Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM KRISSEN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
DIVISIONAL FOREST OFFICERBANKURA DIVISION & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/08/1964
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1965 AIR 625 1965 SCR (1) 1
ACT:
West Bengal Estates Acquisition Act, 1953 (West Bengal Act 1
of 1954) as amended by West Bengal Act (25 of 1957)-Section
5(aa)Estates-Acquisition of-Estates and rights of
intermediaries in estates vesting in State from date
specified in notification by State Government Right to cut
zamindari trees granted by intermediary to third person
whether would also vest in State by virtue of amended
law--construction and validity of amendment.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant had been granted by the Zamindar of Simlapal
in West Bengal a right to cut trees in certain forests of
the zamindari. The exercise of this right was interrupted
by action taken against him under the West Bengal Private
Forests Act, 1948. The appellant filed a writ petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. In the
meantime, the West Bengal Estates Acquisition Act, 1953,
(Act 1 of 1954) was passed. This Act provided that from the
date specified in a notification under section 4 of the Act,
property and interests specified in section 5 of the Act
would vest in the State Government. According to the Forest
Department the right to cut trees enjoyed by the appellant
was within the purview of section 5 of the Act and,
therefore, had become vested in the State Government.
Certain decisions of the Calcutta High Court, however, went
against this interpretation; it was held therein that a
right to cut trees granted by an intermediary to a third
person was not within the terms of section 5. Thereupon the
State Legislature of West Bengal passed Act 25 of 1957 which
by adding section 5(aa) to the Act provided that upon the
due publication of a notification under section 4, on and
from the date of vesting, all lands in any estate comprised
in a forest together with all rights to trees therein or the
produce thereof and held by an intermediary or any other
person shall, notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in any judgment, decree or order of any Court or
Tribunal, vest in the State. The appellant’s writ petition,
coming up for hearing after this amendment, was dismissed.
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An appeal to the Division Bench also failed. Appeal before
the Supreme Court came by virtue of a certificate of fitness
under Article 133 (1) (c) of the Constitution.
The question for consideration was whether the terms of
section 5(aa) were sufficient and apt to provide for the
vesting of the right to cut the trees when such right
belonged, on the date of vesting, not to the intermediary or
zamindar but to another person to whom it had been granted
under a contract with the said intermediary.
HELD : (i) The words "together with" used in section 5(aa),
on the basis of which it was contended by counsel for the
appellant that it was only where the right to the trees
constituted an integral part of the right to the land that a
vesting was effected of the latter right, meant in the
context of the section no more than the expression ’as well
as’ and imported no condition that the right to the trees
should also belong to the owner of the land. Also, it was
not possible to read the words "held by an intermediary
2
or any other person" to mean that they were applicable only
to cases where the entirety of the interest-to the land, to
the trees, and to the produce were vested in a single
person-be he the intermediary or another person. These
words would obviously apply equally to cases where the land
belonged to an intermediary and the right to the trees or to
the produce of the trees to another person. In construing
the section, moreover, the fact that it was amended to
overcome certain decisions rendered under the original
enactment was not an irrelevant factor to be taken into
account. [41-G; 5B-D, 5G].
(ii) From the mere fact that there was no provision in the
Act for compensating the interest of persons like the
appellant, the Court could not hold that such an interest
was not within the vesting section--section 5(aa). The
absence’ of a provision for compensation might render the
vesting section unconstitutional, but it could not detract
from the clear operation of the words used in section 5(aa).
After the passing of the 17th Amendment to the Constitution
and the inclusion of West Bengal Act 1 of 1954 among those
specified in Schedule IX, the absence of a provision for
compensation for the acquisition of the appellant’s rights
would not render the West Bengal Act or the acquisition
thereunder, unconstitutional. [6B; 6E].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 781 to 784
of 1963.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated March 17, 1961 of
the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Original orders Nos.
212, 433, 435 and 436 of 1959 respectively.
D. N. Mukherjee, for the appellant (in C.A. No. 781/63).
N. C. Chatterjee, Ramkrishna Pal, Taraknath Roy and D. N.
Mukherjee, for the appellants (in C.As. Nos. 782-784/63).
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, S. C. Bose and P. K.
Bose, for respondents Nos. 1 to 3 (in C.A. No. 781/63).
