Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BRIJENDRA SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/11/1980
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1981 AIR 636 1981 SCR (2) 287
1981 SCC (1) 597
CITATOR INFO :
R 1981 SC1157 (6)
E&R 1991 SC1928 (4,6,8)
ACT:
Uttar Pradesh Imposition of Ceiling of Land Holding
Act, 1960 (Act 1 of 1961) -Section 5(6) proviso (b) Effect
of the Amending Act 1972 (Act 18 of 1973) "Good Faith"-True
meaning and scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The Uttar Pradesh Imposition of Ceiling of Land Holding
Act 1960 was amended by the Amending Act 1972. Section 5(6)
proviso (b) of the Act States :
"(6) In determining the Ceiling area applicable to
a tenure-holders, any transfer of land made after the
twenty-fourth day of January, 1971, which but for the
transfer would have been declared surplus land under
this act, shall be ignored and not taken into account :
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall apply
to-
(a) ...........................
(b) a transfer proved to the satisfaction of the
prescribed authority to be in good faith and for
adequate consideration and under an irrevocable
instrument not being a benami transaction or for
immediate or deferred benefit of the tenure-holder of
other members of his family.
The appellant sold 25 acres of land for consideration by
registered deeds dated 2nd January and 9th August, 1971. The
Prescribed Authority under the U.P. Imposition of Ceiling on
Land Holdings Act, 1960 issued notice to the appellant to
show cause why 25.96 acres land from his holding be not
declared surplus. The appellant filed objections stating
that (i) the entire land was unirrigated; (ii) there was no
source of irrigation in the fields and he had made two sales
of 25 acres for acquiring a site and constructing a
residential house. The Prescribed Authority rejected the
objections of the appellant and declared the said land as
surplus.
Aggrieved by the said order the appellant went in
appeal before the Appellate Authority, who, partly allowed
the appeal. The appellant filed a writ petition in the High
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Court, which was dismissed in limine. By special leave
petition, the point for consideration was whether a sale
made by a tenure-holder on a date between January 24, 1971
and June 8, 1973 for adequate consideration and under an
irrevocable instrument not being a benami transaction or for
immediate or deferred benefit of the tenure holder or other
members of his family, can be held to be not in ‘good faith’
within the contemplation of proviso (b) to sub-section (6)
of section 5 of the Ceiling Act, merely because the tenure-
holder had failed to prove the satisfaction of the
Prescribed Authority or the Appellate Authority that the
purpose for
288
which the sale was made, did not constitute an impelling
necessity for the sale.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD : It is clear that the crucial date on or from
which no tenure-holder is entitled to hold land in excess of
the ceiling area is June 8, 1973. It is a cardinal canon of
construction that an expression which has no uniform
precisely fixed meaning, takes its colour, light and content
from the context. [293E-F, H]
The benefit of clause (b) of the proviso to sub-section
(6) is available to a transfer made in good faith, that is,
to a bona fide transfer whereby the tenure-holder genuinely
and irrevocably transfers all right, title and interest in
the land in favour of the transferee, in the ordinary course
of management of his affairs and which is not a collusive
arrangement, or device or subterfuge to enable the tenure-
holder to continue to hold the surplus land or any reserved
interest in presenti or in futuro therein, (or merely to
convert it into cash), and thus circumvent the ban under
section 5(1) of the Ceiling Act. In order to be entitled to
the benefit of proviso (b) of Sec. 5(6), a transfer made in
good faith, must satisfy the further conditions, (ii) to
(iv), enumerated in the proviso (b). [294C-F]
Once it is established by the transferring tenure
holder that the transfer in question effected in the course
of ordinary management of his affairs, was made for adequate
consideration and he had genuinely, absolutely and
irrevocably divested himself of all right, title and
interest (including cultivatory possession) in the land in
favour of the transferee, the onus under Explanation II, in
the absence of any circumstances suggestive of collusion, or
an intention or design to defraud or circumvent the Ceiling
Act, on the tenure holder to show that the transfer was
effected in good faith will stand discharged. It will not be
necessary for the tenure to prove further that the transfer
was made for an impelling need or to raise money for meeting
a pressing legal necessity. [294G-H, 295A]
The other conditions of Proviso (b) to Sec. 5(6) being
satisfied, the Appellate Authority was not justified in
holding that the sales were not in ‘good faith’ merely on
the ground that the construction of a residential house in
New Delhi did not in his opinion constitute a compelling
necessity for the sales. Moreover, in the instant case, the
tenure-holder at the material time was serving in the army
in the rank of Brigadier which implies that he was nearing
the age of retirement from army service. It is not shown
that he had any other house where he could live. He had, in
fact, borrowed part of the cost of construction from the
Government. There was therefore nothing sinister in his
intention if he arranged to sell his lands to other
cultivators to raise funds to acquire a site and build a
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residential house in New Delhi where he would live in
reasonable comfort after retirement from army service.
