Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THAKUR KESARI SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
19/10/1960
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
BENCH:
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
SARKAR, A.K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1961 AIR 432 1961 SCR (2) 47
ACT:
Landlord and Tenant--General refusal of payment of
rent--Notification by Government--Application for recovery
of rent as arrears of land revenue--Rescission of
notification--Validity of proceeding Procedure--Marwar
Tenancy Act, 1949 (XXXIX of 1949), s. 85--Rajasthan Revenue
Courts (Procedure and jurisdiction) Act, 1951 (1 of
1951), s. 2.
HEADNOTE:
The Marwar Tenancy Act, 1949, now repealed but which was in
force in the State of jodhpur at the relevant period, by s.
85 authorised the Government in case of any general refusal
by tenants to pay rent to declare by notification that such
rents might be recovered as arrears of land revenue. A
notification having been issued by the Government of
Rajasthan under that section the appellant, a jagirdar,
applied to the Collector thereunder for the recovery of
rents due to him from his tenants. The tenants also applied
to the Collector stating that notice of the said application
should be served on them and they should be given a hearing
as required by the rule framed under the Rajasthan Revenue
Courts (Procedure and jurisdiction) Act, 1951. The
Collector rejected the tenants’ application and passed an
order directing the recovery of the sum found to be due to
the appellant as arrears of land revenue. The Additional
Commissioner on appeal and the Board of Revenue in revision
upheld the Collector’s order. But before the Board passed
its order the
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Government rescinded the notification. The High Court on an
application under Art. 226 of the Constitution held that
although s. 85 of the Tenancy Act had not been repealed by
the Revenue Courts Act, 1951, the rules framed under that
section had been, and the non-compliance with the rules
framed under the latter Act which should have been followed,
was an error on the face of the record and quashed the
orders directing that since the notification under s. 85 of
the Tenancy Act had been rescinded no further action
thereunder should be taken by the Collector.
Held, that there could be no doubt that s. 2 of the
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Rajasthan Revenue Courts (Procedure and jurisdiction) Act,
1951, had not repealed s. 85 of the Marwar Tenancy Act,
1949, and that the former Act contemplated its continuance,
unfettered by the bar of limitation, and subject to this
modification that an application under the section was no
longer to be made to the Deputy Commissioner but to the
Collector.
Section 85 of the Tenancy Act clearly contemplated that an
application thereunder shall be heard and determined in the
absence of the tenant. The right given by the section was a
summary one and the application must be heard ex parte. It
was not, therefore, necessary to serve any notice on the
tenants.
It would not be correct to hold that the procedure of a con-
tested proceeding as prescribed by Ch. II of the Rules
framed under the Revenue Courts (Procedure and jurisdiction)
Act, 1951, could apply to the application for to apply them
would be to wholly defeat its object.
Once a notification under the section had been issued and an
application duly made, subsequent rescission of ’the
notification could not divest the appropriate authority of
the power already vested in him to dispose of the
application.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 277 of 1955.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 27, 1954, of
the Rajasthan High Court in Civil Mis. Writ No. 1/1954.
N. C. Chatterjee, Suresh Agarwal and Ganpat Rai, for the
appellant.
R.K. Rastogi and K. L. Mehta, for the respondents. 1960.
October 19. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
IMAM J.-The appellant was the Jagirdar of Thikana Rakhi in
the Marwar (Jodhpur) area of the State of Rajasthan. Within
Thikana Rakhi was the
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village of Khakharki. He had a number of tenants under him
in the village who paid rent on the basis of a certain share
of the produce of the land held.
There was an Act in force in the Marwar area called the
Marwar Tenancy Act of 1949, hereafter refer. red to as the
Tenancy Act, which had been passed by His Highness the
Maharaja of Jodhpur before the integration of the State of
Jodhpur in the State of Rajasthan. That Act now stands
repealed but we are concerned with a period when it was in
force. Section 78 of that Act provides that when rent is
payable by a division of the produce or is based on an
estimate or appraisement of the standing crop, the landlord
or the tenant may apply to the Tahsildar for making the
division, estimate or appraisement, when this could not be
done amicably. Section 79 of the Tenancy Act lays down the
procedure to be followed at the hearing of such an
application and provides that any amount found due as rent
by the Tahsildar on that application shall have the effect
of a decree for arrears of rent.
