Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ABDUL WAHEED KHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHAWANI AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/02/1966
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
RAMASWAMI, V.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1718 1966 SCR (3) 617
ACT:
Bhopal State Land Revenue Act (4 of 1932), ss. 71, 89, 93,
95 and 200(1)-Suit based on title-If barred by decision of
revenue officer.
HEADNOTE:
The suit of the appellant as khatedar of the land in
dispute, for ejectment of the respondents on the ground that
they were shikmi tenants, was decreed by the Tahsildar under
s. 71 of the Bhopal State Land Revenue Act, 1932. Within 12
years of the date of their dispossession the respondents
filed the suit against the appellant in the civil court,
claiming to be the khatedars and for possession. The lower
courts and the High Court held that the decision of the
revenue court did not bar the jurisdiction of the civil
court on the question of title to the suit land and decreed
the suit.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : Section 200(1) of the Act, read with ss. 71, 89, 93
and 95, does not exclude the jurisdiction of the civil court
to entertain a suit based on title. [621 E-F]
Section, 200(1) bars the civil court from entertaining a
suit with respect to any matter which a revenue officer is
empowered by the Act to determine. But the question of
title is a matter foreign to the scope of s. 71. The
Tahsildar is no doubt empowered under s. 93 to decide on any
dispute about any entry to be made in the Record of rights
showing the persons who are holders of land, but, under s.
95, the effect of such an entry is only to make it a
presumptive piece of evidence in a collateral proceeding
such as a suit based on title. Therefore, it is assumed
that such a suit could be filed in spite of a decision under
s. 93. The suit was within time under Art. 142, Limitation
Act, 1908, and since the High Court and the lower courts
held that the presumption raised by the entry was rebutted
by the oral and documentary evidence adduced by the res-
pondents, the correctness of the concurrent findings of fact
could not be canvassed in the appeal under Art. 136. [621 B,
C; 622 B, C]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1039 of 1963.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
June 24, 1959 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Civil
Second Appeal No. 8 of 1957.
N. N. Keswani and Urmilla Kapur, for the appellant.
B. Sen, C. L. Sanghi and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the
respondents.
The Judgment of the Court as delivered by:
Subba Rao, J. This appeal by special leave raises mainly the
question whether a civil court had jurisdiction to entertain
the
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suit filed by the respondents for the recovery of possession
of the plaint-schedule land and mesne profits’
The relevant facts may be briefly stated: The respondents,
claiming to be the khatedars of an extent of 57.07 acres of
land in Mauza Bhanpur, Tahsil Huzur, Western District
Bhopal, filed a suit against the appellant on the ground
that the latter was in illegal possession thereof. The
appellant contested the suit mainly on the ground that he
was the khatedar of the said land and that he was in
possession thereof in that capacity. He also pleaded that
his title to the property was declared by the Tahsildar in
an application for ejectment filed by him against the
respondents under the Bhopal State Land Revenue Act, 1932
(Act No. IV of 1932), hereinafter called the Act, and that
the said decision would be a bar to the maintainability of
the suit in a civil court.
The learned Subordinate Judge, Bhopal, held that the res-
pondents were the khatedars of the suit land and that they
had been in possession thereof in that capacity. He held
that the suit was maintainable in a civil court.
On appeal, the Additional District Judge agreed with the
findings arrived at by the trial court.
On second appeal to the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Shiv
Dayal, J., of that Court, after admitting certain
notifications as evidence, came to the same conclusion both
on the question of title and on the question of
jurisdiction. In the result he dismissed the second appeal.
Hence the present appeal by special leave.
Mr. Keswani, learned counsel for the appellant, raised
before us a number of points; but his arguments may
conveniently be crystallized into the following points: (1)
whether the decision of the revenue court on the question of
title to the suit land bars the jurisdiction of the civil
court; (2) whether the concurrent finding given by the lower
courts on the question of title was vitiated by an error of
law by the courts wrongly throwing the burden of
establishing title on the appellant notwithstanding the fact
that in the Record of Rights the said land was entered in
the name of the appellant; and (3) whether the suit was
barred by limitation. The other questions mooted by him
were pure questions of fact and, therefore, they need not be
noticed.
