Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 191 1991
PETITIONER:
GAYA DIN (D) THROUGH LRS. & ORS. ...
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HANUMAN PRASAD (D) THROUGH LRS. & ORS. ...
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/11/2000
BENCH:
S.S.M.Quadri, S.N.Phukan
JUDGMENT:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI, J.
This appeal, by special leave, is from the judgment
and order of the High Court of judicature at Allahabad in
Writ Petition No.1685 of 1975 dated October 20, 1989. The
lis has its origin in the objections filed by the successors
of Sheetal Prasad, the respondents, under the U.P.
Consolidation of Holdings Act, 1953 (for short, the
Consolidation Act) at the time of Partal against the
successors of Bala Prasad and Sadhau, the appellants, who
were recorded as Khatedars of khatas in dispute. They are
Khata Nos. 2,11,21,23 which, comprise of bhumidhari lands,
khata Nos. 28,39 which consist of sirdari lands of village
Akathi and khata No.8 which is a bhumidhari land of village
Chainpur. To appreciate the scope of the controversy and
the facts giving rise to it, it would be helpful to notice
the genealogy of the family of the parties : PEDIGREE
Matai Manni Gokul (died issueless) Bala Pd. Sadhau Sheetal
Pd. Parmeshwar Chandrika =Smt.Sheoraja (died (died
issueless) issueless)
Gayadin Brindaban Mathura Gaya Hanuman Bhikhari A1 A2
A4 A5 R1 =Smt.Sukhdei R2 =Smt.Sheo Devi A3 Jagannath R3
[A represents appellant and R represents respondent]
In the objections filed by them, the respondents
claimed that they and the appellants are the members of
Joint Hindu family and that the entries in the names of
appellants are in representative capacity for all the
members of the joint family and, therefore, their names
should also be recorded as the co-sharers along with the
names of the appellants. This claim was contested by the
appellants denying existence of joint family and asserting
that they are holding the khatas in their individual
capacity. On considering the evidence adduced by the
parties the Consolidation Officer held that all the khatas
did not belong to a common ancestor and that it was not
shown that they were acquired for the whole family from the
joint family funds by the head of the family so he dismissed
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the objections on December 23, 1969. The respondents herein
carried the matter in appeal before the Settlement Officer
Consolidation. On June 4, 1970, he allowed the appeal and
set aside the said order of the Consolidation Officer. But
the Deputy Director of Consolidation allowed the revision
filed by the appellants and remanded the case to the
Settlement Officer Consolidation on July 6, 1971. By order
dated September 22, 1973, the Settlement Officer held that
the khatas in question were joint Hindu family property and
all the parties were co-sharers who were entitled to 1/6th
share each. The appellants again carried the matter in
revision before the Deputy Director of Consolidation who set
aside the order of the Settlement Officer holding that the
khatas in question are held by the appellants individually
and allowed the revision on April 7, 1975. The respondents
assailed the validity of that order before the High Court in
the writ petition. By the impugned order the High Court
quashed the said order of the Deputy Director of
Consolidation dated April 7, 1975 and restored the order of
the Settlement Officer Consolidation dated September 22,
1973. The appellants are thus before us in appeal.
Mr.V.K.S.Choudhary, learned senior counsel for the
appellants, argued that the High Court ought not to have
interfered with the order of the Deputy Director of
Consolidation under Article 226 of the Constitution and that
in any event the tenancy rights were inherited not in
accordance with the personal law of the parties but in
accordance with the provisions of the U.P. Tenancy Act,
1939. According to Mr.Choudhary, the Joint Hindu family
could not have held the tenancy rights even if the lands
were that of Manni, the common ancestor, and on his death
the sons would have become co-tenants. He contended that
under Sections 3-B and 3-C of the United Provinces
Agricultural Tenants [Acquisition of Privileges] Act, 1953
(for short, the Acquisition Act) unless an unrecorded co-
tenant got a declaration, he could not claim to be a co-
tenant (See: Section 7-A). The respondents not having
obtained such a declaration, are not entitled to be recorded
as sharers in the khatas. Mr.Anil Kumar Gupta, learned
counsel for the respondents, submitted that the contentions
now raised under the Acquisition Act were not urged before
any of the Authorities or the High Court so these
contentions could not be raised for the first time before
this Court; that the only question which was under the
consideration of the Authorities as well as the High Court
was whether the parties were members of the Joint Hindu
family and the khatas in question were held for their
benefit, which was answered in favour of the respondents by
the High Court. A perusal of the impugned order of the High
Court as well as the orders of the Authorities under the
Consolidation Act, shows that the appellants did not urge at
any earlier stage, the contentions now raised before us
under Sections 3B and 3C of the Acquisition Act, therefore,
we are not inclined to deal with the said contentions. The
only point which remains to be considered is the controversy
which was raised and decided by all the Authorities as well