B. Sen, S. C. Bose and P. K. Bose, for respondents Nos. 1 to
3 (in C.As. Nos. 782 to 783/63) and respondents (in C.A.
No. 784/63).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ayyangar J. These appeals are before us by virtue of
certificates granted by the High Court under Art. 133(1)(c)
of the Constitution and they raise for consideration the
question of the proper construction of S. 5(aa) of the West
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Bengal Estates Acquisition Act, 1953 (West Bengal Act 1 of
1954) as amended by West Bengal Act 25 of 1957.
The relevant facts in these four appeals are analogous and
they raise the common question of law which we have already
indicated. For the disposal of these appeals it is
sufficient therefore to refer to the facts of any one of
them. We propose to set out those of Civil Appeal 781 of
1963.
3
The Zamindar of Simlapal in the Collectorate of Bankura
entered into a contract with the appellant Ram Krissen Singh
and by a document dated September 3, 1946, granted him the
right to cut the trees, in certain demarcated areas, of
certain forests of the Zamindari on payment of a sum of Rs.
7,131/8/-. Under the terms of the said document the period
during which the appellant was given this right to cut trees
was to end on April 14, 1955. The appellant started the
cutting operations and cut only for, the first few years,
but thereafter action was taken by the Forest Officers of
the State to prevent him from further cutting under the
powers vested in them by the West Bengal Private Forests
Act, 1948. Thereupon, the appellant tiled a petition under
Art. 226 of the Constitution for a writ of certiorari for
quashing the orders passed against him and also for an
injunction restraining the Forest Officers from taking
delivery of possession and from cutting and disposing of the
forests covered by his agreement. By the time the petition
was filed the West Bengal Estates Acquisition Act, 1953 (Act
1 of 1954), (hereafter referred to as the Act) had been
passed and in the counter-affidavit which was filed to this
petition reliance was placed upon its provisions for
contending that the "estate" belonging to the Zamindar in
which the forest lay as well as all the rights to the trees
therein, to whomsoever belonging, had vested in the State
-under S. 5 of the Act by reason of a notification issued by
the State Government under s. 4. By the date the writ
petition came to be heard the West Bengal Legislature had,
in view of certain decisions rendered by the Calcutta High
Court which held that the terms of s. 5 of the Act which
specified the property or interest in property which would
vest in the Government did not include the right to cut
trees in a forest, which had been granted to a third person
by the proprietor or intermediary before the date of the
vesting, amended the said vesting section by introducing S.
5 (aa) to have retrospective effect from the date of the
commencement of the principal Act. Section 5 (aa) read:
"5. Upon the due publication of a notification
under section 4, on and from the date of
vesting(aa) all lands in any estate comprised
in a forest together with all rights to the
trees therein or to the produce thereof and
held by an intermediary or any other person
shall, notwithstanding anything to the
contrary contained in any judgment, decree or
order of any court or Tribunal, vest in the
State’;
4
After this amendment was brought to the notice of the Court
the petitioner was allowed to amend -his writ petition by
adding allegations (a) regarding the construction of the
said section, and ( b) its constitutional validity. The
petition then came on for hearing in December, 1958, and the
learned Single Judge, by his judgment dated December 24,
1958 discharged the rule followcertain earlier decisions of
his on the same point. An appeal filed to the Division
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Bench under the Letters Patent was also dismissed but the
learned Judges granted a certificate under Art. 133(1) (c)
and that is how the appeal is before us.
The first, and possibly the only, question that now calls
for consideration is whether the terms of s. 5 (aa) are
sufficient and apt to provide for the vesting of the right
to cut the trees when such right belonged, on the date of
the vesting, not to the intermediary or Zamindar but to
another person to whom it had been granted under a contract
with the said intermediary. The argument addressed to us by
Mr. Chatterjee-learned counsel for the appellant-was that it
was only the land held or other rights possessed by an
intermediary that became vested in the State and that cl.
