Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MANCHEGOWDA ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT17/04/1984
BENCH:
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
BENCH:
SEN, AMARENDRA NATH (J)
BHAGWATI, P.N.
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1151 1984 SCR (3) 502
1984 SCC (3) 301 1984 SCALE (1)632
CITATOR INFO :
R 1985 SC 389 (20)
D 1988 SC1626 (15)
R 1992 SC 195 (6)
ACT:
Karnataka Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
(Prohibition of Transfer of Certain Lands) Act, 1978,
Sections 4 & 5, constitutional validity-Whether the
prohibition of transfer of granted lands and Resumption or
restitution thereof without payment of compensation or
providing any appeal for such orders of resumption violates
Art. 19 (1) (f), 31 and 31A of the Constitution-Whether
making such special provisions only with regard to Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes to the exclusion of persons
belonging to other communities, violated Art. 14 of the
Constitution.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners are purchasers of lands which had been
originally granted by the State to persons belonging to
Scheduled Caste or Scheduled Tribes. Such lands had been
originally granted to persons belonging to Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes under the provisions of Law or on the
basis of rules or regulations governing such grant. After
the passing of the Karnataka Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes (Prohibition of Transfer of Certain Lands Act), 1978,
notices have been issued by the appropriate authority to the
transferees of such lands to show cause as to why the lands
transferred to them should not be resumed for being restored
to the original grantees or their legal heirs or for
distribution otherwise to the members of Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes in accordance with the provisions of
the Statute, as the transfers in their favour are in view of
the provisions of the Act now null and void. The appellants,
who were aggrieved by the said notices challenged the vires
of the Act. According to them, ss. 4 & 5 of the Act violated
the provisions of Arts 14, 19 (1) (f), 31 and 31A of the
Constitution. The High Court for reasons recorded in the
Judgment upheld the validity of the Act and dismissed the
petitions. However, the High Court granted certificates
under Arts. 132 & 133 of the Constitution and hence the
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appeals.
Dismissing the appeals, the Court
^
HELD: 1 : 1. Sections 4 & 5 of the Karnataka Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes (Prohibition of Transfers of
Certain Lands) Act, 1978 is constitutionally valid. [5101F]
503
1 : 2. However, the provisions of the Act must be read
down and held that the Act will apply to transfers of
granted lands made in breach of the condition imposing
prohibition of transfer of granted lands only in those cases
where the title acquired by the transferee was still
voidable at the date of the commencement of the Act and had
not lost its defeasible character at the date when the Act
came into force. Transferees of granted land having a
perfected and not a voidable title at the commencement of
the Act must be held to be outside the pale of the
provisions of the Act. S. 4 of the Act must be so construed
as not to have the effect of rendering void the title of any
transferee which was not voidable at the date of the
commencement of the Act. Granted lands which had been
transferred after the expiry of the period of prohibition do
not come within the purview of the Act, and cannot be
proceeded against under the provisions of this Act. The
provisions of the Act make this position clear, as ss. 4 & 5
become applicable only when granted lands are transferred in
breach of the condition relating to prohibition of such
lands. Granted lands transferred before the commencement of
the Act and not in contravention of prohibition on transfer
are clearly beyond the scope and purview of the present Act.
Also in case where granted lands had been transferred before
the commencement of the Act in violation of the condition
regarding prohibition on such transfer and the transferee
who had initially acquired only a voidable title in such
granted lands had perfected his title in the granted lands
by prescription by long and continuous enjoyment thereof in
accordance with law before the commencement of the Act, such
granted lands would also not come within the purview of the
present Act, as the title of such transferees to the granted
lands has been perfected before the commencement of the Act.
Since at the date of the commencement of the Act the title
of such transferees had ceased to be voidable by reason of
acquisition of prescriptive rights on account of long and
continued user for the requisite period, the title of such
transferees could not be rendered void by virtue of the
provisions of the Act without violating the constitutional
guarantee. [520D-H, 521A-C]
1 : 3. As the provisions of appeal has been
incorporated by the Amending Act which received the assent
of the Governor on the 29th February, 1984 and first came to
be published in the Karnataka Gazette Extraordinary on the
3rd day of March, 1984, the Deputy Commissioner to whom the
appeal will be presented will no doubt take this fact into
consideration in deciding the question of limitation in
regard to any appeal which may be filed against an order of
the Assistant Commissioner; if any appeal is preferred
within a period of three months from the date the amended
provision conferring the right of appeal came into force,
the Deputy Commissioner taking into consideration the fact
that a period of three months has been prescribed for
preferring an appeal from the date of the order of the
Assistant Commissioner, may have no difficulty in
entertaining the appeal by condoning the deal under s. 5 of
the Limitation Act in terms of the power conferred on the
Deputy Commissioner under the said s. 5A, provided the
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Deputy Commissioner is satisfied that the appeal is
otherwise maintainable and the interest of justice requires
that the appeal should be entertained and not be thrown out
on the ground of limitation. [521-D-G]
504
1 : 4. It is no doubt true that before the passing of
the present Act any transfer of granted land in breach of
the condition relating to prohibition on such transfer would
not have the effect of rendering the transfer void and would
make any such transfer only voidable. But the State,
consistently with the directive principles of the
Constitution, has made it a policy and very rightly, to
preserve, protect and promote the interest of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes which by and large form the
weaker and poorer sections of the people in our country.
