Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT.PUTTAHONNAMMA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
C. GANGADHARA MURTHY & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/02/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (2) 511 1996 SCALE (2)348
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
Leave granted.
We have heard the counsel for the parties. This appeal
by special leave arises from the order of the Division Bench
of the Karnataka High Court dated April 21, 1994 made in
W.P. No.1628/92. The High Court in the impugned order has
held that since the appeal under Section 50 of the Karnataka
land Revenue Act,1956 [for short, the "Act"] has not been
preferred by the appellant, the revision under Section 56 is
not maintainable. Therefore, it has remitted the matter to
the Assistant Director of Survey & Settlement and Land
Records for disposal of the matter in accordance with law in
the light of the order made by the Deputy Assistant Director
of Land Survey & Settlement Officer in Annexure-A dated
August 7, 1989. The facts are not in dispute. They are as
under:
In a family partition on February 11, 1953, the
properties were divided between two branches. In furtherance
thereof, a further partition had taken place on May 8, 1967
in which the properties have been divided between the
appellant’s husband and the respondents. For the demarcation
of boundaries, the appellant had applied to the Assistant
Director, Land Records to mutate the lands in her name with
the boundaries thereunder. The Assistant Director by his
proceedings dated October 14, 1986 demarcated the lands.
Feeling aggrieved, the respondents filed an appeal under
Section 49 of the Act before the Deputy Director Land
Records who had allowed the appeal and set aside the order
by proceedings dated August 7, 1989 and remitted the matter
to the Assistant Director to proceed with demarcation in the
light of the directions given in the order.
The appellant filed a revision under Section 56. The
Joint Director by his order dated 26, 1991 allowed the
revision and set aside the order of the appellate authority
and confirmed the order of the Assistant Director. The
respondents filed a revision under Section 56 to the
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Director. The Director by his order dated September 16, 1991
dismissed the same. In a further revision filed by him the
Karnataka Administrative Tribunal by order dated January 1,
1992 dismissed the revision holding that no second revision
is maintainable under Section 56. The respondents filed the
writ petition in the High Court. As stated earlier, the
Division Bench has allowed the writ petition with the above
direction.
A contention was raised in the High Court that since
the second appeal has been provided under Section 50 of the
Act, the revision under Section 56 is not maintainable. The
High Court accepted the said contention and allowed the writ
petition in part and remitted the matter to the Assistant
Director as referred to earlier. The High Court while
holding that the second revision is not maintainable has
held further that the order passed by the Joint Director,
namely, Ist revisional authority was a nullity for want of
jurisdiction. The conclusion in that behalf is that since
the appeal under Section 50 would lie against the order
under Section 49, failure to avail of the remedy under
Section 50, the appellant became disentitled to avail of
revisional jurisdiction under Section 56; therefore, the
order of the Joint Director was held to be without
jurisdiction and a nullity. Accordingly, it remitted the
matter to the primary authority for disposal.
The question, therefore, is: whether the High Court is
right in its conclusion that without availing the remedy of
second appeal under Section 50, the party would be precluded
to avail the remedy of revision under Section 56. Section 50
reads thus:
"50. Second Appeal (1) A second
appeal shall lie against any order
passed in a first appeal under
Section 49 :-
(a) if such an order is passed by
the Assistant commissioner, to the
Deputy Commissioner;
(b) if such an order is passed by
the Deputy Commissioner, to the
Tribunal;
(bl) if such an order is passed by
the Assistant Superintendent for
Settlement or the Assistant
Superintendent of Land Records, to
the Director of Survey, Settlement
and Land Records;
(c) if such an order is passed by
the Deputy Commissioner of land
Records or Deputy Commissioner for
Settlement or by the Director of
Survey, Settlement and Land Records
to the Tribunal.
(2) An order passed on second
appeal shall be final."
Section 56 reads thus:
(56. Power of revision:-(l) The
Tribunal, any Revenue Officer not
inferior in rank to an Assistant
Commissioner, and any Survey
Officer not inferior in rank to a
Superintendent of Land Records or
an Assistant Settlement Officer in
their respective departments, may
call for and examine the record of
any inquiry or the proceedings of
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any subordinate officer under this
Act or under Section 54 of the Code
of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Central
Act 5 of 1908) for the purpose of
satisfying itself or himself, as
the case may be, as to the legality
or propriety of the proceedings of
such officer. Proviso [ * ]
Explanation:-For the purposes of
this sub-section,
(i) Special Duty Commissioner shall
be deemed to be not subordinate to
the Deputy Commissioner; and
(ii) all revenue officers shall be
deemed to be subordinate to the
Tribunal.
