Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAGITI SASAMAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PANDAB BISSOI
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1961
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ)
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 547 1962 SCR Supl. (3) 673
CITATOR INFO :
R 1963 SC 361 (4,6)
RF 1987 SC2205 (10,11)
R 1991 SC1094 (9)
ACT:
Landlord and Tenant-Relationship in dispute-Civil Court
Jurisdiction of Orissa Tenants Protection Act, 1948 (Act III
of 1948), s. 7(1).
HEADNOTE:
The appellant filed in the Civil Court a suit for permanent
injunction restraining the respondents from entering the
lands in suit on the allegation that the lands belonged to
him and were in his cultivatory possession for many years
and that the respondents had no right or title to them and
had never cultivated them. The respondents contended that
they were tenants of portions of the said lands and were in
cultivating possession of the same as tenants. The question
which arose for decision was whether having regard to the
provisions of S. 7(1) of the Orissa Tenants Protection Act,
1948, the Civil Court had jurisdiction to entertain the suit
which involved a dispute as to the relationship of landlord
and tenant between the parties.
Held, that even on a liberal construction of s. 7(1) of the
Act it cannot be held that disputes as regards the existence
of the relationship of landlord and tenant fall to be deter-
mined by the Collector under that section. Disputes which
are entrusted to the Collector under s. 7(1) are the simple
disputes specified therein in the five categories and do not
include a serious dispute as to the relationship between the
parties as landlord and tenant. In the present case the
suit was therefore within the jurisdiction of the Civil
Court.
Secretary of State v. Mask & Co. (1940) L.R. 67 I.A. 222,
referred to.
JUDGMENT:
Civil APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 92 of 59.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated August 31, 1956, of
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the Orissa High Court in second appeal No. 1.5.1 of 1951.
A. V. Viswanatha Sastri and T. V. R. Tatachari, for the
appellant.
M. S. K. Sastri, for respondents.
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1961. September 20. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This is an appeal by a certificate
granted by the High Court of Orissa and it raises a short
question about the scope and effect of the provisions of s.
7 (1) of the Orissa Tenants Protection Act, 1948 (Act III of
1948) (hereafter called the Act). The appellant Magiti
Sasamal sued the respondents Pandab Bissoi and others in the
Court of the District Munsiff, Berhampur, for a permanent
injunction restraining them from entering the suit lands
belonging to the appellant. The appellants case was that
the suit lands belonged to him and were in his personal
cultivation for many years. In the year of the suit the
appellant had cultivated the said lands as usual, manured
and raised paddy crop thereon after spending a large amount
in that behalf According to the appellant the respondents
had no manner of right or title to the said lands and had
never cultivated them. From the notice given by them to the
appellant, however, it appeared that the respondents wanted
to enter upon the lands forcibly and to remove the standing
crop therefrom. This they desired to do by setting up a
false claim that they were the tenants of the lands and as
such were entitled to the protection of the Act. The appel-
lant alleged that the respondents were local rowdies and
were known for their high-handed action in the
neighbourhood. On these allegations the appellant claimed a
permanent injunction against the respondents.
The respondents admitted the title of the appellant to the
lands in suit but pleaded that they were the tenants in
respect of separate portions of the said lands. Their
version was that they had cultivated their holdings and
raised the paddy crop thereon in the year in question.
According to them they had been in cultivating possession of
their respective holdings as tenants long before September
1, 1947, and so they were entitled to remain in possession
as such tenants under the
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they had filed petitions under the Act before the Sub-
Collector, Berhampur, claiming appropriate relief against
the appellant. They urged that they were ever ready and
willing to pay the Rajabhag as provided by the Act and they
contended that the Suit was not maintainable in a civil
court.
On these pleadings the learned trial judge framed
appropriate issues. Three issues of law had been framed by
him on the pleas raised by the respondents. These issues
were, however, not pressed at the hearing, One of them,
namely issue 5, refers to the jurisdiction of the Court to
try the suit in view of the provisions of the Act. Thus, it
if; clear that the issue of jurisdiction was not pressed by
the respondents at the trial. On the merits the learned
trial judge considered the evidence and held that though the
appellant was the owner of the property the respondents had
proved that they were the tenants in possession of their
respective holdings and that their possession was long
before September 1, 1947. On these findings the learned
judge came to the conclusion that the appellant was not
entitled to claim an injunction against the respondents and
so he dismissed his suit.