On October 31, 1950, the appellant who had some difficulty
in realising the rent from his tenants in village Khakharki,
made an application under s. 78 of the Tenancy Act to the
Tahsildar, Merta, within which the village Khakharki was
situate. Before this application was finally disposed of,
the Government of Rajasthan issued a Notification under s.
85 of the Tenancy Act which is set out below:
Jaipur, February 22, 1951. No. F. 4(74) Rev./1/ 51.-Whereas
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it has been made to appear that the cultivators of the
villages mentioned in the Schedule below have refused to pay
rent to the persons entitled to collect the same;
Now, therefore, in exercise of the power conferred by sub-
sec. (1) of sec. 85 of the Marwar Tenancy Act, 1949 (No.
XXXIX of 1949), the Government of Rajasthan is pleased to
declare that such rents may be recovered as arrears of land
revenue.
7
50
by order of
His Highness the Rajpramukh,
H. D. Ujwal
Secretary to the
Government of Rajasthan,
Revenue Department.
This Notification was published in the Official Gazette on
March 3, 1951, and one of the villages mentioned in the
Schedule to it, was Khakharki. In view of the Notification,
the appellant became entitled under s. 85, the terms of
which will be set out later, to have the rents due to him
from the tenants of Kbakharki realised as arrears of land
revenue. Accordingly, on March 9, 1951, he filed an
application under that section in the Court of the
Collector, Nagaur, within whose jurisdiction lay the village
of Khakharki for recovery as arrears of land revenue of the
rents due to him for 1950-51 from those tenants of Khakharki
who had refused to pay them. Subsequently, on March 26,
1951, the appellant’s application under s. 78 of the Tenancy
Act was dismissed for reasons which it is not necessary for
the purpose of this appeal to state.
On March 29, 1951, the tenants filed an application in the
Court of the Collector of Nagaur stating that the notice of
the appellant’s application under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act
should be served on them and they should be heard on that
application- as this was required by the rules framed under
the Rajasthan Revenue Courts (Procedure and Jurisdiction)
Act of 1951, hereinafter referred to as the Revenue Courts
Act, which governed that application. The Revenue Courts
Act was an Act passed by the Rajpramukh of the State of
Rajasthan with which the State of Jodhpur had integrated
prior thereto, and it applied to the whole State of
Rajasthan, including the Marwar area. This Act came into
force on January 31, 1951. This application by the tenants
was rejected by the Collector. Thereafter, on April 5, 1951
the Collector passed an order by which a total sum of Rs.
38,587-3.0 was found due to the appellant from the tenants
on account of rent, other charges and court fees. The
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Collector then sent the order to the Tahsildar of Merta for
recovering that sum as arrears of land revenue.
The tenants filed an appeal before the Additional
Commissioner, Jodhpur, challenging the validity of the order
of the Collector dated April 5, 1951. This appeal was
dismissed by the Additional Commissioner on November 2,
1951.
The tenants then went in revision to the Board of Revenue,
Rajasthan. The Board of Revenue took the view that the
Revenue Courts Act had not affected the procedure to be
followed on the hearing of an application under s. 85 of the
Tenancy Act but it remanded the case to the Additional
Commissioner as the tenants contended that the Additional
Commissioner had not decided other points that arose in the
appeal to him. The Additional Commissioner heard the
tenants on the other points and again dismissed their appeal
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on July 7,1952.
The tenants moved the Board of Revenue in revision against
the order of July 7, 1952, also. Before the Board of
Revenue could decide the revision case, the Government of
Rajasthan on November 1, 1952, published another
Notification rescinding the earlier Notification dated
February 22, 1951, issued under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act.
One of the points argued before the Board of Revenue in this
revision case was that in view of the rescission of the
Notification, no further proceedings could be taken under s.
85 of the Tenancy Act for recovery of rent as arrears of
land revenue. The Board of Revenue rejected this and all
other contentions raised on behalf of the tenants and
dismissed the revision case on September 29, 1953.
