Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IQBAL SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT10/12/1975
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
BENCH:
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BHAGWATI, P.N.
CITATION:
1976 AIR 211 1976 SCR (2) 988
1976 SCC (1) 570
ACT:
Displaced Persons (Compensation & Rehabilitation) Act,
1954-Section 40-Rules 16 to 21-Rules whether to carry out
purpose of the act or can go beyond the objects for which
they can be framed-Whether verified claims of a displaced
person can be clubbed with a legacy received by him or the
purpose of payment of maximum compensation under the act-
Transfer of Property Act-Section 6-Meaning of Property-Right
of transfer of property of inheritance how taken away.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent a displace person from Pakistan had a
verified claim of more than Rs. 32 lacs from compensation
under the Displaced Persons (Compensation & Rehabilitation)
Act, 1954. His uncle Jai Singh had also a verified claim of
about Rs. 26 lacs. Jai Singh executed a will by which a
portion of his share in the compensation was bequeathed to
the respondent. Jai Singh died. The Assistant Settlement
Officer clubbed together the individual claim of the
respondent and the share of the legacy and awarded the
maximum compensation of Rs. 2 lacs under rule 16. Respondent
objected to the clubbing on the ground that the character of
the share Jai Singh was that of a legacy and not of
compensation. On an appeal, the Assistant Settlement
Commissioner accepted the respondent’s contention. The
Regional Settlement Commissioner, however, revised the order
of the Assistant Settlement Commissioner and restored the
order of the Assistant Settlement Officer. The appeal to the
Settlement Commissioner filed by the respondent failed. The
High Court allowed the writ petition filed by the respondent
and quashed the orders passed by the Settlement
Commissioner.
In an appeal by certificate under Article 133(1) (a) it
was contended by the appellant that the purpose of the Act
was to compensate and rehabilitate displaced persons subject
to a maximum limit. Combined effect of rules 16 to 21
interpreted in the light of the scheme of the Act was said
to be that the amount of compensation payable to an
individual cannot in any case exceed Rs. 2 lacs.
Dismissing the appeal,
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^
HELD : 1. There is nothing in the Act to prevent a
claimant from making a gift or will in respect of the amount
he might be entitled to get. No provision of the Act takes
away rights of transfer of or inheritance to verified
claims. Nothing like an abatement or an extinction of a
claim by the death of the claimant is provided for by the
Act. The statutory rights of claimants to compensation are
covered by the wide definition of "property" in section 6 of
the Transfer of Property Act. They cannot evaporate or
vanish suddenly with the death of a claimant. Rules framed
under section 40 of the Act have to be and are those
reasonably necessary for carrying out the purposes of the
Art. They cannot go beyond the objects for which they can be
framed. The objects are determination and payment of
compensation and do not extend to deprivation of anything
acquired in India. [990-F-H, 991-A]
2. The right of the respondent as a legatee was
different in character from his claim as a displaced person.
There is no provision for clubbing together of compensation
to different displaced persons each with a right of his own
except as members of joint families which are treated as
legal entities by themselves. The rights of a successor of
another displaced person are outside the rule. The
989
judgment of the Punjab High Court in the case of Karam Singh
v. Union of India I.I.R. [1964] 1 Punjab 742, approved.
[991 C, 992 A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1223 of
1972.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 19-8-1969 of the
Delhi High Court in Civil Writ No. 117-D of 1961.
Shyamla Pappu and M. N. Shroff for the Appellants.
D. Goburdhan and R. Goburdhan for Respondent.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by.
BEG, J. The Union of India and the Commissioners of the
Rehabilitation Department of the Govt. of India are the
appellants before us after certification of this case, under
Article 133(1) (a) of the Constitution, if involves a
consideration of the meaning of some rules framed under
Section 40 of the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act 44 of 1954 (hereinafter referred to as
’the Act’).
The respondent Iqbal Singh, a displaced person from
Rawalpindi, in West Pakistan, had a verified claim assessed
at over Rs. 32 lacs from compensation under the Act. His
uncle, Jai Singh, had also a verified claim assessed at Rs.
