Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHARAJA PRATAP SINGH BAHADUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/04/1968
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 164 1968 SCR (3) 734
ACT:
Bihar Land Reforms Act 30 of 1950-Notification under s. 3 of
Act vesting all estates in State-Permanent malikana payable
to Zemindar whether a proprietary or intermediary interest-
Whether subject to vesting provision.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent was the proprietor of certain estates in
Bihar. He was also in receipt of a permanent malikana
allowance from the Government. After the passing of the
Bihar Land Reforms Act 1950 followed by a notification under
s. 3 thereof the estates of the respondent vested in the
State of Bihar. In 1958 the State of Bihar stopped payment
of the malikana allowance on the ground that it was a
proprietary interest which had vested in the State. The
respondent thereupon filed a petition under Art. 226 ,of the
Constitution. The High Court held that the respondent’s
right to the malikana was not an intermediary interest and
did not cease with the extinction of his proprietary rights
in the estate. The State of Bihar appealed to this Court.
The contentions raised on behalf of the appellant were : (i)
that the right to malikana was an interest in the estates
belonging to the respondent which on the issue of the
notification under s. 3 became extinguished and (ii)
alternatively, the respondent was an intermediary of
temporary settled estates in respect of which malikana was
payable and on the transference of his intermediary
interests in those estates, his right to the malikana stood
extinguished and he became entitled only to the compensation
payable under s. 24A.
HELD : (i) The history of the malikana allowance showed that
it was a permanent grant of money in lieu of the
proprietor’s rights in lands originally held by him. The
proprietors retained certain estates and it was only the
interest in these estates that was lost on the publication
of the notification under s. 3. The malikana payable to the
respondent in the present case was not an interest in such
estates and did not cease on the issue of the notification.
[740 B]
(ii) The respondent was not a proprietor, tenure-holder or
an intermediary of the estates in respect of which malikana
was paid to him. The malikana was not rent or income
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derived from those estates. Nor was the malikana an
incumbrance on them. The respondent’s right to the malikana
was not an intermediary interest in the estates for which
compensation was payable under s. 24A and it did not
therefore vest in the Government. [740 H]
Herranund Shoo v. Mst.Ozeerun & Ors., 9 W.R. 102, Gobinda
Chunder Roy Choudhuri v. Ram Chunder Chowdhury, 19 W.R. 95,
Hurmuzi Begum v. Hirday Narayan, 5 Cal. 921 and Jaggo Bai v.
Utsava Lal, 51 AN. 439, distinguished.
Bhoalee Singh v. Mst. Neemoo Behoo, 12 W.R. 498, Syed Shah
Najamuddin Hyder v. Syed Zahid Hossein, 8 C.L.J. 300,
Maharaja P. S. Bahadur v. State of Bihar, 18 Pat. 1018, Deo
Kuar v. Man Kuar, 21 I.A. 148 and Mahendra Narayan Roy
Chowdhuri v. Abdul Gafur Choudhry, 35 C.W.N. 1233. referred
to.
State of Uttar Pradesh v. Kunwar Sri Trivikram Narain Singh,
[1962] 3 S.C.R. 213, relied on.
7 35
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 157 of 1967.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 7, 1960 of
the Patna High Court in Misc. Judicial Case No. 693 of
1958.
C. K. Daphtary, Attorney-General, D. P. Singh, R. K. Garg,
S. C. Agarawala, K. M. K. Nair and S. P. Singh, for the
appellants. Sarjoo Prasad and D. Goburdhun, for the
respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bachawat, J.-This appeal is directed against an order allow-
ing a writ petition under Art. 226 of the Constitution.
Maharaja Pratap Singh Bahadur was the proprietor of the
estates collectively known as the Gidhaur estate, in Monghyr
district. On the publication of a notification under s. 3
of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 (Bihar Act XXX of 1950)
on July 24, 1953 the Gidhaur estate and the interests of the
Maharaja therein vested in the State of Bihar. The Maharaja
was receiving a permanent malikana allowance of Rs.
5743/14/6 annually in two equal six monthly instalments as
shown in annexure "A" to the writ application. The
registers and rolls of the recipients of the malikana
maintained by the Collector of the district since a long
time past show that the successive proprietors of the
Gidhaur estate were receiving the malikana for a long time
past. The State of Bihar stopped payment of the malikana
allowance from April 1, 1958 on the ground that the
proprietary interests of the Maharaja in the Gidhaur estate
vested in the State and consequently his right to the
malikana was extinguished.
