Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRI BHAGWAN AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAM CHAND AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01/03/1965
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1767 1965 SCR (3) 218
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1966 SC 282 (10)
R 1966 SC 893 (14)
RF 1968 SC 372 (11)
RF 1968 SC 850 (11)
D 1970 SC 971 (6)
R 1970 SC1919 (10,11)
RF 1971 SC2361 (5)
R 1972 SC1910 (9)
R 1974 SC 87 (11)
RF 1977 SC 161 (7)
R 1982 SC1302 (14)
RF 1988 SC 94 (8)
R 1990 SC 261 (19)
RF 1991 SC1893 (19)
ACT:
U.P. Temporary Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947,
ss. 3(4) and 7-F--Power of District Magistrate to grant
permission to sue a tenant for eviction--Whether revisional
power of State Government quasi-judicial and be exercised by
observing rules of natural justice.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants applied to the Rent Controller and
Eviction Officer under s. 3 of the U.P. (Temporary) Control
of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947, for permission to file a
suit in ejectment against the predecessors-in-interest of
the respondents who were the present tenants of certain
premises in Agra. After a series of proceedings before the
Officer and the appellate authority, the latter eventually
ordered that the permission applied for should be granted.
The respondent then moved the Commissioner of Agra in
revision and the order granting permission was set aside by
him; but upon an application made to it under s. 7-F of the
Act, the State Government directed the Commissioner to
revise his order. Accordingly the latter cancelled his
previous order and confirmed the order granting permission
passed by the appellate authority.
The appellants’ ejectment suit, in which one of the
issues was whether the permission granted to sue the
respondents was valid, was decreed in favour of the
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appellants and an appeal against this decree to the First
Additional Civil Judge was dismissed.
However, on appeal to the High Court, the single Judge,
differing from the view expressed in earlier decisions of
the High Court that the revisional order which the State
Government was authorised to pass under s. 7-F is a purely
administrative order, came to the conclusion that the
permission granted was invalid because the State Government,
vhen exercising its authority under s. 7-F of the Act was
required to decide the matter in a quasi-judicial manner and
by following principles of natural justice and should have
given the respondents an opportunity of being heard. On
appeal to this Court:
HELD’: The revisional proceedings which go before the
State Government under s. 7-F are, like the proceedings
before the District Magistrate under s. 3(2) as well as
before the Commissioner under s. 3(3), quasi-judicial in
character and all these three authorities must act according
to the principles of natural justice. [226 B, C].
The right conferred on the tenant not to be evicted.
except on the specified grounds enumerated in cls. (a) to
(g) of s. 3(1) is a statutory right of great significance
and it is this statutory right of which the tenant would be
deprived when the landlord obtains’ the permission of the
District Magistrate. Therefore the Act must be taken to
require that in exercising their respective powers to grant
the permission, the appropriate authorities have to consider
the matter in a quasi-judicial manner and to follow the
principles of natural justice before reaching their
conclusion. [226H-227B].
The Associated. Cement Companies Ltd. v. Bhupendra Cement
Works, Surajpur v.P.N. Sharma, [1965] 2 S.C.R. 366 and Ridge
v. Baldwin & Ors. L.R. [1964] A.C. 40, referred to.
219
Narottam Saran v. State of U.P. A.I.R., 1954, All. 232
and Murlidhar v. State of U.P. A.I.R. 1964 All. 148,
disapproved.
Laxman Purshottam Paimputkar v. State of Bombay [1964]
1 S.C.R. 200, considered.
Obiter:Considerations of judicial propriety and decorum
require that if a learned single Judge hearing a matter is
inclined to take the view that the earlier decisions of the
High Court, whether of a Division Bench or of a single
Judge, need to be reconsidered, he should not embark upon
that enquiry sitting as a single Judge, but should refer the
matter to a Division Bench or, in a proper case, place the
relevant papers before the Chief Justice to enable him to
constitute a larger Bench to examine the question. That is
the proper and traditional way to deal with such matters and
it is rounded on healthy principles of judicial decorum and
propriety. [228B-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 764 of
1954.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree
dated May 9, 1963, of the Allahabad High Court in Second
Appeal No. 2272 of 1959.
A.V. Viswanatha Sastri, B.R.L. lyengar, S.K. Mehta, and
K.L. Mehta, for the appellants.
