Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COLLECTOR OF BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NUSSERWANJI RATTANJI MISTRI & OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/02/1955
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BOSE, VIVIAN
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
CITATION:
1955 AIR 298 1955 SCR (1)1311
ACT:
Land revenue-Assessment-Bight of Government to levy-Foras
tcnure-Incidents-Foras Land Act (Bombay Act VI o@ 1851), s.
2Land acquisition, effect of-Land Acquisition Act (VI of
1857), s. 8 -Crown Grants Act (XV of 1857), s. 3-Scope of-
Bombay City Land Bevenue Act (Bombay Act II of 1876).
HEADNOTE:
In the island of Bombay certain lands were held on a tenure
known as "Foras". Under s. 2 of Bombay Act VI of 1851 the
occupants were entitled to hold the lands subject only to
the payment of revenue then payable. Between 1864 and 1867
the Government of India acquired these lands under the
provisions of the Land Acquisition Act (VI of 1857). On 22-
11-1938 the Governor-General sold them to certain persons
under whom the present respondents claimed. In April 1942
the appellant acting under the Bombay City Land Revenue Act
(Bombay Act II of 1876) issued notices to the respondents
proposing to levy assessment on the lands at the rates
mentioned therein. The respondents thereupon instituted two
suits disputing the right of the appellant to assess the
lands to revenue. They contended that under the Foras Land
Act the occupants had acquired the right to hold the lands
on payment of revenue not exceeding what was then payable,
that the right to levy even that assessment was extinguished
when the Government acquired the lands under the Land
Acquisition Act, that the Governor-General having conveyed
the lands absolutely under the sale deed dated 22-11-1938
the respondents were entitled to hold them revenue-free and
that even if revenue was payable it could not exceed what
was payable under the Foras Land Act.
Held, (i) that under the Foras Land Act (VI of 1851) the
occupants of Foras lands acquired a specific right to hold
them on payment of assessment not exceeding what was then
payable.
(ii) that the right of the Government to levy assessment was
not the subject-matter of the land acquisition proceedings
and that the effect of those proceedings was only to
extinguish the rights of the occupants in the lands and to
vest them absolutely in the Government.
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(iii) that where there is an absolute sale by the Crown
it does not necessarily import that the land is conveyed
revenuefree.
The question is one of construction of the grant. The rule
is that a grantee from the Crown gets only what is granted
by the 168
1312
deed and nothing passes by implication. When the grant is
embodied in a deed the question ultimately reduces itself to
a determination of what was granted thereunder. Section 3
of the Crown Grants Act (XV of 1895) that "all provisions,
restrictions conditions and limitations over shall take
effect according to their tenor" does not apply when the
question is as to the liability to pay revenue.
(iv)that the Foras tenure became extinguished when the lands
were acquired under the Land Acquisition proceedings and it
was incapable of coming back to life when the lands were
sold on 22-11-1938 and the respondents cannot claim a right
to pay assessment only at the rate at which it was payable
under the Foras Land Act.
Goswammi Shri Kamala Vahooji v. Collector of Bombay ([1937]
L.R. 64 I.A. 334), Shapurji Jivanji v. The Collector of
Bombay ([1885] I.L.E. 9 Bom. 483, 488), Naoroji Beramji v.
Rogers (4 Bom. H.C.R. 1), Deputy Collector, Calicut
Division v. Aiyavu Pillay ([1911] 9 I.C. 341), Dadoba v.
Collector of Bombay ([1901] I.L.R. 25 Bom. 714), Thakur
Jagannoth Baksh Singh v. The United Provinces ([1946] F.L.J.
88) and Collector of Bombay v. Municipal Corpration of the
City of Bombay and others ([1952] S.C.R. 43), referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 74 of 1952.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Decree dated
the 10th November 1948 of the High Court of Judicature at
Bombay in Appeal from Original Decree No. 274 of 1945
arising out of the decree dated the 17th March 1945 of the
Court of Revenue Judge, Bombay in Suits Nos. 7 and 23 of
1943.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India (Porus A. Mehta,
with him), for the appellant.
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India and Jamshedji
Kanga,, (R. J. Kolah and Rajinder Narain, with them), for
the respondents.
1955. February 28. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-The point for decision in this appeal
is as to the liability of certain lands situated within the
City of Bombay to be assessed to revenue under the Bombay
City Land Revenue Act No. II of 1876. These lands were
originally known as Foras lands, and the rights of the
occupants of
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those lands were settled by Bombay Act No. VI of 1851,
called the Foras Act. What these rights are, is a matter in
controversy between the parties, and will be presently
considered. Between 1864 and 1867 the Government acquired
these lands for the purpose of the B.B. C.I. Railway under
the provisions of Land Acquisition Act No. VI of 1857. On
22-11-1938 these lands, being no longer required for the
purpose of the Railway, were sold by the Governor-General to
Lady Pochkhanawalla and others as joint tenants under a
deed, Exhibit A. On 28-3-1939 the survivor of the purchasers
under Exhibit A conveyed the lands in trust under Exhibit B,
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and the respondents are the trustees appointed under that
deed.
