Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
MAHARAJA PRATAP SINGH BAHADUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THAKUR MANMOHAN DEO AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/02/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Bengal Ghatwali Lands Act, 1859 (Act V of 1859), ss. 1 and
2--The Court of Wards Act, 1870 (Act IV of 1870), ss. 8, 9,
13-Provisions of former Act in respect of long leases of
ghatwali lands in conflict with provisions of latter Act-
Whether conditions in both Acts to be satisfied Lease of
ghatwali estate land in perpetuity-Lease executed by Deputy
Commissioner-Presumption of valid execution under s. 114
Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
HEADNOTE:
A lease in perpetuity in respect of certain lands belonging
to a ghatwali estate situated in the area of present West
Bengal was granted in 1873 of the predecessors-in-interest
of the appellant for the purpose of erecting dwelling
houses. The lease was executed on behalf of the Estate,
which was under the management of the Court of Wards, by the
Deputy Commissioner of Santal Pargana. In 1952 the lease
was challenged by the Ghatwal as being void. According to
the Bengal Ghatwali Lands Act 1859 (Act V of 1859) such a
lease could be executed by the Court of Wards for certain
specified purposes which included the erection of dwelling
houses. Under the Court of Wards Act 1870 (Act IV of 1870)
the Court of Wards could grant such a lease with the
sanction of the Board of Revenue. The trial court held that
the lease was void as it was not sanctioned by the Board of
Revenue. The High Court held that the case must be decided
on the provisions of Act V of 1859 which was a special Act
overriding the general Act i.e., Act IV of 1870. According
to the High Court the lease was void under Act V of 1859
because it was not executed by the Court of Wards. Even
under Act IV of 1870 it was void for want of sanction of the
Board of Revenue. In appeal to this Court,
HELD : The lease was valid.
(i) The Bengal Ghatwali Lands Act, 1859 was a special Act
dealing with ghatwali lands. The Court of Wards Act, 1870
was a general enactment. On the principle generalia
specialibus non derogant the provisions of the former Act in
respect of leases of ghatwali lands would prevail over the
provisions of the latter Act regarding lease of land under
the management of the Court of Wards. [669 B-C]
(ii) The lease in question was for the purpose of raising
dwelling houses and thus one of the conditions in s. 2 of
the Act of 1859 was satisfied. The other condition that the
lease must be executed by the Court of Wards was also
satisfied in the case inasmuch as under s. 114 of the Indian
Evidence Act the official act of execution of the lease by
the Deputy Commissioner must be presumed to have been
regularly performed i.e., with due authority from the Court
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
of Wards. [669 G, H]
(iii) Even on the footing that the Court of Wards Act,
1870 was applicable to the case, the lease could not be said
to be void. A combined reading of ss. 8, 9 and 13 of the
said Act showed that the Collector (or Deputy Commissioner,
since the terms are synonymous) could grant a lease of land
in the management of the Court of Wards in his district; he
could grant a lease in perpetuity with the sanction of the
Board of Revenue. In the present case it could be presumed
under s. 114 of the Evidence Act that the sanction of the
Board of Revenue was duly obtained. [670 D]
663
664
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 35 of 1963.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated August 9, 1960 of
the Patna High Court in Appeal from Original Decree No.
438 of 1954.
Ugra Singh and D. Goburdhun, for the appellant.
Sarjoo Prasad and R. C. Prasad for respondent no. 1.