Fortythree of the tenants filed a petition in the High Court
for Rajasthan for a writ of certiorari to quash the orders
of the Collector, the Additional Commissioner and the
Revenue Board, earlier mentioned. The High Court allowed
the petition and quashed and set aside these orders and held
that the Notification under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act having
been cancelled, no further proceedings for realisation of
arrears of rent as arrears of land revenue could be taken by
the Collector of Nagaur. The High Court however granted a
certificate that the case was a fit one for appeal
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to the Supreme Court. Hence the present appeal. The rent
found due has not been realised yet by the Tahsildar
presumably, in view of the pending proceedings. The
respondents to the appeal are the State of Rajasthan and
various Revenue Officers of that State and the tenants.
This appeal has been contested only by some of the tenants
and the other respondents have not appeared before us.
Section 85 of the Tenancy Act is in these terms:
S. 85.--"’(1) In case of any general refusal to pay rent
to persons entitled to collect the same in any local area
the Government may, by notification in, the Official
Gazette, declare that such rents may be recovered as arrears
of land revenue.
(2) In any local area to which a notification made under
sub-sec. (1) applies a landlord or any other person to whom
an arrear of rent is due, may notwithstanding anything to
the contrary in this or any other enactment for the time
being in force, instead of suing for recovery of the arrear
under this Act apply in writing to the Deputy Commissioner
to realise the same, and the Deputy Commissioner shall after
satisfying himself that the amount claimed is due, proceed
subject to the rules made by the Government to recover such
amount with costs and interest as an arrear of land revenue.
(3) The Deputy Commissioner shall not be made a defendant
in any suit in respect of an amount for the recovery of
which an order has been passed under this section.
(4) Nothing herein contained and no order passed under this
section shall debar:-
(a) a landlord from recovering by suit or application any
amount due to him which has not been recovered under this
section;
(b) a person from whom any amount has been recovered under
this section, in excess of the amount due from him, from
recovering such excess by suit against the landlord or other
person on whose application the arrear was realised.
The first point raised on behalf of the respondents in the
High Court was that s. 85 of the Tenancy Act
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had itself been repealed by the Revenue Courts Act and no
action under that section could be taken after the latter
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Act had come into force.
The Revenue Courts Act was repealed in 1955 after the
judgment of the High Court was delivered but this does not
affect the question before us. The long title of the Act
states that the Act is intended to provide for and regulate
the jurisdiction and procedure of Revenue Courts and
Officers, in Rajasthan. The preamble states " Whereas it is
expedient, pending the enactment of a comprehensive law for
the whole of Rajasthan relating to agricultural tenancy,
land tenures, revenue, rent, survey, record, settlement and
other matters connected with land, to provide for and
regulate the jurisdiction and procedure of revenue courts
and officers in relation to such matters arising under the
laws in force in the covenanting States of Rajasthan ".
Jodhpur was one of the covenanting States and one of the
laws in force there, was the Tenancy Act. This Act
continued to apply to the territories belonging to the
former Jodhpur State which since the integration, formed
part of the State of Rajasthan, till that Act was repealed
as hereinbefore stated. Section 2 of the Act provides, " On
and from the coming into force of this Act all existing laws
shall, in so far as they relate to matters dealt with in
this Act, be repealed ". It is said that the effect of s. 2
of the Revenue Courts Act is to repeal s. 85 of the Tenancy
Act. The High Court was, unable to accept this contention
and we think rightly. Section 85 of the Tenancy Act would
be repealed only if the Revenue Courts Act contained any
provision dealing with the matter covered by it. We find no
such provision in the Revenue Courts Act, The Revenue Courts
Act deals with matters of jurisdiction and procedure of
Revenue Courts. It does not deal with any substantive
right. This is clear from the provisions of the Revenue
Courts Act and, indeed, is not in dispute. Quite clearly,
s. 85 creates, on the requisite notification being issued, a
substantive right in a landlord to have the rent due to him
recovered as arrears of land revenue. We do not find any
provision
54
in the Revenue Courts Act dealing with the substantive right
created by s. 85 of the Tenancy Act. There is, therefore,
no foundation for the argument that that section has been
repealed by s. 2 of the Revenue Courts Act.