The Maharaja alleged in ’the writ petition that the
permanent malikana was payable irrespective of his
proprietary rights in his estates notified under sec. 3 and
was not income or rent from those estates nor a charge or
encumbrance on them. He alleged that ’the stoppage of the
payment of the malikana was illegal and asked for a writ
directing the State to make payment of the malikana.’ The
State did not file any return to the petition. The High
Court held that the Maharaja’s right to the malikana was not
an intermediary interest in the Gidhaur estate and did not
cease with the extinction of his proprietary right in the
estate. Accordingly, the High Court issued a writ in the
nature of mandamus commanding the State of Bihar to pay the
malikana due to the Maharaja from April 1, 1958. The State
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of Bihar has filed this appeal on a certificate granted by
the High Court.
Section 2 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act is the definition
section. Section 2(i) defines an estate to mean any land
included-under one entry in any of the general registers of
revenue paying
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and revenue free lands and includes a share of or in any
estate. Section 2(jj) defines an "intermediary" in relation
to any estate or tenure to mean a proprietor, tenure-holder,
under tenure holder and trustee. Section 2(jjj) defines an
"intermediary interest" as meaning the interest of an
intermediary in an estate or tenure. Section 2(o) defines
"proprietor" to mean a person holding in trust or owning for
his own benefit an estate or part of an estate. Section
2(r) defines a "tenure holder" to mean a person who has
acquired from a proprietor or another tenure holder the
right to hold land for the purpose of collecting rent or
bringing it under cultivation by establishing tenants on it
and includes inter alia the holder of a tenure created for
maintenance of any person. Section 2(q) defines tenure to
mean the interest of a tenure holder or under tenure holder.
Under section 2A the expressions "proprietor or tenure-
holder" and "estate or tenure" mean and include
"intermediary" and the "intermediary interest" respectively.
Section 3(1) states that the State Government may, from time
to time, by notification declare that the estates or tenures
of a proprietor or tenure-holder, specified in the
notification, have passed to and become vested in the State.
Sections 4(a) and 23(1) are as follows :-
" 4. (a) Consequences of the vesting of an
estate or tenure in the State.
Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force or in
any contract, on the publication of the
notification under sub-section (1) of section
3, or sub-section (1) or 2 of section 3A the
following consequences shall ensue, na
mely
(a) Such estate or tenure including the
interests of the proprietor or tenure-
holder in
any building or part of a building comprised
in such estate or tenure and used primarily as
office or cutchery for the collection of rent
of such estate or tenure, and his interests in
trees, forests, fisheries, jalkars hats,
bazars mela and ferries and all other sairati
interests as also his interest in all sub-soil
including any rights in mines and minerals
whether discovered or undiscovered, or whether
being worked or not, inclusive of such rights
of a lessee of mines and minerals, comprised
in such estate or tenure (other than the
interests of raiyats or under raiyats) shall,
with effect from the date of vesting, vest
absolutely in the State free from all
encumbrances and such proprietor or tenure
holder shall cease to have any interests in
such estate or tenure other than the interests
expressly saved by or under the provisions of
this Act."
737
.lm15
Section 24A(1) Determination of compensation of any
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intermediary of temporarily settled estate-(1) In the case
of such intermediary of a temporarily settled estate, the
Compensation Officer shall determine the compensation
payable in respect of the transference to the State of the
interest of the intermediary in such temporarily settled
estate, whether let in farm or held in khas, at a sum equal
to twenty times of the malikana payable to him during the
previous agricultural year and, where the intermediary has
taken out the engagement of the lands comprised in such
estate for a fixed period on the payment of a fixed jama,
also a sum equal to the pro rata refund of the fixed jama
paid by him for the unexpired period of the engagement."
It may be noted that ss. 2(ii), 2(iii), 2A and 24A were in-
serted in the parent Act by the Bihar Land Reforms
(Amendment) Act, 1953 (Bihar Act XX of 1954). Section 4 was
also amended by the same Act.
Learned Attorney-General contended (1) that the right to the
malikana was an interest in the estates called the Gidhaur
estate specified in the notification of July 24, 1953 and on
the issue of the notification the right to malikana stood
extinguished and (2) alternatively, the Maharaja was an
intermediary of temporary settled estates in respect of
which the malikana was payable and on the transference of
his intermediary interests in those estates, his right to
the malikana stood extinguished and he became entitled only
to the compensation payable under see. 24A.
Regulation VIII of 1793 (sec. 43) described malikana as an
allowance to proprietors in consideration of their
proprietary rights. Baden-Powell’s Lands Systems of British
India, Vol. II,. p. 717 said that malikana in Bengal and
places other than the Punjab usually means an allowance to
an ex-proprietor by way of solatium for a lost right.