U. P. Singh, for respondents nos. 2 and 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Subba Rao, J. The facts that gave rise to this appeal may be
briefly stated. In the plaint there are three schedules, A,
B and C. We are concerned in this appeal only with schedules
A and C and nothing, therefore. need be said in regard to
schedule 13. The lands described in schedules A and C were
situate in Rohini Ghatwali Estate. When that Estate was in
the management of the Court of Wards, on March 25, 1873, the
then Deputy Commissioner, Santal Paragana, on behalf of the
Court of Wards representing the said Estate executed a lease
in perpetuity in respect of the A schedule property in
favour of Maharaja Sir Jai Mangal Singh Bahadur, the
predecessor-in-interest of the 2nd defendant, for the
purpose of erecting dwelling houses thereon. The 2nd
defendant and his ancestors had been in possession of the
said property since the date of the said lease. The lands
described in Schedule C annexed to the plaint were not
covered by the said lease, but it is alleged that the 2nd
defendant and his ancestors had been in possession of the
same. The plaintiff, who is the present Ghatwal of the
Rohini Ghatwali Estate, after attaining majority on October
17, 1949, filed Title Suit No. 37 of 1952 on the file of the
Court of the Subordinate Judge, Deoghar, for recovery of
possession of the said lands on the ground, inter alia, that
they formed part of his Estate and that the lease executed
by the Deputy Commissioner in respect of the A Schedule
lands was void, as it was not countersigned by the Com-
missioner, Bhagalpore, and that the 2nd defendant had no
title to the C Schedule lands. To that suit the Member,
Boardof Revenue, Bihar, was made the 1st defendant and
Maharaja Pratap Singh, the successor-in-interest of the
lessee, being a minor represented by the Collector of
Monghyr, as representing the Court of Wards, as the 2nd
defendant. The 2nd defendant contended that the suit was
barred by limitation.
The learned Subordinate Judge held that the lease executed
on behalf of the Court of Wards, not having been sanctioned
by the Board of Revenue, became void as soon as the
superintendence of the Court of Wards was removed from the
Ghatwali Estate. So far as the lands mentioned in Schedule
C were concerned, he came to the conclusion that they were
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
outside the scope of the lease
665
of 1873 and, therefore, the plaintiff was entitled to get
possession thereof. He held that the suit was not barred by
limitation. In the result he decreed the suit of the
plaintiff for possession of A and C Schedule lands. Against
the said decree the 2nd defendant filed an appeal to the
High Court at Patna.
The said appeal was heard by a division Bench of the High
Court. It held that the validity of the lease of 1873
should be judged on the provisions of the Bengal Ghatwali
Lands Act, 1859 (Act V of 1859) and not on those of Court of
Wards Act, 1870, (Act IV of 1870) and so judged the lease
was void, as it was not executed by the Court of Wards as
provided thereunder. It also held that even if Act IV of
1870 applied, the lease would be void inasmuch as no
sanction of the Board of Revenue was - obtained under s. 9
of the said Act.’ In regard to the C Schedule properties it
accepted the finding of the learned Subordinate Judge that
it was not the subject-matter of the said lease. But it
further held that the suit was not barred by limitation. In
the result, the decree of the first court was confirmed; but
in the circumstances of the case, no order for costs was
made. Hence the present appeal.
At the outset learned counsel for the appellant raised a
point for the first time before this Court that as the
Rohini Ghatwali Estate vested in the Government under the
Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1960. (Bihar Act XXX of 1950). The
plaintiff had no locus standi to maintain the suit. When
this appeal came up for hearing before this Court on August
18, 1965 it called for a finding from the High Court on the
point whether the subject-matter of the appeal had vested in
the State Government under the said Act. Pursuant to that
order, the High Court submitted a finding to the effect that
the subject-matter of the appeal vested in the State under
Notification No. 74 L . R./Zan. dated May 22, 1952,
published in Bihar Gazette issued on May 29, 1952. At the
time this Court called for a finding, no decision was given
by it on the question raised by the appellant as regards the
locus standi of the plaintiff to file the suit. After
hearing arguments we now find that this is not a case where
we can dismiss the suit on the ground that the subject-
matter of the suit vested in the State Government. The suit
was filed on October 21, 1952, i.e., after the Estate had
vested in the Government. But the defendants did not
contest the suit on the ground that after such vesting the
plaintiff had no locus standi to maintain the suit. Pending
the appeal in the Patna High Court, the State of Bihar was
made a party to it on February 19, 1957; but the said State
did not put forward its claim to the suit property. That
apart, the question whether Basauri Ghatwali Tenure vested
in the State was the subject-matter of T.S. No. 115 of 1950
between the parties. It is represented to us that the
learned Subordinate Judge held in that suit that the said
tenure also vested in the State, that an appeal filed in the
High Court also went against the respondents and that the
respon-
666
dents would file an appeal to this Court. In the
circumstances we do not think we are justified in permitting
the appellant to raise for the first time before us the
contention based upon the provisions of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act. But we must make it clear that we leave open
the said question in view of the fact that proceedings are
pending in regard thereto,.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
The next question turns upon the validity of the lease deed
of the year 1873. The lease executed by the Court of Wards
is not filed, but the Kabuliat executed by the 2nd
defendant’s ancestor to the Court of Wards is filed and it
is Ex. I in the case. Both the parties proceeded on the
basis that the terms of both the documents are the same.