A reference to schedule 1 to Revenue Courts Act which gives
a list of suits and applications triable by a Revenue Court
and prescribes the periods of limitation applicable to and
court fees payable on them can usefully be made now. The
schedule is divided into several groups, of which group C
contains a list of applications triable by a Collector.
Item 2 of this group concerns applications " for realisation
of rent as land revenue on the general refusal to pay rent
". In regard to the period of limitation for such applica-
tions, it is stated there that none exists. We have no
doubt that item 2 of group C in the schedule does not confer
a substantive right to make an application for realisation
of rent as land revenue at all. The purpose of the schedule
appears from ss. 7, 9 and 10 of the Act which respectively
provide that the jurisdiction of the various revenue courts,
the periods of limitation for proceedings maintainable in
these Courts and the court fees payable thereon are as
stated in the schedule. The schedule is not operative by
itself So item 2 of group C in the schedule does not confer
any right to apply for collection of rent as arrears of land
revenue. On the other hand, the mention of such an
application in the schedule clearly indicates that the
Revenue Courts Act recognises that such an application is
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competent. Since the Revenue Courts Act itself does not
authorise such an application, it must be so competent under
other existing laws, reference to which has been made in the
preamble and s. 2 of the Act. One of such laws is s. 85 of
the Tenancy Act. Therefore it seems to us that the Revenue
Courts Act, instead of repealing s. 85 of the Tenancy Act
contemplates its continuance in force.
It is necessary before leaving this part of the case to
refer to Ch. XIII of the Tenancy Act which deals with
procedure and jurisdiction. It consists of ss. 118 to 144.
Section 118 says that all suits and applications of the
nature specified in the second schedule to
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the Act shall be heard and determined by a Revenue Court.
Section 124 states that all suits and other proceedings
especified in the second schedule shall be instituted within
the time prescribed for them in that schedule. Section 129
provides that a Deputy Commissioner shall have power to
dispose of applications specified in group E of the second
schedule. It is not necessary to refer to the other
sections in this Chapter. Turning to second schedule, we
find that group E is concerned with applications triable by
a Deputy Commissioner. Item 4 of this group deals with
applications under s. 85 " for collection of rent as land
revenue in the event of general refusal to pay ". The period
of limitation for such applications is stated there to be "
so long as notification remains in force " and this period
is stated to commence from the time when the notification
under the section is published in the Official Gazette.
Now the Revenue Courts Act provides by s. 7 that all suits
and applications of the nature specified in the first and
second schedules shall be heard and determined by a revenue
court. A revenue court is defined in s. 4(xvi) of this Act
as including among others, the Board of Revenue, the
Commissioners and the Collectors. We have earlier stated
that item 2 of group C in the first schedule to this Act
refers to an application under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act, and
provides that there shall be no period of limitation for
making such an application, and that it shall be made to a
Collector. Therefore, for an application under s. 85 of the
Tenancy Act the Revenue Courts Act specifies a new revenue
court, namely, the Collector, in the place of the Deputy
Commissioner mentioned in s. 85 of the Tenancy Act and also
makes it free of the bar of limitation. It follows that ss.
7 and 9 of the Revenue Courts Act deal with matters dealt
with in ss. 118, 124 and 129 of the Tenancy Act. By virtue
of s. 2 of the Revenue Courts Act, ss. 118, 124 and 129 of
the Tenancy Act will have to be taken as repealed. There
would also consequently be a repeal of item 4 of group E in
the second schedule to the Tenancy Act. The position then
is that since the coming into force of
56
the Revenue Courts Act, there is no period of limitation
prescribed for making an application under s. 85 of the
Tenancy Act and that application has to be made to a
Collector. The application under s. 85 by the appellant in
the present case had been made to the Collector, as at the
date when it was made the Revenue Courts Act was in force.
The repeal of ss. 118,124 and 129 of the Tenancy Act does
not however affect s. 85 of this Act except as hereinbefore
stated.
