Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ANR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AVTAR SINGH & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/04/1984
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
SEN, A.P. (J)
ERADI, V. BALAKRISHNA (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1048 1984 SCR (3) 391
1984 SCC (3) 589 1984 SCALE (1)822
ACT:
Punjab Refugees (Registration of Land Claims) Act,
1948-s. 33-Revisional power of Central Government-Scope of-
Whether can be exercised repeatedly.
HEADNOTE:
One Harnam Singh, father of the respondents, was owner
of some agricultural land in the erstwhile Sind Province now
forming part of Pakistan. After the partition of the country
he along with his wife and three sons migrated to India. As
displaced person, he lodged a claim on March 15, 1948 in
respect of his entire holding on Pakistan. On the
introduction of the Punjab Refugees (Registration of Land
Claims) Act, 1948, on April 3, 1948 the said Harnam Singh,
his sons and his wife filed separate claims alleging that in
1946 there was an oral partition of the land which
originally belonged to Harnam Singh. The claims were
verified and allotments were made in favour of each
claimant. The Chief Settlement Commissioner rejected a
reference from the department and by his order dated August
21, 1961 held the allotments to be valid. Apprehending that
the claim of ownership of land in Sind and the partition
between himself, his sons and his wife and the allotment of
land was being re-examined, on March 13, 1962 Harnam Singh
submitted a representation to the Government of India for
issuing a direction under s. 33 of the Act that the matter
be treated as finally settled. On this representation, Shri
N. P. Dube, Joint Secretary to the Government of India,
Department of Rehabilitation wrote a D. O. letter dated May
31, 1963 to Shri J. M. Tandon, Deputy Secretary to the
Government of Punjab, Rehabilitation Department, saying,
inter alia. "that there is no point in waiting any more and
the matter should be finalised on the basis of the judicial
findings arrived at in the case. We also feel that there are
no reasons to differ from those judicial pronouncements at
this stage. The record received from the Punjab Government
is, therefore, returned with the request that the case may
be finalised as mentioned above". It appears that the
Managing Officer of the Rehabilitation Department, Punjab
Government submitted a note to move the Central Government
under s. 33 of the Act for reopening and cancellation of the
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order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August 21,
1961. The reopen a notice was issued to the allotees calling
upon them to show cause why the order of the Chief
Settlement Commissioner dated August 21, 1961 should not be
set aside and allotment in favour of each of them should
392
not be cancelled. The allotees contended that since the
power of revision conferred by s. 33 of the Act had already
been exercised by the Central Government, the same power of
revision could not be repeatedly exercised particularly when
no fresh material against the allotees was produced after
the earlier decision. Ultimately a Joint Secretary to the
Government of India exercising power of revision conferred
by s. 33 by his order dated March 15, 1965 quashed and set
aside the order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner dated
August 21, 1961 and further directed that the allotment of
land favour of Harbans Singh his sons and his wife be
cancelled and that a fresh allotment be made on the footing
that Harnam Singh alone was the owner of the land situated
in Sind. The validity of the order dated March 15, 1965 of
the Joint Secretary was challenged in the High Court by two
sons of Harnam Singh, respondents in this appeal. Broadly
agreeing with the view taken by a learned single Judge, a
Division Bench while dismissing the Letters Patent appeal in
the High Court, held that the D. O. Letter of the Joint
Secretary dated May 31, 1963 conveyed the decision of the
Government of India in exercise of powers under s. 33 and
therefore, the power of revision against the order of the
Chief Settlement Commissioner was exhausted because a quasi-
judicial tribunal had no power to revise or review its
earlier decision on merits even if the earlier decision was
wrong on facts or law. Accordingly, the High Court held that
the impugned order of the Government of India dated March
15, 1965 was without jurisdiction and was invalid and of no
legal efficacy. Hence this appeal.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD : The contention that the power of revision cannot
be repeatedly exercised and finality must attach to the
orders would necessitate an examination in depth of the
nature and extent of power conferred by section 33 of the
Punjab Refugees (Registration of Claims) Act, 1948 which
enables the Central Government to revise and reopen any
proceeding under the Act and to pass any order in relation
thereto as in the opinion of the Central Government the
circumstances of the case require and as is not inconsistent
with any of the provisions contained in the Act or the Rules
made thereunder. But in the facts of the present case it is
not necessary to undertake this exercise. The Court would
proceed on the assumption that section 33 of the Act does
not provide reservoir of power from which revisional
jurisdiction can be exercised more than once in respect of
the same order or the same proceeding. [403E-F]
In the instant case the question which would squarely
arise is whether on an earlier occasion, the Central
Government had exercised any revisional power conferred by
section 33 in respect of the order dated August 21, 1961 of
the Chief Settlement Commissioner. In other words, whether,
as contended by the appellants, the letter of Shri N. P.
