Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
RANJIT SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND OTHERS(And Connected Appeals)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/08/1964
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
WANCHOO, K.N.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1965 AIR 632 1965 SCR (1) 82
CITATOR INFO :
R 1965 SC1017 (10)
RF 1967 SC 856 (6,20)
R 1967 SC1110 (13)
RF 1967 SC1766 (4)
R 1968 SC 394 (7)
RF 1972 SC2027 (39)
RF 1972 SC2097 (6,18,19)
R 1972 SC2301 (61,63,65)
RF 1973 SC2734 (32)
F 1974 SC1522 (3)
RF 1975 SC1193 (23)
RF 1980 SC1762 (6)
F 1983 SC 920 (5)
F 1985 SC1394 (14,27)
ACT:
East Punjab Holdings (Consolidation and Prevention of
Fragmentation) Act (50 of 1948) as amended by Punjab Act (27
of 1960) and the Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation)
Act (1 of 1954)-Validity Constitution of India, 1950, Arts.
19, 31 and 31-A.
HEADNOTE:
As a result of proceedings for consolidation of holdings in
certain villages in Punjab, some lands had been taken away
from the proprietors, reserved and given over to the village
panchayats or allotted to non-proprietors, under powers
derived from various enactments, namely, the East Punjab
Holdings (Consolidation and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act
(L of 1948) as amended by Punjab Act (27 of 1960), the
Punjab Gram Panchayat Act (4 of 1953) and the Punjab Village
Common Lands (Regulation) Act (1 of 1954). Under s. 7 of
the last Act the proprietors were not entitled to any
compensation. They challenged by writ petitions the
validity of the proceedings and the enactments under which
the proprietor’s interest was acquired without compensation
as being in breach of Arts. 19(1)(f) and 31 of the
Constitution. The High Court dismissed them following its
own full bench decision in Jagat Singh v. Punjab State,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
(1962) P.L.R. 241. In appeals to the Supreme Court, it was
contended that : (i) The Full Bench decision was not correct
in view of the decision in K. K. Kochuni v. State of Madras
[1960] 3 S.C.R. 887, and (ii) the Amending Act (27 of 1960)
and the Regulation Act (1 of 1954) were ultra vires,
HELD : (i) The Full Bench decision was right. [94C-D].
The view taken by this Court has always been in favour of
giving a large and liberal meaning to the terms "estate",
"rights in an estate" and "extinguishment and modification"
of such right-, in Art. 31-A of the Constitution of India,
and also, to give a wide meaning to the expression agrarian
reform". [93C-D; 94A-B].
The enactments referred to above and the Punjab Security of
Land Tenures Act (10 of 1953) are all part of a general
scheme of agrarian reforms and the modification of rights
envisaged by them had the protection of Art. 31-A. [95B-C].
Case law considered.
The Kochuni case [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887 did not involve any
agrarian reform. It considered a bare transfer of the
rights of the sthanee to the tarwad without alteration of
the tenure and without any pretence of agrarian reform.
That was a special case and could not be applied to cases
where the general scheme of legislation was definitely
agrarian reform. [94B-C].
(ii) The changes proposed by the consolidation proceedings
were included in the general scheme of planning of rural
areas and the productive utilisation of vacant and waste
lands. If agrarian reforms are to succeed, mere
distribution of land to the landless is not enough. There
must be a proper planning of rural economy and conditions.
A scheme
83
which makes villages self-sufficient cannot, but be regarded
as part of the larger reforms which consolidation of
holdings, fixing of ceilings on lands, distribution of
surplus lands and utilising of vacant and waste lands
contemplate. [94 E-G; 95A-B].
Quaere : What is the relevance and bearing of Art. 31-A as
amended by the Constitution (Seventeenth Amendment) Act,
1964 on the case. [90D-E].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 743 of 1963.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and orders dated
December 13, 1961, and September 12, 1960 of the Punjab High
Court in C.W. No. 319 of 1961 and Civil Writ No. 454 of 1958
and Letters Patent No. 388 of 1958 respectively.
Bishan Narain, S. K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for the appel-
lants (in C.As. Nos. 553 & 554/1962).
Bishan Narain and D. Goburdhun, for the appellant (in C.A.
No. 743/1963).