Under Ex. 1, Maharaja Sir Jaymangal Singh Bahadur, the
ancestor of the 2nd defendant, had taken on lease the A
scheduled property for the purpose of erecting dwelling
houses from Brown Wood, the then Deputy Commissioner,
Santhal Pargana, on behalf of the Court of Wards
representing the Rohini Ghatwali Estate. That document was
executed under ss. I and 2 of Act V of 1859. Learned
counsel for the appellant contended that the validity of the
lease was questioned by the respondents in the plaint only
on the ground that it was not countersigned by the
Commissioner of Bhagalpore, that the High Court went wrong
in invalidating it on a different ground and that, in any
view, having regard to the fact that a period of about 80
years had elapsed from the date of the lease, the High Court
should have presumed that the document was executed in
strict conformity with the provisions of both Act IV of 1870
and Act V of 1859.
Mr. Sarjoo Prasad, learned counsel for the respondents, on
the other hand, argued that both Act IV of 1870 and Act V of
1859 are complementary to each other, that a lease to be
valid should comply with the provisions of both the Acts,
that a lease in order to bind a Court of Wards should be
executed in the manner prescribed by Act TV of 1870 and
that, as the lease was not executed by the Court of Wards as
defined by the said Act with the sanction of the Board of
Revenue, it was null and void on the removal of the Estate
from the superintendence of the Court of Wards.
To appreciate the rival contentions it is necessary to
consider the scope of the said two Acts. The relevant
provisions of the said Acts may be extracted.
The Bengal Ghatwali Lands Act, 1859 (Act V. of 1859).
Section 1. Ghatwals holding lands in the district of
Birbhoom under the provisions of the aforesaid Regulation
(The Bengal Ghatwali Lands Regulation, 1814) shall have the
same power of granting leases for any period which they deem
most conducive to the improvement
667
of their tenures as is allowed by law to the proprietors of
other lands:
Provided that no lease of ghatwali lands for any period
extending beyond the lifetime or incumbency of the grantor
of the lease shall be valid and binding on the successors of
the grantor, unless the same shall be granted for the
working of mines or for the clearing of gunle, or for the
erection of dwelling-houses or manufactories, or for tanks,
canals and similar works, and shall be approved by the
Commissioner of the Division, such approval being certified
by an endorsement on the lease under the signature of the
Commissioner.
Section 2. If any of the said ghatwali lands be at any time
under the superintendence of the Court of Wards, or
otherwise subject to the direct control of the officers of
the Government, it shall be lawful for the Court of’ Wards
or the Commissioner to grant leases for any such purpose as
aforesaid; and every lease so granted shall be valid and
binding on all future possessors of the said lands, anything
in the existing law to the contrary notwithstanding.
The Court of Words Act, 1870 (Act of 1870)
Section 8. In every division of the provinces subject to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
control of the Lieutenant Governor of Bengal, there shall
from and after the passing of this Act, be a Court of Wards.
The Commissioner of revenue of each such division shall be
such court, and shall have and exercise all the powers and
authorities conferred by this Act upon the court over the
persons and property of all wards of’ such court.
Section 9. It shall be competent to the court to manage-
estates and other lands failing under their charge, either
by appointment of a manager, or by giving some or all the
estates and lands in farm, or by adopting such other form of
management as may to the said court seem most expedient.