Next it is said that even though s. 85 of the Tenancy Act
may not have been repealed, the procedure to be followed in
respect of an application made under it is in view of r. 114
in, Ch. IV of the rules framed under the Revenue Courts Act
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is that laid down in Ch. 11 of these rules and that that
procedure was not followed. This, it is contended,
constitutes an error apparent on the face of the orders
passed by the revenue authorities in this case, and renders
them liable to be set aside.
A reference has now to be made to the rules framed under s.
85 of the Tenancy Act. These rules, so far as relevant for
our purpose, prescribe that an application by the landlord
under the section shall be accompanied by a list in a
prescribed form in which is to be stated the dues of the
landlord for canal charges, rent, interest and court fees.
Rule 34 provides that the Deputy Commissioner shall check
the lists by examining the Patwari or by any other suitable
method and thereafter enter in the appropriate column in the
form, the amounts passed by him as due to the landlord.
Under r. 35 he has thereafter to send the list to the
Tahsildar who shall then proceed to realise the amount
stated in the list by the Deputy Commissioner to be due to
the landlord.
It is said on behalf of the tenants that the rules under s.
85 lay down the procedure for the disposal of an application
made under that section, and that these rules have been
repealed by s. 2 of the Revenue Courts Act, read with r. 114
of the rules framed under that Act. It is contended that
the revenue authorities committed an error in following the
rules framed
57
under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act and not those prescribed in
Ch. 11 of the rules made under the Revenue Courts Act.
Now Ch. IV of the rules framed under the Revenue Courts Act
consists only of r. 114. That rule provides that the
procedure laid down in Ch. II of the same rules shall be
followed, so far as it can be made applicable, in all
proceedings in revenue courts. In view of s. 7 of the
Revenue Courts Act, an application under a. 85 of the
Tenancy Act must, since the coming into force of the former
Act, be heard and determined by a revenue court. Such an
application there. fore gives rise to a proceeding in a
revenue court and such a proceeding must, it is said, in
view of r. 114 be according to the procedure prescribed by
Ch. 11 of the rules framed under the Revenue Courts Act.
It is enough for our purposes to say that Ch. II lays down
a procedure for a contested matter, that is to say, it
requires that notice of the proceedings should be issued to
the respondent to it and he should be given a hearing. It
is unnecessary to refer to the detailed procedure prescribed
in this chapter for, as no notice of the application had in
fact been given to the tenants in this case and they had not
been heard on it, it must be held that the procedure laid
down in that chapter had not been followed.
The High Court accepted the contention of the tenants that
the rules framed under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act had been
repealed and that the rules in Ch. II of the rules framed
under the Revenue Courts Act applied and should have been
followed. It therefore held that there was an error
apparent on the face of the record and thereupon set aside
the orders of the revenue authorities challenged by the
tenants.
We have given our anxious consideration to this question but
have been unable to agree with the view taken by the High
Court. It seems to us that the rules made under s. 85 of
the Tenancy Act had not laid down any special procedure.
The only rule relevant in this connection is r. 34 to which
we have earlier referred. All that that rule does is to
require 8
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58
the Deputy Commissioner to check the list, a duty which
under the section itself he has to perform, and also makes
it necessary for him to examine the patwari for the purpose.
The rules do not indicate how the application is to be
heard, that is, whether ex parte or on notice.
It seems clear to us that a. 85 itself requires an
application made under it to be heard ex parte. First the
section does not say that a notice of the application has to
be served on the tenant concerned. Secondly, an application
under the section can be made only after the notification
prescribed has been issued. That notification decides that
there has been a general refusal by tenants to pay rent.
Therefore the section could not have contemplated that the
question whether a tenant had so refused would be heard
again on notice to him. Thirdly, in proceedings for
recovery of land revenue, the persons liable are not heard
and therefore when rent is directed to be recovered as land
revenue, it is not contemplated that the tenants should be
heard. It is of the essence of such proceedings that there
shall be a summary and quick decision. If the procedure
laid down in Ch. 11 of the rules framed under the Revenue
Courts Act has to be followed, the entire object of s. 85 of
the Tenancy Act would, in our view, be defeated. It seems
to us that s. 85 would then really become redundant for then
it would contemplate an application for realisation of rent
giving rise to a contested proceeding governed by the
procedure of a suit and would be a duplication of s. 78 of
the Tenancy Act earlier referred to or of s. 80 of the same
Act which provides for a suit in a revenue court for the
recovery of rent both of which have to be heard as contested
proceedings in the presence of the other side. Fourthly,
c1. (b) of sub-sec. (4) of s. 85 of the Tenancy Act plainly
indicates that the proceeding on an application under that
section is to be ex parte. That clause contemplates a suit
against a landlord by a tenant from whom an amount in excess
of what is legally due has been recovered under the section.