In April 1942 the appellant acting under the provisions of
Bombay Act No. II of 1876, issued notices to the respondents
proposing to levy assessment on the lands at the rates
mentioned therein, and calling for their representation. In
their reply, the respondents denied the right of the
appellant to assess the lands to revenue, and followed it up
by instituting two suits before the Revenue Judge for
establishing their rights. In their plaints, they alleged
that under the provisions of the Foras Act the maximum
assessment leviable on the lands was 9 reas per burga, and
that the Government had no right to enhance it; that the
effect of the land acquisition proceedings between 1864 and
1867 was to extinguish the right of the State to levy even
this assessment, and that further, having purchased the
properties absolutely from the Governor-General under
Exhibit A. they were entitled to bold them without any
liability to pay revenue thereon. They accordingly prayed
for a declaration that the Government had no right to levy
any assessment on these lands, or, in the alternative, that
such assessment should not exceed what was payable under
Bombay Act No. VI of 1851. The appellant contested the
suit. The Revenue Judge held that as a result of the land
acquisition proceedings between 1864 and 1867, the lands
vested in the Government freed from any liability to pay
assessment, and that when the Governor-General transferred
them under
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Exhibit A without reserving the right to assess them, the
purchasers had the right to hold them without any liability
to pay revenue. He accordingly granted a declaration that
the appellant had no right to levy assessment, and -that the
notices issued by him under Act No. II of 1876 were illegal.
On appeal by the defendants to the High Court of Bombay, it
was held by Chagla, C.J., Bhagwati, J. concurring, that Act
No. VI of 1851 imposed a specific limit on the right of the
Government to levy assessments on the lands in question,
that, further, by reason of the land acquisition proceedings
the right of the Provincial Government to levy assessment
even within the limits prescribed by Act No. VI of 1851 was
extinguished, and that when the lands were transferred by
the Central Government to Lady Pochkhanawalla and others,
they got them as revenue-free lands. In the result, the
appeal was dismissed. This appeal by special leave is
directed against this decision.
The statutory authority under which the appellant seeks to
levy assessment on the lands is section 8 of Bombay Act No.
11 of 1876, and it is as follows:
"It shall be the duty of the Collector, subject to the
orders of Government, to fix and to levy the assessment for
land revenue.
When there is no right on the part of the superior holder in
limitation of the right of Government to assess, the
assessment shall be fixed at the discretion of the Collector
subject to the control of Government.
When there is a right on the part of the superior bolder in
limitation of the right of Government, in consequence of a
specific limit to assessment having been established and
preserved, the assessment shall not exceed such specific
limit".
It was on the footing that the respondents were ’superior
holders’ as defined in the Act, that the appellant issued
notices to them in April 1942. In their reply notices and
in the plaints, the respondents did not dispute that
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position, but only contended in terms of section 8 that they
had a specific right in limitation of the right of the
Government to assess the
1315
lands; and the entire controversy in the Courts below was
whether they had established that right. No contention was
raised that they were not superior holders as defined in the
Act, and that, in consequence, no assessment could be
imposed on the lands under section 8 of the Act.
In the argument before us, the contention was sought to be
raised for the first time by the learned Attorney-General
that the proceedings taken by the Collector under section 8
were incompetent, as that section would apply only to lands
held by superior holders, that the definition of ’superior’
holier’ in section 3 (4) as meaning "the person having the
highest title under the Provincial Government to any land in
the City of Bombay" would take in only persons who held on a
derivative tenure from the Government, that persons who
acquired lands from the Government under an outright sale
could not be described as ’superior holders’ within section
3 (4), and that the lands held by the respondents were
therefore outside the operation of section 8.
On behalf of the appellant, the learned Solicitor General
objected to this question being allowed to be raised at this
stage of the proceedings, as that would involve
investigation of questions of fact and of law, such as
whether under the tenures in the City of Bombay, owners held
the lands as superior holders, whether under Indian
jurisprudence what was paid by the occupier of land was rent
or revenue, whether the prerogative right of the Crown to
assess lands subsisted in the Presidency Towns of Calcutta,
Bombay and Madras and several other questions, for the
decision of which there were not sufficient materials. This
objection must be upheld. In view of the fact that the
respondents have, at all stages, claimed immunity from
assessment on the basis of section 8, we do not consider
that it would be proper to allow them now to change their
front, and take up a stand wholly inconsistent with what
they had taken, when that involves an investigation into
facts which has not been made. We must, therefore, proceed
on the footing that the respondents are ‘superior holders’
as defined
1316
in section 3 (4) of Act No. 11 of 1876, and that their
rights are to be determined in accordance with sec-
tion 8 of the Act.