R.Ganapathy Iyer and B.R.G.K. Achar, for the respondents (in
C.As. Nos. 553 and 554/1962) and respondents Nos. 1 to 3 (in
C.A. No. 743/1963).
S.K. Mehta and K. L. Mehta, for respondent No. 4 (in C.A.
No. 743/1963).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah J. This judgment will dispose of Civil Appeal
No. 743 of 1963 and Civil Appeals No. 553 and 554 of 1962.
The appellants in Civil Appeal No. 743 of 1963 are owners of
lands in village Virk Kalan, Tehsil and District Bhatinda.
The appellants in the other appeals are owners of lands in
villages Sewana and Mehnd of Tehsil Hansi in District
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
Hissar. Proceedings for the consolidation of holdings are
going on in these villages under the East Punjab Holdings
(Consolidation and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act 1948
(Act 50 of 1948). This Act was amended on many occasions
but we are concerned with it as amended by the East Punjab
Holdings (Consolidation and Prevention of Fragmentation)
(2nd Amendment & Validation) Act (27 of 1960). In the
present consolidation proceedings portions of lands from
those commonly owned by the appellants as proprietors, have
been reserved for the village Panchayat and given over to it
for diverse purposes, and other portions have been reserved
either for non-proprietors or for the common purposes of the
villages. Without going into too much detail it is
sufficient to indicate that in village Virk Kalan 270
84
kanals and 13 marlas have been given to the village
Panchayat for management and realisation of income, although
the ownership is still shown in village papers as Shamlat
Deh in the names of the proprietors and 10 kanals and 3
marlas have been reserved for abadi to be distributed among
persons entitled thereto and 3 kanals and 7 marlas have been
reserved for manure pits. Similarly, in village Sewana 400
kanals and 4 marlas have been set apart for the village
Panchayat for extension of the abadi and to enable grants of
8 marlas of land to be made to each family of non-
proprietors and 16 kanals have been reserved for a primary
school and some more for a phirni. Similiarly, in village
Mehnd, land has been reserved for the village Panchayat, a
school, tanning ground, hospital, cremation ground and for
non-proprietors. The proprietors were not paid compensation
for the lands and it is the taking away and allotment of
these lands which are the subject of challenge in these
appeals on grounds about to be stated. Before we do so we
will set down some of the legislative measures which have
relevance and mention some of the cases decided under them
one of which led to the Second Amendment Act.
The Consolidation Act (50 of 1948) was passed to provide for
the compulsory consolidation of agricultural holdings and
for preventing the fragmentation of agricultural holdings.
Section 18 of the Act provided that notwithstanding anything
contained in any law for the time being in force, it shall
be lawful for any Consolidation Officer to direct inter
alia:
"(a) that any land specifically assigned for
any common purpose shall cease to be so
assigned and to assign any other land in its
place;
(b)
(c) that if in any area under consolidation
no land is reserved for any common purpose
including extension of the village abadi, or
if the land so reserved is inadequate, to
assign other land for such purpose to
Section 46 of the Consolidation Act conferred
powers on the State Government to make rules
for carrying out the purpose of the Act and in
particular to provide for :
(e) the manner in which the area is to be
reserved under section 18 and the manner in
which it is to
85
be dealt with and also the manner in which the
village abadi is to be given to proprietors
and non-proprietors (including scheduled
castes, Sikh backward classes, artisans and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
labourers) on payment of compensation or
otherwise;"
On March 3, 1956 the Punjab Government, by a
notification, added rule 16 to the Rules for
reservation of the abadi for the proprietors as
well as the non-proprietors and it read as
follows:-
"The area to be reserved for the common
purpose of extension of abadi for proprietors
and non-proprietors under section 18(c) of the
Act shall be reserved after scrutinizing the
demand of proprietors desirous of building
houses and of non-proprietors including
Harijan families working as agrarian labourers
who are in need of a site for house. The land
reserved for extension of abadi shall be
divided into plots of suitable sizes. For the
plots allotted to proprietors area of equal
value shall be deducted from their holdings
but in the case of non-proprietors including
Harijan families these shall be allotted
without payment of compensation and they shall
be deemed to be full owners of the plots
allotted to them."
