Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KANWAR LAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
IIND ADDITIONAL DISTT. JUDGE, NAINITAL & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT20/04/1995
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
BENCH:
SAWANT, P.B.
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1995 AIR 2078 1995 SCC Supl. (2) 394
JT 1995 (4) 42 1995 SCALE (2)858
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
SAWANT, J.:
1. Leave granted.
2. These four appeals arc directed against a common
judgment dated 19th October, 1987 delivered by the High
Court in four writ petitions filed before it by the four
appellants. Since the questions of
46
law which arise in these appeals arc common, it would be
sufficient to refer to the 808 facts in one of the appeals
viz civil appeal arising out of S.L.P. No. 3204 of 1988
since the High Court has taken the facts from it.
3. In 1920s, Government of India being anxious to develop
the undeveloped, lands throughout the country including that
in the district of Nainital offered to extend many
concessions to those who agreed to develop the )and. Lala
Khushi Ram Dusaj, predecessor of the appellant was one of
the persons who accepted the offer and agreed to develop
land in District Nainital. Government of India granted
lease of 4805 acres of land to Lala Khushi Ram for
development under the Crown Grants Act [later renamed as
Government Grants Act, 1895 - hereinafter referred to as
"the Grants Act"] by a registered lease deed dated 25.8.1920
which was executed by the Secretary of State for India in
Council for a period extending upto 31st March, 2013. One
of the conditions of the said lease with which we arc
concerned here, was that the leased land would not be taken
away except as specified by the clauses of the lease deed
and that too for the purpose of land reforms. In case the
land was taken away, compensation was payable to the lessee
in accordance with the provisions of the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894. Section 3 of the Grants Act provided that all
provisions, restrictions, conditions and limitations
contained in any such grant or transfer shall be valid and
take effect according to their tenor, any rule of law, stat-
ute or enactment of the legislature to the contrary
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notwithstanding. After taking possession of the leased
land, the lessee Lala Khush; Ram is alleged to have spent
moneys to clear the jungle and level the uneven terrain and
develop the land for agriculture.
4. In the year 1959, the State of U.P. passed U.P.
Government Estates Thekedari Abolition Act, 1958
[hereinafter referred to as the "Principal Act"] and issued
notifications under the said Act for taking over the leased
lands granted under the Grants Act and issued notifications
vesting all such lands in the State. In 1960, the State of
U.P. amended the Grants Act. While retaining the provisions
of Section 3 of the said Act the Amendment added a proviso
to the said section which stated that nothing in the said
section shall prevent, or be deemed ever to have prevented,
the effect of any enactment relating to the acquisition of
property, land reforms or the imposition of ceiling on
agricultural land.
5. By its decision dated 25th October, 1967 the High
Court declared the provisions of the Principal Act as ultra
vires the Constitution and quashed the notifications issued
under the said Act, taking over the lands leased under the
Grants Act. In 1970, the State of U.P. passed the Uttar
Pradesh Government Estates Thekedari Abolition [Re-enactment
and Validation] Act, 1970 [for short the Validation Act’]
with the result that the Principal Act and the notifications
which had been issued thereunder were revived by adding a
deeming clause. Under the amended Principal Act, the State
issued notifications on 16th October, 1970 applying the
provisions of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms
Act, 1950 [for short the Z.A. Act] to the villages in
question. In the year 1973, the appellant who is the
successor of Lala Khushi Ram, the original lessee, received
notices under the amended Principal Act and also received
copies of com-
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sensation roll showing the compensation at less than Rs.3/-
per acre. The appellant, therefore, filed his objection
before the Collector who referred the matter to the
respondent No.1-Additional District Judge. On 17th
December, 1977, respondent No.1 partly accepted the
reference. The appellant, therefore, moved the High Court
by a writ petition. On 19th October, 1987 the High Court
dismissed all the writ petitions before it by the impugned
common judgment. Hence the present appeals.