Dube, Joint Secretary dated May 31, 1963 is a decision
recorded by the Central Government in exercise of the power
conferred by section 33 ? The letter of Mr. Dube dated May
31, 1963 does not record any decision of the Central
Government. It merely says that it is not necessary to wait
any more for response to the queries addressed to
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authorities in Pakistan and
393
the matter should be finalised on the basis of finding
arrived at in the case. It further proceeds to aver that
there is a feeling that there is no reason to differ from
those judicial pronouncements at ‘this stage’. Such
expression of feeling could hardly tantamount to a decision
of the Central Government under Sec. 33. By this letter the
Central Government informed the Government of Punjab that
the record is returned with the request that the case may be
finalised as indicated in the letter. The revisional power
is the power is the Central Government and not of the Punjab
Government. There decision was left to the Punjab
Government. There was nothing pending with the Punjab
Government for finalisation Therefore, the High Court was
clearly in error in treating the letter of Shri Dube dated
May 31, 1963 as a decision of the Central Government in
exercise of the power conferred by Sec. 33. There was no
occasion for the Central Government to exercise power under
Sec. 33 and therefore, it is not possible to agree with the
High Court that the letter records the decision of the
Central Government under Sec. 33. If the letter of Shri Dube
is not a decision of the Central Government under Sec. 33 of
the Act, as a necessary corollary, the impugned decision
must be treated as one renderer for the first time in
exercise of the revisional power under Sec. 33 and
therefore, it cannot be said to be one without jurisdiction.
[403 G; 404 A; F-G; 405 B-E]
D. N. Roy and S. K. Bannerjee & Ors v. State of Bihar &
Ors. [1971] 2 S.C.R. 522.
If every litigant in whose favour a competent authority
has made an order can still approach the higher authority
for the affirmance of the order without any rhyme or reason,
the whole gamut of power of revisional jurisdiction would
become a play thing for already successful party who may
foreclose the decision and when needed can successfully urge
that the power of revision is exhausted. [404 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 503 of
1971.
From the Judgment and Order dated 22.5.1969 of the
Punjab & Haryana High Court in L.P.A. No. 384 of 1966.
M. M. Abdul Khader and Ms. A. Subhashini for the
appellants.
P.P. Rao for the Respondent No. 1 and R.S. Bindra and
Harbans Singh for respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DESAI, J. Avtar Singh and Dr. Kartar Singh two sons of
S. Harnam Singh filed Civil Write No. 1242 of 1965 against
their father S. Harnam Singh, respondent No. 2 and Union of
India and Tehsildar cum Managing Officer, respondents Nos. 1
and 3 res-
394
pectively questioning the correctness and validity of an
order dated March 15, 1965, Annexure ‘G’ to the petition.
S. Harnam Singh was the owner of agricultural land
comprised in Deh No. 100 as also a portion of the land
included in Deh No. 99 situated in District Nawab Shah, in
erstwhile Sind Province now forming part of Pakistan. Harnam
Singh had three sons : Avtar singh, Dr. Kartar Singh and
Harbans Singh. Smt. Tej Kaur was the wife of Harnam Singh.
It was alleged that in the year 1946 Harnam Singh effected a
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partition of agricultural land between himself, his three
sons and his wife Smt. Tej Kaur each being given an almost
equal share. It was alleged that intimation of the alleged
partition was sent to the revenue authorities of Sind
Province with a request to effect necessary mutation in the
revenue records showing land as having been given in the
partition to the particular person. After the partition of
the country S. Harnam Singh his three sons and his wife
migrated to India and they claim to be displaced persons.