The matter was then taken by the appellant before the
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District Judge, Ganjam, Nayagarh. The learned District
Judge considered the evidence led by the parties and
reversed the conclusions of the trial court. He held that
the onus was on the respondents to prove their possession of
their respective holdings as tenants on or before the
specified date, and according to him they had failed to dis-
charge that onus. The question of jurisdiction was not
raised before the appellate court by the respondents.
Having held against the respondents on the merits the
learned District Judge allowed the appeal, set aside the
decree passed by the trial court and directed that an
injunction should be issued against the respondents as
claimed by the appellant.
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The respondents then moved the High Court by second appeal ;
and the main point which they urged before the High Court
was that the learned trial judge had no jurisdiction to
entertain the suit having regard to the provisions of s. 7
(1) of the Act. The appellant pointed out to the High Court
that this question of jurisdiction bad not been pressed
before the trial court and had not been raised before the
lower appellate court. Even so the High Court allowed the
point to be raised and decided it in favour of the
respondents. As a result of the finding that the civil
court bad no jurisdiction to entertain the suit the second
appeal preferred by the respondents has been allowed and the
appellant’s suit dismissed with costs throughout. It is
against this decree that the appellant has come to this
Court with the certificate granted by the High Court; and
the short point which has been raised before us on his
behalf by Mr. Viswanatha Sastri is that in holding that the
present suit is outside the jurisdiction of the civil court
the High Court has misconstrued the scope and effect of the
Provisions of s. 7(1) of the Act.
The Act received the assent of the Governor General on
February 5, 1948 and was published on February 14,194S. It
is a temporary Act and by s.1(4) it has been provided that
it shall cease to have effect on April 15, 1949 except is
respects things done or omitted to be done before the
expiration thereof. It has been passed in order to provide
for temporary protection to certain classes of tenants in
the Province of Orissa. Legislature thought that the said
tenants deserved protection and so as a beneficent measure
the Act has been passed. Section 2(c) of the Act defines
landlord and s. 2(g) defines a tenant. The main operative
provision of the Act is contained in s. 3. This Section
provides that not withstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force, or any express or
implied agreement to the contrary, but subject to the
provisions of this Act,
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a person who, on the first day of September 1947, was
cultivating any land as a tenant shall continue to have the
right to cultivate such land and it shall not be lawful for
the landlord to evict the tenant from the land or interfere
in any way with the cultivation of such land by the tenant.
It would thus be seen that the Act purports to provide
protection to tenants who were in possession of lands on the
appointed day which is September 1, 1947. The other sub-
sections of s. 3 make material and subsidiary provisions in
regard to the said protection. Section 7(1) reads thus:
"’Any dispute between the tenant and the landlord as
regards, (a) tenant’s possession of the land on the 1st day
of September, 1947 and his right to the benefits under this
Act. or (b) misuse of the land by the tenant, or (c) failure
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of the tenant to cultivate the land properly, or (d) failure
of the tenant to deliver to the landlord the rent accrued
due within two months from the date on which it becomes
payable, or (e) the quantity of the produce payable to the
landlord as rent, shall be decided by the Collector on the
application of either of the parties".
The appellant contends that s. 7(1) covers disputes between
landlords and tenants which are specified under cls. (a) to
(e) but it does not cover a dispute between the parties as
to whether the relationship of landlord and tenant ’exists
between them. It is only where such a relation ship is
either admitted or established in a civil court that the
specified disputes fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of
the Collector on the other hand the respondents’ case is
that the dispute as to the status of the tenant is also
included under s. 7(1). The High Court has upheld the
respondents’ interpretation, and Mr. Viswanatha Sastri
contends that this interpretation is based on a
misconstruction of the section.
It is true that having regard to the beneficent object which
the Legislature had in view in passing the Act its material
provisions should be liberally
678
construed. The Legislature intends that the ’disputes
contemplated by the said material provisions should be tried
not by ordinary civil courts but by tribunals specially
designated by it, and so in dealing with the scope and
effect of the jurisdiction of such tribunals the relevant
words used in the section should receive not a narrow but a
liberal construction.