C.B. Agarwala, S.S. Khanuja and Ganpat Rai, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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Gajendragadkar, C.J. The short question of law which
arises in this appeal by special leave is whether the
revisional order passed by the State Government of Uttar
Pradesh under s. 7-F of the Uttar Pradesh (Temporary)
Control of Rent and Eviction Act, 1947 (hereinafter called
the Act), is rendered invalid by reason of the fact that
before passing the said order, the State Government did not
hear the two respondents, Ram Chand and Kailash Chand, who
were affected by it. This question arises in this way. The
respondents are the present tenants of the premises bearing
municipal No. 863, situated at Jumna Kinara Road, Agra,
commonly known as Putaria Mahal. Their predecessors were let
into possession as tenants by the appellants, Lala Shri
Bhagwan and Shrimati Gopal Devi, on an agreement that they
would pay a monthly rent of-’ Rs. 58-4-0 and that the
tenancy would commence from the Sudi 1 of each Hindi month
and end on Badi 15 of the next month. The two appellants
applied to the Rent Controller and Eviction Officer
(hereafter called the Officer), under s. 3 of the Act for
permission to file a suit in ejectment against the
predecessors-in-interest of the respondents. The Officer
granted permission by his order passed on September 1, 1951.
The respondents then moved’ the Additional District
Magistrate, who had been authorised by the District
Magistrate to hear appeals against the decision of the
Officer. The appellate authority declined to confirm the
permis-
220
sion granted to the appellants and remanded the case to the
Officer for a fresh hearing. On re-hearing the matter, the
Officer changed his view and rejected the appellants’
application for permission on August 9, 1952. The appellants
then moved the appellate authority again and prayed that the
original order granting permission to them to sue the
respondents should be restored. On December 9, 1952, the
appellate authority ordered that permission should be
granted to the appellants for suing the respondents in
ejectment. The respondents then moved the Commissioner of
Agra in revision. On February 4, 1953, the revisional
authority allowed the revisional application and set
aside the appellate order granting permission to the
appellants. That took the appellants to the State Government
under s. 7-F of the Act. On May, 7, 1953, the State
Government directed the Commissioner to revise his order on
the ground that it thought that the need of the appellants
was genuine. Acting in pursuance of this direction, the
Commissioner passed an order on July 28, 1953, by which he
cancelled his previous order and confirmed the order passed
by the appellate authority, granting permission to the
appellants to sue the respondents in ejectment. This order
was clearly the result of the direction issued by the State
Government under s.7-F of the Act. After this order was
passed, the appellants sued the respondents in ejectment in
the court of the Civil Judge, Agra.
The claim made by the appellants for ejectment of the
respondents was resisted by them on several grounds, and on
the contentions raised by the respondents, the trial court
framed six issues. One of the issues was whether the
permission granted to the appellants to sue the respondents
was valid. It is with this issue that we are concerned in
the present appeal. The trial Judge found in favour of the
appellants on this issue and recorded his conclusion in
their favour even on the other issues which had been framed
by him. In the result, the trial court passed a decree in
favour of the appellants on August 31, 1957. The respondents
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challenged this decree by preferring an appeal in the court
of the First Additional Civil Judge, Agra. In their appeal,
they disputed the correctness of the findings recorded by
the trial court on all the issues, including the issue about
the validity of the sanction obtained by the appellants
before filing the present suit. The appeal court confirmed
all the findings recorded by the. trial Judge, with the
result that the respondents’ appeal was dismissed, on the
30th May, 1959.
The respondents then went to the Allahabad High Court by
way of second appeal. The learned single Judge of the said
High Court, who heard the said appeal, was called upon to
consider the question as to whether the permission granted
to the appellants was valid. That, in fact, was the only
issue which was raised before him. The other issues which
had been found in favour of the appellants were not raised
before the learned Judge. On the issue as to the validity of
the sanction obtained by the appellants, the learned
221
Judge came to the conclusion that the said sanction was
invalid inasmuch as the State Government in exercising its
authority under s.7-F of the Act, had not given an
opportunity to the respondents to be heard. He took the view
that in exercising its authority under s. 7-F, the State
Government was required to decide the matter in revision in
a quasi-judicial manner and it was absolutely essential that
the principles of natural justice should have been followed
by the State Government before reaching its decision and an
opportunity should have been given by it to the respondent
to place their case before it.