On April 9, 1957 the Punjab Government added
rule 16(ii) which provided for reservation of
lands for the Gram Panchayat. It read :
16(ii) : In in estate or estates where during
consolidation proceedings there is no shamlat
deh land or such land is considered
inadequate, land shall be reserved for the
village Panchayat, under section 18 (c) of the
Act, out of the common pool of the village at
a scale prescribed by Government from time to
time. Proprietary rights in respect of land,
so reserved (except the area reserved for the
extension of abadi of proprietors and non-
proprietors) shall vest in the proprietary
body of the estate -or estates concerned, and
it shall be entered in the column of ownership
of record of rights as (jumla malikan wa digar
haqdaran arazi hasat rasad raqba). The
management of such land shall be done by the
Panchayat of the estate or estates concerned
on behalf of the village proprietary body and
the Panchayat shall have the right to utilize
the income
86
derived from the land so reserved for the
common needs and benefits of the estate or
estates concerned."
Rule 16(ii) was declared ultra vires on November 5, 1959 by
the Punjab High Court in Munsha Singh v. State of Punjab(1).
After Munsha Singh’s case the second amending Act (27 of
1960) was passed. It gave legal cover to rule 16(ii) by
including in section 2 of the Consolidation Act (50 of 1948)
the following
"2(bb) "Common purpose" means any purpose in
relation to any common need, convenience or
benefit of the village and includes the
following purposes
(i) extension of the village abadi;
(ii) provide income for the Panchayat of the
village concerned for the benefit of the
village community-.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
(iii) village roads and paths; village drains;
village wells, ponds or tanks; village
watercourses or water channels; village bus
stands and waiting places; manure pits; hada
rori; public latrines; cremation and burial
grounds; Panchayat Ghar; Janj Ghar; grazing
grounds; tanning places; mela
grounds; public places, of religious or
charitable nature; and
(iv) schools and playgrounds, dispensaries,
hospitals and institutions of like nature,
water-works or tub---wells, whether such
schools, play grounds) dispensaries,
hospitals, institutions, water-works or tube-
wells may be managed and controlled by the
State Government or not."
It also added a new section (s. 23-A) in the
Consolidation Act as follows :-
"23A. As soon as-, a scheme comes into force,
the management and control of all lands
assigned or reserved for common purposes of
the village, under section 18,-
(a) in the case of common purposes specified
in sub-clause (iv) of clause (bb) of section 2
in respect of which the management and control
are to be exercised by the State Government,
shall vest in the State Government; and
(1) I.L.R. [1960] 1 Punjab 589.
87
(b) in the case of any other common purpose,
shall vest in the panchayat of that village;
and the State Government or the Panchayat, as
the case may be, shall be entitled to
appropriate the income accruing therefrom for
the benefit of the village community, and the
rights and interests of the owners of such
lands shall stand modified and extinguished
accordingly:
Provided that in the case of land assigned or
reserved for the extension of village abadi or
manure pits for the proprietors and non-
proprietors of the village, such land shall
vest in the proprietors and non-proprietors to
whom it is given under the scheme of
consolidation."
It also amended the preamble suitably. All the amendments
were with retrospective effect.
Before fact follow up the result of this amendment we may
say something about three other Acts of the Punjab
legislature to which some reference will be necessity in the
sequel. The Punjab Gram Panchayat Act, 1953 (4 of 1953) was
passed to provide for better administration in the rural
areas of Punjab by Panchayats. Section 19 of the Panchayat
Act laid multifarious administrative duties on the Panchayat
like sanitation, drainage, supply of water, looking after
burial and cremation grounds, public health, providing
schools, hospitals etc. and also emphasized-
(f) pounds for animals;
(n) the development of agriculture and
village industries, and the destruction of
weeds and pests;
(o) starting and maintaining a grain fund
for the cultivators and lending them seed for
sowing purposes on such conditions as the Gram
Panchayat may approve.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
(q) allotment of places for preparation and
conservation of manure;
(t) framing and carrying out schemes for the
improved methods of cultivation and management
of land to, increase production."