Harnam Singh lodged a claim on March 15, 1948 in respect of
the entire land including the land belonging to the heirs of
Ch. Attar Singh who was his father-in-law. Later on, on
April 21, 1948 Harnam Singh intimated to the Rehabilitation
Authorities that out of a total claim of 300 acres of land
lodged by him, about 75 acres of land was of the ownership
of Ch. Attar Singh and confined his claim to the total area
of 225 acres of land. It may be mentioned that in the claim
lodged on March 15, 1948 there was no reference to the
partition effected by Harnam Singh between himself his sons
and his wife. On the introduction of the Punjab Refugees
(Registration of Land Claims) Act, 1948 (‘Act’ for short) on
April 3, 1948 Harnam Singh and his sons as also Smt. Tej
Kaur filed separate claims on the basis of the partition of
the land which originally belonged to S. Harnam Singh. It
was alleged that these claims were verified and allotments
of land were made to the extent of 21-8 standard acres in
favour of each claimant on temporary basis. On October 5,
1953, Harnam Singh and his sons approached the authorities
in the Rehabilitation Department to convert temporary
allotment into quasi-permanent allotment. Deputy Registrar
Land Claims accepted the request of Harnam Singh and his
sons, both with regard to the ownership of the land as well
as partition thereof amongst various members of the family.
However, it was recommended that on the basis of the revised
calculations, each claimant would be entitled to 19-11 1/2
S.A. of land instead of 21-8 S.A. and the excess allotment
should be cancelled This recommendation was approved by the
competent authority vide its order dated
395
October 28, 1953 as also by the Deputy Custodian of Evacuee
Property as per its order dated November 11, 1953.
Consequently excess allotment of 8-14 1/2 standard acres in
respect of five claimants was cancelled and the remaining
allotment was ordered to be made on quasi-permanent basis.
It was alleged that later on proprietary rights were
conferred on each claimant in respect of the land allotted
to him by the Managing Officer. Some time in 1960, a notice
was received by the allottees from the Chief Settlement
Commissioner, Punjab calling upon them to show cause why
their allotment should not be cancelled. In view of the
notice, it became necessary for the allottees to establish
not only the ownership of land in Sind but the partition
thereof amongst themselves. The allottees claimed that they
offered the necessary proof which satisfied the Chief
Settlement Commissioner who had issued notice on the basis
of Jamabandi entries received from Pakistan. Accordingly the
Chief Settlement Commissioner by his order dated August 21,
1961 confirmed the allotment, directed conferment of quasi-
permanent status and rejected the departmental reference.
Somewhere in October 1961, Harnam Singh apprehended that the
claim to ownership of land in Sind and the partition between
himself, his sons and his wife and the allotment of land was
being re-examined whereupon on March 13, 1962 he submitted a
representation to the Government of India for issuing a
direction under Section 33 of the Act that the matter be
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treated as finally settled. It is alleged that on this
representation, the Government of India sent for the record
of the whole case, called for the comments of the Punjab
Rehabilitation Department which led Land Claims Officer to
forward his note dated October 27, 1961 to the Government of
India alongwith the whole record of the case. It is alleged
that the case was examined and the Joint Secretary to the
Government of India, Ministry of Rehabilitation, one Shri
Dube, conveyed the decision of the Government of India to
the Deputy Secretary to the Government of Punjab,
Rehabilitation Department, Jullundur vide his D.O. Letter
No. 13(66) L & RO-62 dated May 31, 1963 with certain
observations which it is alleged tend to show that the power
of revision under Sec. 33 was exercised and both, the
holding of the land in Sind, partition thereof between
Harnam Singh, his sons and his wife and the allotment of
land to them as displaced persons in India were considered
as valid and finally settled. It appears that the Managing
Officer of the Rehabilitation Department, Punjab Government
submitted a note dated November 5, 1963 to move the Central
Government under Sec. 33 of the Act for cancellation of the
order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August
396
21, 1961. Thereupon the Chief Settlement Commissioner issued
a notice dated May 21, 1964 to the allottees calling upon
them to show cause why allotment in favour of each of them
should not be cancelled. The allottees appeared and
submitted their objections to the re-opening of the case
inter alia contending that the power of revision conferred
by Sec. 33 of the Act cannot be repeatedly exercise and it
having been earlier exercised and the allotment having been
held to be valid as per the letter of Shri Dube dated May
31, 1963, the Central Government had no jurisdiction either
to revise or review its previous decision more particularly
when no fresh material against the allottees is produced
after the earlier decision. Ultimately the Joint Secretary
of the Government of India exercising power of revision
conferred by Sec. 33 by his order dated March 15, 1965
Annex. G to the writ petition quashed and set aside the
order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August 21,
1961 and further directed that the allotment of land in
favour of Harnam Singh, his sons and his wife be cancelled
and that a fresh allotment be made on the footing that
Harnam Singh alone was the owner of the land situated in
Sind. In other words, the claim that each sons of Harnam
Singh had acquired land on partition was rejected as
untenable. Thereupon, two sons of Harnam Singh, Shri Avtar
Singh and Dr. Kartar Singh filed Civil Writ Petition in the
High Court of Punjab at Chandigarh.