26,06,413/- On 21st November, 1952, Jai Singh executed a
will under which he gave various legatees, including the
respondent, shares in the compensation which was due to be
paid to him. Jai Singh died on 7th February, 1953. In an
inquiry under Section 9 of the Act the respondent was held
to be a beneficiary under Jai Singh’s will to the extent of
19% of the amount due to be paid to Jai Singh. The Assistant
Settlement Officer, however, clubbed together the individual
claim of over Rs. 32 lacs of Iqbal Singh respondent, and the
share of Rs. 4,95,028/- as a legatee in the separate claim
of Jai Singh. He then awarded the maximum compensation of
Rs. 2 lacs under Rule 16 which says:
"16. Scale of compensation.-Compensation shall be
payable in accordance with the scale specified in
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appendices VIII or IX as the case may be".
Appendix VIII is the relevant appendix giving
percentages of the assessed claims which were to be paid as
"compensation" for the verified claims ranging from Rs. 500
to Rs. 18 lacs and above. The maximum prescribed for Rs. 18
lacs and above is Rs. 2 lacs as "compensation". Thus, no
claimant could get more than that as compensation whatever
be the amount at which his claim was assessed. The result of
clubbing together by the Assistant Settlement Officer was
that the respondent was not to get more than Rs. 2 lacs even
though his own claim as compensation was for that much so
that he was, if this decision was correct, to be totally
deprived of his share in the legacy left by his uncle. His
case is that he is entitled to Rs. 2 lacs on his claim of
Rs.32 lacs, and, in addition, to his share of 19% also as a
legatee of the will relating to the amount which was payable
to Jai Singh deceased as claimant. The character of the
first was "compensation" and of the second was that of a
"legacy" under a will.
990
In appeal, the Assistant Settlement Commissioner
accepted the respondents case, by an order dated 29th July,
1957, and directed that the respondent’s claim be paid
separately from the share in the claim he was entitled to as
a beneficiary under the will mentioned above.
On 26th April, 1957,, the Regional Settlement
Commissioner, however, revised the order of the Assistant
Settlement Commissioner and held that the respondent could
not, under the existing rules, get any share of compensation
separately as a legatee out of the estate of Jai Singh.
The respondent appealed to the Settlement Commissioner
who agreed with the Regional Commissioner. The Central
Government also rejected a revision petition of the
respondent under Section 33 of the Act.
The respondent then filed a Writ Petition before the
Circuit Bench of the Punjab High Court which came up finally
before a Division Bench of the Delhi High Court and was
allowed. Orders of the Central Government and the Settlement
Commissioner were quashed and the order of the Assistant
Settlement Commissioner was restored by the High Court.
It has been urged on behalf of the appellants that the
High Court overlooked the scheme of the Act and
misinterpreted the relevant rules. The main contention
advanced by Mrs. Shymla Pappu, appearing on behalf of the
appellants, is that the whole purpose of the Act was to
compensate and rehabilitate individual displaced persons
with a maximum limit imposed on what could be awarded to a
displaced person for this purpose. It is urged that the
respondent could not obtain more than the maximum amount
prescribed by Appendix VIII under Rule 16. It is submitted
that the combined effect of Rules 16 to 21, interpreted in
the light of the scheme of the Act, is that the amount of
compensation payable to an individual cannot in any case,
exceed Rs. 2 lacs. Rule 21 is especially relied upon. It
says:
"21. Mixed claims.-Where a person holds a number
of verified claims in different capacities, the total
compensation payable to him shall be determined in
accordance with the provisions of rule 18, 19 and 20".
It is true that the Act is intended for payment of
compensation for rehabilitation of displaced persons and
matters connected therewith. There is, however, nothing in
the Act to prevent a claimant from making a gift or a will
in respect of the amount he may be entitled to get. No
provision of the Act takes away rights of transfer of or
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inheritance to verified claims. Nothing like an abatement or
extinction of a claim by the death of the claimant is
provided for by the Act. Inheritance to and devolution of
rights of claimants are clearly beyond the purview or scheme
of the Act. They are untouched by the provisions of the Act
and are governed by other provisions of law. The statutory
rights of claimants to compensation, which crystallize on
assessment and verification of claims, are separate rights
to property of each claimant covered by the wide definition
of "property" in Section 6 of the Transfer of Property Act.
They cannot evaporate or vanish suddenly with the
991
death of a claimant. Rules framed under Section 40 of the
Act have to be and are those reasonably necessary for
carrying out the purposes of the Act. They cannot go beyond
the objects for which they can be framed. Those objects are
confined to determination and payment of compensation for
what was left in Pakistan and do not extend to deprivation
of anything acquired in India in capacities other than those
relevant for purposes of compensation.
