Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10
PETITIONER:
SHRIMATI SHANTABAI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF BOMBAY & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
24/03/1958
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BENCH:
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
BOSE, VIVIAN
CITATION:
1958 AIR 532 1959 SCR 265
ACT:
Fundamental Rights, Enforcement of Unregistered document
conferring right to cut and appropriate wood from forest
land-Proprietary interest vested in State by subsequent
enactment-Claim founded on rights accruing from such
document, if maintainable -Constitution of India, Arts.
19(1)(f), 19(1)(g)-Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary
Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950 (No. 1
of 1951).
HEADNOTE:
By an unregistered document the husband of the petitioner
granted her the right to take and appropriate all kinds of
wood from certain forests in his Zamindary. With the
passing of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary
Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, all
proprietary rights in land vested in the State under s. 3 Of
that Act and the petitioner could no longer cut any wood.
She applied to the Deputy Commissioner and obtained from him
an order under s. 6(2) of the Act permitting her to work
the forest and started cutting the trees. The Divisional
Forest Officer took action against her and passed an order
directing that her name might be cancelled and the cut
materials forfeited. She moved the State Government against
this order but to no effect. Thereafter she applied to this
Court under Art. 32 of the Constitution and contended that
the order of Forest Officer infringed her fundamental rights
under Arts. 19(i)(f) and 19(1)(g) :
Held (per curiam), that the order in question did not
infringe the fundamental rights of the petitioner under
Arts. 19(1)(f) and 19(i)(g) and the petition must be
dismissed.
34
266
Ananda Behera v. The State of Orissa, [1955] 2 S.C.R. gig,
followed.
Chhotabai jethabai Patel and Co. v. The State of Madhya
Pradesh, [1953] S.C.R. 476, not followed.
Held (per Das C. J., Venkatarama Aiyar, S. K. Das and A. K.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10
Sarkar, jj.), that it was not necessary to examine the docu-
ment minutely and finally determine its real character for
the purpose of deciding the matter in controversy, for
whatever construction might be put on it, the petition must
fail. If the document purported to transfer any proprietary
interest in land, it would be ineffective both for non-
registration under the Registration Act and under s. 3 of
the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights Act which
vested such interest in the State. If it was a profits-a-
prendre that was sought to be transferred by it, then again
the document would be compulsorily registrable as a profits-
a-prendre was by its nature immoveable property. If it was
a contract that gave rise to a purely personal right, assum-
ing that a contract was property within the meaning of Art.
19(i)(f) and 31(1) Of the Constitution, the petitioner could
not complain as the State had not acquired or taken
possession of the contract which remained her property and
she was free to dispose of it in any way she liked. The
State not being a party to that contract would not be bound
by it, and even if for some reason or other it could be, the
remedy of the petitioner lay by way of a suit for
enforcement of the contract and compensation for any
possible breach of it and no question of infringement of any
fundamental right could arise.
Per Bose, J. The document conferred a right on the peti-
tioner to enter on the lands in order to cut down and carry
away, not merely the standing timber, but also other trees
that were not in a fit state to be felled at once. The
grant was, therefore, not merely in respect of moveable
property but immoveable property as well. Being valued at
Rs. 26,ooo, the document was compulsorily registrable under
the Registration Act otherwise no title or interest could
pass ; and in absence of such registration the petitioner
had no fundamental rights that could be enforced, as held by
this court in Ananda Behera’s case.
Although standing timber is not immoveable property under
the Transfer of Property Actor the Registration Act, trees
attacked to the earth which are immoveable property under s.
3(26) of the General Clauses Act, as also S. 2(6) of the
Registration Act, must be so under the Transfer of Property
Act as well.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petition No. 104 of 1957.
Petition under Article 32 of the Constitution for the
enforcement of fundamental rights.
R. V. S. Mani, for the petitioner.
267
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India, R.
Ganapathy Iyer and R. H. Dhebar for respondents, Nos. 1-3.
N.N. Keshwani, for I. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 4.
1958. March 24. The Judgment of Das C. J. Venkatarama
Aiyar, S. K. Das and Sarkar JJ. was delivered by Das C. J.
