Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GANGA DEVI & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/02/1972
BENCH:
RAY, A.N.
BENCH:
RAY, A.N.
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CITATION:
1972 AIR 931 1972 SCR (3) 431
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1215 (6)
ACT:
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950, s. 39
(1) (e) (i) and (ii)--Average annual income how
determined--Forest income, if includes income derived by
processing wood.
HEADNOTE:
The forests of the appellants vested in the respondent-State
as a result of the notification under the U.P. Zamindari
Abolition and Land Reforms Act. 1950, and the Compensation
Officer determined the basis of compensation.
In appeal by the respondent the High Court held that the
Compensation Officer in determining the compensation was
wrong in arriving at the iverage annual income by adding the
annual income, under s. 39(1) (e) (i) on the basis of a
period of 25 years and the appraisement of the annual yield,
under s. 39(1)(e)(ii), on the date of vesting.
In appeals to this Court,
HELD : (1) The High Court Was correct in holding that the
average annual income from forest under s. 39(1)(e) of the
Act could not be computed by arithmetical addition of the
figures arrived at on the basis of cl. (i) and on the basis
of cl. (ii). The section speaks of computation of average
annual income from forest, (i) on the basis of income for a
period of 20 to 40 agricultural years immediately preceding
the date of vesting as the Compensation Officer may consider
reasonable, and (ii) on the appraisement of the annual yield
of the forest on the date of vesting. Under the first
clause. the actual income derived from the forest for a
number of years before the date of vesting as the Com-
pensation Officer may consider reasonable is to be taken and
the average calculated. Under the second clause the annual
yield as on the date of vesting is to be appraised. This
should be done, inter alia, by taking into consideration the
number and age of trees, the area of cultivation and the
produce. Therefore, the compensation officer has to compute
the ’average annual income’ by taking recourse to both the
methods but not by adding the figures on the basis of cl.
(i) and on the basis of cl. (ii) [435 D-H; 436 A-B]
(2) The High Court rightly held that forest income was
referable to price of the standing timber. Hence any income
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which the appellants derived by processing wood, was income
in the nature of trade and would not be forest income. [436
E-G]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 41 to 46
of 1967.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated September 1, 1965
of the Allahabad High Court in First Appeals Nos. 513 of
1955 etc.
L887upCI/72
432
M. C. Chagla, S. R. Agarwala, A. T. M. Sampath and E. C.
Agarwala, for the appellants (in all the appeals).
L. M. Singhvi and O. P. Rana, for the respondent (in all
the appeals).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Ray, J. These six appeals are by certificate from the
judgment dated 1 September, 1965 of the High Court at
Allahabad, Lala Triloki Nath and Lala Digambar Prasad filed
four appeals and the State two in the High Court against the
order dated 6 September, 1955 of the Compensation Officer.
During the pendency of the appeals the Lalas died and the
appellants were brought on record. The High Court allowed
the appeals filed by the State and allowed in part the
appeals filed by the appellants. The appellants have come
up by certificate in these six appeals.
Each of the Lalas held equal one half share in each of the
forests in the villages of Chharba and Prithipur in Dehra
Dun District. By a notification dated 1 July, 1952 under
the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950
(hereinafter called the Act) the entire forest vested in the
State of Uttar Pradesh.
On 2 May, 1953 the Lalas received the Draft Compensation
Assessment Rolls under section 46 (1 ) (b) of the Act which
showed annual compensation to be paid to the Lalas as nil.
The Lalas thereafter on 20 May, 1953 filed their objections
against the draft compensation roll and claimed compensation
under the provisions of the Act.
With regard to village Chharba the Lalas claimed that it was
a valuable sal forest comprising 225 acres. The Lalas
assessed the worth of the forest at Rs. 3,40,000. They
claimed that sayar income during the 10 agricultural years
immediately preceding the date of vesting should be computed
separately and added to the gross income from the forests.
They further claimed that income by selling poola grass was
to be within sayar income. The next head of claim was that
they did not have accounts of the income of the forest for
the previous 20 years ’but they were able to produce
accounts for four years from 1944 up to 1947 and the share
of each of the Lalas on the basis of the income derived for
the said four years came to Rs. 1274-12-0 and on the basis
of the appraisement of the annual yield on the date of
vesting it came to Rs. 5457/-. On this basis each of the
Lalas claimed Rs. 46740/as compensation in respect of
village Chharba.
With regard to the Prithipur forest the Lalas claimed that
they had worked the forest during the years 1945 to 1952 and
that the
433
average annual income of each of their share from the
Prithipur forest on the basis of 20 agricultural years
immediately preceding the date of vesting came to Rs.