88
The last was added in 1954. In the same year the
legislature enacted the Punjab Village Common Lands
(Regulation) Act (1 of 1954) with the object of regulating
the rights in shamlat deh and abadi deh. The provisions of
the Common Lands Regulation Act resulted in the vesting of
all rights of management in the shamlat deh in the village
Panchayat and in the land in the abadi deh under a house
owned by a non-proprietor, in the non-proprietor (s. 3).
Section 4 provided:
"All lands vested in a panchayat by virtue of
the provisions of this Act shall be utilised
or disposed of by the panchayat for the
benefit of the inhabitants of the village
concerned, in the manner prescribed." Section
6 provided
"Any income accruing from the use and
occupation of the lands vested in a panchayat
shall be credited to the panchayat fund and
shall be utilised in the manner prescribed."
Finally, section 7 provided :
"No person shall be entitled to - any
compensation for any loss suffered or alleged
to have been suffered as a result of the
coming into force of this Act."
The Common Lands Regulation Act was challenged in Hukam
Singh v. State of Punjab(1) but was upheld. The High Court,
however, observed that Art. 31(2) would have rendered the
Act void but for the enactment of Art. 31-A.
The last Act to which a brief reference may be made is the
Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act, (10 of 1953) and its
amendment by Act 57 of 1953 and Act II of 1955. By that Act
security of land tenures, fixing of areas for "self-
cultivation" was provided and there was conferment of rights
on tenants to purchase lands under their cultivation from
the landholders. The validity of these Acts was challenged
but they were upheld in Atma Ram v. State of Punjab(2) to
which we shall refer later.
The appellants in this appeal had filed a Civil Writ
Petition (No. 319 of 1961) contending that the distribution
of shamlat lands was illegal and such lands, if they had to
be redistributed, could only be distributed among the
proprietors but could not be given to non-proprietors.
Grover J., who heard the petition ,dismissed it on the
authority of Jagat Singh v. Punjab State(3). Against his
order special leave was granted by this Court and
(1) I.L.R. [1955] Punjab 1334. (2) [1959] S.C.R. 1 Supp.
748.
(3) 1962 64 P.L.R. 241.
89
Civil Appeal No. 743 of 1963 is the result. The other two
appeals arise from other writ petitions. Writ Petition No.
761 of 1957 (Civil Appeal No. 553 of 1962) was dismissed by
Grover J. against whose decision a Letters Patent Appeal was
filed. Writ Petition No. 454 of 1958 (Civil Appeal No. 554
of 1962) was heard by the Bench which heard the said Letters
Patent Appeal and both were dismissed on August 18, 1960.
The High Court did not certify the judgments as fit for
appeal but the appellants obtained special leave and Civil
Appeals Nos. 553 and 554 of 1962 were filed.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
These appeals were heard together and they challenge the
correctness of the decision in Jagat Singh’s case(1) and
thus question the validity of the Amending Act 27 of 1960
because they contend it is in breach of Arts. 19(1)(f) and
31 of the Constitution. Rules 16(i) and (ii) are also
challenged. They further challenge the Common Lands
(Regulation) Act which is a part of the entire scheme. The
High Court in Jagat Singh’s case(2) has held that Act 27 of
1960 gives retrospective validity to rules 16(i) and (ii)
and the position which existed when Munsha Singh’s case(3)
was decided does not obtain now. The High Court has also
decided that Act 27 of 1960 is saved by Art. 31-A and the
case of this Court in K. K. Kochuni v. State of Madras(3)
which interpreted Art. 31-A, as amended by the Constitution
(Fourth Amendment) Act, 1955, is not applicable. In the
appeals before us the same points are raised and the Common
Lands (Regulation) Act is also challenged.
These appeals were heard and closed for judgment on April
27, 1964 but as the Court went into vacation at the end of
the first week of May, judgment had to be postponed till
after the vacation. The Court reassembled on July 20, 1964
but on June 20, 1964 the Constitution (Seventeenth
Amendment) Act, 1964, received the assent of the President.
That amendment inter alia substituted retrospectively from
January 26, 1950, a new sub-clause (a) in clause (2) of Art.
31-A and added a proviso to cl. (1). These cases were
decided in the High Court under Art. 3 1 -A as it was
formerly. The appeals were set down to be mentioned on July
20/23, 1964 before a different Bench, and counsel were asked
if, in view of the amendment, they wished to say anything.
