Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SAMSUDDIN RAHMAN & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BIHARI DAS & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/07/1996
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (6) 517 1996 SCALE (5)299
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Punchhi.J,
Special leave granted.
The appellants herein were the plaintiffs in a suit
filed in the Court of the Assistant District Judge, Cachar,
Silchar against the defendants-respondents praying for a
decree for declaration of title in respect of the suit land
measuring about 60 Bighas, on the basis that it was in their
possession and, in the alternative, for possession, if not
found in possession. On the other hand, the suit land was
claimed by the defendants-respondents to be theirs and in
their possession, affirmed by the grant of an annual Patta
in their favour by the Deputy Commissioner of the area
concerned. The trial court, while concluding the matter, was
about to decree the suit, buf refrained from doing so, as in
the plaint, no specific claim had been raised by the
plaintiffs-appellants to get quashed the grant of the annual
Patta, given by the Deputy Commissioner in favour of the
defendants-respondents. On appeal by the plaintiffs-
appellants to the District Judge, Cachar, Silchur, the
hurdle put by the trial court was cast aside and the suit
was decreed on the basis that once title stood proved in
favour of the plaintiffs-appellants, the factual grant of
annual Patta in favour of the defendants-respondents had no
value or sanctity and hence the same could be ignored. The
High Court, however, upset the decision of the District
Judge, at the instance of the defendants-respondents,
dismissing the suit of the plaintiffs-appellants altogethers
taking the view that the evidence led by the plaintiffs-
appellants was deficient to the point of being no evidence
at all in the eye of law. It is within this narrow compass
that the controversy in the instant appeal stands focused.
The case of the plaintiffs-appellants, in brief, was
that they were the owners of a parcel of land covered by a
Patta, particulars of which stand fully described in the
judgments of the courts below. Alongside that parcel of
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land, a river named Barak used to flow on the Southern and
Eastern sides. It was claimed that gradually the river
receded, making slow and imperceptible gains as accretions
to the land-holding of the appellants, which gain is
solidified in the form of the suit land. The appellants on
that basis claimed that the suit land had become part and
parcel of their original holding and that they had been in
possession thereof till the Deputy Commissioner on grant of
annual Patta to the contesting respondents, has cast a
shadow on their titles which led to proceedings under
Section 145 Cr.P.C., necessitating the plaintiffs-appellants
to approach the Civil Court for appropriate relief. Besides
what has been said before, the contesting defendants-
respondents had also countered that the land originally
belonged to them and as it had re-emerged on the other side
of the river, since it changed its course, it was theirs,
and with them under an annual Patta.
It is the conceded position between the contestants
that The Assam Land and Revenue Regulation, 1886, as amended
up to date, is attracted to provide solution to the dispute.
Such was the positive stands of the parties before the
District Judge. It was also the admitted position that no
statutory law was applicable in the State of Assam with
regard the right to any land gained by alluvion or
dereliction of a river to any estate. A Division Bench of
the Assam High Court in Boroji Munipurini v. The State of
Assam and Ors. (AIR 1958 Assam 34) had elaborately to go
into the question as to whether any such law was available
in the context and working of the aforementioned
Regulation, and came to the view that in the State of Assam
the principles of English Law on the subject were applicable
as principles of justice, equity and good conscience and
those principles by themselves had the force of law. Some of
the observations made therein which brought the aforesaid
result are as follows:
"It is therefore clear that it is
an universal law, recognised by all
that a land which has gradually and
imperceptibly come out of the river
bed and added to the land of a
riparian owner becomes part of tme
land belonging to him and is to be
considered as his property. This,
in some cases, is based on the
specific provisions of the Bengal
Regulation or other enactments, in
some on custom, and in some cases
on the principles of justice,
equity and good conscience.
......"The law in force" has not
been defined anywhere in the
regulation [The Assam Land and
Revenue Regulation] and we see no
reason to confine it to the
statutory law. If the law in force
is that the accreted land becomes
part of the land to which it has
accreted, even though that may be
based on the principles of justice,
equity and good conscience, the
land becomes an increment by
accretion to the tenure to which it
has accreted."