The custom of ’Paying malikana allowance to displaced pro-
prietors may be traced back to the Moghul period. "The
claims of the ancient zemindars and village headmen, when
thus displaced were usually recognised to the extent of
giving them an allowance for subsistence, and sometimes they
continued to receive this allowance in the shape of payments
from the new occupants called russoomi-zemindaree." (See
Phillips on Law Relating to the Land. Tenures of Lower
Bengal, p. 126). It was said that "Malikana is the
unalienable right of proprietorship." (see the answer of
Ghulam Hosein Khan, Appendix No. 16 to Mr. Shore’s Minutes
of 2nd April 1788 quoted in C.D. Field’s Regulations of the
Bengal Code p. 717). The Regulations from 1788 onwards
recognised this custom/. Regulation VIII of 1793, secs. 43
to
738
47 provided that in the event of the proprietor refusing to
accept a reasonable settlement his lands were to be let in
farm or held khas. When the lands were let in farm, the
farmer was to engage to pay 10% of the jama as malikana to
the excluded proprietors in addition to the jama and the
Government was to be considered ,as guarantees for the
payment. The malikana was realisable from the farmer as
arrears of revenue. When the lands were held in khas 10% of
the net collections was to be paid as malikana from the
treasury. Section 5 of Regulation VII of 1822 repealed the
existing regulations regarding malikana and substituted
fresh provisions for such allowance. The new provisions
were declared by section 11 of Regulation IX of 1833 to be
prospective only and to be applicable solely to the
settlements made under them. (see Clarke, Regulations Vol.
I p. 71). Regulation VII of 1822 was ,originally enacted
for the ceded and conquered Provinces, Cuttack, Pataspur and
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its dependencies. It was extended to other Provinces by
sec. 2 of Reg. IX of 1825. Later it was repealed as
regards the North Western Provinces by Act XIX of 1873 and
fresh provisions for allowance to displaced proprietors were
substituted. The malikana was for a term of years when the
proprietors were dispossessed from management temporarily.
It was a permanent grant when the proprietors’ rights in
their lands were ,completely extinguished.
The decisions under the Limitation Acts relating to the
malikana turned on the particular language of those Acts.
Clause 12 of S. 1 of the Limitation Act of 1859 seemed to
make it imperative on the courts to deal with malikana as an
interest in land and to treat a claim for it as barred if
not made within a period of 12 years after the last receipt
by the proprietor. (see Herranund Shoo v. Mst. Ozeerun &
Ors. (1),, Govinda Chunder Roy Choudhuri v. Ram Chunder
Chowdhury(2). But under the Limitation Act of 1877 the non-
receipt of malikana for 12 years did not extinguish the
right and malikana could be sued for within twelve years
from the time when it became due. (see Hurmuzi Begum v.
Hirday Narayan(3). In Jaggo Bai v. Utsava Lal(1) the courts
below treated malikana as immovable property and since the
point as to its not being immovable property was not taken
earlier, the Privy Council did not allow the point to be
taken before it for the first time. Nevertheless the Privy
Council held that a suit to establish a right as to malikana
was not a suit for possession within the meaning of art. 141
and was governed by art. 120 ,of the Limitation Act of 1908.
Though malikana is not a charge ,on immovable property the
explanation to art. 132 of that Act declared that for the
purposes of that article, it was "deemed" to be money
charged on immovable property.
(1) 9 W. R. 102. (2) 19 W.R. 95.
(3) 5 Cal. 92 1. (4) 51 Allahabad 439.
739
Malikana is not rent. (see Bhoalee Singh v. Mst. Neemoo
Behool(1) and Syed Shah Najamuddin Hyder v. Syed Zahid Hos-
sein(1). It is not rent or revenue derived from land and
not assessable as agricultural income. (Maharaja P. S.
Bahadur v. State of Bihar(3). In Deo Kuar v. Man Kuar (4)
malikana was described as a grant of a portion of a land
revenue. For purposes of the Pensions Act, 1871 because
sec. 3 of the Act interpreted the expression "grant of money
or land revenue" to include anything payable on the part of
the Government in respect of a right. The Privy Council
held that malikana was something payable on the part of
Government in respect of a right and therefore a suit
relating to malikana was not cognizable by the court without
a certificate from the Collector. The plea of bar under the
Pensions, Act is not taken in the present appeal.
Malikana is not an incumbrance on the estate of the proprie-
tor liable to pay it and is not extinguished on the sale of
that estate for recovery of arrears of land revenue under
Act XI of 1859. (see Mahendra Narayan Roy Chowdhuri v. Abdul
Gafur Choudhury (5) . The person in receipt of a permanent
malikana is, not a proprietor of the estate for which
malikana is payable and has no title to the alluvial
accretion to the estate, (see Soudamini Dassya v. Secretary
of State for India (6)
The proprietors of the Gidhaur estate in Bihar are in
receipt of a permanent malikana for over a century. The
origin of this malikana allowance is not known. From time
immemorial it has been customary in Bihar to pay a permanent
malikana allowance to ex-proprietors in lieu of their lost
proprietary right. Phillips in his Law Relating to the Land
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Tenures of Lower Bengal, pp. 144, 147, 269, said that the
proprietors of the soil in Biharuniversally claimed and
possessed a right of malikana and he endeavoured in vain to
trace its origin in Bihar. The malikana right of the
excluded proprietors in Bihar was acknowledged in the
Regulations passed on August 8, 1788. At the time of Per-
manent Settlement, the new grantees were forced to
acknowledge this right. (see Baden-Powell, Land-System of
British India, Vol. I pp. 516, 517). The Bihar Board of
Revenue Misc. Rules 1939, art. 342 p. 166 divides’ malikana
into two classes. Malikana of the first class is for a term
of Years only, that is, during the currency of a settlement.