This may be said to be the declared policy of the State and
the provisions seeking to nullify such transfers is quite in
keeping with the policy of the State which may properly be
regarded as public policy for rendering social and economic
justice to these weaker sections of the society.
In pursuance of this policy, the legislature is
undoubtedly competent to pass an enactment providing that
transfers of such granted lands will be void and not merely
voidable for properly safeguarding and protecting the
interests of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for
whose benefit only these lands had been granted. Even under
the Contract Act, any Contract which is opposed to public
policy is rendered void. [512D-E, 513C-E]
1 : 5. Even in the absence of any such statutory
provisions, the transfer of granted lands in contravention
of the terms of the grant or in breach of any law, rule or
regulation covering such grant will clearly be voidable and
the resumption of such granted lands after avoiding the
voidable transfers in accordance with law will be permitted.
Avoidance of such voidable transfers and resumption of the
granted lands through process of law is bound to take time
Any negligence and delay on the part of the authorities
entitled to take action to avoid such transfers through
appropriate legal process of law is bound to take time. Any
negligence and dealy on the part of the authorities entitled
to take action to avoid such transfers through appropriate
legal process for resumption of such grant may be further
impediments in the matter of avoiding such transfers and
resumption of possession of the granted lands. Prolonged
legal proceedings will undoubtedly be prejudicial to the
interests of the members of the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes for whose benefit the granted lands are
intended to be resumed. As transfers of granted lands in
contravention of the terms of the grant or any law,
regulation or rule governing such grants can be legally
avoided and possession of such lands can be recovered
through process of law the Legislature for the purpose of
avoiding delay and harassment of protracted litigation and
in furthering its object of speedy restoration of these
granted lands to the members of the weaker communities is
perfectly competent to make suitable provision for
resumption of such granted lands by stipulating in the
enactment that transfers of such lands in contravention of
the terms of the grant or any regulation, rule or law
regulating such grant will be void in providing a suitable
procedure consistent with the principles of natural justice
for achieving this purpose without recourse to prolonged
litigation in Court in the larger interests of benefiting
the members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
[513F-H, 514A-D]
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2 : 1. Any person who acquires such granted land by
transfer from the original grantee in breach of the
condition relating to prohibition on such transfer must
necessarily be presumed to be aware of the prohibition
imposed on the transfer of such granted land, and they
cannot be considered to be a
505
bona fide purchaser for value; and every such transferee
acquires to his knowledge only avoidable title to the
granted land. The title acquired by such transfer is
defeasible and is liable to be defeated by an appropriate
action taken in this regard. If the Legislature under such
circumstances seek to intervene in the interests of these
weaker sections of the community and choose to substitute a
speedies and cheaper method or recovery of these granted
lands which were otherwise liable to be resumed through
legal process, it cannot be said that any vested rights of
the transferees are affected. Transferees of granted lands
with full knowledge of the legal position that the transfers
made in their favour in contravention of the terms of grant
or any law, rule or regulation governing such grant are
liable to be defeated in law, cannot and do not have in law
or equity, a genuine or real grievance that their defeasible
title in such granted lands so transferred is, in fact,
being defeated and they are being dispossessed of such lands
from which they were in law liable to be dispossessed by
process of law. [514F-H, 515A-C]
2 : 2. The position will, however, be somewhat
different where the transferees have acquired such granted
lands not in violation of any term of the grant of any law
regulating such grant as also where any transferee who may
have acquired a defeasible title in such granted lands by
the transfer thereof in contravention of the terms or the
grant or any law regulating such grant has perfected his
title by prescription of time or otherwise. [515C-D]
2 : 3. But where the transferee acquires only a
defeasible title liable to be defeated in accordance with
law, avoidance of such defeasible title which still remains
liable to be defeated in accordance with law at the date of
commencement of the Act and recovery of the possession of
such granted land on the basis of the provisions contained
in ss. 4 & 5 of the Act cannot be said to be
constitutionally invalid and such provision cannot be termed
as unconscionable, unjust and arbitrary. [515D-E]
3 : 1. Granted lands were intended for the benefit and
enjoyment of the original grantees who happen to belong to
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. The condition
imposed against the transfer for a particular period of such
granted lands which were granted essentially for the benefit
of the grantees cannot be said to constitute any
unreasonable restriction. The granted lands were not in the
nature of properties acquired and held by the grantees in
the sense of acquisition, or holding or property within the
meaning of Art. 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution. It was a
case of a grant by the owner of the land to the grantee for
the possession and enjoyment of the granted lands by the
grantees and the prohibition on transfer of such granted
lands for the specified period was an essential term or
condition on the basis of which the grant was made. The
prohibition on transfer was not for an indefinite period or
perpetual. It was only for a particular period, the object
being that the grantees should enjoy the granted lands
themselves at least for the period during which the
prohibition was to remain operative. Persons belonging to
scheduled castes and scheduled tribes to whom the lands were
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granted were, because of their poverty, lack of education
and general backwardness, exploited by various persons who
could and would take advantage of
506
bona fide the said plight of these poor persons for
depriving them of their lands. The imposition of the
condition of prohibition on transfer for a particular period
could not, therefore, be considered to constitute any
unreasonable restriction on the right of the grantees to
dispose of the granted lands. The imposition of such a
condition on prohibition in the very nature of the grant was
perfectly valid and legal. [575G-H, 516A-B, E-F]
3 : 2. The transferees of the granted lands from the
original grantees, acquired the lands improperly and
illegally in contravention of the condition imposed on such
transfers. Such transferees must have been aware and must in
any event be deemed to have been aware of the condition
regarding the prohibition on transfer and they cannot be
considered to be bona fide transferees for value. Such
persons acquired in the granted lands only avoidable title
which was liable to be defeated and possession of such lands
could be resumed from such transferees. Such a person who
only acquires a defeasible legal right cannot make a
grievance of any violation of Art. 19 (1) (f) of the
Constitution, when the defeasible legal right is, in fact,
defeated by appropriate legal action or by any suitable
provision enacted in an Act passed by the competent
legislature. Further in most cases such transferees have
after the transfer, which is liable to be avoided in
accordance with law, enjoyed for a sufficiently long period
the benefits of lands transferred to them before the lands
could be recovered from them Art. 19 (1) (f), therefore, did
not invalidate s. 4 of the Act. [516G-H, 517A-B]
3 : 3. The right or property which a transferee
acquires in the granted lands, is a defeasible right and the
transferee renders himself liable to lose his right or
property at the instance of the grantor. This kind of
defeasible right of the transferee in the granted lands
cannot be considered to be property as contemplated in art.