6. The first contention raised in these appeals is that
the State cannot amend the Grants Act, which is a pre-
constitutional central statute by its own enactment, viz.,
the Principal Act so as to annul the provisions of Section 3
of the Central Act. The answer to this contention lies in
the provisions of Article 372 of the Constitution. The
relevant provisions of Article 372 arc as under:
"372. Continuance in force of existing laws
and their adaptation-(1) Notwithstanding the
repeal by this Constitution of the enactments
referred to in Article 395 but subject to the
other provisions of this Constitution, all the
laws in force in the territory of India
immediately before the commencement of this
Constitution shall continue in force therein
until altered or repealed or amended by a com-
petent Legislature or other competent au-
thority.
(2) For the purpose of bringing the provi-
sions of any law in force in the territory of
India into accord with the provisions of this
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Constitution, the President may by order make
such adaptations and modifications of such
law, whether by way of repeal or amendment,
’as may be necessary or expedient, and provide
that the law shall, as from such date as may
be specified in the order, have effect subject
to the adaptations and modifications so made,
and any such adaptation or modification shall
not be questioned in any court of law.
(3) Nothing in clause (2) shall be deemed-
(a) to empower the President to make any
adaptation or modification of any law after
the expiration of three years from the
commencement of this Constitution; or
(b) to prevent any competent Legislature or
other competent authority from repealing or
amending any law adapted or modified by the
president under the said clause.
Explanation 1.- The expression "law in force"
in this article shall include a law passed or
made by a Legislature or other competent
authority in the territory of India before the
commencement of this Constitution and not
previously repealed, notwithstanding that it
or parts of it may not be then in operation
either at all or in particular areas."
Entry 18 of List II of the Seventh Schedule of the
Constitution reads as under:
" 18. Land, that is to say, rights in or over
land, land tenures including the relation of
landlord and tenant, and the collection of
rents; transfer and alienation of agricultural
land; land improvement and agricultural loans;
colonization." .
7. Article 246 [3] read with Entry 18 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule gives power to the State Legislature to
make law with regard to rights in or over land, land tenures
including the relation of landlord and tenant and the
collection of rents, transfer and alienation of agricultural
land; land improvement and agricultural loans; colo-
48
nization. Admittedly, the lands in question were under
personal cultivation of the appellant and, therefore, they
are agricultural lands. Hence the State legislature was
competent to enact the Principal Act which concerns the
rights in or over the land etc. which are all subjects
covered by Entry 18 of List II. In view of the provisions
both of clauses [1] and [3] (b) of Article 372 of the
Constitution, therefore, the State Legislature being the
competent legislature to enact such law could repeal or
amend the Grants Act or any of its provisions including
Section 3 thereof This would be true also of the State
amendment of the Grants Act by the Government Grants [U.P.
Amendment] Act, 1960. Hence the contention that the State
Legislature could not amend the provisions of Section 3 of
the Grants Act has to be rejected.
8. The next contention of the appellant is that in the
absence of a fresh notification issued under the amended
Principal Act, the leasehold rights of the appellant cannot
be deemed to have been terminated, so as to enable the State
to resume the lands.
9. As the facts in the present case reveal, the Principal
Act was extended to the district of Nainital by notification
dated 17th June, 1965 w.e.f 26th June, 1965. By
notification dated 30th June, 1966, issued under Section 3
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of that Act, the lease of the appellant was determined. The
High Court declared as unconstitutional the provisions of
that Act and hence the Act was amended and re-enacted w.e.f
20th June, 1964 by U.P. Government Estates Thekedari
Abolition [Re-enactment and Validation] Act, 1970. Section
6 of the Validation Act validated anything done of purported
to have been done and any action taken or purported to have
been taken under the provisions of the Principal Act, viz.,
U.P. Government Estates Thekedari Abolition Act. That
Section reads as follows:
"6. Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or
order of any court or Tribunal to the
contrary, anything done or purporting to have
been done and any action taken or purporting
to have been taken under any provision of the
principal Act before the commencement of this
Act including, in particular, any notification
under subsection (3) of section 1, any
determination of lease under section 3, or the
recovery of any rents or other dues under
section 4 or the taking over of possession or
charge of land or of books, accounts or other
documents under section 6 of that Act, shall
be deemed to be, and always to have been as
valid as if the provisions of this Act were in
force at all material times.
