Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SURAJNATH AHIR AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PRITHINATH SINGH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/05/1962
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
BENCH:
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1963 AIR 454
CITATOR INFO :
E 1971 SC 77 (10)
F 1971 SC2251 (6)
F 1977 SC 5 (7,10,22)
RF 1979 SC1769 (26,28)
R 1988 SC1478 (6)
ACT:
Land Reform--Suit for recovery of possession after re-
demption of mortgage--Limitation--Vesting of estates in the
State--Subsisting title to possession, if confers right to
recover possession--Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950 (Bihar XXX
of 1950), ss. 2(k) 3(1), 4(a), 4(f) , 6(1) (a) (b), (c),
HEADNOTE:
The plaintiff-respondents sued the appellants for recovery
of possession of the lands in dispute. The appellants had
entered into possession of the lands on the strength of a
mortgage deed. The mortgagors executed another mortgage
with respect to their milkiat interest in favour of certain
persons. The plaintiff-respondents bought the milkiat
rights shares together with the kasht lands from the
mortgagors and entered into possession of the milkiat
property and subsequently redeemed the mortgage deeds in
1943. The appellants however did not make over possession
of the lands in dispute after the mortgages had been
redeemed. The trial court found that the plaintiff-
respondents had no subsisting title to the lands and that
the suit was barred by adverse possession and limitation.
The High Court, on appeal filed by the plaintiff-
respondents, allowed the appeal on the
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ground that the defendant-appellants were in possession only
as mortgagees and that after the redemption of the mortgage
they had no right to continue in possession.
The appellants than appealed to the Supreme Court by
certificate granted by the High Court. Apart from the ques-
tions of estoppel and limitation by adverse possession the
main point which was raised in the appeal was that the
plaintiff-respondent had no subsisting title to evict the
appellant in view of the provisions of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act, 1950.
Held, that the suit was instituted within twelve years of
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the redemption of the mortgage deed and was not therefore
barred by limitation.
Section 4 of the Act vests in the State all the interests of
the proprietor or tenure-holder, including the right to
recover possession from the trespasser, except those
interests which are expressly saved by the Act. Since no
mortgage subsisted on the date of the vesting in the State
the respondent could not take advantage of s. 6(1) (c) of
the Act (as amended by Act XVI of 1959).
The mere fact that a proprietor had a subsisting title to
possession over certain land on the date of vesting would
not make that land under his ’Khas Possession’. The res-
pondents lost their right to recover possession from the
appellants even if they were trespassers, on their estate
vesting in the State.
Brijnandan Singh v. Jamuna Prasad A. I. R., 1958 Pat. 589,
Haji Sk. Subhan v. Madhorao [1962] Supp. I S.C.R. 123.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 533 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated January 28, 1959,
of the Patna High Court, in Appeal from Original Decree No.
143 of 1948.
B. K. Saran and K. L. Mehta, for the appellants.
R. K. Garg, D. P. Singh, S. C. Agarwal and M. K. Ramamurthi,
for the respondents.
1962 May 4. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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RAGHUBAR DAYAL, J.-This appeal, on a certificate granted by
the High Court of Judicature at Patna, arises in the
following circumstances:
The plaintiffs-respondents sued the appellants for the
recovery of possession of the disputed lands and mesne
profits as the family of the defendants did not have any
raiyat interest in the disputed lands except rehan interest
under the rehan deed dated July 3, 1906, and that subsequent
to the redemption of that deed, they had no right to remain
in possession and occupation of the disputed lands.
The plaintiffs alleged that Pranpat Bhagat and others held
eight annas share of milkiat interest in village Sevathra,
pargana Nonaur, tauzi No. 3879 and that the other eight
annas share was held by Kunj Bihari Bhagat and others.
These persons also held khudkasht lands in the village and
that such lands were treated as kasht lands. In 1906 Ram
Autar Bhagat, one of the members of the joint family of
Pranpat Bhagat, executed the mortgage deed with respect to
15 bighas of land out of 16 bighas of kasht lands, to Sheo
Dehin Ahir, on behalf of his joint family. The defendants
entered into possession on the basis of that mortgage deed,
they having had no connection with the land mortgaged prior
to the execution of the mortgage deed.