(1-A) [ *]
(2) If, any case, it shall appear
to the Tribunal or to such officer
aforesaid, that any decision or
order or proceedings so called for
should be modified, annulled or
reversed, Tribunal or such officer
may pass such orders as may be
deemed fit:
Provided that no order shall be
modified, annulled or reversed
unless notice has been served on
the parties interested and
opportunity given to them of being
heard.
(3) No application for revision
under this Section and no power of
revision on such application shall
be exercised against any order in
respect of which an appeal under
this Chapter has been preferred and
no application for revision shall
be entertained unless such
application is presented within a
period of four months from the date
of such order:
Provided that any Revenue Officer
or Survey Officer referred to in
subsection (1) may exercise power
under this section in respect of
any order against which no appeal
has been preferred under this
Chapter, at any time within three
years from the date ok the order
sought to be revised.
Explanation;- In computing the
period of limitation for the
purpose of this subsection, any
period during which any proceeding
under this section is stayed by an
order or an injunction by Any court
shall be excluded."
It is seen that against the order passed by any of the
enumerated officers, the remedy of first appeal has been
provided under Section 49. Against the appellate orders
under Section 49, Section 50 gives right of second appeal.
Section 56 envisages that the Tribunal, any Revenue Officer
not inferior in rank to an Assistant Commissioner may call
for and examine the record of any enquiry or the proceedings
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of any subordinate officer under the Act or under Section 54
of CPC for the purpose of satisfying itself or himself, as
the case may be, as to this legality or propriety of the
proceedings of such officer. Sub-section [3] provides that
no application shall be exercised against any order in
respect of which an appeal under this Chapter "has been
preferred" (Emphasis supplied) and no application for
revision shall be entertained unless such application is
presented within a period of four months from the date of
such order. Two limitations have been prescribed for
exercising the revisional power under Section 56 , namely,
the application which seeks revision of the appellate order
under Section 49 has not preferred any second appeal as
provided under Section 50 of the Act; since Section 50 falls
under that Chapter, the application shall be filed within a
period of four months from the date of the appellant order.
In other words, if the aggrieved party has availed of the
remedy of second appeal under Section 50, he has been
precluded to again avail the revisional remedy under Section
56. It does not follow that the party who had not availed
the second appellate remedy under Section 50 is also
prohibited to file the revision under Section 56. It would
be clear under the scheme of the Act that the hierarchy of
remedial forums prescribed are the appeal under Section 49,
second appeal under Section 50 and only a revision under
Section 56 of the Act and choice to avail of remedy of
second appeal or a revision under Section 50 or 56 is left
to the aggrieved party. The further scheme is that the
revisional authority has power to suo motu correct legality
or propriety of the proceedings of any subordinate officers
specially and obviously when it touches the interest of the
State.
Filing a second appeal is a statutory remedy available
to an aggrieved party, If the party fails to avail of the
remedy and seeks the remedy of revisional jurisdiction, the
party is not precluded from availing of the revisional
jurisdiction Merely because the selfsame person failed to
avail of the remedy of second appeal under Section 50. It
would be one of the alternatives available to an aggrieved
party. The phrase "has been preferred " make the matter
manifest that on availing of the remedy under Section 50,
the remedy under Section 56 gets exhausted. It would appear
that the High Court proceeded on the basis of the language
of the unamended sub-section (3) of Section 56 which existed
prior to Amendment Act 33/1975. Therein, the language
appears to be that when the party failed to avail of the
second appellate remedy, the revisional jurisdiction under
Section 56 was prohibited. But after the Amendment Act
33/1975 the language is differently worded. Therefore, the
party who had availed of the remedy of second appeal under
Section 50, is prohibited to avail of the revisional remedy
under Section 56. The High Court, therefore, was incorrect
in its conclusion that the party who did not file second
appeal under Section 50, is prohibited to avail of the
remedy of revision under Section 56. The order of the Joint
Director, thereby, is not a nullity or without jurisdiction
since the remedy under Section 56 is available to the
appellant.
It is contended by Shri Santosh Hedge, learned senior
counsel appearing for the respondents that in view of the
above conclusion, the High Court had not gone into the
correctness of the order passed by the Joint Director.
Though the respondent had availed of successive unsuccessful
revisional remedies, we do not propose to express any
opinion on merits. We set aside the order of the High Court
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and remit the matter to the High Court for consideration of
the case according to law.
The appeal is allowed. No costs.