While bearing this principle in mind we must have regard to
another important principle of construction, and that is
that if a statute purports to exclude the ordinary
jurisdiction of civil courts it must do so either by express
terms or by the use of such terms as would necessarily lead
to the inference of such exclusion. As the Privy Council
has observed in Secretary of State v. Mask & Co., (1) "it is
settled law that the exclusion of the jurisdiction of the
civil courts is not to be readily inferred, but that such
exclusion must either be explicitly expressed or clearly
implied". There can be no doubt that ordinarily a dispute
in regard to the relationship between the parties such as
that between a landlord and a tenant would be a dispute of a
civil nature and would fall within the competence of the
civil court. If the respondents contend that the
jurisdiction of the civil court to deal with such a civil
dispute has been taken away by s. 7 (1) we must enquire
whether s. 7(1) expressly takes away the said jurisdiction
or whether the material words used in the section lead to
such an inference or the scheme of the Act inescapably
establishes such an inference. The relevance and
materiality of both these principles are not in dispute.
Let us then revert to s. 7. It would be noticed that a. 7(1)
has expressly and specifically provided for five categories
of disputes which are within the jurisdiction of the
Collector and which must therefore be taken to be excluded
from the jurisdiction of the civil court. On a reasonable
construction of s. 7(1) a dispute specified by s. 7(1)(a)
would be a dispute between a tenant and a landlord in regard
(1) (1940) L. R. 67 1. A. 222, 236.
679
to the former’s possession of the land on September 1, 1947.
It is clear that the dispute to which s. 7(1)(a) refers is a
narrow dispute as to the possession of the tenant on a
specific date and his consequential right to the benefits of
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the Act. The same is the position with regard to the other
categories of the dispute specified by s. 7(1). In none of
the said categories is a dispute contemplated as to the
relationship of the parties itself. In other words s. 7(1)
postulates the relationship of tenant and landlord between
the parties and proceeds to provide for the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Collector to try the five categories of
disputes that may arise between the landlord and the tenant.
The disputes which are the subject-matter of s. 7(1) must be
in regard to the five categories. That is the plain and
obvious construction of the words "any dispute as regards".
On this construction it would be unreasonable to hold that a
dispute about the status of the tenant also falls within the
purview of the said section. The scheme of s. 7(1) is
unambiguous and clear. It refers to the tenant and landlord
as such and it contemplates disputes of the specified
character arising between them. Therefore, in our opinion,
even on a liberal construction of s. 7(1) it would be
difficult to uphold the argument that a dispute as regards
the existence of the relationship of landlord and tenant
falls to be determined by the Collector under s. 7(1).
In this connection it would be relevant to take into
consideration the provisions of s. 7(2). This clause
provides that the Collector may, after making such enquiries
as he may deem necessary, order the tenant, by a notice
served in the prescribed manner and specifying the grounds
on which the order is made, to cease to cultivate the land.
It is significant that the making of the enquiry and its
mode are left to the discretion of the Collector. If a
serious dispute as to the existence of the relationship of
landlord and tenant between the parties had been covered by
s. 7(1) it is difficult to imagine that the
680
Legislature would have left the decision of such an
important issue to the Collector giving him full freedom to
make such enquiries as he may, deem necessary. As is well
known, a dispute as to the existence of the relationship of
landlord and tenant raises serious questions of fact for
decision, and if such a serious dispute was intended to be
tried by the Collector the Legislature would have provided
for an appropriate enquiry in that behalf and would have
made the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure
applicable to such an enquiry. Section 7(2) can be easily
explained on the basis that the relationship between the
parties is outside s. 7(1) and so the disputes that are
covered by s. 7(1) are not of such a nature as would Justify
a formal enquiry in that behalf The provisions of sub-ss.
(3), (6) and (7) also indicate that the relationship between
the parties is not, and cannot be, disputed before the
Collector. The parties arrayed before him are landlord and
tenant or vice versa, and it is on the basis of such
relationship between them that he proceeds to deal with the
disputes entrusted to him by s. 7(1).
It is true that when the relationship of landlord and tenant
is proved or admitted the disputes falling within the five
categories enumerated in s. 7(1) will have to be tried by
the Collector. Let us take the present case itself to
illustrate how s. 7(1) will operate. In the suit filed by
the appellant against the respondents the issue about the
status of the respondents was framed and so it had to be
tried by the civil court. In such a suit if the civil court
holds that the relationship between the landlord and the
tenant had not been established it may proceed to deal with
the suit on the merits. If, however, it holds that the said
relationship is established then the civil court cannot deal
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with the dispute between the parties if it falls within any
one of the categories specified by s. 7(1). In such a case,
having made the finding about the relationship between the
parties the civil court will either dismiss the suit on the
ground that it can give no relief to
681
the landlord, or may, if it is permissible to do so, return
the plaint for presentation to the Collector. What course
should be adopted in such a case it is unnecessary for us to
decide in the present appeal. All that we wish to emphasise
is that the initial dispute between the parties about the
relationship subsisting between them will still continue to
be tried by the civil court and is outside the purview of s.