[295G-H, 296A-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 2726 of
1980.
Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 23-5-1978 of the Allahabad High Court in Civil Misc.
Writ No. 4497/78.
289
Manoj Swarup and Miss Lalita Kohli for the Appellant.
O. P. Rana and Mrs. Shobha Dixit for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SARKARIA, J.- This is an appeal by special leave
against a judgment dated May 23, 1978 of the High Court of
Allahabad. The material facts giving rise to this appeal are
as under :
The Prescribed Authority under Section 10(2) of the
U.P. Imposition of Ceiling on Land Holdings Act, 1960 (Act
No. 1 of 1961) (as amended by U.P. Act 18 of 1973) issued
notice to the appellant to show cause why 25.96 acres out of
44 acres of irrigated land from his holding be not declared
surplus. In response to this notice, the appellant filed
objections stating, inter alia, (i) that the entire land was
unirrigated; (ii) that there was no source of irrigation in
field Nos. 1373, 79 and 80; (iii) that the appellant had
made two sales of 12.50 acres each, 25 acres in all, for a
valid necessity, namely, to raise funds for acquiring a site
and constructing a residential house in New Delhi. (a) The
appellant being an Army Officer in the rank of Brigadier,
had after obtaining permission on January 2, 1971 from the
Army Headquarters, sold 12.50 acres of the land for a
consideration of Rs. 25,000/- to one Inderjit Singh by a
registered deed, dated August 9, 1971, and handed over the
possession to the vendee; (b) Similarly, after obtaining the
permission of the Army Headquarters on January 2, 1971, he
sold 12.50 acres of the land for Rs. 25,000/- to one Gurjeet
Singh by another registered sale-deed and handed over the
possession to the vendee. Since the money raised by these
sales was insufficient to purchase a building site and
constructing a house thereon, the appellant also raised a
loan of Rs. 50,000/- from the Government for that purpose.
The Prescribed Authority by its order dated June 26,
1977, rejected the objections of the appellant and declared
25.96 acres of the land as surplus.
Aggrieved by the order of the Prescribed Authority, the
appellant went in appeal before the Appellate Authority
(District Judge, Rampur). who, by his order dated December
8, 1977, partly allowed the appeal, holding that the entire
land was unirrigated and accordingly declared 16.94 acres of
unirrigated land as surplus. The District Judge has not held
that the aforesaid sales made in favour of Inderjit Singh
and Gurjeet Singh by two sale deeds of 12.50 acres each,
were fictitious or Benami, nor has he found that the vendees
were not in
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possession of the sold land. The District Judge seems to
have denied the protection of Proviso (b) of sub-section (6)
of Section 5 of the Ceiling Act to the said two sales,
merely for the reason that "the appellant had failed to
prove any impelling necessity for building a house and that
he could not do without a house in New Delhi", and
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therefore, "it could not be held that the sales in question
were not effected to avoid the Ceiling Law."
To impugn this decision of the District Judge, in so
far as he did not uphold the aforesaid sales relating to 25
acres of land, the appellant filed a writ petition under
Article 226 of the Constitution in the High Court, which
dismissed the same in limine by its order, dated May 23,
1978. Hence this appeal by special leave.
The question of law that has been mooted before us is,
whether a sale made by a tenure-holder on a date between
January 24, 1971 and June 8, 1973 for adequate consideration
and under an irrevocable instrument, not being a benami
transaction or for immediate or deferred benefit of the
tenure-holder or other members of his family, can be held to
be not in ’good faith’ within the contemplation of proviso
(b) to sub-section (6) of Section 5 of the Ceiling Act,
merely because the tenure-holder had failed to prove to the
satisfaction of the Prescribed Authority or the Appellate
Authority that the purpose for which the sale was made, did
not constitute an impelling necessity for the sale.
Answer to this question turns on a correct
interpretation of the expression "good faith" used in the
aforesaid proviso (b).