as by the High Court and that is : whether the parties are
members of joint Hindu family and the khatas in question are
held for all the members of the joint Hindu family. Now, we
shall advert to the contentions of the appellants that the
High Court ought not to have interfered with the findings of
facts recorded by the Deputy Director of Consolidation whose
powers under the amended provision of Section 48 of the
Consolidation Act are wide enough to upset or reverse the
findings of facts recorded by the Settlement Officer
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Consolidation. The High Court, it was argued, erred in
quashing the order of the Deputy Director on the ground that
he unjustifiably interfered with order of the Settlement
Officer Consolidation when there was no error apparent on
the face of the record. The learned counsel for the
respondents has submitted that the powers of the revisional
authority -- the Deputy Director -- under amended Section 48
are wider than the unamended Section 48 which was analogous
to Section 115 C.P.C.; but even so the powers cannot be
equated to the powers of the Court of appeal so interference
with the order of the Settlement Officer Consolidation by
the Deputy Director on re-appreciating the evidence, was
illegal and was rightly quashed by the High Court. There
can be no doubt that under amended Section 48 of the
Consolidation Act, the revisional power of the Director of
Consolidation is not confined to errors of jurisdiction as
was the position under the unamended provision. The power
of the revisional authority now extends to satisfying
himself as to the regularity, correctness, legality or
propriety of any order other than an interlocutory order.
It is well-settled that conceptually the powers of a
revisional authority, even if couched in wide language,
cannot be equated with the powers of an appellate authority.
The scope of the powers of the Deputy Director under the
amended provision came up for consideration of this Court in
Ram Dular Vs. Deputy Director of Consolidation, Jaunpur and
Ors. [1994 Supp. (2) SCC 198]. It was observed that in
considering the correctness, legality or propriety of the
order or correctness of the proceedings or regularity under
Section 48 of the Consolidation Act, the Deputy Director of
Consolidation could not assume the jurisdiction of the
original authority as a fact-finding authority by
appreciating for himself of those facts de novo; he had to
consider whether the legally admissible evidence had been
considered by the authorities in recording a finding of fact
or law or the conclusion reached by them was based on
evidence or any patent illegality or impropriety had been
committed or there was any procedural irregularity, which
would go to the root of the matter. That judgment was
relied on in a recent judgment of this Court in Seshmani and
Anr. Vs. Deputy Director of Consolidation, district Basti,
U.P. and Ors. [2000 (2) SCC 523]. It is true in Sheo Nand
and Ors. Vs. Deputy Director of Consolidation, Allahabad
and Ors. [AIR 2000 SC 1141], this Court observed :
Section 48 of the Consolidation Act gives very wide powers
to the Deputy Director. It enables him either suo motu on
his own motion or on the application of any person to
consider the propriety, legality, regularity and correctness
of all the proceedings held under the Act and to pass
appropriate orders. These powers have been conferred on the
Deputy Director in the widest terms so that the claims of
the parties under the Act may be effectively adjudicated
upon and determined so as to confer finality to the rights
of the parties and the Revenue Records may be prepared
accordingly.
But in the very next para the amplitude and the extent
of the powers have been qualified thus : Normally, the
Deputy Director, in exercise of his powers, is not expected
to disturb the findings of fact recorded concurrently by the
Consolidation Officer and the Settlement Officer
(Consolidation) but where the findings are perverse, in the
sense that they are not supported by the evidence brought on
record by the parties or that they are against the weight of
evidence. It would be the duty of the Deputy Director to
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scrutinise the whole case again so as to determine the
correctness, legality or propriety of the orders passed by
the authorities subordinate to him.
Thus, it is clear that notwithstanding the fact that
Section 48 has been couched in wide terms, it only permits
interference where the findings of the subordinate authority
are perverse in the sense that they are not supported by the
evidence brought on record or they are against the law or
where they suffer from the vice of procedural irregualrity.
Now, reverting to the facts of this case, the Settlement
Officer has correctly framed the questions; whether the
parties are members of joint Hindu family and the property
in dispute is joint Hindu family property. He discussed the
documents of 1905, 1906, 1911, 1916, 1919 and 1920 executed
in favour of various members of the family including minors
to show that the family acquired properties in the names of
the family members including minors. He also referred to
Khewat of 1924 and 1932 to arrive at the conclusion of
existence of joint family. Another fact which was taken
into consideration was that Hanuman Prasad entered into
partnership agreement in June 1948 which shows that Hanuman
Prasad was a partner and Gaya Din was an honorary manager.
