Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHANKAR NARAYAN RANADE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
08/02/1963
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1964 AIR 24 1964 SCR (1) 885
ACT:
Inam-Construction of sanad-Grant of village including
water-If includes water of flowing river-Claim of riparian
right -Vaildiiy-Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879 (Act 5 of
1879), s. 37 (1)-Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879 (Bom. 7 of
1879), s. 5-Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (IV of 1882), s.
8.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was one of the sharers in the Inam village of
vadner and brought a suit against respondents claiming
relief on the basis of his title to the running water of
river valdevi. During World War 11, the military
authorities constructed residential quarters within and
outside the limits of vadner. They built a dam across the
river within the limits of vadner and dug a well near the
bank of the river which was fed by the river water and the
water was carried to the residential areas. The diversion
of water and the use of land continued from 1942 to 1959,
which deprived the appellant and the other Inamdars of their
right to utilise that water for their own gain and of others
; this had caused injury and damage to them, for which, the
appellant claimed compensation from the respondents.
According to the respondents, by virtue of a notification
under s. 5 of the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879, the river had
become a notified canal and consequently the Inamdars had
lost their rights, if any, in the waters of the said river.
They also took a plea of limitation. The trial court
decreed the suit and held that the appellant was entitled to
the compensation only for two years before the date of the
suit and the rest of his claim was barred by time. The
decree was challenged both by the
886
appellant and the respondents by cross-appeals in the High
Court. The High Court dismissed the appeal with
modifications. Then followed an appeal to this court on
certificate.
Held, that the use of the word "water-" in the sanad, pro-
perly construed, excludes the running water of the river and
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it could not be said that title to the flowing water of the
river went with the title to the bed of the river. If the
sanad made no grant of the running water in terms, the
appellant could not claim the same as the riparian owner.
Anapurnabai Gopal v. Government of Bombay (1931) 47 Bom.
L. R. 839 and Lyen v. Fish-Mongers’ Company [1876] 1 App.
Cas. 662, referred to.
Held, further, that the appellant could not be allowed to
make an alternative case on the ground of his rights as a
riparian owner as there was neither any allegation in the
plaint nor any evidence on the record to that effect.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 212 of 1961.
From the judgment and decree dated December 11, 1957, of the
Bombay High Court in First Appeal No. 640 of 1957.
G. S. pathak, N. D. Karkhanis, B. Datta, J.
B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the
appellant.
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General of India, N.S.
Bindra and R. H. Dhebar for P. D. Menon, for the
respondents.
1963. February 8. The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-The short question which this appeal
raises for our decision is whether the appellant Shankar
Narayan Ranade has established his title to the running
water of the river Valdevi which runs through his Inam
village Vadner. The said village had been granted to the
ancestors of
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the appellant by the Peswa Government in 1773 A.D. This
grant was continued by the British Government when the
British Government came in power. The river Valdevi has its
origin in the hills of Trimbak and from those hills it flows
to Vadner and then to Chehedi where it joins the river Darna
and thus loses its individuality. The total length of this
river is about 25 miles, while its length within the limits
of Vadner village is about 2 miles 82 furlongs. The Darna
river after its conjunction with Valdevi proceeds towards
Sangvi and there is merged with Godavari river : The
appellant is one of the sharers in the Inam village of adner
and he brought the present suit No. 12/1950 in the Court of
the Civil judge (Senior Division) at Nasik, claiming reliefs
against the Union of India and the State of Bombay, respon-
dents 1 & 2 respectively, on the basis of his title to the
running water of the said river.
It appears that in 1942, during the period of the 11 Would
War, the Military authorities constructed barracks and other
residential quarters for the army personnel within and
outside the limits of Vadner. They also built a dam across
the river Valdevi within the limits of Vadner and dug a well
near the bank of the river. This well was fed with water
carried by two channels drawn from the river. When the
water reached the well, it was pumped from the well and duly
stored in four reservoirs where it was filtered and then it
was carried by means of pipes to the residential area
occupied by the military personnel.
