Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SEVALIRAM GOTIRAM TELI (DECEASED)BY HEIRS AND LRS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MADHUKAR YESHWANT PATANKAR & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 19/11/1996
BENCH:
N.P. SINGH, S.B. MAJMUDAR
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Majmudar, J.
In this appeal the question that falls for our
consideration is as to whether heirs of a tenant governed by
the provisions of Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948 (hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’) can claim
restoration of possession of the land under the provision of
Section 32(1B) of the Act when such proceedings were
initiated suo motu by the Mamlatdar concerned. The
Additional Mamlatdar, the Deputy Collector and the
Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal held in favor of the heirs of
the tenant and ordered restoration of possession of the
lands from the respondent-landlords. The High Court of
Bombay by the judgment under appeal took a contrary view and
held that such proceedings are maintainable only for the
tenant concerned and not for his heirs. It is this view of
the Bombay High Court which brought in challenge in the
present proceedings by the heirs of the erstwhile tenant.
A few relevant facts may be noted at the outset. One
Savaliram Gotiram Teli was the tenant of three agricultural
lands being Survey Nos. 88, 89 and 90 situated at Village
Trimbak in Nasik Taluka in Maharashtra State. Respondents
were the landlords of the said lands. On the appointed day,
that is, 15th June 1955 the said tenant was in occupation of
these lands. He was dispossessed by the landlords prior to
1st April 1957 otherwise than under an appropriate order
under Section 29 of the Act. After dispossessing the tenant
the respondent-landlords remained in possession of the said
lands till 31st July 1969. The Additional Mamlatdar
instituted suo motu proceedings under Section 32 (1B) of the
Act of the ground that the tenant was in possession of the
lands on the appointed day and he was dispossessed prior to
the tillers day, that is, 1st April 1957 by the landlords
without following due procedure of law and the lands in
question were in possession of the landlords of their
successors-in-interest on 31st July 1969 and, therefore, the
respondents were liable to restore the possession of the
lands to the heirs of the tenant even though the tenant in
the meantime had died in 1959. As all the requisite
condition for applicability of Section 32(1B) of the Act
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were found to have been satisfied the Special Additional
Tahsildar, Nasik by his order dated 20th August 1971
directed the respondent-landlords to restore the lands to
the heirs of the tenant under Section 32 (1B) of the Act for
personal cultivation. The said order was challenged by the
landlords by filing Tenancy Appeal which came to be
dismissed by Leave Reserve Deputy Collector, Nasik on 10th
January 1972. Respondent-landlords carried the matter in
revision before the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal under
Section <??>70 of the Act. That Revision Application was
also dismissed. It is thereafter, that the respondents,
aggrieved by the order of the Revenue Tribunal dated 2nd
March 1973, carried the matter in appeal under Article 227
of the Constitution of India to the High Court of Bombay.
The only question argued before the High Court by the
respondents was as to whether the proceedings under Section
32 (1B) of the Act for the benefit of the heirs of the
original tenant could be maintained. The learned Single
Judge of the High Court by his order dated 1st March 1978
persuaded himself to hold that such proceedings were not
maintainable for the heirs of the erstwhile tenant and only
the tenant could have initiated such proceeding and as he
had died in 1959 and as during his lifetime he had taken no
steps to get restoration of possession of the lands within
two years from the date of dispossession as per Section 29
of the Act his tenancy rights had got extinguished and could
not be inherited by the appellant-heirs and consequently the
proceedings under Section 32 (1B) of the Act were liable to
the quashed on that ground. It is the aforesaid order of the
learned Single Judge of the High Court which is brought in
challenge in the present proceedings as noted earlier.
At the time when this appeal was finally heard before
us it was brought to out notice by learned counsel for the
appellants that the aforesaid decision of the learned Single
Judge which was reported in AIR 1979 Bombay 117 has been
overruled by a Division Bench of the High Court of Bombay in
the case of Pandharinath Sakharam Chavan v. Bhagwan Ramu
Kate & Ors. AIR 1<??> Bombay 203 and it has been held by the
Division Bench of the High Court that such proceedings under
Section 32 (1B) of the Act were maintainable even at the
instance of the heirs of the original deceased tenant if the
statutory conditions for applicability of the Section were
complied with.
Learned counsel for the respondents on the other hand
submitted that though the Division Bench of the High Court
has overruled this judgment so far as these proceedings are
concerned this Court may uphold the view of the learned
Single Judge as the same is well sustained on the scheme of
the Act.
