Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
M.K. HARIHAR IYER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AUTHORISED OFFICER LAND REFORMS, TIRUNELVELI
DATE OF JUDGMENT14/02/1990
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
BENCH:
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (CJ)
THOMMEN, T.K. (J)
AHMADI, A.M. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 907 1990 SCR (1) 358
1990 SCC Supl. 182 JT 1990 (1) 222
1990 SCALE (1)191
ACT:
Tamilnadu Land Reforras (Fixation of Ceiling on Land)
Act 1961--Sections 3(2), 3(31), 5(2), 10(B), 21A, 22,
23(vii)--Whether ’affected person’ can avail of Section 21A
in respect of proceedings commenced prior to the 1970 Amend-
ing Act.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant land-owner held lands in excess of 30
standard acres as on 6.4.1960. He filed a return as required
by the Tamil Nadu Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling on Land)
Act, 1961 and an enquiry was initiated by the Authorised
Officer concerned under Section 9(2)(b) of the Act. Several
objections raised by the appellant were rejected and the
Authorised Officer came to the conclusion that the family of
the appellant could be reckoned to be of five members be-
tween 6.4.1960 and 2.10.1962 and thus the appellant was
entitled to 30 standard acres; his wife and daughter however
could hold 10 and 7.71 standard acres respectively as strid-
hana. The appellant was asked to elect which lands he wished
to be included in his holding and state which lands should
be treated as surplus. Feeling aggrieved by the said deter-
mination, the appellant preferred an appeal under Section
78(1) to the Land Tribunal. The appellant contended (i) that
the Authorised Officer had wrongly included the lands of his
minor sons, unmarried daughter and wife gifted to them long
before 1960; (ii) that subsequent to the filing of the
appeal, the Act was amended as a consequence whereof his
rights and liabilities with regard to the fixation of ceil-
ing area were required to be worked out on the basis of the
revised date of commencement of the Act i.e. 15.2.1970;
notified date being 2.10.1970. It was also urged by the
appellant that the lands of his eldest son Laxminarayanan
could not be included in his holding. On those grounds
amongst others relating to the effect of subsequent transac-
tions the appellant prayed that the matter ought to be
remanded to the Authorised Tribunal for a de novo considera-
tion. The appellant authority rejected all the contentions
and dismissed the appeal, whereupon the appellant preferred
a revision application before the High Court. Before the
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High Court his plea regarding subsequent transactions was
confined to the documents executed between 15th February
1970, the date of commencement of the
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Act, and 2nd October 1970, the notified date; contentions
regarding other transactions were not pressed. The High
Court accepted this contention and took the view that even
in respect of proceedings which commenced prior to the
coming into force of the Amending Act, an affected person
can take advantage of the provisions contained In Section 2
IA. The High Court held that while Section 2 of the Amending
Act reduced the ceiling area to half, benefit was conferred
by Section 21A and hence both the provisions had to be read
together. On that reasoning the High Court opined that the
three documents relating to subsequent transactions executed
between the said date, could not be ignored in fixing the
ceiling area unless it was found that the documents were
executed to defeat the provisions of the Act, in which case
the transactions may be declared void under Section 22 of
the Act. The High Court accordingly directed the Authorised
Officer to make further inquiries regarding the three trans-
actions in question and pass appropriate orders. The High
Court rejected the other contentions. The appellant being
aggrieved with the rejection of other points raised before
the High Court has preferred this appeal by special leave.
Dismissing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: The proceedings in this case had started and
concluded before the Authorised Officer long before the
Amending Act saw the light of the day. Under Section 3(1) of
the Amending Act, any action taken (including any order
made, decision or direction given, proceeding taken, etc.)
under the provisions of Act before the date of publication
of the Amending Act, can be continued and enforced after the
said date in accordance with the provisions of the Act as if
the Amending Act had not been passed. This is however,
subject to subsection (2) which carves out an exception to
sub-section (1) insofar as the reduction of the ceiling area
from 30 standard acres to 15 standard acres is concerned.
[367E-G]
B.K.V. Radhamani Ammal v. Authorised Officer, Land
Reforms, Coimbatore, [1985] 2 SCC 46, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 695 of
1975.
From the Judgment and Order dated 21.3.1974 of the
Madras High Court in Civil Revision Petition No. 2598 of
1972.