An affidavit in opposition was filed on behalf of
respondent Nos. 1 and 3 by one A. G. Vaswani, Settlement
Commissioner (A) & Ex-Officio Under Secretary to the
Government of India, Ministry of Labour Employment &
Rehabilitation inter alia contending that in April 1948 when
for the first time Shri Harnam Singh lodged his claim as
displaced person against the loss of his land and property
in Pakistan, he had categorically stated that 225 acres of
land situated in Sind belonged to him and there was no
express or implied, overt or covert reference or even a
whisper of a partition between himself and his sons and wife
before he migrated to India. It was also contended that the
claim lodged by Harnam Singh in April, 1948 was attested by
Shri Harnam Singh, then Deputy Custodian of Evacuee
Property, East Punjab and at the relevant time Judge of the
Punjab High Court. It is alleged that on the basis of the
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alleged partition, separate claims were lodged for the first
time in June 1948 each claiming 48 acres of land which was
reduced to 32 acres. It was specifically contended that the
separate claims on the basis of alleged oral partition were
an after thought and were submitted
397
to escape a higher graded cut under the Quasi-permanent
Allotment Scheme. Other averments in the affidavit are
hardly relevant. With respect to the D. O. Letter of Shri
Dube, it was stated that the opinion expressed in it was not
a judicial decision in exercise of the revisional
jurisdiction under Sec. 33 of the Act nor could it
constitute an exercise of power under Sec. 33 of the Act. It
was submitted that the revisional power was exercised for
the first time when the allotment was cancelled and a
direction was given for fresh allotment on the basis that
Harman Singh alone was the owner of the land situated in
Sind.
The writ petition came up before a learned Single Judge
of the High Court. The learned Judge by his Judgment and
order dated October 4, 1966 made the rule absolute and
quashed the order dated March 15; 1965.
The Union of India preferred Letters Patent Appeal No.
384 of 1966 which was heard by a Division Bench of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court. The Division Bench broadly
agreed with the view taken by the learned Single Judge that
the ‘D. O. letter of Shri Dube dated May 31, 1963 conveyed
the decision of the Government of India in exercise of
powers under Sec. 33 and therefore, the power of revision
against the order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner was
exhausted because a quasi-judicial tribunal has no power to
revise or review its earlier decision on merits even if the
earlier decision is wrong on facts or law’. Accordingly,
while dismissing the L.P. Appeal the High Court held that
the impugned order of the Government of India dated March
15, 1965 was without jurisdiction and was invalid and of no
legal efficacy. Hence this appeal by special leave by the
Union of India.
Mr. Abdul Khader, learned counsel for the appellant
urged that the High Court was in error in treating D. O.
letter No. 33 (66)/ L & RO-62 of Shri N. P. Dube dated May
31, 1963 as a decision reached or recorded in exercise of
the power conferred by Section 33 so as to exhaust the power
of revision. Consequently, it was urged that the High Court
was in error in holding that the decision of the Central
Government dated March 15, 1965 was without jurisdiction.
Chronology of events and the assertion and counter
assertion would reveal that controversy centres round the
nature and character of the letter dated May 31, 1963 of
Shri N. P. Dube, Joint
398
Secretary to Shri J. M. Tandon, Deputy Secretary to the
Government of Punjab, Rehabilitation Department, Jullundur.
More specifically the question is whether it was an inter-
departmental communication or it was the decision recorded
in exercise of the power conferred by Sec. 33 of the Act? If
it was not a decision recorded by the Central Government in
exercise of the power conferred under Sec. 33 the judgment
of the High Court would be unsustainable.
The Act as its long title shows was enacted to provide
for the payment of compensation and rehabilitation grants to
displaced persons and for matters connected therewith.
Consequent upon the partition of the country, there was
migration of population both the ways. Large number of
residents of area now forming part of Pakistan migrated to
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India and there was also a flow in the reverse direction.