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5106/-. The Lalas stated that on the basis of appraisement
of the annual yield on the date of vesting of the forest
Prithipur the share of each came to Rs. 7955/-. On this
basis each of the Lalas claimed a sum of Rs. 101 1 14 and
odd as compensation for the forest Prithipur.
The Compensation Officer decided that the income from the
poola grass, was not sayar income but forest income and
disallowed income from poola grass in entirety. The
Compensation Officer however allowed some sayar income in
each forest and decided that the average annual income of
the forest under section 39(1) (e) of the Act should be
calculated on the basis of the period of 25 years
immediately preceding the date of vesting and not 20 years
as the Lalas had claimed. With regard to the forest in
village Chharba the Compensation Officer arrived at the
figure of Rs. 55292/- consisting of Rs. 4300/- as sayar
income and Rs. 50992/- as the forest income for computation
of average annual income on the basis of the period of 25
years and thus arrived at the annual income of Rs. 2211-8-0
under section 39(1)(e)(i) of the Act. With regard to the
computation of average annual income on the appraisement of
the annual yield of the forest on the date of vesting as
contemplated in section 39 (1) (e) (ii) of the Act the
Compensation Officer held that the representative area was
not specified by the Lalas with enumeration or location and
the enumeration figures of the Lalas were based on estimated
and presumed calculations.
The Lalas appraised Rs. 11000/- as the annual yield on the
date of vesting. The Compensation Officer found that the
forest had been felled about 6 to 8 years before vesting and
the age of the crop for that reason could not be more than 8
years for coppice. The Compensation Officer thus appraised
Rs. 800/- as the annual yield and determined Rs. 2211-8-0
and Rs. 800/- aggregating Rs. 3011-8-0 as the average annual
income to be added to the gross assets for assessment of
compensation.
With regard to the forest in village Prithipur the Lalas
claimed Rs. 5106/- as the annual income for a period of 20
agricultural years immediately preceding the date vesting
and appraised the annual yield on the date of vesting at Rs.
7955/-. The Lalas claimed one tenth of the sayar income for
10 agricultural years at Rs. 2007-8-0. The Compensation
Officer disallowed income from poola grass but allowed sayar
income of Rs. 23550/- and added the same to the forest
income of Rs. 113914/- aggregating Rs. 137464/- on the basis
of a period of 25 years and thus arrrived at the average
annual income of the forest under section
434
39(1) (e) of the Act at Rs. 5496-8-0. The Compensation
Officer appraised the annual yield at Rs. 1650/- add thus
arrived ,it ’the total sum of Rs. 7146-8-0 to be added as.
gross assets of forest income.
In the High Court the State contended that the Compensation
Officer was in error in adding the annual income on the
basis of a period of 25 years and the appraisement of the
annual yield in order to arrive at the average annual income
under section 3 9 (1) (e) of the Act. The contentions of
the Lalas in the High Court were these : First, the income
from poola grass was sayar income and should have been
allowed and added separately to the average annual income.
With regard to Prithipur forest it was said that the
Compensation-Officer wrongly rejected the sayar income for
the Fasli years 1352 and 1353 amounting to Rs. 4600/- and
Rs. 4500/- respectively. Secondly, the average annual
income from forest should have been determined on the basis
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of income for a period of 20 and not 25 years. Thirdly, the
Compensation Officer was in error in not accepting the whole
income of the Prithipur forest for the Fasli years 1352,
1356, 1357 and 1358 by holding that the income during those
four years had been derived by processing wood and therefore
the income was made by activities in the nature of trade and
was not forest income. Fourthly, the Compensation Officer
should have accepted the appraisement of the annual-yield of
the forest on the date of vesting as claimed by the Lalas.
The High Court came to the conclusion that the Lalas were
entitled to income from poola grass as sayar income and thus
allowed the appeals of the Lalas in part. The sayar income
is not to be clubbed with the average annual income but is
to be dealt with separately.
Sayar income is dealt with in section 39(1)(c) of the Act.
Sayar is not defined in the Act but in section 3 (26) of the
Act the word ’sayar’ is to have the meaning assigned to it
in the United Provinces Tenancy Act, 1939. In the 1939
Tenancy Act sayar includes whatever is to be paid or
delivered by a lessee or licensee on account of right of
gathering produce. forest rights, fisheries and the use of
water for irrigation from artificial sources. Therefore the
income derived by ’the landlord from persons who have been
given licences to cut an remove poola grass from forest has
been held by the High Court to be sayar. We agree with the
reasoning of the High Court. The High Court was correct in
holding that the sayar income during 10 agricultural years
immediately preceding the date of vesting should be taken
into consideration in determining the gross assets under
section 39 of the Act.