G. Viswanatha lyer and N. Sudhakar for the Appellant.
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V. Krishnamurthy for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
AHMADI, J. This appeal by special leave is filed against
the judgment and order of the High Court of Madras whereby
it remitted the matter to the Authorised Officer for dispos-
al in accordance with law and in the light of the observa-
tions made therein. The facts giving rise to this appeal are
as under:
The appellant-land owner held lands in Kanyakumari
District in excess of 30 standard acres as on 6th April,
1960. He filed a return in Form No. 2 as required by the
Tamil Nadu Land Reforms (Fixation of Ceiling on Land) Act,
1961 (Act 58 of 1961), hereinafter called ’the Act’. An
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enquiry was initiated by the Authorised Officer, Land Re-
forms, under Section 9(2)(b) of the Act. The appellant
raised several objections but they were overruled. The
Authorised Officer came to the conclusion that the family of
the appellant could be reckoned to be of five members be-
tween 6th April, 1960 and 2nd October, 1962 and accordingly
the land owner was entitled to 30 standard acres while his
wife and daughter could hold 10 and 7.71 standard acres
respectively as stridhana lands. The appellant was directed
to state which lands he wished to be included in his holding
and identify the lands which fell surplus, failing which the
Authorised Officer said he would be constrained to select
the surplus lands. The appellant was given five days time to
make the option.
Feeling aggrieved by the decision of the Authorised
Officer, the appellant preferred an appeal under Section
78(1) to the Lands Tribunal. The appellant complained that
the Authorised Officer had wrongly added the lands of his
minor sons, unmarried daughter and wife gifted to them long
before 1960 in his holdings for determining if his total
holdings exceeded the ceiling limit fixed under Section 5(2)
of the Act. According to him the lands covered under the
registered gift deed ought to have been excluded from his
holding under the Explanation to Section 3(14) as a gift
stood on par with a partition. As a limb of the same argu-
ment the appellant contended that subsequent to the filing
of the appeal, the Act was drastically amended by Tamil Nadu
Land Reforms (Reduction of Ceiling on Land) Act, 1970 (Act
17 of 1970), hereinafter called ’the Amending Act’, whereby
under Section 3(2), ’the date of commencement of this Act’
came to be fixed as 15th February, 1970 and the ’notified
date’ came to be fixed as 2nd October, 1970 under Section
3(31) of the Act. Consequently, argued
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the appellant, his rights and liabilities with regard to the
fixation of ceiling area were required to be worked out on
the basis of the state of affairs existing on the revised
date of commencement of the Act i.e. 15th February, 1970,
fixed by virtue of the amendment in the Act. He also relied
on the fact that his eldest son who was a minor on th April,
1968 had attained majority on 1st January, 1970 (in the High
Court judgment the date is 1st October, 1970) i.e. before
the commencement of the Act on 15th February, 1970, and also
before the notified date i.e. 2nd October, 1970, and hence
his land could not be included in his holding as was done by
the Authorised Officer. It was also pointed out that his son
had created a trust in respect of a portion of the land
which would be exempt from the operation of the Act by
virtue of Section 73(2)(b) of the Act. It was, therefore,
submitted that his eldest son Laxminarayanan was a necessary
party and the proper course would be to set aside the im-
pugned order of the Authorised Officer and remand the matter
for a de novo consideration after notice to his son. The
second submission made was that on 10th April, 1968 when the
impugned order was made the appellant’s wife was pregnant,
she had since delivered a daughter and had gifted to her
5.71 acres of Vadaseri land on 1st October, 1970 and later
an additional 5.06 acres of the land from the same village,
which developments had to be taken into account as subse-
quent events touching the determination of the appellant’s
ceiling area. Thirdly, it was pointed out that the appellant
had transferred 2 acres 48 cents of S. No. 2221, 0.82 cents
of S. No. 2208-A and 1 acre 66 cents of Vadaseri lands to a
third party on 26th April, 1970 for services rendered to
him. Similarly a portion of S. No. 2224 admeasuring 0.31
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cents was sold to yet another third party on 23rd April,
1969 for valuable consideration and it was necessary to give
effect to these transactions which were subsequent to the
impugned order. It was lastly contended by the appellant
that his property bearing S. Nos. 1387-A and 1363-A which
was subject to mortgage had to be sold on 1st July, 1968, a
development subsequent to the impugned order which too had
to be noticed in fixing the ceiling area. These transac-
tions, it was said, were protected by Section 21A of the
Act. It was, therefore, submitted that since an appeal was a
continuation of the original proceedings it was obligatory
on the part of the appellate authority to examine the impact
of these subsequent developments and refix the ceiling area.