(aa) did not deal with those cases where the right to the
trees had been severed from the right to the land and
belonged to a third person on the date of the vesting. For
this purpose learned counsel laid stress on two features of
the clause. The first was the use of the words "together
with" and the second the words "and held by an intermediary
or any other person". Taking up, first, the word "together
with" the submission was that it was only where the right to
the trees constituted an integral part of the right to the
land that a vesting was effected of the latter right and
that where there had been a severance of the two rights it
was only the land that remained in the intermediary that
became vested and not the right to the tree,-,. We feel
unable to accept this argument. We consider that the
expression "together" is obviously used to denote not the
necessity for integrality between the land and the right to
cut trees by way of common ownership but as merely an
enumeration of the items of property which vest in the
State. In the context, the word means no more than the
expression "as well as" and imports no condition that the
right to the trees should also belong to the owner of the
land. It may be added that the words "or to the produce
thereof" occurring next also emphasis what we have just now
pointed out, for if these words are read disjunctively, as
they must, in view of the conjunction "or", the words would
indicate that not merely lands in the estate and the right
to the
5
trees but independently of them the right to the produce of
the trees on the land would also vest in the State.
Coming next to the words "and held by an intermediary"
learned counsel could not justifiably submit an argument
that both the land and the right to the trees should inhere
in the intermediary to attract the operation of the clause,
because the words "held by an intermediary" are followed by
"any other person". Obviously, that other person i.e.,
person other than the intermediary, could have the right
either to the land, a right to the trees or a right to the
produce. By the use of the expression "or any other person"
therefore the legislature could obviously have intended only
a person like the appellant who might not have any right to
the lands which are held by the intermediary but has a right
to the trees in that land. Besides, it is not possible to
read the words "held by an intermediary or any other person"
to mean that they are applicable only to cases where the
entirety of the interest-to the land, to the trees and to
the produce-are vested in a single person-be he the inter-
mediary or another person. These words would obviously
apply equally to cases where the land belongs to an
intermediary and the right to the trees or to the produce of
the trees to another person.
This apart, there is one further aspect Of the matter to
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which also reference might be made. The amendment effected
by the addition of cl. (aa) to s. 5 was admittedly
necessitated by certain decisions of the High Court of
Calcutta which held that where an intermediary had granted a
right to cut trees or to forest produce, the rights so
conferred were unaffected by the vesting provision in s. 5
of the Act as it stood before the amendment. If the
argument now put forward by Mr. Chatterjee is accepted it
would mean that the amendment has achieved no purpose. Un-
doubtedly, if the words of the amendment, on their plain
reading, are insufficient to comprehend the case now on hand
the fact that the legislature intended to overcome a
decision of the High Court could not be any determining
consideration but, if as we find, the words normally bear
that construction, the circumstance that the amendment was
effected with a view to overcome certain decisions rendered
under the original enactment is not an irrelevant factor to
be taken into account.
Mr. Chatterjee next submitted that the scheme of the Act was
the provision of compensation for every interest acquired by
the State by virtue of the vesting under s. 5 and that as
there was no provision in the Act for compensating the
interest of persons
6
like the appellant, the Court should hold that such. an
interest was not within the vesting section-,-,. 5 (aa).
This is, of course, a legitimate argument, and if there had
been any ambiguity in the construction of s. 5 (aa), the
circumstance referred to by learned counsel would certainly
have great weight. But in view of the plain words of S. 5
(aa) which we have discussed earlier, we do not find it
possible to accept the argument. The absence of a provision
for compensation might render the vesting section
unconstitutional, and that indeed was the argument addressed
to the High Court and a matter which we shall immediately
consider, but it cannot detract from the clear operation of
the words used in s. 5 (aa).
A further point that was urged before the High Court was
that the enactment was unconstitutional in that no provision
was made for the award of compensation to persons in the
position of the appellant whose rights to cut trees became
vested in the State. Mr. Chatterjee pointed out that the
learned judges of the High Court had upheld the validity of
the enactment by holding that compensation had, in fact,
been provided. Learned counsel drew our attention to the
provisions quoted and submitted that the learned judges
erred in their construction of these provisions and that, in
fact, no compensation was provided, but this question about
the constitutional validity of the amending Act does not
really fall for consideration because learned counsel for
the appellant did not contest the position that after the
enactment of the 17th Amendment to the Constitution, and the
inclusion of West Bengal Act 1 of 1954 among those specified
in Schedule IX, the absence of a provision for compensation
for the acquisition of the appellant’s rights would not
render the West Bengal Act or the acquisition thereunder
unconstitutional.
These appeals fail but in the circumstances of the case
there will be no order as to costs.
Appeals dismissed.