Those who migrated under those tragic, traumatic and
compulsive circumstances were forced to leave their
properties at the place they were settled for generations.
Both India and Pakistan were faced with a huge problem of
settling persons thus displaced. In order to compensate such
displaced persons who were uprooted out of their abodes, the
Act was enacted.
Sec 2 (b) defines ‘displaced person’ to mean ‘any
person who, on account of the setting up of the Dominions of
India and Pakistan, or on account of civil disturbances or
the fear of such disturbances in any area now forming part
of West Pakistan, has, after the first day of March, 1947,
left, or been displaced from, his place of residence in such
area and who has been subsequently residing in India, and
includes any person who is resident in any place now forming
part of India and who for that reason is unable or has been
tendered unable to manage, supervise or control any
immovable property belonging to him in West Pakistan, and
also includes the successors-in-interest of any such
person.’ ‘Evacuee property’ has been defined in Sec. 2 (c)
to mean ‘any property which has been declared or is deemed
to have been declared as evacuee property under the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950.’ Sec, 14 of
the Act envisages constitution of a compensation pool which
shall consist of evacuee property both in cash and kind.
Sec. 4 requires all displaced persons having a verified
claim to make applications for the payment of compensation.
Sec. 7 casts a duty on the Settlement Commissioner to make
an enquiry in such manner as may be prescribed and having
due regard to the prescribed scales of compensation, the
nature of the verified
399
claim and other circumstances of the case, to ascertain the
amount of compensation to which the applicant is entitled.
After following the procedure prescribed in several sub-
sections of Sec. 7, the Settlement Commissioner has to make
an order determining net amount of compensation, if any,
payable to the applicant. Sec. 8 prescribes the form and
manner of payment of compensation. Compensation can be paid
in cash, in Government bonds, by sale to the displaced
person of any property from the compensation pool and
setting off the purchase money against the compensation
payable to him etc. Sec. 22 provides for appeal against the
order of the Settlement Officer or a Managing Officer to the
Settlement Commissioner as the case may be, in such form and
manner as may be prescribed. Sec. 23 provides for an appeal
against the orders of the Settlement Commissioner or the
Additional Settlement Commissioner or an Assistant
Settlement Commissioner to the Chief Settlement Commissioner
in such form and manner as may be prescribed, with this
proviso that no appeal shall lie from any order passed in
appeal under Sec. 22. The next important section material
for the present appeal in Sec. 33 which reads as under:-
"33 : The Central Government may at any time call
for the record of any proceeding under the Act and may
pass such order in relation thereto as in its opinion
the circumstances of the case require and as is not
inconsistent with any of the provisions contained in
the Act or the rules made thereunder."
Having noticed the relevant provisions, certain facts
may be reiterated. Harnam Singh a displaced person submitted
a land claim on March 15, 1948 at Delhi for an area of 300
acres said to have been abandoned by him in Nasrat Tehsil,
district Nawabshah in Sind. He filed another claim at
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Jullundur on April 1, 1948, reducing his claim to 225 acres.
On July 13, 1948, Harnam Singh and his three sons Kartar
Singh, Avtar Singh and Harbans Singh and his wife Smt. Tej
Kaur lodged separate claims each for 48 acres of land in
lieu of land alleged to have been abandoned by each one of
them in Pakistan. There was a modified claim submitted on
February 22, 1949. The difference between the first and the
second claim arises from the altered stand adopted by the
claimants. Initially Harnam Singh claimed to be the
exclusive owner of 225 acres of land but when separate
claims were submitted by his three sons and his wife it was
alleged that there was orapl artition of the property
belonging to Harnam Singh between
400
himself his wife and his three sons. Each one of the five
claimants verified his own claim, whereupon each was
allotted 21-8 S. A. of land. Upon their request to convert
temporary allotment into quasi-permanent allotment, their
cases were examined by the Managing Officer who found that
there was an excess allotment of 1-12 1/2 standard acres in
case of each of the claimants and with their consent the
excess area of 8-14 1/2 standard areas was cancelled. A
little while after the officer in-charge (Land claims)
Jullundur examined the case of each of the claimants and
made a reference to the Chief Settlement Commissioner on
September 2, 1960 recommending that 48-14 standard acres was
in excess of the entitlement of the five claimants in view
of the entries in Jamabandi and the excess allotment be
cancelled. A further enquiry revealed that the claim of
Harnam Singh that there was partition between himself and
his sons was untenable and that except Harnam Singh, the
other claimants did not have any land of their ownership and
therefore the entire allotment deserved to be cancelled. The
Chief Settlement Commissioner rejected the reference by his
order dated August 21, 1961. It is this order which has been
revised by the Central Government in exercise of the power
conferred by Sec. 33 by the impugned order dated March 15,
1965.