Bose J. delivered a separate Judgment.
DAS C. J.- We have had the advantage of perusing the
judgment prepared by our learned Brother Bose J. which he
will presently read. While we agree with him that this
application must be dismissed, we would prefer to base our
decision on reasons slightly different from those adopted by
our learned Brother. The relevant facts will be found fully
set out by him in his judgment.
The petitioner has come up before us on an application under
Art. 32 of the Constitution praying for setting aside the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10
order made by the respondent No. 3 on March 19, 1956,
directing the petitioner to stop the cutting of forest wood
and for a writ, order or direction to the respondents not to
interfere in any manner whatever with the rights of the
petitioner to enter the forests, appoint her agents, obtain
renewal passes, manufacture charcoal and to exercise other
rights mentioned in the petition.
Since the application is under Art. 32 of the Constitution,
the petitioner must make out that there has been an
infringement of some fundamental right claimed by her. The
petitioner’s grievance is that the offending order has
infringed her fundamental right under Art. 19(1)(f) and
19(1)(g). She claims to have derived the fundamental
rights, which are alleged to have been infringed, from a
document dated April 26, 1948, whereby her husband Shri
Balirambhau Doye, the proprietor of certain forests in eight
several Tehsils, granted to her the right to take and
appropriate all kinds of wood-Building wood, fuel wood and
bamboos, etc.-from the said forests for a period from the
268
date of the document up to December 26, 1960. The terms of
the document have been sufficiently set out in the judgment
to be presently delivered by Bose J. and need not be set out
here. The petitioner has paid Rs. 26,000 as consideration
for the rights granted to her. The genuineness of this
document and the good faith of the parties thereto have not
been questioned. The document, however, has not been
registered under the Indian Registration Act.
The nature of the rights claimed by the petitioner has to be
ascertained on a proper interpretation of the aforesaid
document. We do not consider it necessary to examine or
analyse the document minutely or to finally determine what
we may regard as the true meaning and effect thereof, for,
as will be presently seen, whatever construction be put on
this document, the petitioner cannot complain of the breach
of any of her fundamental rights.
If the document is construed as conveying to her any part or
share in the proprietary right of the grantor, then, not
being registered under the Indian Registration Act, the
document does not affect the immoveable property or give her
any right to any share or interest in the immoveable
property. Assuming that she had acquired a share or
interest in the proprietary right in spite of the document
not having been registered, even then that right has vested
in the State under s. 3 of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of
Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act,
1950, and she may in that case only claim compensation if
any is payable to her under the Act. If the document is
construed as purely a license granted to her to enter upon
the land, then that license must be taken to have become
extinguished as soon as the grantor’s proprietary rights in
the land vested in the State under s. 3 of the Act. if the
document is construed as a license coupled with a grant,
then the right acquired by her would be either in the nature
of some profits-a-prendre which, being an interest in land,
is immoveable property or a purely personal right under a
contract. If the document is construed-as having given her
a profits-a-prendre which is an interest in land, then also
269
the document will not affect the immoveable property and
will not operate to transmit to the petitioner any such
profits-a-prendre which is in the nature of’ immoveable
property, as the document has not been registered under the
Indian Registration Act, as has been held in Ananda Behera
v. The State of Orissa (1). If it is a purely personal
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10
right, then such right will have no higher efficacy than a
right acquired under a contract. If, therefore, the
document is construed as a matter of contract, then assuming
but without deciding that a contract is a property within
Arts. 19(1)(f) or 31(1) of the Constitution, she cannot com-
plain, for the State has not acquired or taken possession of
her contract in any way. The State is not a party to the
contract and claims no benefit under it. The petitioner is
still the owner and is still in possession of that contract,
regarded as her property, and she can hold it or dispose of
it as she likes and if she can find a purchaser. The
petitioner is free to sue the grantor upon that contract and
recover damages by way of compensation. The State is not a
party to the contract and is not bound by the contract and
accordingly acknowledges no liability under the contract
which being purely personal does not run with the land. If
the petitioner maintains that, by some process not quite
apparent, the State is also bound by that contract, even
then she, as the owner of that contract, can only seek to
enforce the contract in the ordinary way and sue the State
if she be so advised, as to which we say nothing, and claim
whatever damages or compensation she may be entitled to for
the alleged breach of it. This aspect of the matter does
not appear to have been brought to the notice of this Court
when it decided the case of Chhotabai Jethabai Patel and Co.
v. The State of Madhya Pradesh (2) and had it been so done,
we have no doubt that case would not have been decided in
the way it was done.
