Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MAJOR GOPAL SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
CUSTODIAN, EVACUEE PROPERTY, PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/03/1961
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1320 1962 SCR (1) 328
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC 994 (4)
ACT:
Evacuee Property--Quasi-permanent allotment-Cancellation of-
Custodian General,powers of-Enactment vesting evacuee Pro-
perty in Central Government-If Custodian General still has
power to cancel allotment-Administration of Evacuee Property
Act, 1950 (31 of 1950), SS. 10, 27 -Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act, 1954 (44 of 1954),
SS. 12, 19.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants who are displaced persons from West Pakistan,
were granted quasi-permanent allotment of some lands in
village Raikot in 1949. On October 31, 1952, the Assistant
Custodian cancelled the allotment of 14 allottees in village
Karodian, and also cancelled the allotment of the Appellants
in Raikot but allotted lands to them in village Karodian,
and allotted the lands of Raikot to other persons. The 14
allottees of village Karodian as well as the appellants
applied for review of the orders of cancellation of their
allotment. The application of the 14 allottees was
dismissed. They preferred a revision to the Custodian
General who cancelled the appellant’s allotment
(1) (1907) I.L.R. 34 Cal. 926.
329
in Karodian and restored the allotment of the 14 allottees
on December 17, 1954 Thereupon,, on January 6, 1955, the
appellants moved the Custodian General for calling up their
review application and for revising the order of October 31,
1952, cancelling their allotment-in Raikot. The Custodian
General refused to revise the order on the ground that his
power to revise had been taken away by the Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act,, 1954. The
appellants contended that the, Custodian General had the
power to revise the order.
Held, that after the enactment of the, Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act, 1954, the Custodian
General ceased to have the power to cancel allotments. By,
the issuing of a notification under, S. 12(1) of this Act,
the Fight, title or interest of the evacuee in the property
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specified in the notification was extinguished and the
property vested absolutely in the Central. Government. The
right of the Custodian manage the property under the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, came to an end
and the management vested in a new set of officers. Even
though no- managing officer was appointed or a managing
corporation, constituted under the new Act to manage the
property no one--else could’exercise the power of
cancellation of allotment.
Bal Mukund v. The State of Punjab, I.L.R. 1957 Punj. 712,
approved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 101 of 1959.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
November 8, 1957, of the Deputy Custodian General, Evacuee
Property, Now Delhi Revision Petition No. 17-R/55 of 1955.
Achhru Ram and K. L. Mehta for the appellants.
B.K., Khanna and, T. M. Sen, for the respondent No. 1.
N.S. Bindra and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the respondents
Nos. 2-4.
1961. March 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUDHOLKAR J.-The appellants who are admittedly displaced
persons from West Pakistan were granted quasi- permanent
allotment of 24 standard acres and 15 3/4 units in the
village of Raikot in Ludhiana District in 1949. Their
father Sardar Nand Singh who was
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330
found entitled to quasi-permanent allotment of 40 standard
acres and 5 1/4 units of land was given quasipermanent
allotment in another village named Humbran in the same
district. The two villages are, however, 25 miles or so
distant from each other. Nand Singh, therefore, made an
application for consolidation of his lands with those of the
appellants in the village Raikot. During the pendency of
this application he died and after his death, the,
application was continued by the appellants. This
application was rejected by the Assistant Custodian on July
23, 1951 on the ground that no land was available in the
village Raikot. A revision petition preferred by the
appellants against the order of the Assistant Custodian was
dismissed by the Additional Custodian on August 20, 1952.
On October 7, 1952 the appellants preferred a revision
application before the Custodian General.
During the pendency of the revision application the
Additional Custodian for the State of Punjab cancelled the
allotment of fourteen quasi-permanent allottees of the
village Karodian in the same district on the ground that
these persons were entitled to allotment of suburban land a
had been wrongly fitted in the village Karodian. Acting suo
motu the Additional Custodian made an order on October 31,
1952 cancelling the order of allotment of land in the
village Raikot made in favour of the appellants in the year
1949 and instead allotted to them land in Karodian in
substitution of :,the lands at Raikot and of the lands
allotted to their father. The land allotted was out of the
land released upon the cancellation of allotment of lands in
favour of the aforementioned 14 allottees. These fourteen
allottees preferred an application for review of the order
cancelling their allotment on the ground that this
cancellation was a result of misapprehension of the actual
facts and that they were not entitled to allotment of
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suburban lands at all. The appellants also preferred an
application for review of the order cancelling their quasi-
permanent allotment in the village Raikot.