Learned counsel for the appellant vehemently contends
that the District Judge had committed an error of law
inasmuch as he held that in order to get the protection of
the aforesaid Proviso (b), it is essential for the tenure-
holder to prove that the sale was made for some pressing
valid necessity. It is emphasised that this is not the
requirement of that provision; that the expression "good
faith" only means that it should not be a benami or
fraudulent transaction in which the transferor continues to
be the beneficial owner or right-holder of the land on the
crucial date, viz. June 8, 1973.
It is emphasised that in the instant case, it was not
disputed that the sales were made to raise funds for
purchasing a building site and constructing a house thereon
in New Delhi, that the authenticity of the documentary
evidence produced by the appellant to establish that fact
was not doubted by the Appellate Authority; nor the adequacy
of the sale considerations, nor the fact that the appellant
had parted with possession of the sold lands; that in this
situation, by no stretch of
291
reasoning, it could be said that the sale was not bona fide
or in good faith.
On the other hand, Shri O. P. Rana stoutly defends the
finding, of the Appellate Authority (District Judge), which
has been upheld by the High Court, that the sale could not
be said to be in ’good faith’ merely because no impelling
necessity for making it had been established.
Before dealing with these contentions, let us have a
look at the material part of sub-section (1) of Section 5,
which reads thus:
"(1) On and from the commencement of the Uttar
Pradesh Imposition of Ceiling on Land Holdings
(Amendment) Act, 1972, no tenure-holder shall be
entitled to hold in the aggregate throughout Uttar
Pradesh, any land in excess of the ceiling area
applicable to him.
Explanation I.- In determining the ceiling area
applicable to a tenure-holder, all land held by him in
his own right, whether in his own name, or ostensibly
in the name of any other person, shall be taken into
account."
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Explanation II is not material for our present
purpose.
The Amendment Act, 1972 (Act No. 18 of 1973) (for short
called the Ceiling Act) came into force with; effect from
June 8, 1973. It is clear that the crucial date on or from
which no tenure-holder is entitled to hold land in excess of
the ceiling area is June 8, 1973. Keeping this in view, let
us now examine sub-section (6), the relevant part of which
reads as under:-
"(6) In determining the ceiling area applicable to a
tenure-holder, any transfer of land made after the
twenty-fourth of January, 1971, which but for the
transfer would have been declared surplus land under
this Act, shall be ignored and not taken into account:
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall
apply to-
(a)...............................................
(b) a transfer proved to the satisfaction of the
prescribed authority to be in good faith and for
adequate consideration and under an irrevocable
instrument not being a benami transaction or for
immediate or deferred benefit of the tenure-holder or
other members of his family.
292
Explanation I .............................
Explanation II.- The burden of proving that a case
falls within clause (b) of the proviso shall rest with
the party claiming its benefit."
It will be seen that when sub-section (6) of Section 5
provides that in determining the ceiling area and surplus
area, any transfer of land which but for the transfer would
have been declared surplus land under the Act, shall be
ignored, it proceeds on the presumption that the tenure-
holders being aware of the resolution or manifesto adopted
by the ruling All India Congress Party on January 24, 1971,
and of the consensus at the Chief Minister Conference held
in July 1972, to take measures to lower the ceiling on
agricultural holdings, might make attempts to defraud,
defeat and evade the ceiling law, then in offing, by making
fictitious transfers of land in favour of other persons.
The presumption which underlies the main provision in
Section 5(6) can be displaced, as the Legislature has itself
indicated, on proof of the conditions set out in Proviso
(b). Although the strength of the aforesaid presumption and
the nature and quantum required to satisfy the conditions of
Proviso (b) may vary according to the circumstances of the
particular case, yet it can be said as a general proposition
that in the case of transfers made prior to the decision of
the Chief Minister’s Conference in July 1972 to lower the
ceiling the burden under Explanation II on the tenure-holder
to establish the facts bringing his case within clause (b)
of the Proviso, would be lighter than the one in the case of
a transfer made after the aforesaid decision in July 1972.
In order to bring his case within the purview of
Proviso (b), the tenure-holder has to show-
(i) that the transfer has been made in ’good
faith’;
(ii) that it is a transfer for adequate
consideration;
(iii)that it has been made under an irrevocable
instrument; and
(iv) that it is not a benami transaction or for
immediate or deferred benefit of the tenure-
holder or other members of his family.