For the reasons stated above, whatever rights, if any, may
have accrued to the petitioner under that document on any of
the several interpretations noted above, the cannot complain
of the infringement by the
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 919,
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 476.
270
State of any fundamental right for the enforcement of which
alone a petition under Art. 32 is maintainable. We,
therefore, agree that this petition should be dismissed with
costs.
BOSE J.-This is a writ petition under Art. 32 of the
Constitution in which the petitioner claims that her
fundamental right to cut and collect timber in the forests
in question has been infringed.
The petitioner’s husband, Balirambhau Doye, was the Zamindar
of Pandharpur. On April 26, 1948, he executed an
unregistered document, that called itself a lease, in favour
of his wife, the petitioner. The deed gives her the right
to enter upon certain areas in the zamindari in order to cut
and take out bamboos, fuel wood and teak. Certain
restrictions are put on the cutting, and the felling of
certain trees is prohibited. But in the main, that is the
substance of the right. The term of the deed is from April
26, 1948 to December 26, 1960, and the consideration is Rs.
26,000.
The petitioner says that she worked the forests till 1950.
In that year the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary
Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, which
came into force on January 26, 1951, was enacted.
Under s. 3 of that Act, all proprietary rights in the land
vest in the State on and from the date fixed in a
notification issued under sub-s. (1). The date fixed for
the vesting in this area was March 31, 1951. After that,
the petitioner was stopped from cutting any more trees. She
therefore applied to the Deputy Commissioner, Bhandara,
under s. 6(2) of the Act for validating the lease. The
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10
Deputy Commissioner held, on August 16, 1955, that the
section did not apply because it only applied to transfers
made after March 16, 1950, whereas the petitioner’s transfer
was made on April 26, 1948. But, despite that, he went on
to hold that the Act did not apply to transfers made before
March 16, 1950, and so leases before that could not be
questioned. He also held that the lease was genuine and
ordered that the petitioner be allowed to work the forests
subject to the conditions set out in
271
her lease and to the rules framed under s. 218(A) of the C.
P. Land Revenue Act.
It seems that the petitioner claimed compensation from
Government for being ousted from the forests from 1951 to
1955 but gave up the claim on the understanding that she
would be allowed to work the forests for the remaining
period of the term in accordance with the Deputy
Commissioner’s order dated August 16, 1955.
She thereupon went to the Divisional Forest Officer at
Bhandara and asked for permission to work the forests in
accordance with the above order. She applied twice and, as
all the comfort she got was a letter saying that her claim
was being examined, she seems to have taken the law into her
own hands, entered the forests and started cutting the
trees; or so the Divisional Forest Officer says.
The Divisional Forest Officer thereupon took action against
her for unlawful cutting and directed that her name be
cancelled and that the cut materials be forfeited. This was
on March 19, 1956. Because of this, the petitioner went up
to the Government of Madhya Pradesh and made an application
dated September 27, 1956, asking that the Divisional Forest
Officer be directed to give the petitioner immediate
possession and not to interfere with her rights. Then, as
nothing tangible happened, she made a petition to this Court
under Art. 32 of the Constitution on August 26, 1957.
The foundation of the petitioner’s rights is the deed of
April 26, 1948. The exact nature of this document was much
canvassed before us in the arguments by both sides. It was
said at various times by one side or the other to be a
contract conferring contractual rights, a transfer, a
licence coupled with a grant, that it related to move able
property and that, contra, it related to immoveable
property. It will be necessary, therefore, to ascertain its
true nature before I proceed further.