To appreciate the first question it is necessary to notice a
few facts. The appellant as khatedar of the land in dispute
had filed a suit under s. 71 of the Act in the court of the
Tahsildar, Tahsil Huzur, Bhopal for the ejectment of the
respondents on the ground that they were his shikmi tenants.
The said court held that the appellant was the khatedar of
the land in dispute and the respon-
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dents were his shikmi tenants. The present contention is
that the said decree was given by a court of exclusive
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jurisdiction and, therefore, the respondents could not
reagitate the same subjectmatter in a civil court.
Under s. 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, a civil court can
entertain a suit of a civil nature except a suit of which
its cognizance is either expressly or impliedly barred. It
is settled principle that it is for the party who seeks to
oust the jurisdiction of a civil court to establish his
contention. It is also equally well settled that a statute
ousting the jurisdiction of a civil court must be strictly
construed. The question is whether a suit based on title of
a khatedar and for possession is either expressly or by
necessary implication barred by the provisions of the Act.
The relevant provisions of the Act may now be read:
Section 200 (i) Except as otherwise provided in this Act, or
in any other enactment for the time being in force no civil
court shall entertain any suit instituted or application
made to obtain a decision or order on any matter which the
Government or any revenue officer is, by this Act, empowered
to determine, decide or dispose of, and in particular and
without prejudice to the generality of this provision, no
civil court shall exercise jurisdiction over any of the
following matters
Cls. (a) to (u)
No reliance is placed on the matters described in cls. (a)
to (u) of’ this section. But it is said that under the
other provisions of the Act a revenue officer is empowered
to determine, decide or dispose of a question of title of a
person to a land as khatedar and, therefore, a suit in a
civil court is barred in terms of s. 200(1). The first
section relied upon in that context is s. 71, which reads:
"A shikmi may be ejected by order of the Tahsildar if he
fails to vacate land on the termination of his lawful
possession or does anything in contravention of his agree-
ment, if any, provided that no ejectment shall take effect
before the commencement of the next agricultural year."’
"Shikmi" is defined under the Act to mean a person who holds
land from an occupant and is or but for a contract, would
be. liable to pay rent for such land to that occupant, but
does not include a mortgagee or a person holding land
directly from Government. "Occupant" is defined to mean "a
person who holds land direct from Government or would do so
but the right of collecting land revenue having been
assigned or relinquished." Section 71, therefore,
presupposes the existence of a legal relationship of
landlord and tenant and enables the occupant to evict his
shikmi if he does not comply with one or other of the
conditions mentioned therein; it does not comprehend a
decision on a question of
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title. The question of title is a matter foreign to the
scope of S. 71. If so, a suit in a civil court for a
declaration of title and possession by a khatadar against a
trespasser falls outside the -scope of S. 200(1) of the Act.
The second limb of the contention turns upon a fasciculus of
provisions relating to the preparation of the Record of
Rights. The relevant provisions are as follows:
Section 89. The Record of rights in each village shall
comprise
(1)........................................
(2) a register, to be called the "register of rights",
showing all persons who are holders of land and the nature
and extent of their interests and the conditions and
liabilities, if any, attaching thereto.
Section 92. No entry in the register of rights shall be
contrary to the decree or order of a civil court.
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Section 93. (1) If any dispute arises about any entry to be
made in any document of the record of rights, the Tahsildar
or other officer preparing the record shall inquire into it
summarily and shall pass such order as he thinks fit.
(2) Such order, if passed with reference to any entry in
the register of rights, shall not be subject to appeal, but
no such order shall debar any person from establishing any
right to land in a civil court, and the civil court may
direct that the entry relating to the land shall be altered
in accordance with its decision.
(3) Any such order, if passed with reference to a record
other than the register of rights shall be subject to appeal
but shall not be called in question in a civil court, except
in so far as any private right, is infringed and then only
by a suit instituted within one year from the date on which
the contents of the record were announced under section 88.