There is no dispute in regard to the connotation,
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construction and existence of ingredients (ii), (iii) and
(iv) in the instant case. Controversy, however centres round
the true meaning and scope of the
293
expression ’good faith’ within the contemplation of clause
(b) of the Proviso. In the instant case, the Appellate
Authority appears to have taken the view-a view which has
been upheld by the High Court-that a transfer cannot be said
to have been made in ’good faith’ merely because it has been
honestly or genuinely made and satisfies the aforesaid
conditions (ii), (iii) and (iv), unless it is proved further
that it was made for a valid pressing necessity.
The thrust of the arguments of the learned counsel for
the appellant is that the expression ’good faith’ within the
contemplation of Proviso (b) only means that the transfer is
honestly and genuinely made and is not designed to
circumvent the Ceiling Act or defeat its object, and that
this expression cannot be legitimately stretched so as to
import into Proviso (b), as a requirement of law, an
additional obligation to prove that the transfer was made
for a pressing necessity, or valid personal need of the
transferor. The argument is not devoid of merit.
The expression ’good faith’ has not been defined in the
Ceiling Act. The expression has several shades of meaning.
In the popular sense, the phrase in good faith’ simply means
"honestly, without fraud, collusion, or deceit; really,
actually, without pretence and without intent to assist or
act in furtherance of a fraudulent or otherwise unlawful
scheme". (See Words & Phrases, Permanent Edition, Vol. 18A,
page 91). Although the meaning of "good faith" may vary in
the context of different statutes, subjects and situations,
honest intent free from taint of fraud of fraudulent design,
is a constant element of its connotation. Even so, the
quality and quantity of the honesty requisite for
constituting ’good faith’ is conditioned by the context and
object of the statute in which this term is employed. It is
a cardinal canon of construction that an expression which
has no uniform, precisely fixed meaning, takes its colour,
light and content from the context.
The meaning and scope of the expression ’good faith’ is
therefore, to be considered in the light of the scheme and
purpose of Section 5, in general, and the context of Proviso
(b) to sub-section (6), in particular. We have already
noticed that the primary object of the Ceiling Act, as
adumbrated in the pivotal provision in Section 5(1) is to
prohibit and disentitle a tenure-holder from holding land in
the aggregate in the State of Uttar Pradesh, in excess of
the ceiling area, in his own right, whether in his own name,
or ostensibly in the name of any other person. The ceiling
area and surplus land of a tenure-holder under the Ceiling
Act, as already mentioned, are to be determined as on June
8, 1973 when the U.P. (Amendment) Act.
294
No. 18 of 1973 came into force. A transfer, therefore, made
after January 24, 1971 which is designed to serve as a cloak
for retention of a right or interest of the transferor in
the ostensibly transferred land in excess of the ceiling
area, even on or after June 8, 1973, will be patently not in
’good faith’. But the Proviso (b) to subsection (6) of
Section 5 extends the negative aspect of the concept ’good
faith’ a little further by indicating, that even if the
transfer is not an ostensible transfer and the transferor
divests himself of all interest and rights in presenti in
the transferred land, but reserves some benefit in futuro
for himself or other members of his family, then also the
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transfer will be not in ’good faith’. A transfer solely for
the purpose of converting surplus land into cash without any
kind of need (not to be confused with legal necessity) may
also lack good faith.
Broadly speaking, the benefit of clause (b) of the
Proviso to subsection (6) is available to a transfer made in
good faith, that is, to a bona fide transfer whereby the
tenure-holder genuinely and irrevocably transfers all right,
title and interest in the land in favour of the transferee,
in the ordinary course of management, of his affairs and
which is not a collusive arrangement, or device or
subterfuge to enable the tenure-holder to continue to hold
the surplus land or any reserved interest in presenti or in
futuro, therein (or merely to convert it into cash), and
thus circumvent the ban under Section 5(1) of the Ceiling
Act. In order to be entitled to the benefit of Proviso (b),
a transfer made in good faith, must satisfy the further
conditions, (ii) to (iv), enumerated in the Proviso (b). The
positive conditions laid down in Proviso (b) are : that the
transfer should be for adequate consideration; that it
should have been made under an irrevocable instrument. The
negative conditions set out in clause (b) of the Proviso are
: that it must not be a benami transaction; that it must not
be for immediate or deferred benefit of the transferring
tenure-holder or other members of his family. These tests or
conditions (ii), (iii) and (iv) provided in Proviso (b) may
not by themselves be conclusive to hold that the transfer
was in ’good faith’. For instance, another important test
for judging the genuineness or otherwise of a sale would be
whether or not cultivatory possession and enjoyment of the
land has passed under the sale to the vendee. Even so, once
it is established by the transferring tenure-holder that the