It would appear from the mere recital of the facts that
the Chief Settlement Commissioner who rejected the reference
as per its order dated August 21, 1961 held the allotment in
favour of the five claimants to be valid, legal and correct.
If the decision of the chief Settlement Commissioner
dated August 21, 1961 is wholly in favour of Harnam Singh
and his sons and wife, they could, by no stretch of
imagination, be said to be persons aggrieved by the decision
of the Chief Settlement Commissioner. Harnam Singh and his
sons contended that the allotment was valid and that the
reference made by the Officer-in-charge (land claims)
department must be rejected. The Chief Settlement
Commissioner accepted this submission of Harnam Singh and
his sons and rejected the reference. Can it ever be said
that a decision wholly in favour of Harnam Singh and his
sons is one adverse to them or that they are aggrieved by
the decision ?
It is now necessary to turn to an intervening event. It
appears that the Chief Settlement Commissioner while
rejecting the reference and accepting the allotment in
favour of Harnam Singh and
401
his sons on the basis of holding and oral partition as legal
and valid observed in para 12 of the order as under :
"Further in the terms of the proprietary rights
Sanad if any, evidence comes to the notice of the
department which establishes any of the facts mentioned
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in the clause below, the Central Govt. can at any time
resume whole or any part of the property."
After converting temporary allotment into quasi-permanent
allotment a Sanad was issued to each claimant. One condition
in the Sanad was that if it appears at any time that the
grant or allotment of land described in the Sanad, is
obtained by fraud, false representation or concealment of
any material fact, it shall be lawful for the President to
resume the whole or any part of the said property so
allotted.
In view of the aforementioned observations and in
absence of any document evidencing partition of the property
as claimed by Harnam Singh, the Punjab Government made a
reference to the Pakistan authorities for the necessary
verification of entries in the Government record. A similar
request was also addressed to the Central Government which
led to a query being addressed to the High Commissioner for
India in Pakistan to obtain documentary evidence if any in
this behalf. Nothing concrete emerged from these queries. In
the meantime, Harnam Singh submitted a representation
(Annexure ‘B’ to the petition) dated March 13, 1962 to the
Government of India for issuing a direction under Sec. 33 of
the Act that the matter be treated as finally settled. Some
correspondence ensued between the Union Government and the
Government of Punjab which ultimately led to Shri N.P. Dube,
Joint Secretary, Ministry of Rehabilitation sending a letter
dated May 31, 1963 to the Deputy Secretary to the Government
of Punjab, Rehabilitation Department, Jullundur which reads
as under :
"N.P. Dube, Regd. A.D.
Joint Secretary. D.O. No. 13 (66)/L&R/62
W.H. & R.
(Department of Rehabilitation)
31st May, 1963
402
My dear Tandon,
Please refer to Balmukand Sharma’s D.O. letter No.
422/SINGH dated the 29th August, 1962, in connection with
the representation filed by Shri Harnam Singh P.C.S (Retd).
The High Commissioner for India in Pakistan was also
addressed by Secretary in August, 1962, to get the required
information but the Pakistan Government have not been able
to supply it so far. The matter has, therefor, been
considered in this office and it is felt that there is no
point in waiting any more and the matter should be finalised
on the basis of the judicial findings arrived at in the
case. We also feel that there are no reasons to differ from
those judicial pronouncements at this stage. The record
received from the Punjab Government is, therefore, returned
with the request that the case may be finalised as mentioned
above.
Yours sincerely,
Sd/-
N.P. Dube
1.6.63
Shri J.M. Tandon
Deputy Secretary to the
Government of Punjab,
Rehabilitation Department,
Jullundur."