Malikana of the second class is permanent. It states that
"the Bihar malikana falls under this class and is a
compensation permanently granted to the proprietors ... It
is of a pensionary nature and does not depend upon col-
lections." The permanent malikana is payable at the treasury
on
(1) 12 W.
(2) 8 C. L. J. 300 at 450.
(3) 18 Patna, 101 8.
(4) 21 1. A. 148,160,161.
(5) 35 C. W. N. 1233.
(6) 50 Cal. 522,538, 545.
740
April 1, and October 1, every year on presentation of pay
orders issued by the Collector accompanied by a life
certificate of the recipient.
There can be no doubt that the malikana payable to the pro-
prietors of the Gidhaur estate is a permanent grant of money
in lieu of their proprietary rights in lands originally held
by them. The proprietors retained certain estates. On the
publication of the notification under s. 3 of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act, 1950 the interest of the Maharaja in those
estates was extinguished. But the malikana payable to him
is not an interest in those estates and did not cease on the
issue of the notification.
Annexure A to the writ application shows that cess was
deducted from the malikana. Under secs. 5 and 421 of the
Cess Act., 1880 cess is charged on immovable property and is
payable by the holder of an estate or tenure or chaukidari
chakran lands and by a cultivating raiyat. It is not known
under what circumstances cess used to be deducted from the
malikana. From the fact that cess was so deducted it is not
possible to hold that malikana is an interest in the estates
held by the Maharaja.
In this Court the appellant raised the second contention for
the first time. The learned Attorney-General contended that
the malikana was payable in respect of certain other
estates, that the Maharaja should be regarded as an
intermediary of those estates, and that on the vesting of
those estates in the Government the right to malikana ceased
and the Maharaja ’became entitled to compensation only under
sec. 24A of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950. The State of
Bihar has filed a petition asking for an ,order admitting
certain documents as additional evidence. We have allowed
this petition. The first document is a letter of the
Collector, Monghyr, stating that the Gidhaur estate was
getting malikana in respect of 17 tauzis noted in the
margin. The second document is the khewat of those tauzis.
They show that various persons other than the Maharaja were
the proprietors of the estates comprised in the tauzis. The
petition states that all these estates have been notified
under sec. 3 and have now vested in the State-Government.
The third document is the notification published on July 24,
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1953 showing the estates of which the Maharaja was the
proprietor and which have now vested in the State Govern-
ment. On the publication of the notification under sec. 3,
all the estates in respect of which the malikana is payable
including the interest of any intermediary therein vested in
the Government free from all incumbrances. But the Maharaja
is not a proprietor, tenure holder or an intermediary of
those estates. The malikana is not rent or income derived
from the estates. Nor is his Tight to the malikana an
incumbrance on them. The Maharaja’s right to the malikana
is not an intermediary interest in the estates
741
and did not vest in the Government. Consequently he has no
right to claim compensation for the malikana under s. 24A.
That section provides for determination of compensation
payable to the intermediary of a temporarily settled estate
is respect of the transference to the Government of the
interest of the intermediary in such estate. The Maharaja
had no intermediary interest in the estates for the
transference of which he could claim any compensation under
sec. 24A.
In State of Uttar Pradesh v. Kunwar Sri Trivikram Narain
Singh (1) this Court held that an allowance of a fixed sum
of money computed on the basis of 1/4th share of the net
revenue of certain estates payable by the Government to the
ex-jagirdars as compensation for abandonment of their right
in those estates was not a right or privilege in respect of
land in any estate or its land revenue within the meaning of
S. 6 (b) of the Uttar Pradesh Zemindari Abolition and Land
Reforms Act, 1951, and on the issue of a notification
vesting those estates in the Government the right to the
allowance did not cease. The allowance in that case was
described as a pension. It may be that the allowance was
not strictly a malikana. Nevertheless the case is
instructive. It shows that an allowance paid to ex-
jagirdars in consideration of the extinction of their rights
in land is not an interest in the land. The permanent
malikana stands on the same footing. It is an allowance
paid to ex-proprietors for extinguishment of their right to
the estate formerly held ’by them. It is not an interest in
that estate, nor an incumbrance on it, and does not cease on
the vesting of the estate in the Government.
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs.
G.C. Appeal dismissed.
(1) [1962] 3 S. C. R. 213, 226-228.
742