Now the amount recovered cannot of course exceed the amount
59
passed as due by the Deputy Commissioner. So the suit
contemplated in s. 85(4)(b) would really be one to contest
the correctness of the finding of the Deputy Commissioner as
to the amount due. It would be inconceivable that such
would be contemplated under the section if the amount has to
be decided by the Deputy Commissioner after hearing the
tenant. It is clearly not necessary that two contested
proceedings, one after the other, in respect of the same
question, between the same parties should be provided for.
It seems, therefore, quite clear to us that s. 85 of the
Tenancy Act contemplates that the application made under it
shall be heard and determined in the absence of the tenant.
Indeed this is not really questioned, for, the contention on
behalf of the tenants is that the procedure followed is
wrong, Dot because that is not the procedure laid down in
the Tenancy Act, but because the Revenue Courts Act and the
rules made thereunder had replaced the ex parte procedure
provided by the Tenancy Act, by the procedure of a Contested
proceeding laid down in Ch. 11 of the rules framed under the
Revenue Courts Act and this is the procedure which should
have been followed.
Now, once it is found, as we have found, that s. 85 of the
Tenancy Act has not been repealed by the Revenue Courts Act
except to the extent that an application under it has now to
be made to a Collector and not to a Deputy Commissioner as
provided in it, the whole of it has to be given effect to.
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The procedure contemplated by the section is an integral
part of the right granted by it, and one cannot be separated
from the other. The application made under it has,
therefore, still to be heard and determined ex parte.
Rule 114 of the rules framed under the Revenue Courts Act
earlier referred to can be of no assistance to the tenants
in the present context. It does not in terms purport to
repeals. 85 of the Tenancy Act. We have earlier said the
Revenue Courts Act contemplated the continuance in force of
s. 85 of the Tenancy Act, and hence no rule framed under the
former Act
60
could intend by implication to repeal that section. Rule
114 may apply to applications under other provisions of
existing laws which are not required by them to be heard ex
parte.
In our view, for the reasons aforesaid, the application
under that section was properly and correctly heard and
determined without notice to the tenants. Such hearing does
not disclose any error at all.
Then it is said that after the rescission of the Notifi-
cation dated February 22, 1951, no further proceeding could
be taken under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act. This contention
also found favour with the High Court and with this view
again we are unable to agree. Subsection (1) of that
section provides for the issue of a notification declaring
that certain rents may be recovered as arrears of land
revenue. Sub-section (2) states that " in any local area to
which a notification made under sub-section (1) applies, a
landlord to whom an arrear of rent is due, may apply in
writing to the Deputy Commissioner to realise the same, and
the Deputy Commissioner shall after satisfying himself that
the amount claimed is due, proceed ...... to recover such
amount as an arrear of land revenue." It is contended that
the words " in any local area to which a notification made
under subsection (1) applies " govern both the application
by the landlord and the action of the Deputy Commissioner
following thereon and therefore the Deputy Commissioner
cannot after the rescission of the notification, take any
action under the section at all.
It seems to us that this contention of the tenants is not
warranted by the language of the section. The words " in
any local area to which a notification made under sub-
section (1) applies " are concerned with the area and not
with the time during which the notification remains in
force. That follows from the words " in any local area ".
There is no reference anywhere to the currency of the
notification in point of time. Item 4 of group E in
schedule 11 to the Tenancy Act earlier referred to, leads to
the same conclusion. That item provides that the period of
limitation for an application under s. 85 is so long as
notification
61
remains in force. It is clear that if in sub-sec. (2) the
words ’,in any local area to which a notification applies "
meant, during the currency of the notification in point to
time, there would have been no need to specify a period of
limitation in schedule 11. We have also earlier pointed out
that item 4 of group C in schedule II has been repealed by
the corresponding provisions in the Revenue Courts Act.