Having given our anxious consideration to the rival
contentions we find that on the express language of Section
32 (1B) of the Act the view taken by the learned Single
Judge of the High Court in the impugned Judgment cannot be
sustained. Section 32 (1B) of the Act reads as under:
"32 (1B). Where a tenant who was in
possession on the appointed day and
who on account of his being
dispossessed before the 1st day of
April 1957 otherwise than in the
manner and by an order of the
Tahsildar as provided in section
29, is not in possession of the
land on the said date and the land
is in the possession of the
landlord or his successor-in-
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interest on the 31st day of July
1969 and the land is not put to a
non-agriculture use on or before
the last mentioned date, then, the
Tahsildar shall, notwithstanding
anything contained in the said
section 29, either suo motu or on
the application of the tenant, hold
an inquiry and direct that such
land shall be taken from the
possession of the landlord or, as
the case may be, his successor-in-
interest, and shall be restored to
the tenant; and thereafter, the
provisions of this section and
sections 32-A t 32-R (both
inclusive) shall, in so far as they
may be applicable, apply thereto,
subject to the modification that
the tenant shall be deemed to have
purchased the land on the date on
which the land is restored to him:
Provided that, the tenant shall be
entitled to restoration of the land
under this sub-section only if he
undertakes to cultivate the land
personally and of so much thereof
as together with the other land
held by him as owner or tenant
shall not exceed the ceiling area.
Explanation.- In this sub-section
"successor-in-interest" means a
person who acquires the interest by
testamentary disposition or
devolution on death."
A mere look at the said provision shows that for
applicability of the said provision the following conditions
must be satisfied:
(1) The tenant governed by the Act must be in possession on
the appointed day, that is, 15th June 1955.
(2) He should have been dispossessed before the tillers
day, that is, 1st April 1957 otherwise than in the
manner and by an order of the Tahsildar as provided in
Section 29.
(3) The said land must be in possession of the landlord or
his successor-in-interest on 31st day of July 1969.
(4) The land should not have been put to non-agricultural
use by the landlord on or before the 31st day of July
1969.
Once the aforesaid four conditions are satisfied a
statutory duty is cast on the Tahsildar notwithstanding
anything contained in Section 29 either suo motu or on
application of the tenant to hold an inquiry and direct that
such land shall be taken from the possession of the landlord
or his successor-in-interest and shall be restored to the
tenant. Once that happens the provisions of Section 32-A to
32-R of the Act will get attracted and the concerned tenant
would be declared deemed purchaser of the land on the day on
which the land is restored to him. However the restoration
order will be subject to the undertaking of the tenant to
cultivate the land personally. There is no dispute in the
present case that all the aforesaid conditions are satisfied
by the appellants. The High Court also has not taken a
contrary view on the applicability of these conditions,
namely, that the original tenant Savaliram Gotiram Teli was
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in possession of the lands of 15th June 1955, the appointed
day. That he was dispossessed before 1st April 1957 by the
respondent-landlords without following the procedure of
Section 29. That thereafter the lands remained in possession
of the respondents upto 31st July 1969 and they did not put
the lands to non-agricultural use. Once these conditions
were satisfied in suo motu proceedings taken out by the
Tahsildar it was the statutory obligation of the Tahsildar
to restore the lands to the tenant. Unfortunately by the
time these proceedings could be initiated and Section 32
(1B) could operate the tenant had died in 1959. It is only
on this ground that the High Court took the view that the
tenant’s heirs cannot get the benefit of Section 32 (1B) of
the Act. The learned Single Judge in order to come to this
conclusion placed reliance on two circumstances, (i) the
tenant in his lifetime after dispossession had not taken
steps to get restoration of possession under Section 29 of
the Act within two years of dispossession; and (ii) the
Section nowhere expressly contemplated that the land could
be restored to successor-in-interest of the tenant when the
Section itself provided that the land could be in possession
of landlord or his successor-in-interest meaning thereby
proceedings could be initiated even against the successor-
in-interest of the landlord but the Section nowhere provided
a similar right in favour of the successor-in-interest of
the tenant. In our view with respect both these grounds are
unsustainable for non-suiting the appellants. So far as the
first ground is concerned it has to be kept in view that
Section 32 (1B) of the Act itself operates on its own and
includes within it the non obstante clause meaning thereby
overriding the provision of Section 29 of the Act. This
clearly means that whether the erstwhile tenant had followed
the provisions of Section 29 or not for getting restoration
of possession of the land from the landlord within two years
under Section 29 was irrelevant as a further locus
penitential is given to such tenants by the express language
of Section 32 (1B) of the Act and the said Section would
operate independently of and de hors section 29.
Unfortunately the effect in this non obstante clause is
missed by the learned Single Judge of the High Court in the
impugned judgment. The Division Bench in the case of
Pandharinath (supra) has rightly pointed out the said flaw
in the judgment of the learned Single Judge. Once Section 32
(1B) operates on its own independently of provisions of
Section 29 of the Act the result becomes obvious, Section 40
of the Act then squarely gets attracted. Section 40 reads
thus:-
"S.40. (1) Where a tenant (other
than a permanent tenant) dies, the
landlord shall be deemed to have
continued the tenancy on the same
terms and conditions on which such
tenant was holding it at the time
of his death, to such heir or heirs
of the deceased tenant as maya be
willing to continue the tenancy.
