Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5312-5318 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Honnamma & Ors
RESPONDENT:
Nanjundalah since dead by his Lrs & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 31/03/2008
BENCH:
TARUN CHATTERJEE & HARJIT SINGH BEDI
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
REPORTABLE
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 5312-5318 OF 2001
HARJIT SINGH BEDI,J.
1. These appeals by special leave are directed against the
judgment of the Karnataka High Court dated 27th July, 2000
whereby the orders of the Appellate Tribunal conferring
occupancy rights on the appellants, have been reversed. The
tenant-claimants are before us in these appeals.
2. The facts of the case are as under:-
3. One Nanjundegowda since deceased filed an application
on 2nd January. 1976 before the Land Tribunal, Nagamangala
in Form No.7 of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act, 1961
(hereinafter called the "Act") claiming occupancy rights on
specified surveys numbers in Village Anakanahalli. He
thereafter filed an application on 8th April, 1981 seeking to
amend Form No. 7 on the plea that some of the survey
numbers given therein had not been correctly re-produced.
This application was straightaway allowed by the Land
Tribunal without notice to the opposite party and the
necessary changes in Form No. 7 including some land falling
in the Revenue Estates of Villages Mylanahalli and
Honnenahalli were made. The landowner, K. Balalingaiah
(now represented by his legal representatives) was the owner of
the land in question. One Javarappa had also filed an
application in Form 7 in the year 1975 for the same piece of
land for which Nanjundegowda had filed his application in the
year 1981. Javarappa’s application was dismissed by the
Land Tribunal. He thereafter filed a Writ Petition in the High
Court which too was dismissed on 4th December, 1980. After
the rejection of the aforesaid application Balalingiah sold the
land in dispute to the respondents herein. The purchasers
were impleaded as parties before the Land Tribunal and they
contested the claim of Nanjundegowda on various grounds.
The tribunal, after taking evidence, documentary as well as
oral, concluded that the claim of tenancy rights made by
Nanjundegowda was untenable and accordingly rejected the
claim. This order was challenged by Nanjundegowda by way
of a writ petition but on the constitution of the Land Reforms
Appellate Authority by an amendment of the Act, the writ
petition was remitted to the Appellate Authority for disposal.
The Appellate Authority crystallized the points for
consideration as under:
1. Whether the lands in dispute are
agricultural lands
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
2. Whether the action of the Land Tribunal
permitting amendment of form No. 7 on
8.4.1981 by including the lands in
Milanahalli and Honnenahalli was valid
3. Whether the inclusion of Survey No. 12
of Milanahalli village in form no. 7 by
the amendment application dated
8.4.1981 was valid
4. Whether the lands in question were
tenanted or not on 1.3.1974
5. Whether the appellant was in
occupation as a tenant of the lands in
question as on 1.3.1974
6. Whether the order of the Land Tribunal
was correct and whether it was liable to
be interfered with
and after an elaborate discussion of the evidence, allowed the
appeal with respect to the land except that covered by survey
Nos.64 and 12 of villages Anakanahalli and Mylanahalli
respectively vide order of 3rd June 1988 observing that the
land was agricultural in nature that Nanjundegowda was
indeed a tenant on the land mentioned in Form No. 7 as his
uncle Kallumaligegowda had brought him from Kenchanahalli
to Anakanahalli where the land was situated and built a house
for him with a promise to give the lands to him, and that after
the death of Kallumaligegowda, his relatives had assured
Nanjundegowda that he could work on the land and bring
credit to his uncle’s family. The Authority also held that the
amendment application pertaining to Form No. 7 filed on 8th
April, 1981 could not be said to be beyond limitation. K.
Balalingaiah filed a revision petition against the order of the
Tribunal before the High Court of Karnataka (CRP No. 3582 of
1988). One Smt. Lakshmamma, a respondent herein, also filed
a revision petition against the order of the Tribunal before the
High Court of Karnataka (CRP No. 3553 of 1988). The High
Court dismissed the revision petitions for non prosecution by
its order dated 20th September, 1991 and an application for re-
call of the order too was dismissed. One Ramegowda, also filed
a revision petition before the High Court against the order of
the tribunal (L.L.R.P No 1 of1997) which too was dismissed by
order dated 29th January, 1997. Some of the alleged
purchasers (respondents herein) again filed revision petitions
before the High Court challenging the order of the Appellate
Authority. The High Court observed that the three points
which arose for consideration were:
(1)Whether the Land Reforms Appellate
Authority was right in concluding that
the amendment application dated
8.4.1981 was rightly allowed except to
the extent indicated in the appellate order
(2) Whether the dismissal of CRP No.
3582 and CRP No. 3553 of 1988 for non-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
prosecution and the dismissal of LRRP 1
of 1997 by challenging the impugned
order constitutes res-judicata as against
the petitioners herein
(3) Whether the order of the Land
Reforms Appellate Authority can be
legally sustained
and then went to examine each of the issues independently.