It is in that background he referred to Gaya Din depositing
ten times revenue in 1950 for acquisition of Bhumidari right
in the lands covered by the Khatas in dispute for the
benefit of the joint family. He has also relied upon
possession of plots irrigation deposits, entries in Kanpur
plots, printing of invitation cards by the family to support
the conclusion of the jointness of the family. It was the
cumulative effect of all these factors that made the
Settlement Officer Consolidation to arrive at the conclusion
that the family was joint and that the khatas were
maintained in the names of members of different branches of
the family. He thus concluded that the eight khatas in
question were joint Hindu family property and all the
parties were co-owners thereof. A perusal of the order of
the Deputy Director of Consolidation shows that nowhere he
pointed out that the findings recorded by the Settlement
Officer Consolidation were perverse or contrary to the
evidence or not supported by evidence. What all appears is
that in respect of certain facts, the Deputy Director
arrived at the conclusion different from that reached by the
Settlement Officer Consolidation but that by itself, in our
view, does not under Section 48 of the Consolidation Act
clothe the Deputy Director with the power to disturb the
findings of fact recorded by the Settlement Officer
Consolidation. The High Court in the impugned order noted :
The Settlement Officer Consolidation on considering of
Khewat, Annexure-1 as also application for mutation on
behalf of Mathura Prasad and Ganga Krishna minor sons of
Sadhau, opposite party No.1 having applied for their
mutation in the joint khewat Annexure-2 and other documents
together with other evidence rightly held the family to be
joint and no partition had taken place. It was also
pointed out that the Deputy director of Consolidation lost
sight of the fact that there was no iota of evidence to
indicate that the opposite parties made self- acquisition of
any land. It was in that context that the High Court
observed that since the evidence on record and on appraisal
of law, the Settlement Officer Consolidation did not commit
any error apparent on the face of the record which could
have been disturbed by the Deputy Director of Consolidation.
It was further pointed out that the findings of the Deputy
Director of Consolidation suffered from non-consideration of
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oral and documentary evidence which was taken into account
by the Settlement Officer Consolidation and was erroneous on
the face of record as such the same could be disturb in
exercise of the jurisdiction under Article 226 of the
Constitution. The High Court has also noted that the order
of the Deputy Director was based on improper consideration
of evidence and wrong application of well- settled principle
of law about presumption of jointness in a joint Hindu
family and quashed the order of the Deputy Director of
Consolidation. We find no illegality in the impugned order
of the High Court. Mr.Choudhary has next contended that
even assuming that Manni was the Head of the family and held
the tenancy rights under the U.P Tenancy Act the succession
is not according to Hindu Law but under the provisions of
the Tenancy Act and that in any event the claim that the
joint family possessed tenancy rights cannot be accepted and
in support of this contention he relied upon the judgment of
the Full Bench of the Allahabad High Court in Chotey Lal &
Ors. vs. Jhandey Lal & Anr. [1972 A.W.R. 225]. There
can be no controversy about the contention that the
succession of the tenancy rights, special rights created
under the Act, can only be under the provisions of those
Acts. On Mannis death his sons Bala Prasad, Sadhau and
Sheetal Prasad became entitled to 1/3rd each. But they
continued as joint Hindu family of which their children also
became members. It is a well-settled principle of Hindu Law
that the joint and undivided family is the normal condition
of Hindu society but it is not a juristic person as such it
cannot hold any property independent of the members. On a
perusal of the aforementioned judgment of Full Bench of
Allahabad High Court, we approve the following proposition
laid down by it : That the members of the joint family
collectively own the coparcenary property. Each member has
an interest in such property, though his interest becomes
definite on partition. Till then, it is an undivided
interest. The view express in Mahabir Singh and the other
cases mentioned above, that the members were not the tenants
of the holding because they had no interest in it, is, with
respect, fallacious. In law, the members of the joint Hindu
family together become the tenants of the holding. The
coparcenary body as such, and as an entity apart from its
members, does not own property. The property does not vest
in the coparcenary but in its members, though
collectively.
But this position far from supporting the claim of the
appellants negatives their claim. As the khatas in question
which now comprise of Bhumidari and Sirdari lands, could not
be held in the name of the joint family which is not a
juristic person, they stand in the names of the members of
different branches of the family and the khatedars ought to
be taken as holding collectively for the benefit of all the
members of the family. For the above reasons, the judgment
and order of the High Court does not suffer from any
illegality to warrant interference by this Court. The
appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.