The Additional Custodian for the State of Punjab recommended
to the Custodian General the restoration
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of the land to the 14 allottees which had been taken away
from them by reason of cancellation of the allotment in
their favour by the order dated October 31, 1952. The
Additional Custodian admitted that these persons were not
entitled to allotment of suburban land and that consequently
their allotment had been wrongly made but referred the
matter back to the Additional Custodian for decision. The
application made by the appellants was kept pending till the
decision of the application of the 14 allottees of Karodian.
The Additional Custodian, however, dismissed the application
on the ground that r. 14(6) of the Evacuee Property Rules
which came into force on July 22, 1952, stood in the way of
cancellation of the allotment in favour of the appellant.
On December 17, 1954, the Deputy Custodian General, before
whom these allottees had preferred an application for
revision, revised the order of the Additional Custodian and
restored to the 14 allottees of Karodian the land which had
been originally allotted to them. and allotment of which had
been cancelled earlier. As a result of this order the
allotment of Karodian land made in favour of the appellants
automatically stood cancelled.
On January 6, 1955, the appellants moved the Deputy
Custodian General for calling up their review application
and for revising the order of October 31, 1952 passed by the
Additional Custodian cancelling the allotment of Raikot
lands which had originally been made in their favour in the
year 1949.
Consequent upon the cancellation of the appellants’
allotment of the Raikot land they were allotted to
respondents 2 to 4. These persons were, therefore, impleaded
as parties to the proceedings before the Deputy Custodian
General. By the order dated November 8, 1957 the Deputy
Custodian General dismissed the appellants’ application.
The appellants have, therefore, come up to this Court by way
of appeal with special leave.
The ground on which the appellants’ application was rejected
by the Deputy Custodian General was that his jurisdiction to
revise the order has been
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taken away by virtue of the provisions of Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act, 1954, (44 of 1954)
and the notification issued thereunder on March 24, 1955.
In taking this view he has relied upon the decision in Bal
Mukund v. The State of Punjab (1). In that case the Court
has held that the powers of the Custodian General to deal
with matters of this kind have been taken away by the
Displaced Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act,
1954, and that these powers now vest in another authority
and that there is no provision for continuing the pro-
ceedings which had been commenced under the Administration
of Evacuee Property Act., 1950, but had not been concluded.
Mr. Achhruram for the appellants challenged the correctness
of this decision.
There is no specific provision in this Act to the effect
that after its commencement the jurisdiction of the various
authorities created by the Administration of Evacuee
Property Act, 1950, to deal with the allotment or
cancellation of allotment of evacuee property shall cease.
What is urged by Mr. Khanna on behalf of the Custodian
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General is that this is the effect of the provisions of ss.
12(2) and 19 of the Act.
Section 12 of the 1954 Act empowers the Central Government
to acquire evacuee property for rehabilitation of displaced
persons by publishing in the official gazette a notification
to the effect that it has decided to acquire such evacuee
property in pursuance of this provision. It is common
ground that by notification S. R. 0. 697 dated March 24,
1955 the Central Government decided to acquire all evacuee
property allotted to displaced persons by the Custodian
under the "Conditions" contained in the notification of the
Government of Punjab in the Department of Rehabilitation,
No. 4892-6 dated July 8, 1949, except certain categories of
property specified in the schedule. The Raikot lands were
allotted to the appellants under the aforesaid notification
of the Government of Punjab. It is not disputed on their
behalf that they do not fall within any of the excepted
categories of property, set out in the schedule. Sub-
section 2 of s. 12 of the Act
(1) I.L.R. 1957 Punj. 712.
333
provides that on the publication of the notification under
sub-s. 1 the right, title or interest of any evacuee in the
property specified in the notification shall immediately
stand extinguished and that property shall vest absolutely
in the Central Government free from all encumbrances. The
power of the Custodian under the Administration of Evacuee
Property Act, 1950, to allot any property to a person or to
cancel an allotment existing in favour of a person rests on
the fact that the property vests in him. But the
consequence of the publication of the notification by the
Central Government under s. 12(1) of the Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act with respect to any
property or a class of property would be to divest the
Custodian completely of his right in the property flowing
from s. 8 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act,
1950, and vest that property in the Central Government. He
would, therefore, not be competent to deal with the property
in any manner in the absence of any provision in either of
these two enactments permitting him to do so. No provision
was, however, pointed out to us in either of these Acts
whereunder despite the Vesting of the property in the
Central Government the Custodian was empowered to deal with
it. Sub-s. 4 of s. 12 of the 1954 Act provides that all
evacuee property acquired under that section shall form part
of the compensation pool. Under s. 16(1) of this Act the
Central Government is empowered to take such measures as it
considers necessary or expedient for the custody, management
and disposal of the compensation pool. Sub-s. 2 of s. 16
empowers the Central Government to appoint such officers as
it deems fit or to constitute such authority or corporation
as it deems fit for the purpose of managing and disposing of
the properties forming part of the compensation pool.
