Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KOCHKUNJU NAIR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KOSHY ALEXANDER AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 24/03/2000
BENCH:
D.P.Mohapatro, K.T.Thomas
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T Thomas J. A Full Bench of the KeralaHigh Court has held that when
a person has land in co-
ownership with another, whatever be its extent, it would not
disentitle him to claim the rights of a Kudikidappukaran
under the provisions of the Kerala Land Reforms Act, 1963
(for short the Act). Having held so the Full Bench
proceeded to consider whether appellant has such an
entitlement. It was found that the land in his possession
is not in co-ownership with others and hence the Full Bench
repelled his claim to have Kudikidappu rights.
The predecessor of respondent (late Geevargis Koshy)
was the owner of a building which he rented out to the
appellant in the year 1963 for conducting a tea-shop. As
per a settlement in the family of the said Geevargis the
said building and the land on which it is situate have been
allotted to the share of first respondent. Two suits were
filed in respect of this building, one by the appellant for
a declaration that the building is his, and the other by the
first respondent together with Geevargis Koshy for recovery
of possession of the building.
The suits underwent a checkered carrier and when they
reached the Kerala High Court on an earlier occasion in
Second Appeal a direction was issued to the trial court on
11.9.1982 to refer the question (which relates to the claim
of appellant that he is entitled to Kudikidappu rights) to
the Land Tribunal under Section 125(3) of the Act. Pursuant
to the reference made by the trial court the Land Tribunal
answered the question in favour of the appellant holding
that he is Kudikidappukaran. Accordingly the suit filed by
the respondent was dismissed by the trial court but the
District Court before which respondents filed a regular
appeal, reversed the finding and decreed the suit for
recovery of possession on the premise that appellant has in
his possession land in excess of ten cents in area.
Appellant took up the matter before the Kerala High Court
again in Second Appeal.
In the High Court, appellant adopted a contention that
since the land is held by him in co-ownership with his wife
and son it cannot be taken into consideration while deciding
whether he has right of Kudikidappukaran. When the Second
Appeal came up before a Division Bench an earlier decision
of another Division Bench was cited before it (Chakkara
Ramakrishnan and others vs. Kuruvaikkandy Kumaran and
others (1980 Kerala Law Notes 19). But the Division Bench
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which heard the Second Appeal could not persuade themselves
to follow the said decision as learned judges were inclined
to take the view that possession of other lands in
co-ownership by a person claiming to be a Kudikidappukaran
in excess of the limits prescribed under Section 2(25) of
the Act will dis- entitle him from claiming the benefits
thereunder. Hence the matter was placed before a Full Bench
which again concurred with the view adopted in Chakkara
Ramakrishnan (Supra).
We are unable to uphold the view of the Full Bench
that the property held in co- ownership cannot be taken into
account while considering whether the claimant has
possession of land exceeding the limit prescribed in Section
2(25) of the Act. The said sub-section, which is the
definition clause, is extracted below (only the material
portion which is necessary for this case):
Kudikidappukaran means a person who has neither a homestead
nor any land exceeding in extent three cents in any city or
major municipality or five cents in any other municipality
or ten cents in any panchayat area or township, in
possession either as owner or as tenant, on which he could
erect a homestead..
The word homestead in the context would only mean a
dwelling house. As the land said to be in the possession of
the appellant is situated in a panchayat area the necessary
requirements can be re-cast like this: The person claiming
to be a Kudikidappukaran should not have, in his possession,
land exceeding ten cents in a panchayat area, either as
owner or as tenant on which he could erect a dwelling house.
Here the contention is that if the person has only
co-ownership over the land it cannot be said that he is the
owner thereof, nor is he in possession of it. Conflicting
decisions have been adopted by the Kerala High Court on that
point at different times. In Vasudevan vs. Sreemathi Amma
(1966 Kerala Law Times 594) a single judge took the view
that the person who has joint ownership of the necessary
extent of land is disentitled to the rights of
Kudikidappukaran. But a contrary view was adopted by a
Division Bench in Pennamma vs. St. Pauls Convent (1972
Kerala Law Times 12). Another Division Bench has held in
Vasistha Vadhyar vs. Mohini Bai (1975 Kerala Law Times 365)
thus: A member of a joint family has no ownership or
possession exclusively on any portion of the property
belonging to the joint family. Therefore, the fact that a
person owns land with others as joint tenant cannot
disentitle him from the protection extended under s.2(25) of
the Act. On the words of the section, this is the only
conclusion that can be arrived at. Nonetheless, the
Division Bench doubted whether the above principle can be
extended to a tenant-in-common since possession of such a
person is different from the possession of a co-parcener or
member of a tarwad. However, a single judge in Damodaran
vs. Vasukutty (1978 Kerala Law Times 1) took the view that
there is no distinction between a member of joint family and
a tenant-in-common or a co-owner and that he too can claim
to be a Kudikidappukaran.