Later on, in 1912, Ram Lal Bhagat and Munni Bhagat, of
Pranpat’s family, executed another mortgage deed with
respect to their entire milkiat interest in favour of Jatan
Ahir and Ram Saran Ahir who also belonged to the family of
Sheo Dehin Ahir. They then got into possession of the fresh
land which had been mortgaged.
Ram Lal Bhagat and others sold their milkiat share together
with the kasht lands to the plaintiffs in 1915. The
plantiffs entered into possession
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of the milkiat property and subsequently redeemed the
mortgage deeds in 1913. The plaintiffs also purchased four
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annas share belonging to the branch’ of Kunj Bihari Bhagat,
The other tour annas share of that branch was purchased by
Raja Singh who then sold it to Ram Ekbal Singh, impleaded as
defendant No. 6 in the plaint. The defendants, however, did
not make over possession of the land in suit after the
mortgage deeds had been redeemed and hence the suit was
instituted for a declaration and recovery of possession.
The defendants 1 to 5 did not admit the allegations made by
the plaintiffs and stated the real state of affairs to be
that the disputed lands were never the bakasht lands of the
proprietors of the village and were really the raiyati qaimi
kasht lands of the defendants. that the plaintiffs never
purchased the disputed lands, that the disputed lands were
the raiyati kasht lands of Ram Autar Bhagat only, who let
out the disputed lands in rehan under different rehan deeds
alleging them to be raiyati kasht lands, and who had earlier
treated it as his exclusive raiyati kasht lands, and that,
ultimately, Ram Autar Bhagat sold the disputed lands to the
defendants and got their names entered as qaimi raiyati
kushtkars. It was further alleged that the defendants bad
acquired title to the land in suit by virtue of adverse
possession.
The trial Court found that the plaintiffs had no subsisting
title to the lands in suit as those lands were not sold to
the plantiffs who had purchased the milkiat interest
including the bakasht and zerat lands, that the suit was
barred by adverse possession also and that it was barred by
limitation. It therefore dismissed the suit.
On appeal, the High Court held that the plaintiffs did
purchase the land in suit and that the defendants were in
possession only as mortgagees
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and that, after the redemption of the mortgage, they had no
right to continue in possession. It therefore allowed the
appeal and decreed the plain tiffs’ suit. The defendants
have now filed this appeal.
Learned counsel for the appellants has urged five points:
(1) The record of rights supported the case of
the defendants that they were the qaimi
raiyats and that the High Court wrongly
construed them.
(2) The sale deed of 1915 in favour of the
respondents did not include the land in suit.
(3) Even if the plaintiffs-respondents
acquired right to the land in suit by
purchase, they are estopped from taking any
action against the defendants-appellants who
had been in possession for long.
(4) The suit is barred by limitation as the
defendants had perfected their title by
adverse possession and the plaintiffs had not
been in possession within limitation,
(5) The plaintiffs-respondents had no
subsisting title to evict the appellants in
view of the provisions of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act, 1950 (Bihar Act XXX of 1950).
The case set up by the defendants with respect to their
acquiring the qaimi raiyati kasht rights, in their written
statement, has been disbelieved by the Courts below and, we
think, rightly. It follows that the defendants were in
possession of the land in suit only as mortgagees as held by
the Court below and. that they had no right to possession
after the mortgage had been redeemed.
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By the sale deed dated October 5, 1915, Ram Lal Bhagat and
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others sold the property described thus in the sale deed:
"8 (eight) annas ancestral milkiat interest,
out of Tauzi No. 3879, in mauza Sewathra,
pergana Nanaur, thana Pito, district Shahabad,
Sub-registry office Jagdishpur, the Sadar Jama
whereof is Rs. 190/which has been in
possession and occupation of us, the
executants without copartnership and
interference by anybody together with all
the present Zamindari rights appertaining
thereto, without excluding any interest and
profit, together with Zirat lands which have
been recorded in the survey papers in the
names of us, the executants as bakasht (lands)
and new and old party lands, aam and Khas
Chairmazrua lands, baharsi dih, house of the
tenants ground rent, ahar, pond, reservoir,
tank, orchard, fruit-bearing and non-fruit-
bearing trees and bambooclumps that is the
entire lands and profit (derived from)
zamindari below and above the surface existing
or which may be derived in future without
excluding anything."