Construing that section, the Privy Council laid down in
Goswamini’ Shri Kamala Vahooji v. Collector of Bombay(1) two
propositions: that though the language of the section would
more appropriately apply when the dispute was as to the
quantum of assessment’, the right to levy it not being
itself controverted, it was open to the superior holder
under this section to plead and prove that the State had no
right to levy any assessment; and that the burden was on the
person who pleaded a limitation on the right of the State to
assess, to clearly and unequivocally establish it. It is,
therefore, open to the respondents to plead that the lands
are wholly exempt from revenue; but the onus of making it
jut lies heavily on them.
The learned Attorney-General has sought to establish a right
in the respondents in limitation of the right of the
appellant to assess the lands on three grounds: (1) the
Foras Act No. VI of 1851, (2) the land acquisition
proceedings under Act No. VI of 1857, and (3) the sale deed,
Exhibit A. Taking first the Foras Act: For a correct
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appreciation of its provisions, it is necessary to refer -Co
the history of the lands, which are dealt with therein. The
Island of Bombay once formed part of the Portuguese Domi-
nions in India. In 1661 when Princess Infant Catherine was
married to King Charles 11 of England, it was ceded by the
King of Portugal to the British Crown as dowry, and by a
Royal Charter dated 27th March 1668 King Charles 11 granted
it to the East India Company. At that time the Island
consisted only of the Fort and the town, and "outside the
walls of the town it was scarcely more than rock and marsh
which became a group of islands every day on high tide".
Vide Shapurji Jivanji v. The Collector of Bombay(1). It
appears from Warden’s Report on the Landed Tenures in Bombay
and Le Mesurier’s Report on the Foras lands, that during the
18th Century the East India Company started
(1) (1937) L.R. 64 I.A. 334.
(2) [1885] I.L.R. 9 Bom. 483, 488,
1317
reclaiming these lands, and invited the inhabitants to
cultivate them, at first without payment of any assessment
and subsequently on favourable rates. These payments were
called "Foras". The meaning of this word is thus explained
by Westropp, J. in his note at page 40 in Naoroji Beramji v.
Rogers(1):-
" foras’ is derived from the Portuguese word fora (Latine
foras, from foris a door), signifying outside. It here
indicates the rent or revenue derived from outlying lands.
The whole island of Bombay fell under that denomination when
under Portuguese rule, being then a mere outlying dependency
of Bassein. Subsequently the term foras was, for the most
part, though perhaps not quite exclusively, limited to the
new salt batty ground reclaimed from the sea, or other waste
ground lying outside the Fort, Native Town, and other the
more ancient settled and cultivated grounds in the island,
or to the quitrent arising from that new salt batty ground
and outlying ground".
Thus, the salt batty lands reclaimed from the sea came to be
known as Foras lands by association with the assessments
payable thereon called "Foras". The nature of the interest
which the occupants had in the Foras lands was the subject
of considerable debate in the beginning of the 19th Century.
In 1804, the Company resumed some of the Foras lands for
settling persons displaced in the Town area, and that
resulted in a suit by one Sheik Abdul Ambly, wherein the
right of the Company to resume the lands was challenged.
The action failed, the Court upholding the claim of the
Company to resume them, but at the same time, it observed
that its action in dispossessing the occupants would "appear
and be felt as a grievous hardship, if not an open and
downright injury". Vide Warden’s Report on the Landed
Tenures of Bombay, pages 60 and 61. Thereafter, the Company
had the matter further investigated, and there were reports
on the subject by Warden in 1814 and Le Mesurier in 1843.
And finally the Company decided to recognise
(1) 4 Boni. H.C.R. 1.
1318
the rights of the ’Occupants, and that resulted in the
enactment of Act VI of 1851.
The relevant provisions of the Act may now be noticed. The
preamble to the Act states that,
"Whereas the East India Company are legally entitled to the
freehold reversion of the several lands heretofore paying a
render called foras, the outline whereof is delineated in a
plan and numbered 1, subject to certain tenancies therein at
will, or from year to year; whereas it is considered
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expedient as of grace and favour that the rights of the said
East India Company in all of the lands included in the said
plan should be extinguished, save as hereinafter mentioned.