Section 19 of the Act provides that notwithstanding anything
contained in any contract or any other law for the time
being in force but subject to the rules that may be made
under the Act the managing officer or managing corporation
may cancel any allotment etc., under which any evacuee
property acquired under the Act is held or
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occupied by a person whether such allotment or lease was
granted before or after the commencement of the Act. This
provision thus confers the power to deal with evacuee
property acquired under the Act only on a managing officer
appointed or managing corporation constituted under the Act
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and makes no mention whatsoever of the Custodian appointed
under the Administration of Evacuee Property Act. No doubt,
under s. 10 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act
the Custodian is empowered to manage evacuee property and in
exercise of his power he will be competent to allot such
property to any person or to cancel an allotment or lease
made in favour of a person. Apart from the fact that
subsequent to the issue of the notification under s. 12(1)
of the Displaced Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation)
Act, the property would cease to be evacuee property, the
aforesaid powers of the Custodian would be in conflict with
those conferred by s. 19 of the 1954 Act on a managing
officer or a managing corporation constituted under that
Act. In other words, to that extent the provisions of s. 10
of the 1950 Act and s. 19 of the 1954 Act cannot stand
together. As already stated the powers conferred by sub-s.
(1) of s. 19 of the 1954 Act are to prevail notwithstanding
anything contained in any other law for the time being in
force. Therefore, they must prevail over the provisions of
B. 10 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act. It is
true that there, is nothing on record to show that a
managing officer was appointed with respect to the Raikot
properties acquired under the notification dated March 24,
1955. But it is not necessary to ascertain that fact. The
point is, who, after the coming into force of the 1954 Act
could cancel an allotment. Section 10 says that only a
managing officer or a managing corporation can do so. This
means that no one else can do so even though some other law
may have authorised another person or authority to cancel an
allotment.
Mr. Achhruram, however, contended that the appellants’
rights were protected by s. 10 of the Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act. Section 10 runs as
follows:
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"Special procedure for payment of compensation
in certain cases.-Where any immovable property
has been leased or allotted to a displaced
person by the Custodian under the conditions
published-
(a)by the notification of the Government of
Pun. jab in the Department of Rehabilitation
No. 4892-S or 4892-S dated the 8th July, 1949,
or
(b)by the notification of the Government of
Patiala and East Punjab States Union in the
Department of Rehabilitation No. 8R or 9R,
dated the 23rd July, 1949, and published in
the official Gazette of that State dated the
7th August, 1949, and such property is
acquired under the provisions of this Act and
forms part of the compensation pool, the
displaced person shall, so long as the
property remains vested in the Central
Government, continue in possession of such
property on the same conditions on which he
held the property immediately before the date
of the acquisition, and the Central Government
may, for the purpose of payment of
compensation to such displaced person,
transfer to him such property on such terms
and conditions as may be prescribed."
It is followed by an explanation; but that explanation has
no bearing upon the point urged by Mr. Achhruram. It is no
doubt true that the Raikot lands were allotted to the
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appellants under the notification referred to in el. (a) of
this section and, therefore, they would be entitled to the
benefits conferred by this section provided they satisfied
all the other requirements of this section, express or
implied. It is implicit in this section that the displaced
person to whom land was allotted "held" the land and was in
possession of such property at the date of the notification.
It is not disputed that the appellants ceased to hold and
had lost possession of the Raikot lands before the
publication of this notification. Even assuming that the
order of the Custodian cancelling the allotment in their
favour was erroneous there will be no difference in the
result because what is essential is the facts of holding and
possession of the land on the date of the notification.
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Mr. Achhruram then referred to the "Conditions" on which
allotments of land may be made under the notification
referred to in sub-s. 10(a) and pointed out that under
condition no. 6 the Custodian or rehabilitation authority
would be competent to resume or cancel an allotment only on
one of the grounds set out in that condition. He said that
the cancellation of the allotment in favour of the
appellants was impermissible inasmuch as it was not based
upon any of the grounds set out in the 6th condition. That
may or may not be so. We would repeat that the appellants
had lost their possession before the publication of the
notification and are thus not entitled to the protection of
the section. Moreover, the Custodian, by reason of the
divesting of the property, as from March 24, 1955, had
become functus officio with respect to it and could not
rectify any error made by him in the past in the matter of
cancellation of allotment. It is true that had the
appellants been in possession at the critical time they
would have had the right to obtain a permanent transfer in
their favour of the Raikot lands and by virtue of what
happened and without any fault on their part they have been
deprived ’of that right. That is indeed unfortunate but
none of the authorities created by the Administration of
Evacuee Property Act could rectify the wrong that has been
done by them to the appellant. The question whether it
could be rectified by any of the authorities constituted by
the Displaced Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act
or not was not canvassed before us and, therefore, there is
no occasion for us to say anything about it.