7(1).
In support of the argument that a dispute as to the
existence of relationship as landlord and tenant should be
taken to be included under s. 7(1) reliance is placed on the
provisions of s. 8(1) of the Act. Section 8(1) provides
that subject to the provisions of s. 7 all disputes arising
between landlord and tenant shall be cogniscible by the
revenue court and shall not be cogniscible by the civil
court. It must be pointed out that we are really not
concerned with s. 8(1) in the present appeal because even
according to the respondents the present dispute between the
parties attracted s. 7(1.) and should have been tried by the
Collector and not by ’the civil court. However, the
question about the construction of s. 8(1) has been
incidentally raised before us. In appreciating the scope
and effect of s. 8(1) it is necessary to bear in mind the
provisions of s. 13 of the Act. The said section provides
that the Act shall, as far as may be, read and construed.
as forming part of the Madras Estates Land Act, 1908, or as
the case may be, of the Orissa tenancy Act, 1913. Therefore
reading the provisions of s. 8(1) and s. 13 tog-other it
follows that all that s. 8 (1) provides is that except for
the disputes covered by s. 7 (1) all disputes arising
between landlord and tenant shall be cogniscible by the
revenue court and to the trial of such disputes by the
revenue court the relevant provisions of the Orissa Tenancy
Act, 1913 would apply. It is true that disputes to which s.
8(1) applies are entrusted to the exclusive jurisdiction of
the revenue courts and are excluded from the jurisdiction of
civil courts, but the effect of this
682
the other relevant provisions of the parent Act of which
this temporary Act forms a part. Now, if we turn to some of
the relevant provisions of the, parent Act it would be clear
that when the revenue courts are given jurisdiction to try
the disputes the enquiry held by them purports to be a
formal enquiry to which the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure may apply (Vide: s. 192 of the Orissa Tenancy Act,
1913). Similarly, the provisions of s. 204(1) which
provides for appeals contemplate appeals to the District
Court and the High Court where questions of title are
involved. These provisions illustrate the point that where
serious disputes about title are entrusted to special
tribunals usually the Legislature contemplates a formal en-
quiry and makes the provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedure applicable to such an enquiry and provides for
appropriate appeals. Now, in regard to the order passed by
the Collector under s. 7(1) the only provision about appeals
is that made by s. 11 which provides that an appeal shall
lie to the prescribed superior revenue authority whose
decision shall be final, and shall not be subject to any
further appeal or revision. Departure made by the
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Legislature in providing only one appeal and that too in
every case to the prescribed superior revenue authority
clearly brings out that the disputes which are entrusted to
the Collector under S. 7(1) axe the simple disputes
specified in the five categories and do not include a
serious dispute like that of the relation,ship between the
parties as landlord and tenant., If such a dispute had been
intended to be tried by the Collector the Legislature would
have provided for a formal enquiry and would have prescribed
appropriate appeals on the lines of ss. 192 and 204 of the
parent Act.
In this connection we may in passing refer to the provisions
of s. 126 of the parent Act. This section deals with the
jurisdiction of civil courts in matters relating to rent.
Section 126(3) provides for the institution of suits in
civil courts on the
683
grounds specified by cls. (a) to (g). Clause (c) deals with
the ground that the relationship of landlord and tenant does
not exist. This clause shows that if a dispute arose
between the parties as to the existence of the relationship
of landlord and tenant a suit in a civil court a.%
contemplated is prescribed by s. 126(3) (c). That also has
some bearing on the construction of s. 7(1); and it is for
that limited purpose that we have referred to it.
Therefore, we are satisfied that the High Court was in error
in holding that under a. 7(1) of the Act it was competent to
the Collector to try the issue between the appellant and the
respondents whether or not the Respondents were the tenants
of the appellant and that the civil court had no
jurisdiction to entertain the said dispute.
In the result, the appeal must be allowed, the order passed
by the High Court set aside and that of the District Court
restored with. costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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