Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AHMAD HAFIZ KHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MOHAMMAD HASAN KHAN
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/03/1963
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 354 1964 SCR (2) 191
ACT:
Proprietary Right, Abolition of--Operation of enactment-
--Validity-Cultivating rights in sir and khudkasht land, if
and when protected against sale in execution of the
decree--Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights
(Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950 (M. P. 1 of
1951), ss. 43, 49.
HEADNOTE:
One Mohd Yusuf, in execution of a money decree against the
appellant, attached the appellant’s share in a village along
with sir and khudkasht lands appurtenant thereto. Before
the sale took place, the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of
Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act,
1950 M. P. 1 of 1951) was made applicable to that area, and
the proprietary rights in the village vested in the State.
On October, 1951, the respondent purchased the sir khudkasht
fields in action sale and the appellant’s objection therein
having been dismissed, the sale was confirmed. On appeal,
the Additional District Judge set aside the sale and the
property was restored to the appellant. On further appeal,
that order was reversed and the auction purchaser was again
put in possession of the property. The appellant then
applied to the executing Court objecting that there was no
jurisdiction to sell the fields. The objection of the
appellant was dismissed by the Civil judge and his
successive appeals to the District judge and the High Court
also failed. On appeal by special leave, the appellant’s
main contention was that the cultivating rights in the sir
lands could not be the subject matter of sale in execution
of the decree in view of s. 43 of the Abolition Act.
Held, that by the operation of the Abolition Act, the
proprietor ceases to be the proprietor of the estate or
village including the sir lands appurtenant to the
proprietorship. But the cultivating rights in the sir lands
which were his home. farm are saved to him and under s. 38
of the Abolition Act he becomes a malik makbuza of these
fields. The Abolition Act having deprived the proprietors
of their property interest gives protection to them in
respect of their new rights in the homefarm which has become
the malik makbuza of the proprietor.
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The words of s. 43 are quite clear and the cultivating
rights in the sir and Khudkash land which became under the
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Act the home-farm of the proprietor are protected against
sale except where those cultivating rights were the subject
of a mortgage or a charge created by the proprietor. That
condition did not exist in the present case and the sale,
therefore, must be declared to be without jurisdiction and
ordered to be set aside.
Govind Prasad v. Pawan Kumar, 1955 N. L. J. 678
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 293 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
December 24, 1959 of the Madhhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Second Appeal No. 3 of 1959.
W. S. Barlingay and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the appellant.
Ganpat Rai, for the respondent.
1963. March 4. The judgment of the Court was delivered by
HIDAYATULLAH J.-One Mohd. Yusaf obtained a money decree for
Rs. 1277/7/- against the appellant, Ahmad Hafiz Khan, on
January 14, 1950. In execution of the decree Mohd. Yusaf
attached two annas and 5-7/45 pies share of the appellant in
Mouza Tumhari, Tahsil Sakti, District Bilaspur, alongwith
sir and khudkasht lands appurtenant thereto. The attachment
was made on September 28, 1950. On March 31, 1951, before
the sale took place, the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of
Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act,
1950 (M. P. Act No. 1 of 1951) was made applicable to that
area. In view of the provisions of the Abolition Act the
proprietary rights in the village vested in the State. Thus
far there is no dispute.
On October 1, 1951, the fields under attachment were put to
sale and were purchased by the
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respondent, Mohd. Hasan Khan. The appellant filed an
application setting forth objections under Order 21 Rule 90
of the Code of Civil Procedure but the application was
dismissed and the sale was confirmed on February 1, 1952.
The judgment-debtor appealed against the order dismissing
the application and on May 1, 1952, the Additional District
judge, Bilaspur, set-aside the sale, and possession of the
property was restored to the appellant. On further appeal
by the auction purchaser the order of the Additional
District judge was reversed and the auction purchaser was
put in possession of the property on April 16, 1955. Both
the appellant and the auction purchaser applied to the
executing court. The appellant raised further objection
while the auction purchaser asked for mesne profits under s.
144 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We are concerned with
the application of the appellant. The objection of the
appellant was dismissed by the Civil judge and his
successive appeals to the District judge and the High Court
also failed. The judgment of the High Court passed on
December 24, 1959, and the present appeal is filed against
that judgment with the special leave of this Court. The
contention of the appellant is that the cultivating rights
in the sir lands could not be the subject matter of sale in
execution of the decree in view of s. 43 of the Abolition
Act. This argument was not accepted by the High Court and
it is contended that the decision of the High Court is
erroneous. In our opinion the contention must be sustained.