Surprisingly enough none of the parties -wished to argue the
appeals and though we cannot now refer to sub-cl. (a) of
cl. (2) of Art 31-A as it was formerly, because that sub-
(1) (1962)64 P.L.R. 241. (2) I.L.R. (1960)1 Punjab 589.
(3) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
90
clause must be deemed to have never existed, we are in the
unhappy position of not being able to express any opinion on
Art. 31 -A as it must be deemed to have been all the time.
In view of the attitude of learned counsel the Bench before
which the statements were made recorded the following
order:-
"These appeals were set down for hearing today
to enable the learned counsel appearing for
both the parties, to argue whether the
provisions of Art. 31-A, as they have been
amended by the Constitution (Seventeenth
Amendment) Act, 1964, had any relevance and
bearing on the case which had been fully
argued before another Bench before this Court
closed for the summer vacation. The counsel
appearing for both the parties made it clear
that the amended provisions had no bearing and
they wanted us to decide the said appeals
without reference to the said amendment. The
appeals will, therefore, be set down for
judgment in due course."
The appeals thus remain to be decided on the old arguments
though it is clear to us that the amendment of Art. 31-A,
far-reaching as it is, must have affected one or other of
the parties. It seems that the implications of the
amendment of the Constitution will have to be worked out in
some other case.
The short point which we think arises is this: whether the
transfer of shamlat deh owned by the proprietors to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
village Panchayat for the purposes of management in the
manner described above and the conferment of proprietary
rights on non proprietors in respect of lands in abadi deh
is illegal and the several provisions of law allowing this
to be done are ultra vires Art. 31 inasmuch as no
compensation is payable or whether the law and the action
taken are protected by Art. 31-A?
The argument of Mr. Bishan Narain in these appeals was that
they were covered by the Kochuni case(1). In that case this
Court observed that the Madras Marumakkathyam (Removal of
Doubts) Act, 1955 was invalid by reason of Art. 19(1)(f)
inasmuch as it deprived a sthanee of his properties and
vested them in the tarwad contrary to Art. 19(1) (f). It
was also held (as has been correctly summarized in the head-
note) that it was not saved by Art. 31-A (as it then stood)
because even if the sthnam properties held in janmam rights
could be regarded as "estates", Art. 31-A did not protect
them since, properly construed, the article envisaged
agrarian reform only and provided for the
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
91
acquisition, extinguishment, or modification of proprietary
and various other kinds of subordinate rights in a tenure
called the estate solely for that purpose. It was pointed
out that although the statement of objects and reasons could
not properly be looked into for purposes of interpretation,
it could be referred to for the limited purpose of
ascertaining the conditions prevailing at the time of the
Fourth Amendment. It was pointed out that Art. 31 -A cl.
(b) must be read with cl. (1) (a) and as the impugned Act
did not contemplate any agrarian reform or seem to regulate
the rights inter se between landlords and tenants or modify
or extinguish any of the rights appertaining to janmam
right, leaving all the characteristics intact, it did not
come within the purview of Art. 3 1 -A of the Constitution.
In Jagat Singh’s case(1) the Full Bench of five Judges
agreed that the impugned provisions did come within the
conception of agrarian reforms but conflicting views were
expressed regarding the ambit of Art. 31-A as expounded in
the Kochuni case(2). A part of the statement of objects and
reasons which accompanied the Fourth Amendment has been set
out in the Kochuni case (2 ) but from the lines of
operations which were in contemplation in the proposed
amendment only one appears to have been quoted there.
Perhaps No. (ii) is also important to consider in this
connection and it reads:
(ii) The proper planning of urban and rural areas require
the beneficial utilisation of vacant and waste lands and the
clearance of slum areas."
Consolidation of holdings is really nothing more than a
proper planning of rural areas and this planning must of
necessity take note of vacant and waste lands. While we do
not seek to interpret the impugned rules and Acts, nor even
Art. 31-A of the Constitution with the aid of this statement
of Objects and Reasons, for such a canon is not approved of
in our practice, we have only completed the picture which to
our minds emerges from these objects and statements, if they
are at all considered relevant for any purpose.