They emphasized the extent of the sale property further by
saying:
"We, the executants, gave up and relinquished
our respective possession and occupation of
vended property today. The entire interest
excluding only the chaukidari chakran
(service) land which has been let out in
settlement with us’ the executants is being
sold. The chaukidari land only is not being
sound (sic)."
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It is clear therefore, as held by the High Court, that the
land in suit which is included in the milkiat share was not
excepted from sale. The only property excluded from sale
was the chaukidari chakran land.
The long possession of the appellants therefore does not
estop the respondents from recovering possession from them.
The suit was instituted within 12 years of the redemption of
the mortgage deed and is not therefore barred by limitation.
The only other question to determine is whether the
plaintiffs-respondents cannot recover possession from the
appellants in view of the provisions of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act, 1950 (Act XXX of 1950), hereinafter called the
Act, which came into force during the pendency of the appeal
in the High Court. The trial Court dismissed the suit on
March 8,1948. The High Court allowed the appeal on January
28, 1958. The Act came into force on September 25, 1950.
Sub-section (1) of s. 3 of the Act empowered the State
Government to declare by notification that the estates or
tenures of a proprietor or tenure holder specified in the
notification have passed to and become vested in the State.
Such vesting took place on January 1, 1955. It is contended
for the appellants that the respondents ceased to have any
proprietary right in the land in suit when their estate
vested in the State and therefore they had no right to
recover possession from them.
Section 4 of the Act mentions the Consequences which follow
on the publication of the notification under sub-s. (1) of
s. 3. According to s. 4(a), such estate or tenure including
the interests of the, proprietor or tenure-holder in the
various objects mentioned therein shall, with effect from
the date of vesting, vest absolutely in the State free fro.,
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all encumbrances, and such proprietor or tenureholder shall
cease to have any interest in such estate or tenure other
than the interest expressly saved by or under the provisions
of the Act. This makes it absolutely clear that after the
vesting of the estate, no interest other than that expressly
saved by or under the provisions of the Act remained in the
respondents. The right to recover possession from .the
trespasser also got vested in the State. Subclause (f) of
s. 4 provides that the Collector shall take charge of such
estate or tenure and of all interests vested in the State
under the section.
In this connection reference may be made to the decision of
this Court in Haji Sk. Subhan v. Madhorao (1) which dealt
with a similar question in the context of the provisions of
the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights
(Estate’s, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950 (M.P. Act No.
1 of 1951).
We have now to consider whether any interest in the land in
suit was expressly saved by or under the provision of the
Act in favour of the respondents.
Section 6 of 4 the Act provides inter-alia that on and from
the date of vesting, all lands used for agricultural
purposes which were in khas possession of a proprietor or
tenure-holder on the date of vesting shall be deemed to be
settled by the State with such proprietor or tenure-holder
as the case may be and such proprietor or tenure-holder
shall be entitled to retain possession thereof and hold them
as a raiyat under the State having occupancy rights in
respect of such lands subject to the payment of such fair
and equitable rent as may be determined by the Collector.
The lands coming within this section included lands used for
agricultural purposes forming the subject matter of a
subsisting mortgage on the redemption of which the
(1) [1962] Supp. 1 S.C.R. 123.
298
intermediary is entitled to recover khas possession. thereof
It follows that such lands, though not in the actual khas
possession of the proprietor on the date of vesting would
also be deemed to be settled with the proprietor, who would
retain their possession as raiyat under the State.
According to s.2(k) of the Act,
" ’khas possession’ used with reference to the
possession of a proprietor or tenure-holder of
any land used for agricultural or horticul-
tural purposes means the possession of such
proprietor or tenure-holder by cultivating
such land or carrying on horticultural
operations thereon himself with his own stock
or by his own servants or by hired labour or
with hired stock."
On the date of vesting, the respondents were not in khas
possession of the land in suit as they were not in
possession in any of the manner mentioned in this
definition.