Provided that no lease or farm shall accept under the
sanction of the Board of Revenue, be given for a term
exceeding ten years, not beyond the period of expiration of
the ward’s minority, and provided that all leases given by
the court, or by the Collector acting for the court, or by
the manager, shall become null and void on the removal of
the estate from the superintendence of the court for
whatever cause, save leases made with such sanction as
aforesaid.
668
A comparative study of these two Acts discloses that Act V
of 1859 is a special Act dealing with a specific subject-
matter, namely, Ghatwali lands in the district of Birbhoom:
it also provides for a particular incident of the tenure,
namely, the power to lease the said lands. It says that a
ghatwal holding lands shall have the same power of granting
leases as is allowed by law to the proprietors of ,other
lands. The proviso thereto enacts that a lease of a
ghatwali land for a period extending beyond the lifetime of
the grantor is not binding on the successors unless the same
was granted for the purposes specified therein with the
approval of the Commissioner signified in the manner
prescribed thereunder. But s. 2 thereof provides that in
the case of a ghatwali land under the superintendence of the
Court of Wards, it shall be lawful to the Court of Wards or
the Commissioner to grant leases of the same for any of the
purposes mentioned in the proviso thereto. In that event,
such leases shall be binding on the future possessors of the
said land. It is, therefore, manifest from the said
sections that a Court of Wards could grant a lease of a
ghatwali land for erecting dwelling houses so as to be
binding on the future possessors of the said land. The
Court of Wards Act deals generally with the management of
all the estates that come under the superintendence of the
Court of Wards and in respect of lands in such estates, the
Court of Wards can grant a lease of the same for a term
exceeding 10 years or beyond the period of expiration of the
ward’s minority only with the sanction of the Board of
Revenue.
It is, therefore, clear that Act V of 1859 is a special
statute and Act IV of 1870 is a general statute. The
special statute does not make the sanction of the Board of
Revenue a pre-condition for the validity of the lease
executed by a Court of Wards so as to bind an future
possessors of the said land, whereas s. 9 of Act V of 1859
imposes such a condition. The argument is that both the
Acts should be read together and, if so read, the sanction
of the Board of Revenue would also be a pre-condition in
addition to the conditions imposed under the proviso to s. I
of Act V of 1859. In our view, such a contention is
untenable. The principle of law in this regard is well
settled. In Maxwell on the Interpretation of Statutes, the
relevant principle is stated, at p. 168, thus:
"A general later law does not abrogate an earlier special
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
one by mere implication. Generalia specialibus non
derogant, or, in other words, ’where there are general words
in a later Act capable of reasonable and sensible
application without extending them to subjects specially
dealt with by earlier legislation, you are not to hold that
earlier and special legislation indirectly repealed,
altered, or derogated from merely by force of such general
words, without any indication of a particular intention to
do so. in such cases it is presumed to have only general
cases
669
in view, and not particular cases which have been already
otherwise provided for by the special Act’. "
If this principle is applicable to the instant case-we do
not see any reason why it is not-the special provisions made
under Act V of 1859 in regard to the conditions imposed for
the validity of such a lease should prevail over those
imposed under the general Act, Act IV of 1870. The general
Act in regard to leases of ghatwali lands should yield to
the special Act. On this construction, the condition for
the validity of the lease in question is that it should have
been executed by the Court of Wards for the purpose of
erection of dwelling houses. The lease of 1873 expressly
states that the lease was granted for erecting dwelling
houses.
The only outstanding question that remains in this context
is whether it was executed by the Court of Wards.
Exhibit I purports to have been given in favour of Brown
Wood, the then Deputy Commissioner of Santhal Pargana, on
behalf of the Court of Wards representing the Rohini
Ghatwali Estate for the purpose of erecting dwelling houses
under ss. I and 2 of Act V of 1859. The only flaw pointed
out by the learned counsel is that there is nothing in the
Act to indicate that a Deputy Commissioner can grant a lease
of a ghatwali land on behalf of the Court of Wards. But the
document was ex facie executed by the Deputy Commissioner on
behalf of the Court of Wards and the validity of it was not
questioned till the suit was filed, that is for about 80
years. The lessee and his successors-in-interest have been
in possession of the lands all these years. In such
circumstances the presumption under s. 114 of the Indian
Evidence Act can readily be drawn. Under that section:
"The Court may presume the existence of any fact which it
thinks likely to have happened, regard being had to the
common course of natural events, human conduct and public
and private business, in their relation to the facts of the
particular case."