It is enacted as follows:"
Section 2 enacts that:
"From and after the said 1st day of July, the rights of the
said Company in all of the said lands mentioned in the said
plan No. 1, except those mentioned in the said plan No. 2,
shall be extinguished in favour of the persons who shall
then hold the same respectively as the immediate rent-payers
to the said Company, saving the rents now severally payable
in respect of such lands, which shall continue payable and
recoverable by distress, or by any means by which land
revenue in Bombay is or shall be recoverable, under any Act
or Regulation Section 4 provides:
"Nothing herein contained shall exempt such lands from being
liable-to any further general taxes on land in Bombay "
According to the appellant, the effect of these provisions
was to grant the lands to the occupants on a permanent
tenure, heritable and alienable, but not further to grant
them on a permanent assessment. Reliance was also placed on
the decision in Shapurji Jivanji v. The Collector of
Bombay(1), where it was held generally that the Government
had the right under section 8 of the Act to enhance the
assessments on Foras lands. There is some support for this
contention in the provisions of the Act. The preamble
(1) [1885] I.L.R. 9 Bom. 483, 488.
1319
expressly recites that the occupants were tenants at will or
from year to year, and that the reversion was with the East
India Company. One consequence of that was that the Company
had the right to eject the occupants. Now, what the Company
did under the Act was to give up that right as a matter of
grace, because, as already mentioned, it would appear to
have invited them to settle on the lands and cultivate them,
and it did that by extinguishing its reversion as landlord.
In other words, it agreed to confer on the tenants the
status of owners of lands. If that was all the scope of Act
No. VI of 1851, it could not be doubted that the rights of
the State to enhance the assessments would not be affected,
because ownership of land does not per se carry with it an
immunity from enhancement of assessment in exercise of
sovereign rights, and occupants of Foras lands cannot claim
to be in a better position by reason of the Act than owners
of lands in ryotwari tracts, the assessments on which are
liable to periodic revision. But what is against the
appellant is that section 2 does not stop with merely
extinguishing the reversionary rights of the Company. It
goes further, and saves expressly "the rents now severally
payable in respect of such lands", rent being used here in
the sense of assessment, and adds "which shall continue to
be payable". Now, the contention of the respondents is that
those words conferred on the Government a right to recover
only the assessment which was then payable, and that there
was thus a limitation on its right to enhance it. It is
common ground that the assessment payable on these lands at
that time was 9 reas per burga, and Exhibit N shows that it
was at that rate that the assessment was collected from 1858
until the lands were acquired by the Government in land
acquisition proceedings. It is accordingly contended for
the respondents that under the Act, the Government could not
claim anything more than 9 reas per burga as assessment on
the lands.
It is urged for the appellant that the words "now severally
payable" could not be construed as impos-
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169
1320
ing a limitation on the right of the Government to enhance
the assessment, as they occur in a saving clause, the scope
of which was to reserve the rights of the Company and not to
confer on the occupants rights in addition to what the body
of the section had granted to them. It is true that the
setting in which these words occur is more appropriate for
reserving rights in favour of the Company than for declaring
any in favour of the occupants. But to adopt the
construction contended for by the appellant would be to
render the words "now severally payable" and "which shall
continue to be payable" wholly meaningless. Notwithstanding
that the drafting is inartistic, the true import of the
clause unmistakably is that while, on the one hand, the
right of the Government to recover the assessment is saved,
it is, on the other hand, limited to the amount then payable
by the occupants. The contention of the respondents that
under the Foras Act they acquired a specific right to hold
the lands on payment of assessment not exceeding what was
then payable, must, therefore, be accepted
We have next to decide what effect the proceedings taken by
the Government under the Land Acquisition Act No. VI of 1857
during the years 1864 to 1867 have on the rights of the
parties. Section VIII of the Act is as follows:
"When the Collector or other officer has made an award or
directed a reference to arbitration, be may take immediate
possession of the land which shall thenceforward be vested
absolutely in the Government, free from all other estates,
rights, titles and interests".
The contention of the respondents which has found favour
with the Courts below is that under that section the effect
of the vesting of the lands in the Government was to
extinguish whatever interests were previously held over
them, that the right of the Government to levy assessment
was such an interest, and that it was also extinguished. It
is argued that when lands are acquired under the Act, the
valuation that is made is of all the interests subsisting
thereon, including the
1321
rights of the Crown to assess the lands, as well as the
interests of the claimants therein, that what is paid to the
owners is not the full value of the lands but the value of
their interests therein, deduction being made of the value
of the right of the Government to assess from out of the
full value, and that, in effect, there was an award of
compensation for the right to assess, and that, therefore,
that right equally with the rights of the claimants over the
lands would be extinguished. One of the awards has been
marked as Exhibit P, and the respondents rely on the
recitals therein that the compensation to the claimants was
"for their interest in the said lands". The award, it must
be mentioned, directs the Government to pay the claimants
the amounts specified therein, but contains no provision for
payment of any sum as compensation to the Government for its
right to assess the lands; nor does it even value that
right. But the respondents contended that the Government
being the authority to pay must be deemed to have paid
itself, and that, in any event, if they were entitled to
compensation, their failure to claim it could not affect the
result, which was that the right to levy assessment would be
extinguished.