(2) Where the tenancy is inherited
by heirs other than the widow of
the deceased tenant, such widow
shall have a charge for maintenance
on the profits of such land."
The said Section provides for a deemed fiction about
transmission of existing tenancy rights in favour of the
heirs. Thus, by the time the tenant died in 1959, as his
tenancy rights had not got extinguished by an appropriate
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proceedings under Section 29 at the instance of the
landlord, those tenancy rights survived and could be
transmitted under the statutory provisions of Section 40 in
favour of the heirs of the erstwhile tenant who were
obviously willing to continue as tenants. Consequently the
appellants themselves got clothed with the rights of
statutory tenants by operation of Section 40 of the Act. The
result was that when Section 32 (1B) operated they fully
satisfied the requirement of being statutory tenants of the
land in question having the same terms and conditions of
tenancy qua the respondent landlords and hence could claim
their right of restoration of possession of the tenanted
lands against the respondent-landlords on satisfaction of
the required conditions of Section 32 (1B) of the Act.
The second ground which appealed to the learned Single
Judge is also unsustainable for the simple reason that
Section 32 (1B) of the Act was required to include a
provision regarding restoration of possession by the
successor-in-interest of landlords for the simple reason
that the landlord might have died in the meantime and his
interest in the land might have been inherited by his
successor-in-interest by way of testamentary succession or
intestate succession and it could be urged by the
successors-in-interest that they were not the landlords who
had illegally dispossessed the tenant. In order to avoid
such a contingency and to rope in such successors-in-
interest who were claiming through the erstwhile landlord
and who were in possession of land only because of the
illegal dispossession of the tenant by their predecessor-in-
interest, the Explanation had to be enacted to make his
successor-in-interest answerable to the claim of erstwhile
tenant under the said Section. Such is not the requirement
so far as the tenant’s heirs are concerned as the tenant
being the aggrieved party can himself support the
proceedings for restoration of possession or if he dies in
the meantime and his tenancy rights get transmitted to his
heirs under Section 40 of the Act, his heirs in their own
right would become statutory tenants and can invoke the
provisions of the Section against the landlord or his
successor-in-interest. As there was no provision like
Section 40 for transmission of landlord’s right on his
death, Explanation to Section 32 (1B) was required to be
enacted for making the said provision fully operative in
such contingencies. The learned Single Judge took the view
that Section 40 was out of picture as the tenancy rights of
the erstwhile tenant had got extinguished on account of non-
compliance of Section 29 of the Act. Once that reasoning
gets displaced by the express provision of non obstante
clause in the Section excluding the operation of Section 29
for the applicability of Section 32 (1B), Section 40 gets
attracted. Hence the non-mentioning of successor-in-interest
of the tenant in the Section pales into insignificance as
seen above. In our view with respect the learned Single
Judge was patently In error when he held that application
under Section 32 (1B) moved by the heirs of the erstwhile
tenant could not be maintained even though all the statutory
conditions for applicability of the Section were satisfied.
It has to be kept in view that the tillers day legislation
is based on the legislative in <??> that all the tillers of
the soil, namely, the tenants would become deemed purchasers
of the lands on 1st April 19<??>. Only in circumstances
where the erstwhile tenants got illegally dispossessed prior
to 1st April 1957, a question would arise as to what is to
be done about them and that is the reason why Legislature
gave a locus penitential to such displaced tenants to apply
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for restoration of possession from the landlords on
satisfying the conditions laid down in the Section and once
those conditions are satisfied the estate of the tenant
would get enlarged into full ownership so far as the
tenanted lands are concerned. Thus it was a statutory right
inhering in the estate of the erstwhile tenant which
obviously could be pressed in service not only by the tenant
himself but by his heirs and legal representatives who also
can claim the statutory right to purchase these lands being
a right inherited by them from the erstwhile tenant having a
direct nexus with the proprietory rights in the land. For
all these reasons, therefore, the judgment under appeal must
be held to be erroneous in law and the said judgment was
rightly overruled by the Division Bench of the High Court in
the case of Pandharinath (supra).
In the result this appeal succeeds and is allowed. The
judgment and order of the learned Single Judge of the High
Court are quashed and set aside and instead the judgment and
order rendered by the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal as
confirming the orders of the Special Additional Tahsildar
dated 20th August 1971 and that of Leave Reserve Deputy
Collector, Nasik dated 10th January 1972 are restored. In
the facts and circumstances of the case will be re order as
to costs.