It appears that this question had been considered by
Division Benches of the Allahabad High Court in the past and
the consensus of judicial opinion appears to have been in
favour of the, view that the revisional order which the
State Government is authorised to pass under s. 7-F, is not
a quasi-judicial order but is a purely administrative order,
and so, it is not necessary that the State Government should
hear the parties before exercising its jurisdiction under
the said section. The learned single Judge was persuaded by
the respondents to consider whether the said decisions were
right and he came to the conclusion that the view taken in
the said decisions was not right. The judgment delivered by
the learned single Judge shows that he had reached this
conclusion on re-examining the question in the light of some
decisions of this Court to which his attention was invited.
After he had reached this conclusion and had dictated a
substantial part of his judgment, his attention was drawn to
a decision of this Court in Laxman Purshottam Pimputkar v.
State of Bombay and others(1), which was then not reported.
The learned Judge considered the blue print of the judgment
to which his attention was invited and thought that the said
judgment confirmed the view he had already taken about the
nature of the proceedings and the character the jurisdiction
contemplated by s. 7-F. Having held that the State
Government was bound to give an opportunity to the
respondents to place their version before it, before it
exercised its authority under s. 7-F, the learned Judge
naturally came to the conclusion that the impugned order
passed by the State Government under s. 7-F was invalid, and
that inevitably meant that under s. 3 of the Act, the suit
was incompetent. In the result, the second appeal preferred
by the respondents was allowed and the appellants’ suit
ordered to be dismissed. In the circumstances of the case,
the learned Judge directed that the parties should bear
their own costs throughout. It is against this decision that
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the appellants have come to this Court by special leave; and
so, the only point which falls for our decision is whether
the revisional order passed by the State Government under s.
7-F, without giving an opportunity to the respondents to
place their case before it, is rendered invalid.
When a legislative enactment confers jurisdiction and
power on any authority or body to deal with the rights of
citizens, it
(1) [1964] I.S.C.R. 200.
222
often becomes necessary to enquire whether the said
authority or body is required to act judicially or quasi-
judicially in deciding questions entrusted to it by the
statute. It sometimes also becomes necessary to consider
whether such an authority or body is a tribunal or not. It
is well-known that even administrative bodies or authorities
which are authorised to deal with matters within their
jurisdiction in an administrative manner, are required to
reach their decisions fairly and objectively; but in
reaching their decisions, they would be justified taking
into account considerations cf policy. Even so,
administrative bodies may, in acting fairly and objectively,
follow the principles of natural justice; but that does not
make the administrative bodies tribunals and does not impose
on them an obligation to follow the principles of natural
justice. On the other hand, authorities or bodies which are
given jurisdiction by statutory provisions to deal with the
rights of citizens, may be required by the relevant statute
to act judicially in dealing with matters entrusted to them.
An obligation to act judicially may, in some cases, be
inferred from the scheme of the relevant statute and its
material provisions. In such a case, it is easy to hold that
the authority or body must act in accordance with the
principles of natural justice before exercising its
jurisdiction and its powers; but it is not necessary that
the obligation to follow the principles of natural justice
must be expressly imposed on such an authority or body. If
it appears that the authority or body has been given power
to determine questions affecting the rights of citizens,
the very nature of the power would inevitably impose the
limitation that the power should be exercised in conformity
with the principles of natural justice. Whether or not such
an authority or body is a tribunal, would depend upon the
nature of the power conferred on the authority or body, the
nature of the rights of citizens, the decision of which
fails within the jurisdiction of the said authority or body,
and other relevant circumstances. This question has been
considered by this Court on several occasions. In the
Associated Cement Companies Ltd., Bhupendra Cement Works,
Surajpur v. P.N. Sharma and another(1), both aspects of this
matter have been elaborately examined, and it has been held,
adopting the view expressed by the House of Lords-in Ridge
v. Baldwin and others(1) that the extent of the area where
the principles of natural justice have to be followed and
judicial approach has to be adopted, must depend primarily
on the nature of the jurisdiction and the power conferred on
any authority or body by statutory provisions to deal with
the questions affecting the rights of citizens. In other
words, in that decision this Court has held that the test
prescribed by Lord Reid in his judgment in the case of
Ridge(2) affords valuable assistance in dealing with the
vexed question with which we are concerned in the present
appeal.
Let us, therefore, examine. the scheme of the Act and the
(1) [1965] 2 S.C.R. 366.
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(2) L.R. [1964] A C. 40.