Mr. Achhruram contended that r. 74 of the Displaced Persons
(Compensation and Rehabilitation) Rules, 1955 stood in the
way of the Custodian allotting the Raikot property to the
respondents during the pendency of the proceedings before
the Custodian General. That rule reads as follows:
"Allotments which are the subject matter of
dispute.-No property in a rural area in
respect of which any case is pending in a
Civil Court or before a Deputy Custodian,
Custodian or Custodian General, shall be
transferred to the allottee".
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The aforesaid rule is in Chapter X headed "Payment of
compensation under section 10 of the Act" and deals with a
transfer of property to an allottee by way of final
settlement of his claim to compensation and does not deal
with the question of allotment on a quasi-permanent basis.
Moreover, this rule applies to a proceeding before an
authority created by the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act and not to an authority created by the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act. There is,
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therefore, no substance in this argument.
Finally Mr. Achhruram referred to s. 17 of the 1954 Act and
to r. 102 of the Rules framed thereunder and said that the
powers of the managing officers appointed under the Act are
confined only to properties which are entrusted to them for
management and not with respect to any other property.
Section 17 deals with the function; and duties of managing
officers and managing corporation. Sub-s. (1) provides that
managing officers and managing corporations will perform
such functions as may be assigned to them under the Act.
Sub-s. (2) provides that subject to the provisions of the
Act and the rules made thereunder, a managing officer or a
managing corporation may, among other things, take such
measures as he or it considers it necessary or expedient for
the purpose of securing, administering, preserving, managing
or disposing of any property in the compensation pool
entrusted to him or it... etc. The argument is that unless
there is such "entrustment" the managing officer or managing
corporation has no function to perform with respect to
evacuee property. His contention appears to be that there
is nothing to show that this property was "entrusted" to a
managing officer. In the first place the section confers
the particular powers On managing officers or managing
corporations only and no one else. Therefore, even if no
managing officer or managing corporation was appointed with
respect to that property no one else could exercise the
power of cancellation of allotment. Further, there is no
ground in the special leave petition or in the statement of
the
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338
case that there is no entrustment in fact of this property
or this class of properties to a managing officer or
managing corporation. He cannot, therefore, be permitted to
make out a new case at this stage of argument. That apart,
this argument assumes that the property, despite the
publication of the notification under s. 12(1) of the Act
continues to be evacuee property. Again, this provision is
a general provision and the particular provision regarding
cancellation of allotment is s. 19(1) of the Act which does
not refer to entrustment at all and it is this provision
which must prevail over the general provision. He then
contends that the provisions of s. 19(1) of the Act being
subject to rules made under the Act must be read along with
r. 102 which deals with cancellation of allotments of
leases. That rule reads thus:
"Cancellation of allotments and leases---A
managing officer or a managing corporation may
sell any property in the compensation pool
entrusted to him or to it, cancel an allotment
or terminate a lease, or vary the terms of any
such lease or allotment if the allottee or
lessee, as the case may be-
(a)has sublet or parted with the possession
of the whole or any part of the property
allotted or leased to him without the
permission of a competent authority, or
(b)has used or is using such property for a
purpose other than that for which it was
allotted or leased to him without the
permission of a competent authority, or
(c) has committed any act which is
destructive of or permanently injurious to
the property, or
(d) for any other sufficient reason to be
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recorded
in writing;
Provided that no action shall be taken under
this rule unless the allottee or the lessee,
as the case may be, has been given a
reasonable opportunity of being heard."
He points out that in the first place, the rule speaks of
land ’entrusted’ to the manager and, therefore would operate
only if entrustment is established. What we have said in
regard to s. 17 would apply
339
here also. He then says that this rule restricts the powers
of a managing officer or a managing corporation in the
matter of cancellation of allotment in the sense that it
permits cancellation only on certain specified grounds and,
therefore, it cannot be said that s. 19(1) of the Act is
completely in conflict with s. 10 of the Administration of
Evacuee Property Act in so far as the question of
cancellation of allotment is concerned. We cannot accept
the argument because, apart from the fact that the acquired
properties have ceased to be evacuee properties, el. (d) of
r. 102 permits the managing officer or managing corporation
to cancel allotment "for any other sufficient reason to be
recorded in writing". The only effect of r. 102 is to
permit cancellation ’of an allotment for reasons stated.
That is all. In our opinion, therefore, this rule does not
help the appellants.
Mr. Khanna had raised three other points but upon the view
which we have taken as to the effect of ss. 12 and 19 of the
Act, it is not necessary to consider them.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed. We, however, make no
order as to costs because had there been no delay on the
part of the Custodian General in dealing with the revision
application the present situation would not have arisen.
Appeal dismissed.