The appellant, however, contended that as third parties
would have to be heard before deciding the issue, the proper
course was to direct the Authorised Officer to consider the
matter afresh in its entirety. The appellate authority
negatived all the contentions and dismissed the appeal with
costs.
362
Thereupon, the appellant approached the High Court by
way of a revision application. Before the High Court the
contention in regard to the subsequent transactions was
confined to the documents executed between 15th February,
1970, the date of commencement of the Act, and 2nd October,
1970, the notified date. That included the two settlement
deeds dated 1st October, 1970 made in favour of the unmar-
ried daughters and the sale deed dated 26th April, 1970
executed in favour of a third party. The contention was not
pressed in respect of the transaction evidenced by the sale
deed dated 23rd April, 1969 in favour of a third party. This
contention found favour with the High Court. The High Court
took the view, relying on an earlier Division Bench judgment
in C.R.P. No. 1197 of 1971 (Fakir Mohmad v. The State of
Tamil Nadu), that "even in respect of proceedings which
commenced prior to the coming into force of the Amending
Act, an affected person can take advantage of the provisions
contained in Section 21A". It was held that while Section 2
of the Amending Act reduced the ceiling area to half, bene-
fit was conferred by Section 2 IA and hence both the provi-
sions had to be read together. It was, therefore, held that
the three documents could not be ignored in fixing the
ceiling area unless it is found that the documents were
executed to defeat the provisions of the Act, in which case
the transactions may be declared void under Section 22 of
the Act. In this view of the matter, the High Court directed
the Authorised Officer to make further inquiries regarding
the said three transactions and pass appropriate orders. The
High Court, however, rejected the rest of the contentions by
which exclusion was sought, viz., (,i) on the conjoint
reading of Section 10(8) and Section 3(14) insofar as it
concerned Laxmmarayanan as a member of the appellant’s fami-
ly; (ii) in regard to lands which were locked in litigation;
(iii) in regard to lands in the possession of mortgagees;
and (iv) the lands which are covered under Section 73(vii)
of the Act. In this view that the High Court took, the
matter was remitted to the Authorised Officer in regard to
the aforesaid three transactions.
The appellant, feeling aggrieved by the rejection of his
other contentions by the High Court, has preferred this
appeal by special leave. The main grievance of the appellant
is that the High Court fell into an error in limiting the
benefit of Section 21 A to three transactions only and by
directing an enquiry under Section 22 overlooking the fact
that it was not subject to Section 22. He further contends
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that the High Court was wrong in thinking that the conten-
tion in regard to the sale deed dated 22nd April, 1969 was
not pressed. In brief the contention is that the High Court
failed to appreciate the impact of the
363
amendments introduced by the Amending Act on the two settle-
ments of 1st October, 1970 and the sale deed of 26th April,
1970 and erred in holding that the relief under Section 21A
must be determined after an enquiry under Section 22 of the
Act. This was the main thrust of the submissions made at the
hearing of this appeal.
The Act (Act 58 of 1961) was notified on 2nd October,
1962 but the date of its commencement was fixed as 6th
April, 1960. The present proceedings had commenced under the
said Act. Th Act was amended by Act 17 of 1970 whereby the
ceiling area was reduced from 30 standard acres for a family
not exceeding five member to 15 standard acres and the date
of commencement of the Act was shifted to 15th February,
1970 and the notified date to 2nd October, 1970. There can
be no doubt that after the passing of Act 17 of 1970 the
family’s holding had to be determined with reference to the
notified date i.e. 2nd October, 1970. See: B.K.V. Radhamani
Ammal v. Authorised Officer, Land Reforms, Coimbatore,
[1985] 2 SCC 46.
The Act was enacted to provide for the fixation of
ceiling on agricultural land holdings and matters connected
therewith. Section 5 fixes the ceiling area in the case of
every family consisting of not more than five members at 15
standard acres after the amendment made in the provision by
virtue of Section 2(2)(a) of the Amending Act. Section 7
lays down that on and from the date of commencement of the
Act, no person shall, except as otherwise provided by the
Act, be entitled to hold land in excess of the ceiling area.
The family of the appellant consisted of himself, his wife,
two minor sons and an unmarried daughter at the date of
commencement of the Act and on the notified date as they
stood before the Amending Act. One son had become a major
w.e.f. 1st January, 1970. In the High Court judgment the
date is stated to be 1st October, 1970. That will not make
any difference so far as the submission is concerned.