31 and 31A. The nature of the right of the transferee in the
granted lands on transfer of such lands in breach of the
condition prohibition relating to such transfer, the object
of such grant and the terms therefore, also the law
governing such grants and the object and the scheme of the
presents Act enacted for the benefit of the weaker sections
of our community, clearly go to indicate that there is in
this case no deprivation of such right or property as may
attract the provisions of Art. 31 and 31A of the
Constitution. [517C-G]
With the enactment of the Act, the, voidable right or
title of the transferee in the grant lands becomes void and
the transferee is left with no right or property in the
granted lands. The lands which are sought to be recovered
from the transferees of the granted lands are lands in which
the transferees cease to have any interest or property. The
effect of the provisions contained in ss. 4 & 5 of the Act
is that the defeasible right or interest of the transferees
in the granted lands is defeated and the voidable
transaction is rendered void. As soon as such transferees
are rendered void by virtue of the provisions of the Act
transferee does not have any right in the granted lands so
transferred, and possession is sought to be recovered of
such lands in which the transferees have lost their right
and interest. Therefore, the question of acquisition of any
property by the State or any modification or extinguishment
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of right of property does not really arise and Art. 31A
cannot be applied. Therefore, there is no infringement of
Arts. 31 & 31A of the Constitution. [518D-H]
507
4. The special provisions made for the resumption of
granted lands originally granted to the members of Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes and resoration of the same to
the original grantees or their heirs and legal
representatives and falling them to other members of these
communities do not infringe Art. 14 of the Constitution.
This Act has undoubtedly been passed for the benefit of
members of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes who are
recognised as backward citizens and weaker sections in the
country. There cannot be any manner of doubt that persons
belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes can be
considered to be separate and distinct classes particularly
in the matter of preservation and protection of their
economic and educational interests. In view of the peculiar
plight of these two classes, the Constitution in Art. 15 (4)
makes specific mention of these two classes and in Art.16
(4) speaks of backward class of citizens. One of the
directive principles as contained in Art. 46 of the
Constitution enjoins that "the State shall promote with
special care and educational and economic interests of the
weaker sections of the people and in particular of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and shall protect them
from social injustice and all forms of exploitation." The
object of this Act is to protect and preserve the economic
interests of persons belonging to Schedule Castes and
Scheduled Tribes and to prevent their exploitation. For the
purpose of the present Act, the classification has a clear
nexus to the object sought to be achieved.
[519 A-F]
5. It is true there was no provision for any appeal in
the original Act. It may be that such a provision was not
originally made, as the Legislature might have felt that
providing for an appeal would unnecessarily prolong the
proceedings and might defeat the purpose of the act.
However, the Karnataka Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
(Prohibition of Transfer of Certain Lands) (Amendment) Act,
1984 (Karnataka Act III of 1984) now provides a suitable
provision for appeal against an order of the Assistant
Commissioner under s.5A. [519G-H, 520A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 3116
and 2608 of 1983 etc. etc.
(From the Judgments and orders dated 30th September,
1982 & 5th October, 1981 of the Karnataka High Court in Writ
Petition Nos. 12680 and 12681/1979 etc. etc.
For the Appellants/Petitioners.
U.R. Lalit Shanti Bhushan, B.P. Singh, S.N. Kacker,
S.L. Benadikar and M/s. PR Ramassesh, KR Nagaraja, B.P.