223
nature of the power and jurisdiction conferred on the State
Government by s. 7-F. The Act was passed in 1947 and its
main object obviously was, in the words of the preamble, to
continue during a limited period powers to control the
letting and the rent of residential and non-residential
accommodation and to prevent the eviction of tenants
therefrom. The preamble further provides that whereas due to
shortage of accommodation in Uttar Pradesh it is expedient
to provide for the continuance during a limited period of
powers to control the letting and the rent of such
accommodation and to prevent the eviction of tenants
therefrom, the Act was enacted. Indeed, it is a matter of
common knowledge that similar Acts have been passed in all
the States in India.
Section 3 of the Act provides that "subject to any order
passed under sub-s. (3), no suit shall, without the
permission of the District Magistrate, be filed in any civil
court against a tenant for his eviction from any
accommodation, except on one or more of the following
grounds". Then follow seven clauses (a) to (g) which set out
the grounds on which a landlord can seek to evict his tenant
even without the permission of the District Magistrate The
scheme of s. 3, therefore, is that in ,order to protect the
tenants from eviction, the legislature has provided that the
landlords could evict their tenants only if there was proof
of the existence of one or the other of the seven grounds
specified by clauses (a)to (g)in s. 3(1). Having made this
general provision, s. 3(1) makes an exception and enables
the landlord to seek to evict his tenant even though his
case may not fall under any of the seven clauses of s. 3(1),
provided he has obtained the permission of the District
Magistrate, In other words, if the District Magistrate
grants permission to the landlord, he can sue to evict the
tenant under the general provisions of the Transfer of
Property Act, as for instance, s. 106. This clearly means
that the District Magistrate is empowered to grant exception
to the landlord from complying with the requirements of
clauses (a) to (g) of s. 3(1) and take the ease of the
tenancy in question outside the provisions of the said
clauses. That is the nature and effect of the power
conferred on the District Magistrate to grant permission to
the landlord to sue his tenant in eviction.
Section 3, as it was originally enacted, provided that
no suit shall, without the permission of the District
Magistrate, be filed in any civil court against a tenant for
his eviction from any accommodation except on one or more of
the grounds specified by clauses (a) to (f). Clause (g) has
been subsequently added.
In 1952, clauses (2), (3) and (4) were added to s. 3 by
the Amending Act 24 of 1952. It is as a result of these
amendments that s. 3(1) now provides that subject to any
order passed under sub-s. (3), the permission granted by the
District Magistrate would enable the landlord to sue his
tenant in ejectment. It is now necessary to read. sub-ss.
(2), (3) and (4), which are as follows:
"(2) Where any application has been made to
the District
224
Magistrate for permission to sue a tenant for
eviction from any accommodation and the
District Magistrate grants or refuses to grant
the permission, the party aggrieved by his
order may, within 20 days from the date on
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which the order is communicated to him, apply
to the Commissioner to revise the order."
"(3) The Commissioner shall hear the
application made under sub-section (2), as far
as may be, within six weeks from the date of
making it, and he may, if he is not satisfied
as to the correctness, legality or propriety
of the order passed by the District Magistrate
or as to the regularity of proceedings held
before him, alter or reverse his order, or
make such other order as may be just and
proper."
"(4) The order of the Commissioner under
sub-section (3) shall, subject to any order
passed by the State Government under s. 7-F,
be final."
The scheme of these three sub-sections is that the District
Magistrate should first consider whether the landlord should
be allowed to sue without complying with clauses (a) to (g)
of s. 3(1). When he decides the question one way or the
other. the party aggrieved by the decision has been given a
right to apply to the Commissioner to revise the said order
within the limitation prescribed by sub-s. (2). That takes
the proceedings before the Commissioner, and he exercises
his revisional jurisdiction and reaches his own decision in
the matter. Sub-section (4) provides that the revisional
order passed by the Commissioner shall, subject to the order
passed by the State Government under s. 7-F, be final. That
takes us to s. 7-F. Section 7-F reads thus:
"The State Government may call for the
record of any case granting or refusing to
grant permission for the filing of a suit for
eviction referred to in s. 3 or requiring any
accommodation to be let or not to be let to
any person under s. 7 or directing a person to
vacate any accommodation under s. 7-A and may
make such order as appears to it necessary for
the ends of justice."
As we have already indicated, the question we have to decide
in the present appeal is: what is the nature of the
proceedings taken before the State Government under s. 7-F
and what is the character of the jurisdiction and power
conferred on the State Government by it; are the proceedings
purely administrative, and can the State Government decide
the question and exercise its jurisdiction without complying
with the principles of natural justice?