On November 5, 1963, the Managing Officer,
Rehabilitation Department, Government of Punjab submitted a
note inter alia pointing out that the story of partition
alleged by Harnam Singh and his sons is a myth and
consequently, except Harnam Singh, no other claimant was
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entitled to any allotment and therefore, the decision of the
Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August 21, 1961 requires
to be reopened under Sec 33 and allotment upheld by him
should be cancelled. Upon this note a reference was made to
the Central Government. Thereupon a notice dated May 21,
1964 was issued to Harnam Singh and his sons, his wife Smt.
Tej Kaur having died in the meantime, calling upon them to
show why the order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner
dated August 21, 1961 should not be set aside and the
allotment in favour of each allottee be not cancelled.
Ultimately, the impugned order was passed.
Undoubtedly, the impugned order is made under Sec. 33
403
which confers a wide power of revision on the Central
Government. The power of widest amplitude for revising and
reopening any proceeding under the Act and to pass any order
in relation thereto as in the opinion of the Central
Government the circumstances of the case require and is not
inconsistent with any of the provisions contained in the Act
or the rules made thereunder is conferred on the Central
Government. This is undoubtedly a power of revision. It is
not even hedged in by any concept of limitation. Such power
of wide plenitude had to be conferred on the Central
Government to set right any illegal unfair, unjust or
plainly untenable order because the proceedings under the
Act were not adversary in form and character which may lead
to the one or the other party approaching the Central
Government to set right the matter. If a displaced person
obtains allotment from the compensation pool, to which he
was not entitled, certainly the Central Government would
hardly come to know in the absence of any opposite party or
adversary drawing attention of the Central Government to
such unjust enrichment. Therefore, Parliament conferred a
very wide power of revision on the Central Government to
reopen any proceeding or order under the Act. This was
hardly disputed.
It was, however, contended that a power of revision
cannot be repeatedly exercised and there must be attached
finality to the orders. This submission would necessitate an
examination in depth of the nature and extent of power
conferred by Sec. 33. But in the facts of the present case
we consider it unnecessary to undertake this exercise. We
would proceed on the assumption that Sec. 33 does not
provide a reservoir of power from which revisional
jurisdiction can be exercised more than once in respect of
the same order or the same proceeding. In this view of the
matter the decision in Everest Apartments Co-operative
Housing Society Ltd. v. State of Maharashtra and Ors. (1) is
hardly of any assistance.
The question that would squarely arise is : whether on
an earlier occasion, had the Central Government exercised
any revisional power conferred by Sec. 33 in respect of the
order dated August 21, 1961 by the Chief Settlement
Commissioner by which the departmental reference was
rejected and the Chief Settlement Commissioner had upheld
the allotment of land in favour of Harnam Singh and his
sons.
404
Mr. P.P. Rao, learned counsel for the respondents
strenuously urged that the letter of Shri N.P. Dube dated
May 31, 1963 is a decision recorded by the Central
Government in exercise of the power conferred by Sec. 33 in
respect of the proceeding in which allotment made in favour
of Harnam Singh and his sons was upheld by the Chief
Settlement Commissioner and therefore, the order of the
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Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August 21, 1961 became
final and could not be the subject matter of a revision
second time, under Sec. 33 of the Act. There is no substance
in this contention.
It needs to be recalled that the decision of the Chief
Settlement Commissioner dated August 21, 1961 was wholly in
favour of Harnam Singh and his sons. Atleast Harnam Singh
and his sons could not be said to be persons aggrieved by
the order so as to move the Central Government invoking its
revisional power under Sec. 33. Mr. Rao however, contended
that the representation Annexure ‘D’ dated March 13 of
Harnam Singh reveals that he apprehended that the case may
be reopened and therefore, by his representation he moved
the Central Government to affirm or confirm the decision of
the Chief Settlement Commissioner dated August 21, 1961. We
remain unimpressed. If every litigant in whose favour a
competent authority has made an order can still approach the
higher authority for the affirmance of the order without any
rhyme of reason, the whole gamut of power of revisional
jurisdiction would become a play thing for already
successful party who may foreclose the decision and when
needed can successfully urge that the power of revision is
exhausted. Further, assuming Harnam Singh made the
representation apprehending danger to his allotment, the
letter of Mr. Dube dated May 31, 1963 does not record any
decision of the Central Government. It merely says that it
is not necessary to wait any more for response to the
queries addressed to authorities in Pakistan and the matter
should be finalized on the basis of finding arrived at in
the case. It further proceeds to aver that there is a
feeling that there is no reason to differ from those
judicial pronouncements at ‘this stage’. Such expression of
feeling could hardly tentamount to a decision of the Central
Government under Sec. 33. It is not for a moment suggested
that the decision of the Central Government has to be
recorded in any particular form. In D.N. Roy and S.K.