435
Counsel for the appellants submitted that the High Court did
not deal with the finding of the Compensation Officer with
regard to income from poola grass for the Fasli years 1352
and 1353 in respect of Prithipur forest. The Lalas claimed
for the Fasli year 1352 a sum of Rs. 4600/- and for the
Fasli Year 1353 a sum of Rs. 4500/- as income from poola
grass. The Compensation Officer gave the additional reason
for rejecting the income from poola grass for these two
years that in the extract of khatauni it was not mentioned
as to what the source of income was. Exhibit P-3 being the
extract from khatauni for the Fasli year 1352 would show
that Rs. 4600/- was the rent for clause 13 sawai items.
Again, Exhibit P-10 for the Fasli year 1353 in respect of
Prithipur forest would show the sum of Rs. 45001/- on
account of rent for sayar. Therefore when the Compensation
Officer will deal with sayar income he will take into
consideration Exhibits P-3 and P-10 for the Fasli years 1352
and 1353.
In the High Court it was contended that the Compensation
Officer was wrong in taking 25 years to be the period on the
basis of which annual average income of the forest was to be
computed under section 39(1)(e) of the Act. The High Court
did not accept that contention. This contention was not re-
peated in this Court.
The High Court held that the Compensation Officer was wrong
in arriving at the average annual income by adding the
annual income on the, basis of a period of 25 years and the
appraisement of the annual yield on the date of vesting.
The High Court said that the two clauses in section 39 (1)
(e) of the Act were independent methods of finding out the
average annual income from forest and it was not intended
that the average annual income should be arrived at by
adding the two methods. Section 39(1)(e) of the Act speaks
of computation of average annual income from forest (i) on
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the basis of income- for a period of 20 to 40 agricultural
years immediately preceding the date of vesting as the
Compensation Officer may consider reasonable and (ii) on the
appraisement of the annual yield of the forest on the date
of vesting. The two are separate matters. It cannot be
said that the Compensation Officer will adopt either of the
clauses. The Compensation Officer has to refer to both the
clauses in order to compute the average annual income from
forest. The High Court is correct in holding that the
average annual income from forest under section 39(1)(e) of
the Act cannot be computed by arithmetical addition of the
figures arrived at on the basis of clause (i) and on the
basis of clause (ii). It is the average annual income from
forest which is to be computed. The words of importance are
’average ,annual income’. Under the first clause the actual
income de-
436
rived from the forest for a number of years before the date
of Vesting as the Compensation Officer may consider
reasonable is to be taken and the average calculated. Under
the second clause the annual yield as on the date of vesting
is to be appraised. The Compensation Officer is to compute
the average income by taking recourse to both the methods.
The second clause which speaks of appraisement of the annual
yield will be done inter alia by taking into consideration
the number and age of trees, the area of cultivation and the
produce.
In the present appeals the High Court found on the materials
that the forest had been felled almost completely during the
last 9 or 10 years preceding the date of vesting. The
evidence further established that there were no mature trees
for felling and that the bulk of the crop that had existed
had grown within a period of 8 years. It was therefore
clear that the whole of the forest’s income derived during
those 9 or 10 years for which accounts of the Lalas were
available represented the whole growth of the forest during
the last 40 years and even if the forest had been gradually
cut during the last 40 years the income derived would not
have been substantially more than what have been derived
during the last 9 or 10 years preceding the date of vesting.
The High Court assessed the evidence. We do not find that
there is any error in regard to the appreciation or
assessment of evidence by the High Court and the conclusion
that under section 3 9 (1) (e) of the Act the annual average
income of Prithipur forest came to Rs. 4396.56 and of
village Chharba at Rs. 2039.68.
Counsel for the appellants contended that the Compensation
Officer did not consider the entire forest income for the
Fasli years 1352, 1356, 1357 and 1358 for the Prithipur
forest on the ground that the entire income was not the sale
price of forest but that the Lalas worked the forest and a
portion of the income was from the sale of the timber of
that forest. The High Court rightly held that the forest
income was referable to the price of the standing timber and
income which the Lalas derived by processing wood would not
be within forest income.
For these reasons we uphold the judgment and order of the
High Court with this modification that when the Compensation
Officer will deal with the income from poola grass as sayar
income as derived by the High Court the Compensation Officer
will also take into consideration the income from poola
grass for the Prithipur forest for the years 1352 and 1353
Fasli.
In the facts and circumstances of the case the appeals are
dismissed. The parties will pay and bear their own costs.
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V.P.S. Appeals
dismissed.
437