We are not now considering the question whether a
person who has right in a joint family property can be
treated as one in possession of that land. But we do
consider now whether a person who is a co-owner along with
others can be treated as owner and whether he is in
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possession thereof.
Ownership imports three essential rights, namely,
right to possession, right to enjoy and right to dispose.
If an owner is wrongly deprived of possession of his
property he has a right to be put in possession thereof.
All the three essentials are satisfied in the case of
co-owner of a land. All co-owners have equal rights and
co-ordinate interest in the property, though their shares
may be either fixed or indeterminate. Every co-owner has a
right to enjoyment and possession equal to that of the other
co-owner or co- owners. Each co-owner has, in theory
interest in every infinitesimal portion of the subject
matter and each has the right, irrespective of the quantity
of his interest, to be in possession of every part and
parcel of the property, jointly with others. (vide Mitras
Co- ownership and Partition, Seventh Edn.)
A three-Judge Bench of this Court has held in Sri Ram
Pasricha vs. Jagannath and ors.(AIR 1976 SC 2335) that a
co-owner owns every part of the composite property along
with others. The following statement of law has been made
by their Lordships:
Jurisprudentially it is not correct to say that a
co-owner of a property is not its owner. He owns every part
of the composite property along with others and it cannot be
said that he is only a part-owner or a fractional owner of
the property. The position will change only when partition
takes place.
To hold that a co-owner is not an owner and his
possession is not the possession envisaged in Section 2(25)
of the Act is in conflict with the correct legal position.
If a co- owner wants to erect homestead on the land he is
free to do so. When a division of the co-ownership property
takes place the co-owner who put up the homestead can claim
that the said portion may be allotted to his share. Courts
would ordinarily grant such equitable relief when claimed.
[vide Nutbehari Das v. Nanilal Das and ors.(AIR 1937 PC
61)]. If the other co-owner objects to the construction of
a homestead he can get the co- ownership property divided by
partition, and if the other party is not readily willing to
that course it is open to him to get it partitioned through
suit. These are various remedies available to the co-owner
in respect of his land. Merely because he has to resort to
such steps it cannot be said that a co-owner cannot erect a
homestead on his land.
The view adopted by the Full Bench of the Kerala High
Court that once the claimant is a co-owner of whatever
extent of land, he must be treated as a person who has no
land on which he could erect a homestead, has preposterous
legal implications. For example, a co-owner having 50 acres
of land along with another co-owner claims right of
Kudikidappu as against another person who has only a wee bit
of land. If the Full Bench view gains acceptance the
claimant must be declared entitled to Kudikidappu right.
Such an order would be unjust and inequitable, if not
ridiculous. The Full Bench of Kerala High Court has gone
wrong in adopting such a view.
Learned counsel for the appellant alternatively
contended that even if this co- ownership land can be taken
into account, the area of his land, after partition, would
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fall below 10 cents in extent. Ext.B-16 is a Partition Deed
of the year 1952 executed by the appellant and his brother
as per which 27½ cents of land has been allotted to the
appellant, his wife and son who was then a minor. Person
is defined in Section 2(43) of the Act as including a
company, family, joint family, association or other body of
individuals. Section 2(14) of the Act defines family
as consisting of husband, wife and their unmarried minor
children or such of them as exist.
A combined reading of the above definitions leads to
the only conclusion that appellant (with or without his wife
and minor son) has 27½ cents of land. There is no
contention that the nature of the land is such that no
homestead could be erected thereon. Even if the minor son
would have claimed his share after attaining majority,
appellant and his wife together will still have land much in
excess of 10 cents.
So looking from any angle, appellant has no right to
claim that he is a Kudikidappukaran in respect of the
building which is the subject matter of the suit. We
therefore dismiss this appeal, without any order as to
costs.