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Under the Central Provinces Tenancy Act, 1920, a
proprietor losing his right to occupy sir land, as a
proprietor became, from the date of such loss of right an
occupancy tenant of sir lands. This was provided by s. 49
of the Act which, in so far as relevant to the present
purpose, read as follows :-
"49, (1) A proprietor, who temporarily or
permanently loses, whether under a decree or
194.
order of a Civil Court or a transfer or
otherwise, his right to occupy his sir-land,
in whole or in part, as a proprietor, shall at
the date of such loss become an occupancy
tenant of such sir-land except in the
following cases,-
(a) when a transfer of such sir-land is made
by him expressly agreeing to transfer his
right to cultivate such sir land; or
(b) when such sir-land is sold in execution
of, or foreclosed under a decree of a Civil
Court which expressly directs the sale or
foreclosure of his right to cultivate such
sir-land."
(The other sub-sections are not relevant)
The effect of the loss of proprietorship by reason of the
Abolition Act is almost the same except that a new right is
created in the quondam proprietor in respect of his sir
lands. On the passing of the proprietary interest to the
State what remains to the proprietor is his cultivating
rights in the sir fields and the Abolition Act provides in
s. 4 (2) that the proprietor "shall continue to retain the
possession of his............ home-farm land". "Home-farm"
is defined by s. 2 (g) (i) as "land recorded as sir and
khudkasht in the name of the proprietor in the annual papers
for the year 1948-49." Thus by the operation of the
Abolition Act, the proprietor ceases to be the proprietor of
the estate or village including the sir lands appurtenant to
the proprietorship. But the cultivating rights in the sir
lands which were his home-farm are saved to him and under s.
38 of the Abolition Act he becomes a malik makbuza of these
fields. The Abolition Act. having deprived the proprietors
of their proprietary interest gives some protection to them
in respect of their new rights in the home-farm which has
become the Malik makbuza
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of the proprietor. Section 43 of the Abolition Act provides
as follows
"Any land which immediately before the date of
vesting, was held in absolute occupancy or
occupancy right or recorded as Sir-land, shall
not be liable to attachment or
sale in
execution of a decree or order for the
recovery of any debt incurred before the date
of vesting except where such debt was validly
secured by mortgage of or a charge on the
absolute occupancy or occupancy land or the
cultivating right in the sir-land."
By this section attachment and sale of the cultivating right
in sir lands is barred unless there is a mortgage of or a
charge on, the cultivating rights. The section applies to
decrees in respect of debts prior to the vesting in the
State as in the case here.
In the present case the attachment was before, and the sale
after the date when the Abolition Act came into force in
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this area. There was no mortgage of or charge on the
cultivating rights’ in Sir. The decree holder Mohd. Yusaf
had only a money decree and the attachment cannot be said to
have created a charge on the attached property so as to make
it a secured debt within the latter part of s. 43. There
being no secured debt and the cultivating rights not having
been mortgaged or charged there could be no sale of these
fields after the Abolition Act came into force. The sale
was, therefore, without jurisdiction, and thus illegal.
The learned single judge in the High Court relied upon a
Division Bench ruling of his own Court reported in Govind
Prasad v. Pawan Kumar (1), where it was held that after the
Abolition Act an attachment of the proprietary share in the
village including the Sir and khudkasht lands appurtenant
thereto made before the Abolition Act got transferred
(1) 1955 N. L. J. 678,
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to the home-farm after the appointed date. It is argued
that if the attachment could subsist on the home-farm then
the home-farm could also be sold. In the ruling the
question whether a sale of the cultivating rights in the
home-farm could take place after the Abolition Act came into
force was not considered at all. There the attachment had
been effected before the Abolition Act came into force and
it was held that the attachment must continue on the home
farm. It was not noticed that. the attachment would be
useless if the sale could not take place and the attention
of the Bench does not appear to have been drawn to the
provisions of s. 43 of the Abolition Act, otherwise the
Bench would have mentioned it. In any event, the words of
s. 43 are quite clear and the cultivating rights in the sir
and khudkash land which became under the Act the home-farm
of the proprietor are protected against sale except where
those cultivating rights were the subject of a mortgage or a
charge created by the proprietor. That condition does not
exist in the present case and the sale, therefore, must be
declared to be without jurisdiction.and ordered to be set-
aside.
We accordingly allow the appeal and set aside the sale in
respect of the sir lands appurtenant to the original
proprietary share. The appellant shall be entitled to his
costs in this Court but costs incurred in the High Court or
the Court below shall be borne as incurred.
Appeal allowed.
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