In the instant case, the right of the respondent as a
legatee under the will of Jai Singh was recognised
separately in proceedings under Section 9 of the Act. The
respondent thus acquired a right which was different in
character from his claim as a displaced person. After having
gone through the Rules 17 to 20, we are unable to construe
Rule 21 as an authority for clubbing together of a claim as
well as a separate right of a claimant as a legatee under a
will which is distinct from the displaced person’s claim to
Compensation as a displaced person. The right of such a
legatee stands on a different footing from a claim made
under Section 4 of the Act for payment of compensation or a
rehabilitation grant. The amount of compensation or a
rehabilitation grant is payable to a displaced person under
the provisions of the Act. A dispute decided under Section 9
of the Act is very different in character from a claim for
compensation or rehabilitation as a displaced person. It
could relate to a right by inheritance to or by succession
under a will of another claimant. But, each person has to be
paid separately as indicated by Rule 17.
Great reliance was placed on Rule 18 on behalf of the
appellants. This rule lays down:
"18. Compensation to be determined on the total
value of all claims.-For the purpose of determining the
compensation payable to an applicant, the Regional
Settlement Commissioner shall,, except as otherwise
provided in these rules, add up the assessed value of
all claims of the applicant in respect of all kinds of
properties, other than agricultural land situated in a
rural area, left by him in West Pakistan and the
compensation shall be assessed on the total value of
all such claims".
This rule shows that only different kinds of claims of each
displaced person in properties left by him in West Pakistan
which can be clubbed together. It does not deal with rights
or claims of another genus which may devolve upon a claimant
in his capacity as an heir or a legatee of another displaced
person who may have acquired a separate right of his own as
a claimant to compensation under the Act. Clubbing together
of "claims" in different kinds of properties has reference
to an individual’s claim to "compensation", and
rehabilitation and not to claims of different displaced
persons which could, by transfer or devolution, vest
separately in an individual.
Rule 19 deals with compensation payable to joint
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families and Rule 19A prescribes maximum amounts payable in
such cases. Rule 19B refers to compensation ordinarily
payable to kartas of joint families. Rule 20 provides for
the assessment of compensation of a co-owner.
992
These are the different types of claims of the same
displaced person in different capacities as claimant, in
each capacity, to compensation due to himself alone. There
is no provision for clubbing together of compensation to
different displaced persons each with a right of his own
except as members of joint families, which are treated as
legal entities by themselves. The rights of a successor of
another displaced person are outside the rule. There is
nothing in the Act or the rules framed thereunder to
conflict with this natural and ordinary interpretation of
fairly clear and simple language used.
The judgment of the Division Bench of the Delhi High
Court (H. R. Khanna, C.J. and S. N. Shankar J.) by which the
Writ Petition of the respondent was allowed, shows that it
had been conceded in the High Court, on behalf of the
Rehabilitation Department, that Rule 18 would not apply to
the case of the respondent before us. The Division Bench had
relied upon an earlier decision of the Punjab High Court in
Karam Singh v. Union of India & Ors. (1) where, upon similar
facts, it had been held:
"It is significant that in Rule 18 it is clearly
stated that the compensation has to be determined on
the total value of all claims pertaining to properties
left by a claimant in West Pakistan. Therefore it is
the property left by a claimant in West Pakistan.
Therefore it is the property left by the petitioner to
which he can make a claim. The property left by his
uncle cannot be said to be the property left by him
within rule 18. Properties left by a joint family are
properties which the claimant, who claims to be a
member of the joint family, can properly be said to
have left in West Pakistan. Though the capacity in
which he held those properties and so also in the case
of properties held by him as a co-sharer with other
persons is different from the capacity in which the
properties left by him in West Pakistan in his personal
and exclusive occupation are concerned. This cannot be
said to be the case where he gets the property of
another displaced person by reason of inheritance or by
transfer. The capacities contemplated by Rule 21 are
set out in Rule 18, 19 and 20 and in any case have to
be analogous to them".
We find ourselves in entire agreement with the view
adopted by the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court and
dismiss this appeal with costs.
P.H.P. Appeal dismissed.
993