In dealing with this question, we have first to examine
the nature of the power conferred on the District Magistrate
himself. There is no doubt that what the District Magistrate
is authorised to do is to permit the landlord to claim
eviction of his tenant, though
225
he may not comply with s. 3(1), clauses (a) to (g) and that
clearly means that the order which the District Magistrate
may pass while. granting sanction to the landlord has the
effect of taking away from the tenants the statutory
protection given to them by the scheme of s. 3(1). A
landlord can normally evict his tenant by complying with the
relevant provisions of the Transfer of Property Act. Section
3(1) imposes a statutory limitation on the said power by
requiring the proof of one or the other of the seven grounds
stated in clauses (a) to (g) of s. 3(1), before he can seek
to evict his tenant. That limitation is removed by the
sanction which District Magistrate may grant; and so, it is
plain that the order which the District Magistrate passes
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under s. 3(2) affects the statutory rights of the tenants.
That is one aspect of the matter which cannot be ignored.
The second aspect of the matter is that the party who may
feet aggrieved by’ the order passed by the District
Magistrate, is given the right to move the Commissioner in
revision within the prescribed period of limitation, and
this provision necessarily implies that the District
Magistrate should indicate his reasons why he makes a
particular .order under s. 3(2). Unless the District
Magistrate indicates, though briefly, the reasons in support
of his final order, the Commissioner would not be able to
exercise his jurisdiction under s. 3(3). How could the
Commissioner consider the question as to whether the order
passed by the District Magistrate is correct or is legal or
is proper. unless he knows the are,q. sons on which the said
order is based? Thus, the provision for a revisional
application to the Commissioner also indicates that the
District Magistrate has to weigh the pros and cons of the
matter and come to a certain conclusion before he makes the
order. The rule naturally imports the requirement that the
parties should be allowed to put their versions before him.
The District Magistrate cannot reasonably weigh the pros and
cons unless both the landlord and the tenant are given an
opportunity to place their versions before him, Therefore,
we are satisfied that the jurisdiction conferred on the
District Magistrate to deal with the rights of the parties
is of such a character that principles of natural justice
cannot be excluded from the proceedings before him.
This conclusion is very much strengthened when we
consider the provisions of s. 3(3). This clause specifically
requires the Commissioner to hear the application made under
sub-s. (2) within the specified period. This requirement
positively enacts that the proceedings before the
Commissioner are quasi-judicial. This clause further
provides that the Commissioner has to be satisfied as to the
correctness, legality, or propriety of the order under
revision. He can also examine the question as to the
regularity of the proceedings held before the District
Magistrate. In our opinion, it is impossible to escape the
conclusion that these provisions unambiguously suggest that
the proceedings before the District Magistrate as well as
before the Commissioner are quasi-judicial in character
226
Further, the revisional power has to be exercised and a
revisional order has to be passed by the Commissioner to
serve the purpose of justice, because the clause provides
that the Commissioner may make such other order as may be
just and proper. Thus, we are satisfied that when the
District Magistrate exercises his authority under s 3(2) and
the Commissioner exercises his revisional power under s.
3(3), they must act according to the principles of natural’
justice. They are dealing with the question of the rights of
the landlord and the tenant and they are required to adopt a
judicial approach.
If that be the true position in regard to the
proceedings contemplated by sub-s. 3(2) and sub-s. 3(3), it
is not difficult to hold that the revisional proceedings
which go before the State Government under s. 7-F, must
partake of the same character. It is true that the State
Government is authorised to call for the record suo motu,
but that cannot alter the fact that the State Government
would not be in a position to decide the matter entrusted to
its jurisdiction under s. 7-F, unless it gives an
opportunity to both the parties to place their respective
points of view before it. It is the ends of justice which
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determine the nature of the order which the State Government
would pass under s. 7-F, and it seems to us plain that in
securing the ends of justice, the State Government cannot
but apply principles of natural justice and offer a
reasonable opportunity to both the parties while it
exercises its jurisdiction under s. 7-F.
We have already referred to the general policy of the
Act. In that connection, we may mention two other sections
of the Act. Section 14 provides that no decree for the
eviction of a tenant from any accommodation passed before
the date of commencement of this Act, shall, in so far as it
relates to the eviction of such tenant, be executed against
him so long as this Act remains in force, except on any of
the grounds mentioned in s. 3. This section emphatically
brings out the main object of the Act which is to save the
tenants from eviction. That is why it prescribes a bar
against the execution of the decrees which may have been
passed for the eviction of tenants before the Act came into
force, unless the landlords are able to show one or the
other ground mentioned ins 3.