We are unable to accept this contention. When the
Government acquires lands under the provisions of the Land
Acquisition Act, it must be for a public purpose, and with a
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view to put them to that purpose, the Government acquires
the sum total of all private interests subsisting in them.
If the Government has itself an interest in the land, it has
only to acquire the other interests outstanding therein, so
that it might be in a position to pass it on absolutely for
public user. In the Matter of the Land Acquisition Act: The
Government of Bombay v. Esupali Salebhai(1) Batchelor, J.
observed:
"In other words Government, as it seems to me, are not
debarred from acquiring and paying for the only outstanding
interests merely because the Act, which primarily
contemplates all interests as held outside Government,
directs that the entire compen-
(1) [1909] I.L.R. 34 Bom. 618, 686.
1322
sation based upon the market value of the whole of land,
must be distributed among the claimants". There, the
Government claimed ownership of the land on which there
stood buildings belonging to the claimants, and it was held
that the Government was bound to acquire and pay only for
the superstructure, as it was already the owner of the site.
Similarly in Deputy Collector, Calicut Division v. Aiyavu
Pillay(1), Wallis, J. (as he then was) observed:
’It is, in my opinion, clear that the Act does not
contemplate or provide for the acquisition of any interest
which already belongs to Government in land which is being
acquired under the Act, but only for the acquisition of such
interests in the land as do not already belong to the
Government".
With these observations, we are in entire agreement. When
Government possesses an interest in land which is the
subject of acquisition under the Act, that interest is
itself outside such acquisition, because there can be no
question of Government acquiring what is its own. An
investigation into the nature and value of that interest
will no doubt be necessary for determining the compensation
payable for the interest outstanding in the claimants, but
that would not make it the subject of acquisition. The
language of section VIII of Act No. VI of 1857 also supports
this construction. Under that section, the lands vest in
the Government "free from all other estates, rights, titles
and interests", which must clearly mean other than those
possessed by the Government. It is on this
understanding of the section that the award, Exhibit p, is
framed. The scheme of it is that the interests of the
occupants are ascertained and valued, and the Government is
-directed to pay the compensation fixed for them. There is
no valuation of the right of the Government to levy
assessment on the lands, and there is no award of
compensation therefor.
We have so far assumed with the respondents that the right
of the Government to levy assessment is an interest in land
within the meaning of section VIII
(1) [1911] 9 I-C-341.
1323
of Act VI of 1857. But is this assumption wellfounded? We
think not. In its normal acceptation, "interest" means one
or more of those rights which go to make up "ownership". It
will include for example, mortgage, lease, charge, easement
and the like. but the right to impose a tax on land is a
prerogative right of the Crown, paramount to the ownership
over the land and outside it. Under the scheme of the Land
Acquisition Act, what is acquired is only the ownership over
the lands, or the inferior rights comprised therein.
Section 3(b) of the Land Acquisition Act No. I of 1894
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defines a "person interested" as including "all persons
claiming an interest in compensation to be made on account
of the acquisition of land under this Act, and a person
shall be deemed to be interested in land if he is interested
in an easement affecting the land". Section 9 requires that
notices should be given to all persons who are interested in
the land. Under section 11, the Collector has to value the
land, and apportion the compensation among the claimants
according to their interest in the land. Under section 16,
when the Collector make an award "he may take possession of
the land which shall thereupon vest absolutely in the
Government free from all encumbrance". The word "en-
cumbrance" in this section can only mean interests in
respect of which a compensation was made under section 11,
or could have been claimed. It cannot include the right of
the Government to levy assessment on the lands. The
Government is not a "person interested" within the
definition in section 3 (b), and, as already stated, the Act
does not contemplate its interest being valued or
compensation being awarded therefor.
It is true that there is in Act No. VI of 1857 nothing
corresponding to section 3(b) of Act No. I of 1984, but an
examination of the provisions of Act No. VI of 1857 clearly
shows that the subject-matter of acquisition under that Act
was only ownership over the lands or its constituent rights
and not the right of the Government to levy assessment. The
provisions relating to the issue of notices to persons
interested
1324
and the apportionment of compensation among them are
substantially the same. Moreover, under section VIII the
Government is to take the lands free from all other
"estates, rights, title and interest", and "interest" must,
in the context, be construed ejusdem generis with "estates"
etc., as meaning right over lands, of the character of, but
not amounting to an estate, and cannot include the
prerogative right to assess the lands. It must accordingly
be held that the effect of the land acquisition proceedings
was only to extinguish the rights of the occupants in the
lands and to vest them absolutely in the Government, that
the right of the latter to levy assessment was not the
subject-matter of those proceedings, and that if after the
award the lands were not assessed to revenue, it was because
there could be no question of the Government levying
assessment on its own lands.