As I have said, the document calls itself a " lease deed ",
but that is not conclusive because the true nature of a
document cannot be disguised by labelling it something else.
272
Clause (1) of the deed runs-
" We executed this lease deed ... and which by this deed
have been leased out to you in consideration of Rs. 26,000
for taking out timber, fuel and bamboos etc."
At the end of clause (2), there is the following paragraph:
" You No. 1 are the principal lessee, while Nos. 2 and 3 are
the sub-lessees."
Clause (3) contains a reservation in favour of the
proprietor. A certain portion of the cutting was reserved
for the proprietor and the petitioner was only given rights
in the remainder. The relevant passage runs:
" Pasas 16, 17, 18 are already leased out to you in your
lease. The cutting of its wood be made by the estate
itself. Thereafter, whatever stock shall remain standing,
it shall be part of your lease. Of this stock, so cut, you
shall have no claim whatsoever."
Clause (5) runs-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10
" Besides the above pasas- the whole forest is leased out to
you. Only the lease, of the forest woods is given to you."
Clause (7) states-
" The proprietorship of the estate and yourself are (in a
way) co-related and you are managing the same and therefore
in the lease itself and concerning it, you should conduct
yourself only as a lease holder explicitly Only in the
absence of the Malik, you should look after the estate as a
Malik and only to that extent you should hold charge as such
and conduct yourself as such with respect’ to sub-lessees."
The rest of this clause is-
Without the signatures of the Malik, nothing, would be held
valid and acceptable, including even your own pasas
transactions,........... The lease under reference shall not
be alterable or alienable by any body."
The only other clause to which reference need be made is
clause (8). It runs-
273
"You should not be permitted to recut the wood in the area
which was once subject to the operation of cutting.
otherwise the area concerned will revert to the estate. The
cutting of the forests should be right at the land surface
and there should not be left any deep furrows or holes."
I will examine the seventh clause first. The question is
whether it confers any proprietary rights or interest on the
petitioner. I do not think it does. It is clumsily worded
but I think that the real meaning is this. The petitioner
is the ‘proprietor’s wife and it seems that she was
accustomed to do certain acts of management in his absence.
The purpose of clause (7) is to ensure that when she acts in
that capacity she is not to have the right to make any
alteration in the deed. There are no words of transfer or
conveyance and I do not think any part of the proprietary
rights, or any interest in them, are conveyed by this
clause. It does not even confer rights of management. It
only recites the existing state of affairs and either
curtails or clarifies powers as manager that are assumed to
exist when the proprietor is away.
Although the document repeatedly calls itself a lease, it
confers no rights of enjoyment in the land. Clause (5)
makes that clear, because it says-
Only the lease of the forest woods is given to you’ .
In my opinion, the document only confers a right to enter on
the lands in order to cut down certain kinds of trees and
carry away the wood. To that extent the matter is covered
by the decision in Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Co. v. The
State of Madhya Pradesh (1), and by the later decision in
Ananda Behera v. The State of Orissa (2), where it was held
that a transaction of this kind amounts to a licence to
enter on the land coupled with a grant to out certain trees
on it and carry away the wood. In England it is a profit a
prendre because it is a grant of the produce of the soil "
like grass, or turves or trees ". See 12 Halsbury’s Laws of
England (Simonds Edition) page 522, Note (m).
(2) [1953]S.C.R.476,483.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 919, 922, 923.
35
274
It is not a " transfer of a right to enjoy the immoveable
property " itself (s. 105 of the Transfer of Property Act),
but a grant of a right to enter upon the land and take away
a part of the produce of the soil from it. In a lease, one
enjoys the property but has no right to take it away. In a
profit a prendre one has a licence to enter on the land, not
for the purpose of enjoying it, but for removing something
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10
from it, namely, a part of the produce of the soil.