Under illustration (e) the ’court may presume that judicial
and official acts have been regularly performed. If an
official act is proved to have been done, it will be
presumed to have been regularly done. In this case it has
been proved that the lease was executed on behalf of the
Court of Wards and that the lessee and his successors have
been in unquestioned enjoyment of the said lands for many
years. Indeed, the plaintiff in the plaint does not allege
that the Deputy Commissioner was not legally authorized to
Act on behalf of the Court of Wards; his only objection is
that the document was not countersigned by the Commissioner
of Bhagalpur Division. But that condition was only
applicable to a lease executed by a Ghatwal and not by the
Court of Wards. In the circumstances, we M It Sup.C.I./66-
11
670
think it is a fit case where the court can reasonably
presume that the Deputy Commissioner, under appropriate
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
rules, was duly authorised to act on behalf of the court of
Wards.
Assuming that the conditions laid down in Act IV of 1870
should also be complied with, we think the respondents are
not in a better position. Under s. 9 of the Court of Wards
Act, the Court of Wards can grant a lease for a term
extending to 10 years or for a period beyond the expiration
of the ward’s minority with the sanction of the Board of
Revenue. Under s. 8 thereof, the Commissioner of Revenue of
each division shall be the Court of Wards. Under s. 9, the
Court of Wards is competent to manage estates and lands
falling under its charge and one of the acts of management
is to grant leases of lands. Under s. 13, when estates or
lands of wards are situated within more than one district
but within the same division, the Collector of each district
shall exercise the duties of the Court of Wards with respect
to the ward’s property situate within his district. A
combined reading of these provisions indicates that the
Collector can grant a lease of a property situate within his
district, for, the grant of a lease of lands in his
management is certainly an act of management. That he can
do so is also implicit under the provisions of s. 9, for,
under that section a lease granted by the Collector acting
for the Court of Wards is valid beyond the prohibited period
if it was made with the sanction of the Board of Revenue.
On a fair reading of the provisions of the Act we have come
to the conclusion that the Collector could grant a lease in
perpetuity with the sanction of the Board of Revenue.
The only question now is whether such a sanction was given
by the Board of Revenue. The Kabuliat indicates ex facie
that the lease was granted in perpetuity by the Deputy
Commissioner on behalf of the Court of Wards. It is not
disputed that the expressions "Deputy Commissioner" and
"Collector" are synonymous. The same officer is called by
both the names and he discharges the same functions. The
land covered by the lease has been in possession and
enjoyment of the lessee for about 80 years. The validity of
the said grant was not questioned all these long years.
Even in the plaint its validity was not challenged on the
ground that the sanction of the Board of Revenue was not
given. For the reasons mentioned by us in the context of
Act V of 1859, in our view, this is a fit case where we can
reasonably presume that when the lease was granted all the
statutory requirements were complied with, that is to say
the Board of Revenue gave its sanction. For the aforesaid
reasons we hold that the lease of 1873 was valid and binding
on the plaintiff.
Now coming to C Schedule lands, the position is simple. It
was concurrently held by the courts below that the C
Schedule property was not the subject-matter of the lease.
The title to the
671
property, therefore, clearly vested in the plaintiff. It is
also found by the lower courts that the said property is a
waste land in regard to which there can be no effective
enjoyment. The High Court, therefore, rightly drew the
presumption that possession followed title.
In this view the question of limitation raised by the
appellant does not call for a decision, for in the case of
the A schedule property the 2nd respondent loses on the
question of title and in regard to the C Schedule property
he will be presumed to be in possession. In either view,
the question of limitation does not arise.
In the result, the appeal is partly allowed and the decree
of the High Court is modified. The parties will pay and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
receive proportionate costs throughout.
Appeal allowed in part.
672