Then there remains the question whether the sale deed,
Exhibit A, imposes any limitation on the right of the Crown
to assess the lands. The deed conveys the lands to the
purchasers absolutely "with all rights, easements and
appurtenances whatsoever" to be held "for ever". It does
not, however, recite that they are to be held revenue-free.
But it is argued for the respondents that where there is an
absolute sale by the Crown as here, that necessarily imports
that the land is conveyed revenue-free; and section 3 of the
Crown Grants Act No. XV of 1895 and certain observations in
Dadoba v. Collector of Bombay(1) were relied on as
supporting this contention. Section 3 of Act No. XV of 1895
is as follows:
"All provisions restrictions, conditions and limitations
over contained in any such grant or transfer as aforesaid
shall be valid and take effect according to their tenor any
rule of law, statute or enactment of the Legislature to the
contrary notwithstanding".
The contention is that as the grant is of a freehold estate
without any reservation it must, to take effect according to
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its tenor, be construed as granting exemption from
assessment to revenue. But that will be extending the
bounds of section 3 beyond its con-
(1) (1901] I.L.R. 25 Bom. 714,
1325
tents. The object of the Act as declared in the preamble is
to remove certain doubts "as to the extent and operation of
the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, and, as to the power of
the Crown to impose limitations and restrictions upon grants
and other transfers of land made by it or under its
authority". Section 2 enacts that the provisions of the
Transfer of Property Act do not apply to Crown grants. Then
follows section 3 with a positive declaration that "all
provisions, restrictions, conditions and limitations over"
shall take effect according to their tenor. Reading the
enactment as a whole, the scope of section 3 is that it
saves "provisions, restrictions, conditions and limitations
over" which would be bad under the provisions of the
Transfer of Property Act, such as conditions in restraint of
alienations or enjoyment repugnant to the nature of the
estate, limitations offending the rule against perpetuities
and the like. But no question arises here as to the
validity of any provision, restriction, condition, or
limitation over, contained in Exhibit A on the ground that
it is in contravention of any of the provisions of the
Transfer of Property Act, and there is accordingly nothing
on which section 3 could take effect.
It is argued by the learned Attorney-General that this
limitation on the scope of the Act applies in terms only to
section 2, and that section 3 goes much further, and is
general and unqualified in its operation. The scope of
section 3 came up for consideration before the Privy Council
in Thakur Jagannath Baksh Singh v. The United Provinces(1).
After setting out that section, Lord Wright observed:
"These general words cannot be read in their apparent
generality. The whole Act was intended to settle doubts
which had arisen as to the effect of the Transfer of
Property Act, 1882, and must be read with reference to the
general context..............
In this view, section 3 must also be construed in the light
of the preamble, and so construed, it cannot, for the
reasons already given, have any bearing on
(1) 1946 F.L.J. 88.
1326
the rights of the parties. Moreover, that section only
enacts that "all provisions, restrictions, conditions and
limitations over" shall take effect according to their
tenor, and what is relied on is not any provision,
restriction, condition or limitation over, in Exhibit A
which according to its tenor entitles the respondents to
hold the lands rent-free, but the absolute character of the
interest conveyed under Exhibit A. Therefore, section 3 does
not in terms apply.
The respondents also relied on certain observations in
Dadoba v. Collector of Bombay(1) as supporting their
contention. There, the -facts were that the Government had
granted one parcel of land to the Free Church Mission of
Scotland revenue-free under a deed dated 1-10-1884. By
another deed dated 20-12-1887 they released their right of
reversion on two other parcels of land held by the Mission
as tenants but "subject to the payment of taxes, rates,
charges, assessments leviable or chargeable in respect of
the said premises or anything for the time being thereon".
On 16-1-1888 the Mission sold all the three parcels to one
Janardan Gopal, and the Secretary of State joined in the
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conveyance for effectually releasing the reversion of the
Government. Before Janardan Gopal purchased the lands,
there had been correspondence between his solicitors and the
Government as to the assessment payable on the lands, and
the Government had intimated that it would be 9 pies per
square yard per annum. Subsequent to the purchase, the
Collector raised the assessment payable on the lands, and
the point for decision was whether he could lawfully do so.