Singh, M. Veerappa, N. Nettar & K N. Bhat, C.R. Soma
Sekharan, TVS Narasimhulu, Vineet Kumar, S. Laxminarasu,
Swaraj Kaushal, Mukul Mudgal, A.G. Ratnaparkhi, R. Satish,
C.K. Ratnaparkhi, S.K. Mehta, SS Javali, S.N. Bhat, Naunit
Lal, Kailash Vasdev, Ms. Lalita Kohli, Manoj Swarup, Ashok
Benadikar, AG Ratnaparkhi
For the Respondents:
R.P. Bhat, S.N. Kacker, L.N. Sinha, Swaraj Kaushal,
Girish Chander and Miss A. Subhashini.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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508
AMARENDRA NATH SEN, J. The question for consideration
in Civil Appeal No.3116 of 1983 by certificate granted by
the High Court is, whether the Karnataka Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes (Prohibition of Transfer of Certain
Lands) Act, 1978 (hereinafter referred to as the Act for the
sake of brevity) is constitutionally valid or not.
The writ petition out of which this appeal arises was
filed in the High Court along with a number of other writ
petitions filed by various other parties challenging the
validity of the Act. The High Court for reasons recorded in
the judgment upheld the validity of the Act and dismissed
this writ petition and also the other writ petitions. The
High Court granted certificate under Arts. 132 and 133 of
the Constitution and this appeal has been filed with the
certificate granted by the High Court. As the identical
question is involved in all these appeals and special leave
petitions, this judgment will also dispose of all the
appeals and special leave petitions.
In as much as the vires of the Act has been challenged
essentially on legal grounds, it does not become necessary
for us to set out the facts at any great length. The broad
facts common to all writ petitions which were filed in the
High Court may, however, be briefly noted. The Petitioners
are purchasers of lands which had been originally granted by
the State to persons belonging to Scheduled Castes or
Scheduled Tribes. Such lands had been originally granted to
persons belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
under the provisions of Law or on the basis of rules or
regulations governing such grant. After the passing of the
Act in question notices have been issued by the appropriate
authority to the transferees of such lands to show cause as
to why the lands transferred to then should not be resumed
for being restored to the original grantees or their legal
heirs or for distribution otherwise to the members of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes in accordance with the
provisions of the Statute, as the transfers in their favour
are in view of the provisions of the Act now null and void.
Before we proceed to deal with the various contentions
raised on behalf of the appellant and the other petitioners
in the other writ petitions, it would be appropriate to set
out the relevant provisions of the Act.
Granted land is defined in S. 3(b) of the mean "any
land granted by the Government to a person belonging to any
of the
509
Scheduled Castes or the Scheduled Tribes and includes land
allotted or granted to such person under the relevant law
for the time being in force relating to agrarian reforms or
land ceiling or abolition of Inams, other than that relating
to hereditary offices or rights and the word "granted shall
be construed accordingly".
Sections 4 and 5 of the Act read as follows:
"S. 4. Prohibition of transfer of granted land-(1)
Notwithstanding anything in any law, agreement,
contract or instrument, any transfer of granted land
made either before or after the commencement of this
Act, in contravention of the terms of the grant of such
land or the law providing for such grant, or sub-
section (2) shall be null and void and no right, title
or interest in such land shall be conveyed or be deemed
ever to have conveyed by such transfer.
(2) No person shall, after the commencement of
this Act, transfer or acquire by transfer any granted
land without the previous permission of the Government.
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(3) The provisions of sub-section (1) and (2)
shall apply also to the sale of any land in execution
of a decree or order of a civil Court or any award or
order of any other authority.
S.5. Resumption or restitution of granted lands.-
(1) Where, on application by any interested person or
on information given in writing by any person or suo
motu, and after such enquiry as he deems necessary, the
Assistant Commissioner is satisfied that the transfer
of any granted land is null and void under sub-section
(1) of Section 4, he may.-
(a) by order take possession of such land after
evicting all persons in possession thereof in such
manner as may be prescribed:
Provided that no such order shall be made except
after giving the person affected a reasonable
opportunity of being heard;
(b) restore such land to the original grantee or
his legal heir. Where it is not reasonably practicable
to restore the land to such grantee or legal heir, such
land shall be deemed to have vested in the government
free from all encumbrances. The Government may grant
such
510
land to a person belonging to any of the Scheduled
Caste or Scheduled Tribes in accordance with the rules
relating to grant of land.
(2) Any order passed under sub-section (1) shall
be final and shall not be questioned in any court of
law and no injunction shall be granted by any court in
respect of any proceeding taken or about to be taken by
the Assistant Commissioner in pursuance of any power
conferred by or under this Act.
(3) For the purposes of this section, where any
granted land is in the possession of a person, other
than the original grantee or his legal heir, it shall
be presumed, until the contrary is proved, that such
person has acquired the land by a transfer which is
null and void under the provisions of sub-section (1)
of section 4.
The validity of the Act has been challenged mainly
because of the provisions contained in ss. 4 and 5 of the
Act which purport to declare transfers of ’granted land’
made either before or after the commencement of the Act in
contravention of the terms of the grant of such land or the
law providing for such grant null and void and confer powers
on the authority to take possession of such land after
evicting all persons in possession thereof and to restore
such lands to the original grantee or his legal heirs and
where it is not reasonably practicable to so restore the
land to a person belonging to the Scheduled Castes or
Scheduled Tribes in accordance with the rules relating to
the grant of such land it may be noted that the validity of
the Act in so far as it imposes prohibition on transfer of
granted land after the commencement of the Act has not been
challenged and the principal objection to the validity of
the Act is taken because of the provisions in the Act
seeking to nullify the transfers of granted lands effected
before the commencement of the Act.