Section 95. Any entry in the register of rights shall be
presumed to be correct until the contrary is proved,. and
all other entries in the record of rights, subject to any
change which may be ordered in appeal, revision or review
only or by a civil court under sub-section (3) of section
93, shall be conclusive evidence of the facts to which they
relate.
On the basis of the said provisions it is argued that under
the said provisions the right of a person to hold land shall
be entered in the register of rights under s. 89(2) of the
Act and a dispute in respect thereof shall be decided by the
Tahsildar under s. 93(1) thereof and
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that thereafter such an entry shall be rectified only by
filing a suit in a civil court in the manner prescribed in
s. 93(2) of the Act and that, therefore, the Tahsildar,
subject to the statutory suit, kw the exclusive jurisdiction
to determine or decide the question in regard to the said
matter within the meaning of s. 200 of the Act. This
argument appears to be plausible, but a deeper scrutiny re-
veals a fallacy. The scope of an entry in regard to the
right to hold a land under s. 89(2) of the Act and the
decision under s. 93 thereof is disclosed by s. 95. When
such an entry is made in the register of rights and is not
corrected in the manner prescribed in s. 93, under s. 95 it
shall be presumed to be correct until the contrary is
proved. The effect of such an entry, therefore, is only to
make it a presumptive piece of evidence in a collateral
proceeding: that is to say, in a suit based on title when
such an entry is relied upon by one or other of the parties,
the court shall presume it to be correct unless the other
party rebuts the presumption. Not only s. 95 does not by
necessary implication bar a suit but also assumes that in
such a suit the correctness of such an entry could be
questioned subject to the said presumption.
Learned counsel for the appellant, in support of his
contention, relied upon Gokhul Sahu v. Jodu Nundun Roy(1),
and Jatindra Nath Chowdhury v. Azizur Rahaman ’Shanao.
Those decisions turned upon provisions which are not in pari
materia with those with which we are now concerned. They do
not, therefore, throw any light on the construction of the
relevant provisions of the Act.
It is, therefore, clear that s. 200(1) of the Act, read with
the said group of sections, does not exclude the
jurisdiction of a civil court to entertain a suit based on
title.
Learned counsel for the appellant then contended that though
the patta was granted in favour of the ancestors of the
respondents in the year 1929 it was revoked later on, that
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under the new settlement of 1935 the appellant’s name was
recorded in the register of rights, that in subsequent
khasras up to 1953 his name continued to be shown as the
owner of the suit land and that, therefore, the courts below
should have held that the presumption raised by the register
of rights in his favour was not rebutted and the plaintiff
had failed to prove his title. But a perusal of the
judgments of the courts below shows that all the courts,
after taking into consideration the entire oral and
documentary evidence, came to the conclusion that the
respondents had established their title. Indeed, though the
High Court rightly pointed out that the finding of fact
given by the lower appellate court was conclusive, in view
of the insistence of the Advocate in the High Court, it
considered the entire documentary and oral evidence over
again and came
(1) [1890] I.L.R. 17 Cal. 721.
MIlSup. Cl/66-8
(2) A.I.R. 1923 Cal. 433.
622
to the same conclusion. It also admitted the notifications
in respect of the settlement as fresh evidence and, after
considering them, held that they did not disclose that the
patta issued in favour of the respondents’ ancestors was
cancelled. In our view, the High Court should have accepted
the finding of the first appellate court and should not have
reviewed the evidence over again. The courts in effect held
that the said presumption was rebutted by the oral and
documentary evidence adduced by the respondents. We are
not, therefore, justified in an appeal under Art. 136 of the
Constitution to permit the appellant to canvass the
correctness of the said concurrent findings of fact.
The last argument raises a question of limitation. If, as
we have held, the suit is outside the scope of the Act, the
question of limitation turns upon the provisions of the
Indian Limitation Act. The suit was originally filed by the
respondents for a declaration of their title to the suit
property, but as they were dispossessed of the land on March
5, 1953, subsequent to the filing of the suit, the plaint
was amended on july 24, 1954, praying for delivery of
possession. To such a suit Art. 142 of the Limitation Act
applies. The suit is, therefore, clearly not barred by
limitation.
In the result, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed.
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