Much of the discussion before us centred round the Madhya
Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals,
Alienated Lands) Act of 1950. But I need not consider that
because this, being a writ petition under Art. 32, the
petitioner must establish a fundamental right. For the
reasons given in Ananda Behera’s case (1), I would hold that
she has none. This runs counter to Chhotebhai Jethabhai
Patel’s case but, as that was a decision of three Judges and
the other five, I feel that we are bound to follow the later
case, that is to say, Ananda Behera’s case (1), especially
as I think it lays down the law aright.
The learned counsel for the petitioner contended that his
client’s rights flowed out of a contract and so, relying on
Chhotebhai Jethabhai Patel’s case(2), he contended that he
was entitled to a writ. As a matter of fact, the rights in
the earlier case were held to flow from a licence and not
from a contract simpliciter (see page 483) but it is true
that the learned Judges held that a writ petition lay.
In so far as the petitioner rests her claim in contract
simpliciter, I think she has no case because of the reasons
given in Ananda Behera’s case (1):
" If the petitioners’ rights are no more than the right to
obtain future goods under the Sale of Goods Act, then that
is a purely personal right arising out of a contract to
which the State of Orissa is not a party and in any event a
refusal to perform the contract that gives rise to that
right may amount to a breach of contract but cannot be
regarded as a breach of any fundamental right."
To bring the claim under Art. 19(1)(f) or Art. 31(1)
(1) [1955]2 S.C.R. 919.
(2) [1953] S.C.R. 476.
275
something more must be disclosed, namely, a right to
property of which one is the owner or in which one has an
interest apart from a purely contractual right. Therefore,
the claim founded in contract simpliciter disappears. But,
in so far as it is founded either on the licence, or on the
grant, the question turns on whether this is a grant of
moveable or immovable property. Following the decision in
Ananda Behera’s case (1), I would hold that a right to enter
on land for the purpose of cutting and carrying away timber
standing on it is a benefit that arises out of land. There
is no difference there between the English and the Indian
law. The English law will be found in 12 Halsbury’s Laws of
England (Simonds Edition) pages 620 and 621. But that still
leaves the question whether this is moveable or immoveable
property.
Under s. 3 (26) of the General Clauses Act, it would be
regarded as " immovable property " because it is a benefit
that arises out of the land and also because trees are
attached to the earth. On the other hand, the Transfer of
Property Act says in s. 3 that standing timber is not
immoveable property for the purposes of that Act and so does
s. 2 (6) of the Registration Act. The question is which of
these two definitions is to prevail.
Now it will be observed that " trees " are regarded as
immoveable property because they are attached to or rooted
in the earth. Section 2(6) of the Registration Act
expressly says so and, though the Transfer of Pro party Act
does not define immoveable property beyond saying that it
does not include " standing timber, growing crops or grass
", trees attached to earth (except standing timber), are
immovable property, even under the Transfer of Property Act,
because of s. 3 (26) of the General Clauses Act. In the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10
absence of a special definition, the general definition must
prevail. Therefore, trees (except standing timber) are
immoveable property.
Now, what is the difference between standing timber and a
tree ? It is clear that there must be a distinction because
the Transfer of Property Act draws one in the definitions of
" immoveable property " and
(1) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 919.
276
" attached to the earth " ; and it seems to me that the
distinction must lie in the difference between a tree and
timber. It is to be noted that the exclusion is only of
standing timber " and not of " timber trees".
Timber is well enough known to be-
" wood suitable for building houses, bridges, ships etc.,
whether on the tree or cut and seasoned. (Webster’s
Collegiate Dictionary).
Therefore, " standing timber " must be a tree that is in a
state fit for these purposes and, further, a tree that is
meant to be converted into timber so shortly that it can
already be looked upon as timber for all practical purposes
even though it is still standing. I? not, it is still a
tree because, unlike timber, it will continue to draw
sustenance from the soil.
Now, of course, a tree will continue to draw sustenance from
the soil so long as it continues to stand and live; and that
physical fact of life cannot be altered by giving it another
name and calling it " standing timber ". But the amount of
nourishment it takes, if it is felled at a reasonably early
date, is so negligible that it can be ignored for all
practical purposes and though, theoretically, there is no
distinction between one class of tree and another, if the
drawing of nourishment from the soil is the basis of the
rule, as I hold it to be, the law is grounded, not so much
on logical abstractions as on sound and practical common-
sense. It grew empirically from instance to instance and
decision to decision until a recognisable and workable
pattern emerged; and here, this is the shape it has taken.