Section 6 does not really enlarge the scope of the
expression ’Khas possession but includes lands covered by
cls. (a), (b) and (c) of sub. s. (1) among the lands which
can be deemed to be settled by the State with the
proprietor. Clause (c) originally was :
"lands used for agricultural or horticultural
purposes and in the possession of a mortgagee
which immediately before the execution of the
mortgage bond were in khas possession of Such
’proprietor or tenure holder-"
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This clause was substituted by another clause by a. 6 of the
Bihar land Reforms (Amendment) Acts 1959 (Act XVI of 1959)
and under that section the substituted clause shall be
deemed always to have
299
been substituted, that is to say, is to be deemed to have
been in the of original Act from the very beginning. The
substituted el. (c) reads :
"(c) lands used for agricultural or horti-
cultural purposes forming the subject matter
of a subsisting mortgage on the redemption of
which the intermediary is entitled to recover
khas possession thereof. "
It is therefore necessary for the respondents, to get
advantage of the pro-visions of this clause, that there be a
subsisting mortgage on the date of vesting and that the land
included in the subsisting mortgage be such that on the
redemption of the mortgage the respondents be entitled to
recover khas possession thereof. No mortgage subsisted on
the date of vesting and therefore the benefit of this clause
cannot be taken by the respondents. The land in suit does
not come within the provisions of el. (c) or any other
clause of sub-s. (1) of s. 6 of the Act. This point was
raised in the High Court which observed as follows in this
connection :
"In the first place the defendants were in
possession as mortgages and, even section 6 of
the Bihar land Reforms Act provides that, the
possession of the mortgagee is the possession
of the mortgagor even for the purpose of
construing the meaning of Khas possession of
the intermediary over the land which may be
deemed to be settled with him by virtue of
section 6 of the Act. The defendants’
possession being the mortgagees’ possession,
the case is covered by the terms of section 6
itself. Apart from it, it has been held in
the case of Brij Nandan Singh v. Jamuna Prasad
Sahu and Another (First
300
Appeal No. 205 of 1948) by a Division Bench of
this Court that the words ’Khas possession
include subsisting title to possession as well
and any proprietor, whose right to get khas
possession of the land is not barred by any
provision of law, will have a right to recover
possession and the State of Bihar shall treat
him as Raiyat with occupancy right and not the
trespassers. The contention of the learned
Advocate General must fail in terms of the
above decision."
On the date of vesting, the appellants were not in
possession as mortgagees. The mortgages had been
redeemed in 1943, Thereafter, the possession of the
appellants wasnot as mortgagees. It may be as trespassers
or in any other capacity. The land in suit, therefore, did
not come within cl. (c) of s. 6 of the Act as it stood when
the High Court. delivered the judgment.
Reliance was placed by the High Court on the case reported
as Brijnandan Singh v. Jamuna Prasad (1) for the
construction put on the expression ’khas possession’ to
include subsisting title to possession as well, and
therefore for holding that any proprietor, whose right to
get khas possession of the land is not barred by any
provision of law, will have a right to recover possession
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and that the St-.to of Bihar shall treat him as a raiyat
with occupancy right and not as a trespasser. We do not
agree with this view when the definition of ’khas
possession’ means the possession of a proprietor or tenure-
holder either by cultivating such land himself with his own
stock or by his own servants or by hired labour or with
hired stock. The mere fact that a proprietor has a sub-
sisting title to possession over certain land on the date of
vesting would not make that land under his ’khas
possession’.
(1) A. I. R. 1958 Pat. 589.
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It is clear therefore that the land in suit cannot de deemed
to be settled with the respondents by the State in
accordance with the provisions of s. 6 of the Act. In the
absence of any such settlement, no rights over the land in
suit remained in the respondents after the date of vesting,
all their rights having vested in the State by virtue of
sub. s. (1) of s. 3 of the Act.
We are therefore of opinion that the respondents lost their
right to recover possession. from the appellants, even if
they were trespassers, on their estate vesting in the State,
by virtue of ss. 3 and 4 of the Act and that therefore,
thereafter, they had no subsisting right to recover
possession from the appellants. The right to possession now
vests in the State. The respondents being no more entitled
to recover possession of the land in suit the decree of the
High Court has to be set aside. We, accordingly, allow the
appeal, set aside the decree. of the Court below and restore
the decree of the trial Court, though for reasons other than
those given by that Court in its judgment. In the
circumstances of the case, we order the parties to bear
their own costs.
Appeal allowed.
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