In deciding that he could not, Sir Lawrence Jenkins stated
that the purchaser had paid full value for the lands in the
belief induced by the Government that the assessment of 9
pies per sq. yard would be permanent, and that on the facts,
the case fell within section 115 of the Evidence Act, and
that the Government was estopped from enhancing the
assessment. He was also prepared to hold that the
correspondence between the purchaser and the Government
prior to
(1) [1901] I.L.R. 25 Bom. 714.
1327
the sale amounted to a collateral contract not to raise the
assessment. Chandavarkar, J., concurred in the decision,
and in the course of his judgment observed:
".... when we have regard to the nature of the transaction,
viz., that Government was selling the property out-and-out
as any private proprietor-when we look to the whole of the
language used .... the intention of the parties must be
taken to have been that the purchaser was to be liable to
pay the amount of 9 pies per square yard per annum then
levied as assessment and no more".
These observations have been relied on as supporting the
contention that when there is an absolute sale by the
Government, it amounts to an agreement not to levy more
assessment than was payable at that time. But the remarks
of the learned Judge have reference to the recitals in the
deed dated 20-12-1887 and the negotiations between the
purchaser and the Government which are referred to in the
passage, and not to the character of the transfer as an
absolute sale; and the decision is based on a finding of
estoppel or collateral contract deducible from the
correspondence between the purchaser and the Government.
Neither section 3 of the Crown Grants Act, nor the observa-
tions in Dadoba v. Collector of Bombay(1) lend any support
to the contention that an absolute sale of lands by the
Government ipso facto confers on the purchasers a right to
hold the lands free of revenue.
The question then is whether on the, terms of Exhibit A such
a right could be held to have been granted. There was some
discussion at the Bar as to the correct rule of construction
applicable to the deed, Exhibit A. It was argued by the
learned Solicitor. General for the appellant that being a
Crown grant, Exhibit A should be construed in favour of the
Crown and against the grantee. On the other hand, it was
argued by the learned Attorney-General that it should make
no difference in the construction of the grant, whether the
grantor was the Crown or a subject, as
(1) [1901] I.L.R. 25 Bom. 714. 170
1328
the question in either case was what had been granted; and
that must be determined on the language of the deed. When
closely examined, it will be seen that there is no real
conflict between the two propositions. The former is in the
nature of a rule of substantive law; and its scope is that
where as the transferee from a subject acquires, unless the
contrary appears, all the rights which the transferor has in
the property as enacted in section 8 of the Transfer of
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Property Act, a grantee from the Crown gets only what is
granted by the deed, and nothing passes by implication. But
when the grant is embodied in a deed, the question
ultimately reduces itself to a determination of what was
granted thereunder. What the Court has to do is to
ascertain the intention of the grantor from the words of the
document, and as the same words cannot be susceptible of two
different meanings, it makes no differenbe whether they
occur in a grant by the Crown or by the subject. If the
words used in a grant by a subject would be effective to
pass an interest, then those words must equally be effective
to pass the same interest when they occur in a Crown grant.
Dealing with this question, Sir John Coleridge observed in
Lord v. Sydney(1):
"But it is unnecessary for their Lordships to say more on
this point, because they are clearly of opinion, that upon
the true construction of this grant, the creek where it
bounds the land is ad medium film, included within it. In
so holding they do not intend to differ from old authorities
in respect to Crown grants; but upon a question of the
meaning of the words, the same rules of common sense and
justice must apply, whether the subject-matter of construc-
tion be a grant from the Crown, or from a subject; it is
always a question of intention, to be collected from the
language used with reference to the surrounding
circumstances’s.
Exhibit A has to be construed in the light of these
principles. As already stated, there is no recital in the
deed that the purchasers are entitled to, hold the lands
free of assessment. On the other hand, it
(1) (1859] 12 Moore P.C. 473, 496, 497; 14 E.R. 991, 1000.
1329
expressly provides that the properties will be subject "to
the payment of all cesses, taxes, rates, assessments, dues
and duties whatsoever now or hereafter to become payable in
respect thereof", which words would in their natural and
ordinary sense cover the present assessment. In Dadoba v.
Collector of Bombay(1), the Court had to consider a clause
similar to the above contained in a deed executed by the
Government in favour of the Mission on 20-12-1887. Dis-
cussing the effect of this clause on the rights of the
plaintiff to hold the property permanently on an assessment
of 9 pies per sq. yard, Chandavarkar, J. observed:
"When that deed says that the property was sold ’subject to
the payment of all taxes, rates, charges, assessments
leviable or chargeable’, it leaves the question open as to
what the taxes etc., are which are ‘leviable or chargeable’.
Extrinsic evidence of that is admissible, for it neither
contradicts nor varies the terms of the deed, but explains
the sense in which the parties understood the words of the
deed, which, taken by themselves, are capable of
explanation: see Bank of New Zealand v. Simpson (2) ".