In Kochuni case(3) reference was made to Atma Ram v. State
of Punjab(4) and the following passage was quoted to show
that agrarian reform was the core of Art. 31-A:-
"Keeping in view the fact that Art. 31-A was
enacted by two successive amendments--one in
1951 (First Amendment), and the second in 1955
(Fourth
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
(1) [1962] 64-P.L.R 241. (2) (1960] 3
S.C.R. 887.
(3) [1959] S.C.R. 1 Supp. 748.
92
Amendment)-with retrospective effect, in order
to save legislation effecting agrarian
reforms, we have every reason to hold that
those expressions have been used in their
widest amplitude, consistent with the purpose
behind those amendments."
The expressions from Art. 31-A which were given such wide
connotation were "any estate or of any rights therein" and
"the extinguishment or modification of any such rights"
occurring in Art. 31A(1). The Act there considered was the
Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act (10 of 1953) as amended
by Act 11 of 1955. It limited the area of land for "self
cultivation", gave the tenants rights to purchase lands with
them and in this way " modified" the rights of landlords.
It also released excess land for redistribution. This was
regarded to be agrarian reform and thus within the
protection of Art. 3 1 -A. The observations of this Court
in Thakur Raghubir Singh’s case(1) were explained and were
confined to the facts of that case. Article 31-A was appa-
rently not then viewed from the angle later adopted in the
Kochuni case(3), namely, that Art. 31-A was concerned with
"tenures" as such. There is reason to think that the
Kochuni case was regarded on other occasions too, as one
decided on its own facts. In Gangadhar Narayanrao Majumdar
v. State of Bombay(3) in considering the words "estate" and
"rights in an estate", the right of an inamdar under Bombay
Acts Nos. 11, VII of 1863 to appropriate to himself the
difference between the full assessment and the quit rent was
treated as a right in an estate and its extinguishment, or
modification, was considered to protected by Art. 31-A.
Similarly, in Ram Narain Medhi v. State of Bombay(4) the
Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands (Amendment) Act 1956
(which amended Bombay Act LXVII of 1948) was in question.
It sought to distribute equitably the lands between the
landlords and tenants by way of compulsory purchase of all
surplus lands by tenants in possession thereof from April 1,
1957 (known as the Tillers’ Day). The fundamental idea was
the prevention of concentration of lands in the hands of a
few landholders. It was pointed out that this was protected
by Art. 31-A. No doubt the redistribution of lands so that
a few may not monopolise the land is the cardinal principle
on which agrarian economy in a socialistic pattern of
society rests. But certain observations in the case show
that abolishing intermediaries or modifications of the
tenures
(1) [1953) S.C.R. 1049. (2) (19601 3 S.C.R. 887.
(3) [1961] 1 S.C.R. 943. (4) [1959] Supp. 1.S.C.R. 489.
93
was not the only objective open under Art. 31-A. It was
observed:
With a view to achieve the objective of
establishing a socialistic pattern of society
in the State within the meaning of Articles 38
and 39 of the Constitution,, a further measure
of agrarian reform was enacted by the State
Legislature, being the impugned Act,
here before referred to, which was designed to
bring about such distribution of ownership -
and control of agricultural lands as best to
subserve the common good thus eliminating
concentration of wealth and means of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
production to the common detriment." (Italics
supplied)
It is clear that in this passage a wider meaning to the
expression, agrarian reforms" than that given in the Kochuni
case(1) is discernible. We shall refer to one more case to
illustrate our point. in Sonapur Tea Co. Ltd. v. Must.
Mazirunnessa(2) the validity of the Assam Fixation of
Ceiling of Land Holdings Act, 1957 was considered and the
question was whether the rights which were taken away or
abridged by the Assam Act were "rights" in relation to an
estate within the meaning of Art. 3 1 -A (2) (b) of the
Constitution. The Kochuni case(3) was decided on May 4,
1960 and the decision in the Assam case was given on April
4, 1961 but there is no mention of the dicta in the former
case. -It was held that the rights which were extinguished
undoubtedly constituted "rights in relation to an estate"
and Mr. N. C. chatterjee who argued the case, conceded that
this was so (see p. 730). The same conclusion regarding the
meaning of the word "modification" was reached in Burrakur
Coal Co. Ltd. v. Union of India(4) without adverting to
Kochuni case(5). See also State of Bihar v. Rameshwar
Pratap Narain Singh(6) and state of Bihar v. Umesh Jha(5).