We may first notice Sections 21A and 22 of the Act as
amended by the Amending Act. They read as under:
"21A. Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 22 or in
any other provision of this Act and in any other law for the
time being in force, where, after the 15th day of February,
1970 but before the 2nd day of October, 1970.
(a) any person has effected by means of a registered instru-
ment a partition of his holding or part thereof; or
364
(b) any parent or grand-parent has voluntarily transferred
any land on account of natural love and affection to any
minor son, unmarried daughter, minor grand-son, or unmarried
grand-daughter in the male line; or
(c) any person has voluntarily transferred any land
(i) to any educational institution; or
(ii) hospital.
of a public nature solely for the purposes of such institu-
tion or hospital;
such partition or transfer shall be valid:
Provided that in the case of transfer to such
educational institution or hospital, the land transferred
absolutely vests in the institution or hospital and the
entire income from such land is appropriated for the insti-
tution or hospital."
"22. Where, on or after the date of the commencement of this
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Act, but before the notified date, any person has trans-
ferred any land held by him by sale, gift (other than gift
made in contemplation of death), exchange, surrender, set-
tlement or in any other manner whatsoever except by bequest
or has effected a partition of his holding or part thereof,
the authorised officer within whose jurisdiction such land,
holding or the major part thereof is situated may, after
notice to such person and other persons affected by such
transfer or partition and after such enquiry as he thinks
fit to make, declare the transfer or partition to be void if
he finds that the transfer or the partition, as the case may
be, defeats any of the provisions of this Act."
Section 21A begins with a non-obstante clause and limits its
application to partition or transfer mentioned in clauses
(a) to (c) effected between 15th February, 1970 and 2nd
October, 1970. The settlement deeds, both dated 1st October,
1970 and the sale deed dated 26th April, 1970 fall within
the two termini points fixed by Section 21A but the sale
deed dated 23rd April, 1969 is clearly outside the scope of
Section 21A and therefore it seems the learned counsel for
the appellant in the High Court rightly did not press the
claim in regard to the
365
land covered under the said document. However, the learned
counsel for the appellant before us pointed out that while
the High Court rightly came to the conclusion that the
appellant was entitled to the benefit of Section 21A insofar
as the two settlement deeds of 1st October, 1970 and the
sale deed of 26th April, 1970 are concerned, it fell into an
error in holding--"However, if those transfers are meant to
defeat any of the provisions of the Act, then the Authorised
Officer may declare the said transfers to be void under
Section 22 of the Act"--thereby totally overlooking the
opening words of Section 2 IA which are intended to override
Section 22. The further observations of the High Court based
on decision in Naganatha Ayyar v. Authorised Officer, [197
1]1 M.L.J. 274 make it clear that the High Court misread
the observations of Ramanujam, J. when it said:
"Ramanujam, J. pointed out that all transfers effected
between the date of commencement of the Act and the notified
date cannot be declared to be void as defeating the provi-
sions of the Act. It has been pointed out that only if the
transfers are really not transfers but sham and nominal
transactions or bogus transactions, they would be defeating
the provisions of the Act and that only then they can be
declared to be void under Section 22 of the Act".
The above observations are somewhat confusing. A sham,
nominal or bogus document may not necessarily be one intend-
ed to defeat any provision of the Act. A partition or trans-
fer evidenced by such a document would be of no avail to
seek the benefit of Section 21A regardless of Section 22.
Section 21A, which begins with the words--notwithstanding
anything contained in Section 22--clearly overrides Section
22 and therefore the transactions referred to in Section 21A
cannot be the subject-matter of enquiry under Section 22.
Section 21A refers to only three types of transfers viz.