The main grounds on which the validity of the Act has
been challenged are:
1. Granted lands which had been transferred by the
grantee in contravention of the prohibition
imposed on the transfer of any granted land under
the terms of the grant, under the rules relating
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to such grant or under any law governing such
grant, renders the transfer voidable and not void
and it is not permissible to nullify such
transfers and to declare them void by any
provisions of the Act;
511
2. The power conferred on the authority to recover
possession of the granted land on the basis of the
provisions contained in the Act defeating the
vested rights of the purchasers who have acquired
such lands bona fide for consideration and have
been in enjoyment and possession thereof for years
is unconscionable unjust and invalid;
3. Ss. 4 and 5 of the Act which empower the authority
to take possession of the granted lands without
payment of any compensation are violative of Art.
19(1)(f) of the Constitution.
4. Ss. 4 and 5 of the Act contravene Art. 31 and the
second proviso of cl. (1) of Art. 31A of the
Constitution and are, therefore, void.
5. Invalidation of transfers of land granted to
persons belonging to only scheduled castes and
scheduled tribes and resumption of only such
granted lands are discriminatory and they infringe
Art. 14 of the Constitution.
It may be noted that these very grounds were urged
before the High Court. The High Court has carefully
considered all the arguments advanced on behalf of the
appellants who were the petitioners in the writ petitions
filed before it. The High Court in its judgment has referred
to the relevant rules governing the grant and has also
discussed the various decisions which were cited before it.
The High Court for reasons stated in the judgment negatived
all the contentions and upheld the validity of the Act. We
may mention that in addition to the aforesaid grounds a
further ground has also been urged before us and the said
ground is that as the Act in question does not provide for
an appeal against the order of the competent authority, the
Act should be held to be unreasonable, unjust and
unconscionable and should, therefore, be struck down.
Before we proceed to examine the contentions raised
before us, it will be appropriate to refer to the objects
and reasons for the passing of this particular enactment.
The objects and reasons run as follows:
512
"The non-alienation clause contained in the
existing Land Grant Rules and the provisions for
conciliation of grants where the land is alienated in
contravention of the above said provision are found not
sufficient to help the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes grantees whose ignorance and poverty have been
exploited by persons belonging to the affluent and
powerful sections to obtain sales or mortgages either
for a nominal consideration or for no consideration at
all and they have become the victims of circumstances.
To fulfill the purpose of the grant, the land even if
it has been alienated, should be restored to the
original grantee or his heirs.
The Government of India has also been urging the
State Government for enacting a legislation to prevent
alienation of lands granted to Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes by Government on the lines of the
model legislation prepared by it and circulated to the
State Government".
It is no doubt true that before the passing of the
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present Act any transfer of granted land in breach of the
condition relating to prohibition on such transfer would not
have the effect of rendering the transfer void and would
make any such transfer only voidable. The present Act seeks
to introduce a change in the legal position. The prohibition
or transfer of granted land had been imposed by law, rules
or regulations governing such grant or by the terms of the
grant. The relevant provisions imposing such prohibition by
rules, regulations and laws have been referred to in the
judgment of the High Court. It is quite clear that the
condition regarding prohibition of transfer of granted land
had been introduced in the interest of the grantees for the
purposes of upkeep of the grants and for preventing the
economically dominant sections of the community from
depriving the grantees who belong to the weaker sections of
the people of their enjoyment and possession of these lands
and for safeguarding their interests against any
exploitation by the richer sections in regard to the
enjoyment and possession of these lands granted essentially
for their benefit. As the Statement of Objects and Reasons
indicates, this, prohibition on transfer of granted land has
not proved to be a sufficiently strong safeguard in the
matter of preserving grants in the hands of the grantee
513
belonging to the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes; and
in violation of the prohibition on transfer of the granted
land, transfers of such lands on a large scale to the
serious detriment of the interests of these poorer sections
of the people belonging to the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes had taken place. In view of this
unfortunate experience the Legislature in its wisdom and in
pursuance of its declared policy of safeguarding, protecting
and improving the conditions of these weaker sections of the
community, thought it fit to bring about this change in the
legal position by providing that any such transfer except in
terms of the provisions of the Act will be null and void and
not merely voidable. The Legislature no doubt is perfectly
competent in pursuance of the aforesaid policy to provide
that such transactions will be null and void and not merely
voidable. Even under the Contract Act any contract which is
opposed to public policy in rendered void. The State,
consistently with the directive principles of the
Constitution, has made it a policy and very rightly, to
preserve, protect and promote the interests of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes which by and large form the
weaker and poorer sections of the people in our country.
This may be said to be the declared policy of the State and
the provision seeking to nullify such transfers is quite in
keeping with the policy of the State which may properly be
regarded as public policy for rendering social and economic
justice to these weaker sections of the society.