And more than once has this principle been reiterated
in the report while taking stock of the English Law culled
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out from the reported decisions of English Courts on the
subject. We would not load this judgment with copious
references therefrom. We would rather content ourselves by
stating that we agree with the state of law as thus evolved
in the State of Assam that the English principles on the
subject as principles of justice, equity and good conscience
the State and, by themselves, are the law governing the
rights between the parties on such principles of alluvion
and diluvion.
The High Court does not dispute either the state of law
as such or its applicability to the controversy. It has
taken note of the Explanation to Regulation 3(b) defining
the word "estate", explaining that any land gained by
alluvion or by dereliction of a river to any estate as here
defined, which under the laws in force is considered an
increment to the tenure to which the land has accreted,
shall be deemed to be part of that estate. In Regulation
34(c) it stands provided that when a settlement has been
accepted and the revenue payable fixed, nothing more shall
be payable from the date it is entered. Exception is kept in
the case of gain by alluvion or by dereliction of a river,
or loss by diluvion, during the currency of the settlement,
in which case increments shall be assessed and reduction
granted by the Deputy Commissioner according to such
limitations as to the extent of gain or loss and such other
conditions as may be prescribed.
The High Court, taking stock of the case-law available
on the subject, paid attention to the fact that if the
accretion was caused gradually and imperceptibly by alluvion
or by dereliction of the river then the plaintiffs-
appellants were entitled to succeed. But, if the addition
had come suddenly and in a single season, it would not be
so. It strangely termed such question to be a mixed question
of fact and laws whereas it could be nothing else than a
question of fact. The High Court commented that the
pleadings in the plaint were deficient inasmuch as definite
period had not been mentioned during which alluvion had
taken place but, in the same breath, observed that oral
evidence had been led by the plaintiffs-appellants, to the
effect that there had been gradual and imperceptible
accretion within a time-span of 15/16 years. Then again the
High Court commented that no specific issue on the aspect of
gradual and imperceptible accretion had been framed and, in
the next breath, said that the parties all the same knew
their respective cases and had led their evidence. The High
Court then went on to find fault in the plaintiffs
appellants’ oral evidence regarding gradual and
imperceptible accretion as, according to it, it had not been
disclosed by the witnesses as by what means of knowledge or
with the aid of which demonstrable facts or by the aid of
which material-on-record could they vouch safe that the gain
was gradual and imperceptible. On that basis, the
plaintiffs-appellants were blamed to have failed to prove
that the suit land was an accretion, gradual and
imperceptible. On this basis alone the appellants were non
suited.
To us the reasoning of the High Court appears entirely
erroneous in the presence of the bar erected under Section
100 of the Cr.P.C. forbidding the High Court to interfere in
a finding of fact in second appeal. In Boroji’s case
[supra], there appears a quotation from the Halsbury’s Laws
of England to say that the whole doctrine of accretion is
based upon the theory that from day to day, week to week and
month to months a man cannot see where his old line of
boundary was, and that which cannot be perceived in its
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progress is taken to be as if it never existed at all. Such
being the ordinary human perception, we fail to appreciate
what did the High Court expect of the plaintiffs’ witnesses
to say about their means of knowledge, or to their
objectivity, or demonstration of facts, or any document on
this aspect being available, and on that basis terming such
evidence merely as any expression of opinion and strangely
no legal evidence Significantly, the trial court as well as
the first appellate court had recorded a clear finding of
fact that the plaintiffs-appellants had proved on the basis
of the oral evidence that it had taken 15-16 years for the
accretion to be visible and demonstrable, requiring steps to
be taken by the State of Assam, one of the defendants-
respondents to straighten matters under the provisions of
Section 34(c) of the Regulation. The High Court was thus in
grave error in upsetting the judgment and decree of the
lower appellate court and in this manner denying relief to
the plaintiffs-appellants, as granted by that court.
Therefore, without hesitation, we upturn the orders of the
High Court, restoring the judgment and decree of the
District Judge, Cachar, dated 19-2-1979, with costs.