Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G B KASHIRSAGAR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
L A NARODE
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/09/1996
BENCH:
M.M. PUNCHHI, K.VENKATASWAMI
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
The view of the High Court in rendering the appellant
helpless in retaining his tenancy over a small piece of land
admeasuring 1 acre and 38 guntas is put to challenge in this
appeal.
It transpires that the appellant was in cultivating
possession of 4 acres and 38 guntas of land under the
respondent-landlord. On an application moved by the landlord
under Section 31 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural
Lands Act. 1948 [the Act], the Tenancy Awal, Karkun.
Kopargaon passed an order on 3.5.1954 on the basis of a
compromise effected between the parties whereunder 3 acres
of land was surrendered to the landlord and the balance land
was left to be retained by the tenant. It is beyond dispute
that had the application been decided on merit, the worst
that could have happened to the tenant was that he would
have been made to vacate half the tenanted land. As is
obvious, the tenant was worse off by the compromise and was
left to retain less than half of the land to the extent of 1
are, 38 quntas only. Be that as it may, the situation
continued as such, when a second attempt was made by the
landlord to evict the tenant under the same provision of
ection 31 of the Act. This time, there again was a
compromise. The land was conceded to be sugarcane land.
Undentably, different provisions of the Act apply to
sugarcane lands, details of which we are not presently
concerned with: except to say that the tenants of the
sugarcane lands were then not evictable. Later came a
notification which permitted eviction of tenants of
sugarcane lands as well, provided such an endeavour did not
come to clash with the provisions of Section 31C and 31d of
the act. Section 31C provides that the tenancy of any land
left with the tenant after the termination of the tenancy
under Section 31 shall not at any time arterwards be liable
to termination again on the ground that the landlord bona
fide required that land for personal cultivation. Section
31D provides that if, in consequence of the termination of
the tenancy under Section 31 any part of the land leased is
left with the tenant, the rent shall be apportioned in the
prescribed manner in proportion to the area of the land left
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with the tenant. The notification prompted the landlord to
move again, seeking the land left with the tenant for bona
fide personal cultivation. He naturally was confronted by
the tenant with the bar under Section 31C of the Act. Two
courts in the revenue hierarchy employed the bar and decided
in favour of the tenant-appellant but the Land Tribunal in
revision at the instance of the landlord, upset those orders
and the High Court in a writ petition, has come to confirm
the same.
The ground on which the Land Tribunal and the High
Court have demolished the defence available in Section 31C
is that the earlier order under Section 31, dated 3.5.1954
was, strictly speaking, not an order under Section 31 but
merely a consent order or a compromise order: not an order
of the kind envisaged under Section 31C so as to erect abar.
It is to examine that view that the parties’ counsel have
been heard and the relevant provisions gone into.
It is noticeable that Section 31 provides for the
procedure for termination of tenancy for personal
cultivation and for non-agricultural use, for which the
landlord has been vested with a right. If his claim is bona
fide and is based on the rights conferred in the provision
then read with Section 31C, the said provision patently
appears to be a one-time measure. The matter in hang can be
viewed in this manner that proceedings under Section 31 were
resorted to by the landlord and a decision was made thereon.
if not on contest with consent of the Parties to which the
Authority hearing the matter put. its seal of approval. No
one can say that the said order was not an order in
purported exercise of the powers and functions of the
Authority under Section 31. Having had a larger share of the
cake, it did not lie in the month of the landlord to be
complaining that those proceedings were no proceedings at
all, in terms of Section 31. Merely because the Authority
did not record an order after contest, can be no ground to
denude the power exercised by the Authority in that behalf.
If this is so then Section 31C is an Obvious bar to a second
attempt to end the tenancy. Merely because the landlord bona
fide requires that land for personal cultivation on the
suggested premise that his family members have increased is
of no consequence. Thus, in our view, the High Court, with
due respect, was in error in rendering the appellant
defenceless, denying him the benefit of Section 31C of the
Act. We hold accordingly.
For the foregoing reasons, this appeal is allowed, the
judgment and order of the High Court is set aside as also
that of the Land Tribunal; restoring the orders of the
Authorities under the Act passed at the two stages: initial
as well as secondary. No costs.