A similar provision is made by s. 15 in regard to
pending suits.. It lays down that in all suits for eviction
of tenants from any accommodation pending on the date of
commencement of this Act, no decree for eviction shall be
passed except on one or more of the grounds mentioned in s.
3. The provision also emphasises the importance attached by
the Act to the protection of the tenants from eviction. The
right conferred on the tenant no to be evicted, except on
the specified grounds enumerated by clause (a) t,9 (g) of s.
3(1), is a statutory right of great significance and it is
this statutory right of which the tenants would be deprived
when the landlord obtains the sanction of the District
Magistrate. That is
227
why we think the Act must be taken to require that in
exercising their respective powers under s. 3(2) and s.
3(3), the appropriate authorities have to consider the
matter in a quasi-judicial manner. and are expected to
follow the principles of natural justice before reaching
their conclusions.
We have already indicated that the Allahabad High Court
had consistently taken the contrary view and held that the
functions discharged by the appropriate authorities under s.
3(2) and s. 3(3) are administrative and an obligation to
follow the principles of natural justice cannot be imposed
on the said authorities vide Narettam Saran v. State of
U.P.(1). Indeed. after the learned single Judge had held in
the present proceedings that the view taken by the earlier
decisions of the Allahabad High Court was erroneous. a
Division Bench of the said High Court considered the same
question once again and re-affirmed its earlier view vide:
Murlidhar v. State of U.P.(2). We have carefully considered
the reasons given by the learned Judges when they re-
affirmed the earlier view taken by the High Court of
Allahabad on this point. With respect, we are unable to
agree with the decision in Murlidhar’s(2) case.
In this connection, we may refer to the decisions of
this Court in Laxman Purshottam Pimputkar’s(3) case on which
the learned single Judge partly relied in support of his
conclusion. In that case, this Court was called upon to
consider the question whether the revisional jurisdiction
conferred on the State Government under s. 79 of the Satan
Act was purely administrative. and it came to the conclusion
that in exercising the said revisional jurisdiction. the
State Government is not acting purely as an administrative
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authority; its decision is judicial or quasi-judicial, and
so, it is essential that the State Government should follow
the principles of natural justice before reaching its
conclusion under that section. The scheme of the relevant
provisions of the Watan Act cannot. however, be said to be
exactly similar to the scheme of the Act with which we are
concerned; whereas section 3 of the Act with which we are
concerned in the present appeal deals with the statutory
rights conferred on the tenants, the relevant sections of
the Watan Act dealt with the right of possession of the
Watan property itself. That being so, it cannot be said that
the decision in Laxman Purshottam Pimputkar’s(3) case can be
deemed to have overruled by necessary implication the view
taken by the Allahabad High Court in regard to the nature of
the power conferred on the appropriate authorities by ss. 3
and 7-F of the Act.
Before we part with this appeal, however, we ought to
point out that it would have been appropriate if the learned
single Judge had not taken upon himself to consider the
question as to whether the earlier decisions of the Division
Benches of the High Court
(1) A.I.R. 1954 All. 232.
(2) [1964] 1964 All.148.
(3) [1964] 1 S.C.R.200.
(N) 3 SCI--2
228
needed to be re-considered and revised. It is plain that the
said decisions had not been directly or even by necessary
implication overruled by any decision of this Court; indeed,
the judgment delivered by the learned single Judge shows
that he was persuaded to re-examine the matter himself and
in fact he had substantially recorded his conclusion that
the earlier decisions were erroneous even before his
attention was drawn to the decision of this Court in Laxman
Purshottam Pimputkar’s(1) case. It is hardly necessary to
emphasis that considerations of judicial propriety and
decorum require that if a learned single Judge hearing a
matter is inclined to take the view that the earlier
decisions of the High Court, whether of a Division Bench or
of a single Judge, need to be reconsidered, he should not
embark upon that enquiry sitting as a single Judge, but
should refer the matter to a Division Bench or, in a proper
case, place the relevant papers before the Chief Justice to
enable him to constitute a larger Bench to examine the
question. That is the proper and traditional way to deal
with such matters and it is rounded on healthy principles of
Judicial decorum and propriety. It is to be regretted that
the learned single Judge departed from this traditional way
in the present case and chose to examine the question
himself.
The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed. There
will be no order as to costs.
Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1964] 1 S.C.R. 200
229