In pursuance of this policy, the Legislature is
undoubtedly competent to pass an enactment providing that
transfers of such granted lands will be void and not merely
voidable properly safeguarding and protecting the interests
of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes for whose
benefit only these lands had been granted. Even in the
absence of any such statutory provisions, the transfer of
granted lands in contravention of the terms of the grant or
in breach of any law, rule or regulation covering such grant
will clearly be voidable and the resumption of such granted
lands after avoiding the voidable transfers in accordance
with law will be permitted. Avoidance of such voidable
transfers and resumption of the granted lands through
process of law is bound to take time. Any negligence and
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delay on the part of the authorities entitled to take action
to avoid such transfers through appropriate legal process
for resumption of such grant may be further impediments in
the matter of avoiding such transfers and resumption of
possession of
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the granted lands. Prolonged legal proceedings will
undoubtedly be prejudicial to the interests of the members
of the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe for whose benefit
the granted lands are intended to be resumed. As transfers
of granted lands in contravention of the terms of the grant
or any law, regulation or rule governing such grants can be
legally avoided and possession of such lands can be
recovered through process of law, it must be held that the
Legislature for the purpose of avoiding delay and harassment
of protracted litigation and in furthering its object of
speedy restoration of these granted lands to the members of
the weaker communities is perfectly competent to make
suitable provision for resumption of such granted lands by
stipulating in the enactment that transfers of such lands in
contravention of the terms of the grant or any regulation,
rule or law regulating such grant will be void and in
providing a suitable procedure consistent with the
principles of natural justice for achieving this purpose
without recourse to prolonged litigation in Court in the
larger interests of benefiting the members of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes.
We my note that the competence of the Legislature to
declare any transfer of granted land in contravention of the
terms of grant of such land or any rule, regulation or law
providing for such grant or without the previous permission
of the Government in case 1 of transfers after the passing
of the Act has not been seriously disputed and cannot
possibly be disputed.
What has been strongly urged before us is that the
provisions contained in S. 4 in so far as the same seek to
nullify transfers effected before the Act had come into
force, are invalid.
Any person who acquires such granted land by transfer
from the original grantee in breach of the condition
relating to prohibition on such transfer must necessarily be
presumed to be aware of the prohibition imposed on the
transfer of such granted land. Anybody who acquires such
granted land in contravention of the prohibition relating to
transfer of such granted land cannot be considered to be a
bona fide purchaser for value and every such transferee
acquires to his knowledge only a voidable title to the
granted land. The title acquired by such transfer is
defeasible and is liable to be defeated by an appropriate
action taken in this regard. If the Legislature under such
circumstances seek to intervene in the interests of these
weaker sections of the community
515
and choose to substitute a speedier and cheaper method of
recovery of these granted lands which were otherwise liable
to be resumed through legal process, it cannot, in our
opinion, be said that any vested rights of the transferees
are affected. Transferees of granted lands with full
knowledge of the legal position that the transfers made in
their favour in contravention of the terms of grant or any
law, rule or regulation governing such grant are liable to
be defeated in law, cannot and do not have in law or equity,
a genuine or real grievance that their defeasible title in
such granted lands so transferred is, in fact, being
defeated and they are being dispossessed of such lands from
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which they were in law liable to be dispossessed by process
of law. The position will however, be somewhat different
where the transferees have acquired such granted lands not
in violation of any term of the grant or any law regulating
such grant as also where any transferee who may have
acquired a defeasible title in such granted lands by the
transfer thereof in contravention of the terms of the grant
or any law regulating such grant has perfected his title by
prescription of time or otherwise. We shall consider such
cases later on. But where the transferee acquires only a
defeasible title liable to be defeated in accordance with
law, avoidance of such defeasible title which still remains
liable to be defeated in accordance with law at the date of
commencement of the Act and recovery of possession of such
granted land, on the basis of the provisions contained in s.
4 and s. 5 of the Act cannot be said to be constitutionally
invalid and such a provision cannot be termed as
unconscionable, unjust and arbitrary. The first two
contention raised on behalf of the petitioners are,
therefore, overruled.
The next contention that Ss. 4 and 5 of the Act
empowering the authority to take possession of the granted
lands without payment of any compensation are violative of
Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution is without any merit. Art.
19(1)(f) which was in force at the relevant time provided
that all citizens shall have the right "to acquire, hold and
dispose of property."
Granted lands were intended for the benefit and
enjoyment of the original grantees who happen to belong to
the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes. At the time of
the grant a condition had been imposed for protecting the
interests of the original grantees in the granted lands by
restricting the transfer of the same. The condition
regarding the prohibition on transfer of such granted lands
for a specified period, was imposed by virtue of the
specific
516
term in the grant itself or by reason of any law, rule or
regulation governing such grant. It was undoubtedly open to
the grantor at the time of granting lands to the original
grantees to stipulate such a condition the condition being a
term of the grant itself, and the condition was imposed in
the interests of the grantee. Except on the basis of such a
condition the grantor might not have made any such grant at
all. The condition imposed against the transfer for a
particular period of such granted lands which were granted
essentially for the benefit of the grantees cannot be said
to constitute any unreasonable restriction. The granted
lands were not in the nature of properties acquired and held
by the grantees in the sense of acquisition, or holding of
property within the meaning of Art. 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution. It was a case of a grant by the owner of the
land to the grantee for the possession and enjoyment of the
granted lands by the grantees and the prohibition on
transfer of such granted lands for the specified period was
an essential term or condition on the basis of which the
grant was made. It has to be pointed out that the
prohibition on transfer was not for an indefinite period or
perpetual. It was only for a particular period, the object
being that the grantees should enjoy the granted lands
themselves at least for the period during which the
prohibition was to remain operative. Experience had shown
that persons belonging to scheduled castes and scheduled
tribes to whom the lands were granted were, because of their
poverty, lack of education and general backwardness,
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exploited by various persons who could and would take
advantage of the sad plight of these poor persons for
depriving them of their lands. The imposition of the
condition of prohibition on transfer for a particular period
could not, therefore, be considered to constitute any
unreasonable restriction on the right of the grantees to
dispose of the granted lands. The imposition of such a
condition on prohibition in the very nature of the grant was
perfectly valid and legal.