In the latter a provision of the Bihar Land Reforms Act
1950, as amended by the Bihar Land’ reforms (Amendment) Act,
1959 which empowered the Collector to annual anticipatory
transfers of land designed to defeat the object of the Act
was held to be protected by Art. 31-A, though the section by
itself did not provide for the "extinguishment or
Modification" of any rights in an estate. It was justified
as an integral part of a statute which did so and thus
received the protect of Art. 3 1 -A along with the parent
Act.
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887. (2)[1962] 1 S.C.R. 724.
(3) [1962] 1 S.C.R. 44,61. (5) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 687.
(4) [1962] 2 S.C.R. 382.
94
From a review of these authorities it follows that when the
Punjab High Court decided these cases on the authority of
Jaga Singh’s case(1) the view taken in this Court was in
favour of giving a large and liberal meaning to the terms
’estate’, ’rights in at estate’ and ’extinguishment and
modification’ of such rights in Art. 31-A. No doubt
Kochuni’s case(2) considered a bare transfer of the rights
of the sthanee to the tarwad without alteration of the
tenure and without any pretence of agrarian reform, as not
one contemplated by Art. 31 -A however liberally construed.
But that was a special case and we cannot apply it to cases
where the general scheme of legislation is definitely
agrarian reform and under its provisions something ancillary
thereto in the interests of rural economy, has to be
undertaken to give full effect to the reforms. In our
judgment the High Court was right in no applying the strict
rule in Kochuni’s case(3) to the facts here.
The High Court was also right in its view that the proposed
changes in the shamlat deh and abadi deh were included in
the general scheme of planning of rural areas and the
productive utilisation of vacant and waste lands. The
scheme of rural development today envisages not only
equitable distribution of land so that there is no undue
imbalance in society resulting in landless class on the one
hand and a concentration of land in the hands of a few on
the other, but envisages also the raising of economic
standards and bettering rural health and social conditions.
Provisions for the assignment of lands to village Panchayat
for the use of the general community, or for hospitals
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
schools, manure pits, tanning grounds etc. enure for the
benefit rural population must be considered to be an
essential part of the redistribution of holdings and open
lands to which no objection is apparently taken. If
agrarian reforms are to succeed, mere distribution of land
to the landless is not enough. There must be a proper
planning of rural economy and conditions and a body like the
village Panchayat is best designed to promote rural welfare
than individual owners of small portions of lands Further,
the village Panchayat is an authority for purposes of Part
III as was conceded before us and it has the protection of
Art 3 1 -A because of this character even if the taking over
of sham lat deh amounts to acquisition. In our opinion, the
High Court was right in deciding as it did on this part of
the case.
With respect to abadi deh the same reasoning must apply ’The
settling of a body of agricultural artisans (such as the
village carpenter, the village blacksmith, the village
tanner
(1) (1962) 64 P.L.R. 241.
(2) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
95
farrier, wheelwright, barber, washerman etc.) is a part of
rural planning and can be comprehended in a scheme of
agrarian reforms. It is a trite saying that India lives in
villages and a scheme to make villages self-sufficient
cannot but be regarded as part of the larger reforms which
consolidation of holdings, fixing of ceilings on lands,
distribution of surplus lands and utilising of vacant and
waste lands contemplate. The four Acts, namely, the Con-
solidation Act, the Village Panchayat Act, the Common Lands
Regulation Act and the Security of Tenure Act are a part of
a general scheme of reforms and any modification of rights
such as the present had the protection of Art. 31-A. The
High Court was thus right in its conclusion on this part of
the case also.
In our opinion these appeals must fail. We, however, make
it clear that by reason of the circumstances which have
supervened we have done no more than examine the correctness
of the decisions under appeal (particularly the Full Bench
decision in Jagat Singh’s case(1) which was followed in
them) in the light of facts and law present to the mind of
the Full Bench. For obvious reasons we have not strayed
beyond that limit but if we have expressed any opinion which
seems to bear on the Seventeenth Amendment, it should not be
regarded as deliberate or binding. The appeals fail and
will be dismissed but there will be no order about costs.
Appeals dismissed.
(1) (1962) 64 P.L.R. 241.
96