,(i) transfer of holding by a registered partition deed;
(ii) transfer of land to specified individuals on account of
natural love and affection; and (iii) transfer in favour of
an educational institution or hospital of a public nature
solely for the purposes of such institution or hospital
provided the transferred land vests absolutely in the insti-
tution or hospital and the entire income from such land is
appropriated for the institution or hospital. Even though
the transactions referred to in Section 21A cannot be de-
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clared void under Section 22 as defeating any of the provi-
sions of the Act, the Authorised Officer would be entitled
dehors Section 22 of the Act, to find out if the instruments
of transfer or partition though answering the description of
transactions under Section 21A, are in fact genuine
366
transactions and not sham, nominal or bogus ones. Similarly
the Authorised Officer would be entitled to determine if the
instruments of transfer even if genuine answer the descrip-
tion of documents referred to in Section 21 A, and if not,
he would be justified in invoking Section 22 of the Act. To
put it differently when any party seeks the benefit of
Section 21A, he must show, if a doubt arises, that (i) the
instrument on which he relies is a genuine one and not a
sham, nominal or bogus one and (ii) it answers the descrip-
tion of the documents referred to by Section 21A. If the
document is not found to be genuine, the Authorised Officer
will not act on it, if it is genuine, the Authorised Officer
will determine if it is one referred to in Section 21A and
if not he will resort to Section 22 of the Act. On this
consideration the sale deed dated 26th April, 1970 in favour
of a third party clearly falls outside the purview of Sec-
tion 21A and the Authorised Officer will be entitled to
embark on an enquiry under Section 22 of the Act, if the
instrument is otherwise genuine. In regard to the two set-
tlements in favour of unmarried daughters also the Autho-
rised Officer will have to consider if the settlements
answer the description of the documents referred to in
Section 21A even if they are genuine. If he answers both
these points in the affirmative he need not test the docu-
ments on the additional requirement of Section 22 but if he
comes to the conclusion that the documents do not fall
within Section 21A, he would be required to test their
validity on the touchstone of Section 22 of the Act. We have
thought it necessary to clearly define the scope of the
enquiry before the Authorised Officer on remand to clear the
doubt, if any, arising from the observations of the High
Court and to avoid unnecessary complications.
The next contention urged by the learned counsel for the
appellant is based on the plain language of Section 10(2)
read with the definition of ’family’ in Section 3(14) of the
Act. The appellant’s son Laxminarayanan is stated to have
attained majority on 1st January, 1970, i.e. before the date
of commencement of the Act on 15th February, 1970 and the
notified date of 2nd October, 1970. Even if the date stated
by the High Court is correct, he attained majority before
2nd October, 1970. On his attaining majority he ceased to be
a member of the appellant’s family. Under Section 10(2), the
Authorised Officer has to take into account only those
members of the family as are covered by the definition of
Section 3(14) of the Act. Although Laxminarayan was undoubt-
edly a member of the appellant’s family on the date on which
the Authorised Officer first determined the ceiling area,
the submission of the appellant’s counsel is that he having
ceased to be a minor son, he cannot be included in the
appellant’s family when
367
the Authorised Officer reconsiders the ceiling area on
remand. The High Court negatived this contention and in our
opinion rightly. The submission overlooks the provision
contained in Section 3 of the Amending Act by which the date
of commencement of the Act and the notified date were re-
vised. Section 3 reads as under:
"Saving--
(1) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), any action
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taken (including any order made, notification issued, deci-
sion or direction given, proceeding taken, liability or
penalty incurred and punishment awarded) under the provi-
sions of the Principal Act before the date of the publica-
tion of this Act in the Fort St. George Gazette, may be
continued or enforced after the said date in accordance with
the provisions of the Principal Act as if this Act had not
been passed.
(2) Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be deemed to entitle
any person whether or not such person is a party to any
proceeding mentioned in sub-section (1), to hold after the
15th day of February 1970, land in excess of the ceiling
area under the Principal Act as modified by Section 2 and
the provisions of the Principal Act as modified by Section
shall, after the said date, apply to such person."
The proceedings in this case had started and concluded
before the Authorised Officer long before the Amending Act
saw the light of the day. Under Section 3(1) of the Amending
Act, any action taking (including any order made, decision
or direction given, proceeding taken, etc.) under the provi-
sions of Act before the date of publication, of the Amending
Act, can be continued and enforced after the said date in
accordance with the provisions of the Act as if the Amending
Act had not been passed. This is, however, subject to sub-
section (2) which carves out an exception to sub-section (1)
insofar as the reduction of the ceiling area from 30 stand-
ard acres to 15 standard acres is concerned. The High Court
was, therefore, right in rejecting this contention.
Lastly, it was submitted that lands which were converted
into orchards of topes before 1st July, 1959 are exempt from
the provisions of the Act by virtue of Section 73(vii) of
the Act. The High Court has rejected this contention on the
following finding:
368
"In the present case certain lands are claimed to be topes
and exemption is claimed regarding the same. But there is
nothing to show that the said lands had been converted into
topes prior to first day of July, 1959.
Since the factual foundation is not laid we cannot entertain
this contention.
These were the only contentions urged before us. In view
of the above discussion we see no merit in this appeal and
dismiss the same with costs.
Y. Lal Appeal dis-
missed.
369