The court concluded that the amendment application dated 8th
April, 1981 having been filed after the cut off date of 30th
June, 1979 was not maintainable in the light of the Division
Bench judgment of the High Court in Pakeera Moolya vs.
Mari Bhat ( ILR 1999 Kar. p. 809), as a very limited right for
an amendment had been left with the claimant and that did
not cover the inclusion of land not identified in the original
application and as such the amendment insofar as it dealt
with the land in Village Honnenahalli and partly in Village
Anakanahalli could not be claimed by amendment.
On Point No.2, the High Court opined that the earlier
decisions in CRP No. 3582 and CRP 3553 of 1988 and in LRRP
No. 1 of 1997 did not constitute res-judicata with respect to
the present proceedings.
4. On the third issue, the High Court found that the
evidence produced by the parties did not justify the conclusion
that the claimant was a person who had been lawfully
inducted on the land in question so as to give him the status
of a deemed tenant as he was not a contractual tenant and
was not paying rent and for this purpose relied on several
judgments of this Court and of the High Court and in
particular on Chokkannagiri Narayanappa vs. Land
Tribunal ( 1982 (2) Kar. L.J. p.21). The High Court
accordingly allowed the revision petition and set aside the
order of the Appellate Authority, thus dismissing the
application filed by Nanjundegowda. It is in this
circumstance, that the present appeals are before us by way of
special leave.
5. At the very outset, Mr. S.N. Bhat, the learned counsel for
the appellant has fairly conceded before us that the earlier
proceedings did not constitute res-judicata and the conclusion
drawn by the High Court to that extent was correct. He has
however argued that the finding on the other two points i.e.
limitation and the deemed tenancy of Nanjundegowda had
been wrongly decided by the High Court and these findings
were required to be set aside. He has laid special emphasis on
the submission that the deemed tenancy under Section 4 of
the Act did not visualize the payment of any rent and all that
was required for the claimant to assume the status of a
deemed tenant was that he had been cultivating the land
lawfully. In support of this argument, the learned counsel has
cited Dahya Lala and others vs. Rasul Mahomed Abdul
Rahim and others AIR 1964 SC 1320.
6. The learned counsel for the respondent has however
pleaded that by the amendment application dated 8th April,
1981 the applicant had sought to include land which did not
figure in the first application dated 2nd January, 1976 and as
an embargo had been placed by the Act itself under which no
application in Form No. 7 could be entertained after
30th June,1979, the question of any amendment thereafter
was statutorily barred and that the High Court even otherwise
having found no case in favour of the claimants on facts, no
interference was called for.
7. We have considered the arguments advanced by learned
counsel. It is true that the Act itself provides a cut off date in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
the filing of the application in Form No. 7. It is also true that
the original application had been filed well within time though
the amended application had been filed after the last date
permitted by the statute. In order to examine the nature of the
amendment, and whether in fact it had set up what was a new
case, requires an examination of the application. It may be
mentioned that in the original application the claim was
limited to land in Village Anakanahalli which was identified as
under:
Village Survey No. Extent
Anakanahalli 35 00-27
49-1 0-37
50 1-17
52/3 1-32
71/1 1-23
31 0-20
64 0-13
81 7-37
75 4-07
75 6-33
13 6-02
By the amended application dated 8th April, 1981,
however the following amendment was sought:
Village Survey No. Extent
Anakanahalli 35-1 00-02
35-2 0-27
49-1 0-37
50-3 1-17
52-3 1-32
71-1 1-23
31-2a 0-15
Mylanahalli 12 1-33
13 6-05
Honnenahalli 75-1 7-00
75-2c 0-18
81c 5-04
8. A perusal of the first and the amended application
would reveal that as survey nos. 64, 81, 75, 75, 13 did not
figure in the original application, the proposed amendment
was rejected and that order has been maintained even by the
High Court. The claim pertaining to survey No. 12 in village
Mylanahalli too has also been rejected for the same reasons.
The amendments have however been allowed with respect to
the other survey numbers and also with respect to a change in
the name of the village(s) on the understanding that a mere
mis-description of the property was to be rectified by
amendment. To our mind therefore, a mere mis-description
while identifying the land in Form no. 7 as originally filed
would not be hit by the embargo with respect to the last date
of the filing of Form no.7 i.e. on 30th June, 1979. The
judgment referred to by the High Court is based on a different
set of facts in as much certain items which had not been
included in the original plaint were sought to be included by
amendment, a proposal which the court held could not be
justified. The observations in Jai Jai Ram Manohar Lal vs.
National Building Material Supply, Gurgaon AIR 1969 SC
1267 are meaningful. It has been observed that a party cannot
be refused amendment in a case of a mis-description of
property as the purpose of amendment is to ensure that the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
real issues are addressed and that in such a case no question
of limitation would arise and the amended plaint must be
deemed to have been instituted on the date on which the
original plaint had been filed. We are, therefore, of the opinion
that the finding of the High Court on the question of limitation
is erroneous.