In that case, the dispute was not as to the liability to pay
any assessment but to the quantum of assessment payable, and
it was a possible view to take that the clause in question
was not decisive on that question, and that it was left
open. But here, the question is whether a right was granted
to the purchasers to hold the lands free from liability to
be assessed, and the clause in Exhibit A clearly negatives
such a right. Even if we are to regard the question as left
open, as observed in Dadoba v. Collector of Bombay(1), it
will not assist the respondents, as they have not
established aliunde any right to hold the lands free from
assessment. It must, therefore, be held that far from ex-
empting the lands from liability to be assessed to revenue,
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Exhibit A expressly subjects them to it.
It was finally contended that even if the land acquisition
proceedings between 1864 and 1867 had not the
(1) [1901] I.L.R. 25 Bom. 714.
(2) 1900 A.C. 182.
1330
effect of extinguishing the right of the Government to levy
assessment, and that even if Exhibit A conferred on the
purchasers no right to hold the land revenue-free, the
assessment which the Government was entitled to levy under
section 8 of Act No. II of 1876 was limited to what was
payable under the Foras Act No. VI of 1851, and that the
appellant had no right to levy assessment at a rate
exceeding the same. The argument in support of the
contention was that it was an incident of the Foras tenure
under which the lands wore held, that the occupants were
bound to pay only a fixed assessment, that the incident was
annexed to the lands, and was inseparable therefrom, that
between the dates when the lands were acquired under the
Land Acquisition at No. VI of 1857 and 22-11-1938 when they
were sold under Exhibit A they continued to retain their
character as Foras lands, that if no assessment was paid on
the lands during that period, it was because the hand to pay
and the hand to receive were the same, that when they came
to the respondents under Exhibit A, they became impressed
with the Foras tenure, and that, in consequence, they were
liable to be assessed only at the rate payable under Act No.
VI of 1851.
This contention is, in our judgment, wholly untenable. When
the lands were acquired under the Land Acquisition Act No.
VI of 1857, the entire "estate, right, title and interest"
subsisting thereon became extinguished, and the lands vested
in the Government absolutely freed from Foras tenure, and
when they were sold by the Government under Exhibit A the
purchasers obtained them as freehold and not as Foras lands.
As the tenure under which the lands were originally held had
become extinguished as a result of the land acquisition
proceedings, it was incapable of coming back to life, when
the lands were sold under Exhibit A.
In support of the contention that the incidents of the Foras
tenure continued to attach to the lands in the hands of the
respondents, the learned Attorney General relied on the
following observations of
1331
Das, J. in Collector of Bombay v. Municipal Corporation of
the City of Bombay and others(1):-
"The immunity from the liability to pay rent is just as much
an integral part or an inseverable incident of the title so
acquired as is the obligation to hold the land for the
purposes of a market and for no other purpose".
But the point for decision there was whether the Municipal
Corporation of Bombay could acquire by prescription a right
to hold the lands rent-free, they having entered into
possession under a resolution of the Government that no rent
would be charged. And the passage quoted above merely laid
down that when title to the land was acquired by the
Municipal Corporation by prescription, one of the rights
acquired as part of the prescriptive title ’was the right to
hold the lands revenue-free. But the question here is whe-
ther the right to hold the lands under a fixed assessment
survived after the acquisition by the Government under the
land acquisition proceedings, and that depends on the effect
of section VIII of Act VI of 1857. If, as observed in the
above passage, the liability to pay assessment was "an
integral part or an inseverable incident of the title", then
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surely it was also extinguished along with the title of the
occupants under section VIII of Act No. VI of 1857.
There is another difficulty in the way of accepting the
contention of the respondents. The Foras Act was repealed
in 1870 by Act No. XIV of 1870 long prior to the date of
Exhibit A, and therefore, even if we hold that the Foras
tenure revived in the hands of the purchasers under Exhibit
A, the rights under the Foras Act were no longer available
in respect of the lands. Section I of Act No. XIV of 1870
saves rights "already acquired or accrued", and it is argued
that the rights now claimed are within the saving clause.
But as the lands had all been acquired under Act No. VI of
1857 between 1864 and 1867 there were no rights in respect
of the lands which could subsist at the date of the repeal,
and the rights now claimed
(1) 1952 S.C.R. 43, 52,
1332
by the respondents are not within the saving clause. In the
result, it must be held that the right of the appellant to
levy assessment under section 8 of Act No. II of 1876 is not
limited by any right in the respondents.
We accordingly allow the appeal, set aside the judgments of
the Courts below, and dismiss both the suits instituted by
the respondents with costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.