Since the latter Act came into force, the position is that
there is no period of limitation for an application under s.
85 of the Tenancy Act. It is impossible, therefore, to
contend that the words " in any local area to which a
notification made under sub-section (1) applies " indicate
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that the Deputy Commissioner’s power to act when an
application under that section is made, exists only so long
as the notification remains in force.
It also seems to us that the Deputy Commissioner’s power to
act arises on an application having been duly made under
sub-see. (2) of s. 85. Even if that application had to be
made within the period that the notification remained in
force, there would be nothing in sub-sec. (2) to lead to the
conclusion that the Deputy Commissioner’s power to act on
the application would also depend on the notification
remaining in force. It may be stated here that in the
present case the application had been made before the
Notification had been rescinded. Once the notification
under s. 85 is issued, power is certainly vested in the
appropriate Revenue officers to deal with and dispose of an
application made under that section at a time the
notification was in force and applied to the particular
area. Subsequent cancellation of the notification would not
divest the appropriate authority of the power already vested
in him to dispose of the application which was properly and
duly made under s. 85. In our view, steps can be taken
under s. 85 of the Tenancy Act by the appropriate Revenue
Officer for realisation of rent found due as arrears of land
revenue even after the notification under that section has
been rescinded.
Reliance is placed by the learned advocate for the
respondents on Crown v. Haveli (1). In that case it
(1) A.I.R. 1949 Lah. 191.
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was held that further proceedings under a temporary Act
could not be continued after it had expired. It is
contended that s. 85 of the Tenancy Act was really a
temporary Act for it was brought into operation only upon a
notification which notification was clearly not intended to
be of permanent operation. We are unable to accept this
view. The fact, if this be so, that s. 85 is brought into
operation by a notification, and that that notification may
not be of permanent operation, does not make the section a
temporary enactment. We do not think that the principles
applicable to interpretation_ of temporary Acts apply to the
case of a provision like s. 85 of the Tenancy Act.
reliance is also placed on cl.(a) of sub-sec. (4) of s.85 of
the Tenancy Act. It is said that this clause by permitting
suits for recovery of rents which have not been recovered
under the section, indicates that after the rescission of
the Notification, further proceedings cannot be taken under
the section. It is contended that cl. (a) contemplates that
it may so happen that when a notification is rescinded, the
whole amount of rent in respect of which the application
under s. 85 had been made, had not been recovered and that
cl. (a) permits suit to be filed in respect of the amount
which remained unrealised at the date the notification is
rescinded. This argument seems to us to beg the question,
for, it proceeds on the basis that the suit contemplated by
el. (a) is for the amount of rent which cannot be recovered
under the section any more because of the rescission of the
notification. Clause (a) however may clearly apply to a
case where in spite of a notification under the section, the
landlord whether during its currency or later, chooses to
proceed by way of a suit under the other provisions of the
Tenancy Act.
It is then contended on behalf of the tenants that the
Notification of February 22, 1951, was not a valid
notification because out of 125 tenants in village Khakharki
82 had paid rent and the remaining 43, who are the
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respondents in this appeal, were willing to pay but could
not pay as the appellant was asking
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for larger sums than what were legitimately due to him. It
is contended that on these facts it could not be said that
there was a general refusal to pay rent within the meaning
of s. 85 of the Tenancy Act. Hence, it is said that the
Notification was ultra vires the section and inoperative.
We do not think that the tenants can be allowed to raise
this point in this Court. It does not appear to have been
raised in the High Court. The High Court’s judgment makes
no mention of it. Whether it is open for a Court to go
behind the notification issued under s. 85 and decide its
validity or not, this contention of the tenants raises a
question of fact as to how many tenants had refused to pay
rent. It also raises a question of interpretation of the
words "general refusal to pay " in s. 85. None of these
questions was raised at any earlier stage. We are
therefore, not inclined to allow the tenants to raise them
now.
In the result we allow the appeal with costs here and below.
Appeal allowed.