The transferees of the granted lands from the original
grantees, acquired the lands improperly and illegally in
contravention of the condition imposed on such transfers.
Such transferees must have been aware and must in any event
be deemed to have been aware of the condition regarding the
prohibition on transfer and they cannot be considered to be
bona fide transferees for value. Such persons acquired in
the granted lands only a voidable title which was liable to
be defeated and possession of such lands could be resumed
from such transferees. Such a person who only acquires a
defeasible legal right cannot make a grievance
517
of any violation of Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution, when
the defeasible legal right is, in fact, defeated by
appropriate legal action or by any suitable provision
enacted in an Act passed by the competent legislature. It
may further be noted that in most cases such transferees
have after the transfer, which is liable to be avoided in
accordance with law, enjoyed for a sufficiently long period
the benefits of lands transferred to them before the lands
could be recovered from them. Art. 19(1)(f), therefore, did
not invalidate S. 4 of the Act.
We have earlier noticed that the title which is
acquired by a transferee in the granted lands, transferred
in contravention of the prohibition against the transfer of
the granted lands, is a voidable title which in law is
liable to be defeated through appropriate action and
possession of such granted lands transferred in breach of
the condition of prohibition could be recovered by the
grantor. The right or property which a transferee acquires
in the granted lands, is a defeasible right and the
transferee renders himself liable to lose his right or
property at the instance of the grantor. We have further
observed that by the enactment of this Act and particularly
s. 4 and s. 5 thereof the Legislature is seeking to defeat
the defeasible right of the transferee in such lands without
the process of a prolonged legal action with a view to
speedy resumption of such granted lands for distribution
thereof the original grantee or their legal representatives
and in their absence to other members of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes Communities. In our opinion,
this kind of defeasible right of the transferee in the
granted lands cannot be considered to be property as
contemplated in Art. 31 and 31-A. The nature of the right of
the transferee in the granted land on transfer of such lands
in breach of the condition of prohibition relating to such
transfer, the object of such grant and the terms thereof,
also the law governing such grants and the object and the
scheme of the present Act enacted for the benefit of weaker
sections of our community, clearly go to indicate that there
is in this case no deprivation of such right or property as
may attract the provisions of Arts 31 and 31-A of the
Constitution.
In the case of Amar Singh v. Custodian, Evacuee
Property, Punjab(1), this Court while considering the
provisions of Administration of Evacuee Property Act 1950
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(XXXI of 1950) and the nature of right in the property
allotted to a quasi-permanent
518
allottee held that the interests of a quasi-permanent
allottee did not constitute property within the meaning of
Art. 19(1)(f), 31(1) and 31(2) of the Constitution. This
Court observed at p. 834:
"Learned counsel for the Petitioners has
strenuously urged that under the quasi-permanent
allotment scheme the allottee is entitled to a right to
possession within the limits of the relevant
notification and that such right to possession is
itself ’property’. That may be so in a sense. But it
does not affect the question whether it is property so
as to attract the protection of fundamental rights
under the Constitution. If the totality of the bundle
of rights of the quasi-permanent allottee in the
evacuee land constituting an interest in such land, is
not property entitled to protection of fundamental
rights, mere possession of the land by virtue of such
interest is not on any higher footing".
With the enactment of the Act, voidable right or the
title of the transferee in the granted lands becomes void
and the transferee is left with no right or property in the
granted lands. The lands which are sought to be recovered
from the transferees of the granted lands are lands in which
the transferees cease to have any interest or property. The
effect of the provisions contained in Ss. 4 and 5 of the Act
is that the defeasible right or interest of the transferees
in the granted lands is defeated and the voidable
transaction is rendered void. We have earlier held that it
is clearly open to the Legislature to declare void the
transfers of granted lands in contravention of the condition
of prohibition on transfer. As soon as such transfers are
rendered void by virtue of the provisions of the Act, the
transferee does not have any right in the granted lands so
transferred, and possession is sought to be recovered of
such lands in which the transferees have lost their right
and interest. Therefore, the question of acquisition of any
property by the State or any modification or extinguishment
of right of property does not really arise and Art. 31-A
cannot be applied. We are, therefore, of the opinion that
there is no infringement of Art. 31 and Art. 31-A of the
Constitution. We may further observe that this aspect has
been carefully and elaborately considered by the learned
Judges of the High Court while holding that Arts. 31 and 31-
A are not violated.