The distinction, set out above, has been made in a series of
Indian cases that are collected in Mulla’s Transfer of
Property Act, 4th edition, at pages 16 and 21. At page 16,
the learned author says-
"Standing timber are trees fit for use for building or
repairing houses. This is an exception to the general rule
that growing trees are immoveable property." At page 21 he
says-
"Trees and shrubs may be sold apart from the land, to be cut
and removed as wood, and in that case they are moveable
property. But if the transfer
277
includes the right to fell the trees for a term of years, so
that the transferee derives a benefit from further growth,
the transfer is treated as one of immoveable’ property."
The learned author also refers to the English law and says
at page 21-
" In English law an unconditional sale of growing trees to
be cut by the purchaser, has been held to be a sale of an
interest in land; but not so if it is stipulated that they
are to be removed as soon as possible."
In my opinion, the distinction is sound. Before a tree can
be regarded as " standing timber " it must be in such a
state that, if cut, it could be used as timber; and when in
that state it must be cut reasonably early. The rule is
probably grounded on generations of experience in forestry
and commerce and this part of the law may have grown out of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10
that. It is easy to see that the tree might otherwise
deteriorate and that its continuance in a forest after it
has passed its prime might hamper the growth of younger wood
and spoil the forest and eventually the timber market. But
however that may be, the legal basis for the rule is that
trees that are not cut continue to draw nourishment from the
soil and that the benefit of this goes to the grantee.
Now, how does the document in question-regard this In the
first place, the duration of the grant is twelve years. It
is evident that trees that will be fit for cutting twelve
years hence will not be fit for felling now. Therefore, it
is not a mere sale of the trees as wood. It is more. It is
not just a right to cut a tree but also to derive a profit
-from the soil itself, in the shape of the nourishment in
the soil that goes into the tree and maker, it grow till it
is of a size and age fit for felling as timber; and, if
already of that size, in order to enable it to continue to
live till the petitioner chooses to fell it.
This aspect is emphasised in clause (5) of the deed where
the cutting of teak trees under 1/2 feet is prohibited.
But, as soon as they reach that girth within the twelve
years, they can be felled. And clause (4) speaks of a first
cutting and a second cutting and a
278
third cutting. As regards trees that could be cut at once,
there is no obligation to do so. They can be left standing
till such time as the petitioner chooses to fell them. That
means that they are not to be converted into timber at a
reasonably early date and that the intention is that they
should continue to live and derive nourishment and benefit
from the soil; in other words, they are to be regarded as
trees and not as timber that is standing and is about to be
cut and used for the purposes for which timber is meant. It
follows that the grant is not only of standing timber but
also of trees that are not in a fit state to be felled at
once but which are to be felled gradually as they attain the
required girth in the course of the twelve years;. and
further, of trees that the petitioner is not required to
fell and convert into timber at once even though they are of
the required age and growth. Such trees cannot be regarded
as timber that happens to be standing because timber, as
such, does not draw nourishment from the soil. If,
therefore, they can be left for an appreciable length of
time, they must be regarded as trees and not as timber. The
difference lies there.
The result is that, though such trees as can be regarded as
standing timber at the date of the document, both because of
their size and girth and also because of the intention to
fell at an early date, would be moveable, property for the
purposes of the Transfer of Property and Registration Acts,
the remaining trees that are also covered by the grant will
be immoveable property, and as the total value is Rs.
26,000, the deed requires registration. Being unregistered,
it passes no title or interest and, therefore, as in Ananda
Behera’s case (1) the petitioner has no fundamental right
which she can enforce.
My lord the Chief Justice and my learned brothers prefer to
leave the question whether the deed here is a lease or a
licence coupled with a grant, open because, on either view
the petitioner must fail. But we are all agreed that the
petition be dismissed with costs.
Petition dismissed.
(I) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 919.
279
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10