transfer in question effected in the course of ordinary
management of his affairs, was made for adequate
consideration and he has genuinely, absolutely and
irrevocably divested himself of all right, title and
interest (including cultivatory possession) in the land in
favour of the transferee, the onus under Explanation II. in
295
the absence of any circumstances suggestive of collusion, or
an intention or design to defraud or circumvent the Ceiling
Act, on the tenure-holder to show that the transfer was
effected in ’good faith’, will stand discharged, and it will
not be necessary for the tenure-holder to prove further that
the transfer was made for an impelling need or to raise
money for meeting a pressing legal necessity. Although proof
of the fact that a transfer was made for a valid pressing
necessity, may highlight or strengthen the inference in
favour of the genuineness of the transfer, it is not an
indispensable constituent of ’good faith’, nor is the proof
of legal necessity requisite, as a matter of law, to enable
a tenure-holder to avail of the benefit of clause (b) of the
Proviso. It may be remembered that at the time when such a
transfer was made, there was no legal restriction on his
power to alienate the whole or any part of his holding. In
other words, at the time when such a transfer was made it
was not unlawful, even if it were made without any pressing
necessity. It became unlawful by the subsequent enactment of
a legal fiction introduced in Section 5 (6) of the Ceiling
Act (No. 18 of 1973) with retrospective effect from January
24, 1971. Even so, under this statutory fiction, a transfer
of land made after January 24, 1971 does not become wholly
void for all purposes; it can be ignored and would not be
taken into account in determining the ceiling area of the
transferring tenure-holder for purposes of the Ceiling Act,
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and that too, if the following two conditions are satisfied:
(a) that the land but for the transfer would have been
declared surplus land under the U.P. Act 18 of
1973; and
(b) that the transfer is not of a kind covered by
Proviso (b) to Section 5(6) of the Act.
This being the position, once a transfer is shown to be bona
fide and further satisfies all the other positive and
negative conditions laid down in the Proviso (b) to Section
5(6), there is no justification in law to stretch the legal
fiction further and to spell out from the expression ’good
faith’ an additional requirement of proving pressing
necessity for the transfer before the tenure-holder is
entitled to the benefit of the aforesaid Proviso (b).
In the instant case, the two sales in question have not
only been found to be genuine and for adequate
consideration, but it has been further accepted that the
sales were made by the tenure-holder to meet an ordinary
need of every house-holder i.e. for raising funds for
constructing a residential house in New Delhi. The sales
have been held by the Appellate Authority to be not in ’good
faith’ merely on the
296
ground that the construction of a residential house in New
Delhi by the tenure-holder could not, in the opinion of the
Authority, be said to be an "impending" (impelling?)
necessity. This approach and finding is manifestly
erroneous.
As discussed above, in order to get the protection of
Proviso (b) to Section 5(6), it is not legally necessary to
proviso, in addition to the conditions set out in the
Proviso (b), that the sales were for valid pressing
necessity. Even so, in the instant case, it had been shown
that the sales were made to raise funds for building a
residential house in New Delhi which was obviously a valid
necessity. The necessity and its urgency was to be judged
from the tenure-holder’s point of view. The tenure-holder at
the material time was serving in the Army in the rank of
Brigadier which implies that he was nearing the age of
retirement from Army Service. It is not shown that he had
any other house where he could live. He had, in fact,
borrowed part of the cost of construction from the
Government. There was therefore nothing sinister in his
intention if he arranged to sell his lands to other
cultivators to raise funds to acquire a site and build a
residential house in New Delhi where he would live in
reasonable comfort after retirement from Army service.
For all the foregoing reasons, we allow this appeal,
set aside the orders of the High Court and of the Appellate
Authority and the Prescribed Authority in so far as they
relate to these two sales in question of 12.5 acres each,
and hold that both these sales were entitled to the
exemption of Proviso (b) to Section 5(6) of the Ceiling Act.
The Prescribed Authority is, therefore, directed not to
ignore these two transfers, but after taking them into
account determine afresh the ceiling area of the appellant.
We make it clear that the Prescribed Authority shall
determine the ceiling area and surplus area of the appellant
on the basis that the whole of the land held by the tenure-
holder (appellant) on the crucial date was unirrigated land,
as the decision of the Appellate Authority (which was upheld
by the High Court) on that issue has become res judicata.
In the circumstances of the case, there will be no
order as to costs of this appeal.
These, then, are the reasons for our Order dated
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November 13, 1980, whereby we had allowed this appeal.
N.K.A. Appeal allowed.
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