519
The next contention urged is that Ss. 4 and 5 of the
Act, are violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution inasmuch
as these sections make special provisions only with regard
to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes to the exclusion of
persons belonging to other Communities. This Act has
undoubtedly been passed for the benefit of members of the
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes who are recognised as
backward citizens and weaker sections in the country. There
cannot be any manner of doubt that persons belonging to
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled tribes can be considered to
be separate and distinct classes particularly in the matter
of preservation and protection of their economic and
educational interests. In view of the peculiar plight of
these two classes, the Constitution in Art. 15(4) makes
specific mention of these two classes and in Art. 16(4)
speaks of backward class of citizens. One of the directive
principles as contained in Art. 46 of the Constitution
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enjoins that "the State shall promote with special care the
educational and economic interests of the weaker sections of
the people and in particular of the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes and shall protect them from social
injustice and all forms of exploitation." The object of this
Act is to protect and preserve the economic interests of
persons belonging to Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes
and to prevent their exploitation. For the purpose of the
present Act, the classification has clear nexus to the
object sought to be achieved. We are, therefore, of the
opinion, that special provisions made for the resumption of
granted lands, originally granted to the members of
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes and resoration of the
same to the original grantees or their heirs and legal
representatives and failing them to other members of these
communities do not infringe Art. 14 of the Constitution.
The last contention raised is that the Act should be
considered to be unjust and unreasonable as no provision has
been made for any appeal against the order of the authority
concerned. It is true that there was no provision for any
appeal in the original Act. It may be that such a provision
was not originally made, as the Legislature might have felt
that providing for an appeal would unnecessarily prolong the
proceedings and might defeat the purpose of the Act. In
course of the hearing, the learned Counsel for the State had
however submitted that in the interest of justice a
provision regarding appeal would be incorporated in the Act
by an appropriate amendment of the Act. It has subsequently
been
520
brought to our notice that by the Karnataka Scheduled Castes
and Scheduled Tribes (Prohibition of Transfer of Certain
Lands) (Amendment) Act, 1984 (Karnataka Act 3 of 1984) which
received the assent of the Governor on the 29th day of
February, 1984 and came to be published in the Karnataka
Gazette Extraordinary on the 3rd of March, 1984, a suitable
provision for appeal against an order of the Assistant
Commissioner has been made in S. 5A which has been
incorporated by the Amending Act. We have had some doubt
whether lack of provision for an appeal in an enactment of
this kind would have infected the Act with the vice of
procedural unreasonableness and would have affected the
Constitutional validity of the Act. As, however, a suitable
provision for an appeal against the order of the Assistant
Commissioner has been made by the Amending Act, this
question does not survive to require any further
consideration and it does not become necessary for us to
make any final pronouncement on it.
Though we have come to the conclusion that the Act is
valid, yet, in our opinion, we have to make certain aspects
clear. Granted lands which had been transferred after the
expiry of the period of prohibition do not come within the
purview of the Act, and cannot be proceeded against under
the provisions of this Act. The provisions of the Act make
this position clear, as ss. 4 and 5 become applicable only
when granted lands are transferred in breach of the
condition relating to prohibition on transfer of such
granted lands. Granted lands transferred before the
commencement of the Act and not in contravention of
prohibition on transfer are clearly beyond the scope and
purview of the present Act. Also in case where granted lands
had been transferred before the commencement of the Act in
violation of the condition regarding prohibition on such
transfer and the transferee who had initially acquired only
a voidable title in such granted lands had perfected his
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title in the granted lands by proscription by long and
continuous enjoyment thereof in accordance with law before
the commencement of the Act, such granted lands would also
not come within the purview of the present Act, as the title
of such transferees to the granted loads has been perfected
before the commencement of the Act. Since at the date of the
commencement of the Act the title of such transferees had
ceased to be voidable by reason of acquisition of
prescriptive rights on account of long and continued user
for the
521
requisite period; the title of such transferees could not be
rendered void by virtue of the provisions of the Act
without violating the constitutional guarantee. We must,
therefore, read down the provisions of the Act by holding
that the Act will apply to transfers of granted lands made
in breach of the condition imposing prohibition on transfer
of granted lands only in those cases where the title
acquired by the transferee was still voidable at the date of
the commencement of the Act and had not lost its defeasible
character at the date when the Act came into force.
Transferees of granted lands having a perfected and not a
voidable title at the commencement of the Act must be held
to be outside the pale of the provisions of the Act. S. 4 of
the Act must be so construed as not to have the effect of
rendering void the title of any transferee which was not
voidable at the date of the commencement of the Act.
We may further observe that as the provision of appeal
has been incorporated by the Amending Act which received the
assent of the Governor on the 29th day of February, 1984 and
first came to be published in the Karnataka Gazette
Extraordinary on the 3rd day of March; 1984, the Deputy
Commissioner to whom the appeal will be presented will no
doubt take this fact into consideration in deciding the
question of limitation in regard to any appeal which may be
filed against an order of the Assistant Commissioner; if any
appeal is preferred within a period of three months from the
date the amended provision conferring the right of appeal
came into force, the Deputy Commissioner taking into
consideration the fact that a period of three months has
been prescribed for preferring an appeal from the date of
the order of the Assistant Commissioner, may have no
difficulty in entertaining the appeal by condoning the delay
under S. 5 of the Limitation Act in terms of the power
conferred on the Deputy Commissioner under the said Section
5A, provided the Deputy Commissioner is satisfied that the
appeal is otherwise maintainable and the interest of justice
requires that the appeal should be entertained and not be
thrown out on the ground of limitation.
With these observations we dismiss the appeals and the
Special Leave Petitions with no order as to costs.
S.R. Appeals & Petitions dismissed.
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