10.In view of the said express validating provision, the
notifications which were issued under the Principal Act in
terms revived with the revival of the Principal Act and
hence the action taken under the said notifications also
stood validated. It was not necessary to reissue the
notifications after the enactment of the Validation Act. To
argue to the contrary would render the provisions of Section
6 of the Validation Act otiose.
11.It is for this reason that we are unable to understand
the reliance placed on behalf of the appellant on the
decision of this Court in Mahendra Lal Jaini v. 7he State of
Uttar Pradesh and Others [(1963] Supp. 1 SCR 9121. The
question considered in that case was whether an Act which
was invalid being ultra vires the provisions of the
Constitution would stand re-
49
vived automatically on amendment of the relevant provision
of the Constitution. It was held that such a revival was
not automatic and that the Act had to be re-enacted after
the constitutional provision which it had infringed was
amended. The ratio of that decision is, therefore, not ap-
plicable to the facts of the present case. The Principal
Act has been re-enacted by amending the relevant provisions
to bring them in conformity with the provisions of the
Constitution and by the provisions of Section 6 of the
Validation Act, as pointed out above, all acts done and
purported to have been done under the principal Act have
been expressly validated.
12. The next contention was that the Validation Act is
violative of the second proviso to Article 31A [1] of the
Constitution. Under the lease granted under the Grants Act,
the rights of the lessee were heritable as well as
transferable. As a result of the determination of the lease
by the Thekedari Abolition Act, the right which have been
conferred on the lessee are only heritable. They are not
transfer able by virtue of the provisions of the U.P Tenancy
Act, 1939. Hence, the lessee is entitled to full
compensation.
13. The relevant provisions of Article 31A [1] of the
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Constitution read as follows:
"31A. Saving of laws providing for ac-
quisition of estates, etc.- (1) Notwith-
standing anything contained in Article 13, no
law providing for -
(a) the acquisition by the State of any
estate or of any rights therein or the ex-
tinguishment or modification of any such
rights, or
x x x x
shall be deemed to be void on the ground that
it is inconsistent with, or take- away or
abridges any of the rights conferred by
Article 14 or Article 19:
Provided that where such law is a law made by
the Legislature of a State, the provisions of
this Article shall not apply thereto unless
such law, having been reserved for the
consideration of the President, has received
his assent:
Provided further that where any law makes any
provision for the acquisition by the State of
any estate and where any land comprised
therein is held by a person under his personal
cultivation, it shall not be lawful for the
State to acquire any portion of such land as
is within the ceiling limit applicable to him
under any law for the time being in force or
any building or structure standing thereon or
appurtenant thereto, unless the law relating
to the acquisition of such land, building or
structure, provides for payment of com-
pensation at a rate which shall not be less
than the market value thereof"
14.What is prohibited by the aforesaid provision is
acquisition by the State of any portion of the land under
personal cultivation which portion is within the ceiling
limit, without payment of its market value as compensation.
By virtue of the Principal Act, as amended, what is
conferred permanently on the erstwhile lessees under the
Grants Act is the hereditary tenancy. The Principal Act as
amended, by itself does not restrict the right of the he-
reditary tenant to transfer the land. The restriction on
the transfer by a hereditary tenant has been placed by the
U.P. Tenancy Act, 1939. It is, therefore, not correct to
say that it is the Principal Act as amended, which places
the restriction on
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the right of the hereditary tenant to transfer the land.
Further while under the old lease, which is abolished by the
Principal Act, the lessee could hold the land only for the
period of the lease which was in the present case, upto
2013, by virtue of the conferment of the hereditary tenancy
under the Principal Act, the lessee can now hold such land
permanently. It cannot be said that the conferment of the
permanent hereditary tenancy on the erstwhile tenure-lessee
is in any way inferior to the rights of the lessee under the
old grant. Hence in the first instance, the question of
payment of compensation does not arise. Secondly, a mere
restriction on the incidence of the lease or owner.-,hip is
not acquisition within the meaning of Article 31A.