9. Mr. Bhat has also laid great emphasis on the third issue
as to whether the deemed tenancy which Nanjundegowda had
claimed was justified on facts. He has pointed out that the
appellate authority as the final fact finding body had found in
favour of the deemed tenants on an appreciation of the
evidence that had been adduced and it was not open to the
High Court sitting in revision to upset these findings of fact
unless they were perverse or not possible on the evidence. It
has also been emphasized that the High Court had relied on
Chokkannagiri Narayanappa’s case (supra) and observed
that as no rent had been paid by Nanjundegowda it could not
be said that he could attain the status of a deemed tenant. He
has however placed reliance on Dahya Lala’s case (supra)
wherein a Constitution Bench of this court while construing
Section 4 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948 (which is para materia with Section 4 of the Act) had
clearly held that the payment of rent was not visualized in
such a situation.
10. We have considered the arguments advanced by learned
counsel. Section 121 provides for an appeal to the Appellate
Tribunal and gives it jurisdiction to confirm, modify or rescind
the order in appeal or its execution or to pass such other order
as may seem legal and just in accordance with the provisions
of the Act. Section 121A which confers the revisional power
on the High Court reads as under:
"121-A Revision by the High Court. -
The High Court may at any time call for
the records of any order or proceeding
recorded by the Appellate Authority
under this Act or any other law for the
purpose of satisfying itself as to the
legality of such order or as to the
regularity of such proceeding and may
pass such order with respect thereto as it
thinks fit;
Provided that no such order shall be
made except after giving the person
affected a reasonable opportunity of
being heard".
11. A comparative reading of Sections 121 and 121-A would
show that the High Court’s power has been circumscribed to
satisfying itself as to the legality of the order impugned and to
the regularity of the proceedings. Mr. Bhat appears to be right
in submitting that interference in revision on facts would be
justified only on very limited grounds such as perversity and
that if the view taken by the Appellate Authority was possible
on the evidence it would be inappropriate on the part of the
High Court to differ in its conclusions. It bears notice that the
Appellate Authority had placed reliance on a large number of
documents/letters, the landowners had written to
Nanjundegowda. The Tribunal accordingly found that these
letters, when examined in the light of the other evidence, had
discharged the presumption under Section 133 of the Act with
regard to the correctness of the revenue record which was
admittedly in favour of the landowner. It appears also that the
High Court was deeply impressed by the fact that
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
Nanjundegowda had not been paying rent at the time when
the application in Form No. 7 had been filed. This finding is
on the face of it erroneous in the light of the Judgment in
Dahya Lala’s case (Supra) . As already noted above, while
construing Section 4 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural
Lands Act, which is pari materia with Section 4 of the Act, this
Court observed as under:
"The Act of 1948, it is undisputed, seeks to
encompass within its beneficent provisions not only
tenants who held land for purpose of cultivation under
contracts from the owners but persons who are
deemed to be tenants also. The point in controversy is
whether a person claiming the status of a deemed
tenant must have been cultivating land with the
consent or under the authority of the owner. Counsel
for the appellants submits that tenancy postulates a
relation based on contract between the owner of land,
and the person in occupation of the land, and there
can be no tenancy without the consent or authority of
the owner to the occupation of that land. But the Act
has by Section 2(18) devised a special definition of
tenant and included therein persons who are not
contractual tenants. It would therefore be difficult to
assume in construing Section 4 that the person who
claims the status of a deemed tenant must be
cultivating land with the consent or authority of the
owner. The relevant condition imposed by the statute
is only that the person claiming the status of a deemed
tenant must be cultivating land "lawfully": It is not the
condition that he must cultivate land with the consent
of or under authority derived directly from the owner.
To import such a condition is to rewrite the section,
and destroy its practical utility. A person who derives
his right to cultivate land from the owners would
normally be a contractual tenant and he will obviously
not be a "deemed tenant". Persons such as licencees
from the owner may certainly be regarded as falling
within the class of persons lawfully cultivating land
belonging to others, but it cannot be assumed
therefrom that they are the only persons who are
covered by the section. The Act affords protection to all
persons who hold agricultural lands as contractual
tenants and subject to the exceptions specified all
persons lawfully cultivating lands belonging to others,
and it would be unduly restricting the intention of the
legislature to limit the benefit of its provisions to
persons who derive their authority from the owner,
either under a contract of tenancy, or otherwise. In our
view, all persons other than those mentioned in
clauses (a), (b) and (c) of Section 4 who lawfully
cultivate land belonging to other persons whether or
not their authority is derived directly from the owner of
the land must be deemed tenants of the lands".
12. From a perusal of the aforequoted passage all that is
required for the person to claim the status of a deemed tenant
is that the possession must be lawful, but there is nothing
which would necessitate the payment of rent as a condition
precedent for the creation of a deemed tenancy. We are
therefore of the opinion that the finding of the High Court with
respect to the deemed tenancy under Issue No.3 is also
erroneous.
13. This appeal is accordingly allowed, the order of the
High Court is set aside and that of the Appellate Authority
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
restored. There will, however, be no order as to costs.