Bannerjee & Ors. v. State of Bihar & Ors. (1) a letter
addressed by Under-Secretary to the Government of India to a
particular person
405
Stating therein ‘that with reference to the application of
the addressee on the subject noted, he was directed to say
that after careful consideration the Central Government by
the letter rejects the revision application as being time-
barred’ was treated as a decision of the Central Government.
This calls for no comments because the letter is self-
explanatory. There is nothing in Shri Dube’s letter remotely
comparable with the letter in the aforementioned case. On
the contrary the Central Government informed the Government
of Punjab that the record is returned with the request that
the case may be finalised as indicated in the letter. The
revisional power is the power of the Central Government and
not of the Punjab Government. The decision was left to the
Punjab Government. There was nothing pending with the Punjab
Government for finalisation. Therefore, the High Court was
clearly in error in treating the letter of Shri Dube dated
May 31, 1963 as a decision of the Central Government in
exercise of the power conferred by Sec. 33. There was no
reason for decision nor any occasion for the Central
Government to exercise power under Sec. 33 and therefore, it
is not possible to agree with the High Court that the letter
records the decision of the Central Government under Sec.
33. If the letter of Shri Dube is not a decision of the
Central Government under Sec. 33 of the Act, as a necessary
corollary, the impugned decision must be treated as one
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rendered for the first time in exercise of the revisional
power under Sec. 33 and therefore, it cannot be said to be
one without jurisdiction. In this view of the matter, the
appeal will have to be allowed.
Mr. Bindra, learned counsel who appeared for some of
the respondents made a strenuous effort to persuade us to
look into the equities of the case. In fact, we are wholly
disinclined to undertake this exercise of evaluating facts
or evidence in a petition for a writ of certiorari. Further
in the impugned decision the facts as appearing from the
record and submissions made by the learned counsel for
claimants are exhaustively dealt with and no case for
interference is made out. Only two aspects however may be
referred to.
Harnam Singh claimed to be the owner of 225 acres of
land situated in erstwhile Sind Province. In the first claim
lodged by him, he clearly stated that he was the owner of
300 acres. He then modified it to 225 acres. In neither of
the two claims, he ever suggested that there was a partition
between him and his sons also giving a share to his wife.
The story of partition clearly appears
406
to be an after thought because it is helpful in obtaining
higher allotment. No documentary evidence has been placed on
record to support the case of partition which clearly
appears to have been an after thought. Earlier Jamabandi
entries from Pakistan permitted a negative inference that
there was no partition. The Central Governments while
setting aside the order of the Chief Settlement Commissioner
dated August 21, 1961 recorded the finding that : (i) there
is no writing or deed of partition : (ii) Revenue records
show the name of Shri Harnam Singh alone on the basis of the
sale deed in his exclusive name : (iii) there are no
receipts indicating separate payment of land revenue by any
one of the respondents after alleged partition; (iv) no
objection was taken by the sons at the time of the filing of
the claim by the father; (v) there is no mention of
individuals share in the claim filed by the father; These
are relevant considerations which would certainly throw
doubt on the claim of oral partition alleged to have been
effected by Harnam Singh. Once the allegation of oral
partition is rejected, the respondents are not entitled to
any consideration even on equitable grounds.
In the concluding stages of the arguments the
respondents contended that Harnam Singh has died and his
heirs having not been substituted, the appeal has abated.
There is no merit in this contention. Harnam singh was not
the petitioner before the high Court. He was respondent No.
2. No relief was claimed against him. Further Harnam Singh
was not asked to surrender the land. Petitioners before the
High Court were adversely affected by the impugned decision.
Death of Harnam Singh would therefore, have no impact on
this appeal. Therefore, the contention is rejected.
In view of the above discussion, this appeal is allowed
and the judgment and the order of the learned Single judge
dated October 4, 1966 in Civil Writ No. 1242 of 1965 as also
the judgment and order in L.P.A. No. 384 of 1966 dated May
22, 1969 of the same High Court are quashed and set aside
and the decision of the Central Government dated March 15,
1965 is restored with no order as to costs throughout.
H. S. K. Appeal allowed.
407