15.Article 31A [1] (a) of the Constitution states that no
law providing for the acquisition by the State of any estate
or any rights therein or the extinguishment or modification
of any such rights, shall be deemed to be void on the ground
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that it is inconsistent with, or takes away or abridges any
of the rights conferred by Article 14 or Article 19. The
second proviso to Article 31A [1], however, states that
where any law makes any provision for the acquisition by the
State of any estate and where any land comprised in such
estate is held by a person under his personal cultivation,
it shall not be lawful for the State to acquire the portion
of such land as is within the ceiling limit applicable to
him under any law for the time being in force, unless the
law relating to the acquisition of such land provides for
payment of compensation at a rate which shall not be less
than the market value thereof
16. Thus there is a clear distinction between the
provisions of Article 31A [1] (a) and of the second proviso
to the said Article. Whereas Article 31A[1] (a) holds valid
the acquisition by the State of any estate or of any rights
therein or the extinguishment or modification of any such
rights, the second proviso carves out an exception to it by
providing that [i] if any, estate is acquired by the State
which comprises any land under personal cultivation and [ii]
if such land is within the ceiling limit applicable to such
person, such land as is within the ceiling limit will not be
acquired without payment of compensation. In other words,
the second proviso provides for compensation only if the
land within the ceiling limit is wholly acquired by the
State. If only some of the rights of the person concerned
in such land are acquired or extinguished or are modified,
the second proviso does not come into play. In the present
case, instead of having the full rights as a lessee
including the right to transfer the land, the appellant will
be a hereditary tenant without the right to transfer the
land. To that extent the rights of the appellant are
modified or his right to transfer the land is extinguished.
He has not been deprived of all his rights. It is not,
therefore, a case of acquisition of his estate within the
meaning of the second proviso to Article 31A [1]. Hence,
the appellant is not entitled to compensation as provided by
the said proviso. Further, as pointed out earlier, the
appellant is conferred with the rights as the hereditary
tenant permanently in place of his earlier rights as a
tenure-lessee which were to expire after 2013. This is,
therefore, a clear case of modification of the rights and.
not of acquisition of all the rights. It cannot be
contended further that this modification is less beneficial
to the appellant On this account also the second proviso to
Article
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31A[11 requiring compensation to be paid, does not come into
play in the present case.
17.It was then urged that in any case the appellant has
become Government lessee within the meaning of Section 133A
of the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950
[hereinafter called ’the Z.A. Act’] and hence the land would
stand excluded from the provisions of the Principal Act.
The provision of Section 133A of the Z.A. Act reads as
follows:
"133A. Government lessees. Every person to
whom land has been let out by the State
Government shall be called a government lessee
in respect of such land and shall
notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in this Act be entitled to hold the
same in accordance with the terms and
conditions of the lease relating thereto. "
18.Since it is not disputed that by notification dated 16th
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October, 1970, the provisions of the Z. A. Act have been mad
applicable to the said lands and Section 133A has also been
made applicable the lands covered by the Principal Act, the
land in question is excluded from the ambit of the Principal
Act.
19.If the scheme of the amended Principal Act is examined,
it would appear the the Act has been passed to provide for
abolition of the thekedari system in Government estates and
the "Government estate" has been defined in the Principal
Act to mean land owned by the State Government in Uttar
Pradesh which indicates that the Act is intended to deal
with government lands as well. Moreover, Section of the
amended Principal Act which provides for determination of
the lease starts with a non obstante clause. It reads as
follows:
"3.Determination of leases. Notwithstanding
anything in any law, contract or other
document, it shall be lawful for the State
Government by order published in the Official
Gazette to determine with effect from a date
(hereinafter called the date of determination)
to be specified, any lease"
20. In view of this non obstante clause Section 133A of the
Z.A. Act cannot have the effect of denying the State the
power under the said Section 3 to determine the lease.
Hence this contention must also fall
21. There was no other contention raised. The appeals,
therefore, fail for the reasons given above and not for the
reasons given by the High Court and are dismissed with
costs.
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