The appellant then approached the military authorities and
also the Government of Bombay and claimed compensation for
the use of the water and the lands by the military
authorities. Since his request for adequate compensation
was not met, he filed the present suit on March 11, 1950, in
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a representative character under O. 1 r. 8 C. P. C.
888
In this suit, the appellant speaking for himself and for the
other sharers in the Inam village of Vadner alleged that the
jagirdars of the village were, full owners of the entire
area of that village, including the land, the stream and the
water flowing through the stream within the limits of the
village. According to the plaint, the acts of diversion of
water committed by the military authorities had deprived the
appellant and the other Inamdars of their right to utilise
that water for their own gains and thus, had caused injury
and damage to them. As compensation for this damage, the
appellant claimed Rs. 1,11,250/- from the respondents. The
appellant further made a claim for Rs. 750/- as compensation
for the use of his land by the military authorities. The
diversion of water and the use of land continued from 1942
to 1949. Some other incidential reliefs were also claimed
by the appellant.
Respondent No. 2 contested the appellant’s claim. It urged
that the Inamdars were not the grantees of the soil, but
were the grantees of the royal share of the revenue only;
and it was urged that in any case, they had no ownership
over the flowing water of the Valdevi river. Respondent No.
1 adopted the written statement of respondent No. 2 and
filed the Purshis in that behalf. According to the
respondents, the river Valdevi had become a notified canal
by virtue of a notification issued on February 17, 1913
under section 5 of the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879, and in
consequence, the Inamdars had lost their rights, if any, in
the waters of the said river and respondent No. 2 had the
absolute right of the use of the said water. A plea of
limitation was also made by both the respondents.
The learned trial judge made findings in favour of the
appellant on all the issues. He held that the Inamdars were
the grantees of the soil, that the
889
river Valdevi and its flowing water belonged to them, that
the notification on which reliance was placed by the
respondents was invalid, that the acts of the military
authorities were unauthorised and that the appellant was
consequently entitled to the compensation for the use, by
the military authorities, of the water of the river and his
lands and also for the loss of his income from the river
bed. According to the trial Court, the appellant was
entitled to this compensation only for two years before the
date of the suit and the rest of his claim was barred by
time. Accordingly, it passed a decree in favour of the
appellant for an amount of Rs. 26,788/1/as compensation for
the use of water up to December 31, 1949, directed that the
compensation for the use of water for the period subsequent
to January 1, 1950 should be ascertained in execution.
proceedings, and awarded compensation @ Rs. 100/- per annum
for the use of the land, and Rs. 50/- per annum for the loss
of income from the river-bed during the period that the act
of the military authorities continued.
This decree was challenged both by the appellant and the
respondents by cross-appeals Nos. 634/1954 and 640/1953
respectively. ’The appellant claimed a larger amount of
compensation, whereas, according to the respondents, no
compensation was payable in respect of the alleged diversion
of the running water of the river Valdevi. It appears that
before the High Court, the respondents did not dispute the
finding of the trial Court that the Inamdars were the
grantees of the soil and conceded that the rights of the
Inamdars such as they were to the waters of the river
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Valdevi had not been extinguished by the notification issued
under the Bombay Irrigation Act. It was, however, urged
that the Valdevi river being a notified canal, the military
authorities could have used its water by making appropriate
applications under
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ss. 17 and 27 of the said Irrigation Act; but since there
was no evidence to show that any such applications had been
made, the said point did not survive. The main argument
urged by the respondents in their appeal was that the
appellant was not the owner of the running water of the
stream and so, he had no right to claim any compensation for
the alleged diversion of the said water by the military
Authorities. The High Court has substantially accepted this
contention. It has held that as owners of the lands in the
village situated on both banks of the river the Inamdars
were entitled to the use of the water of the river as
riparian owners and what belonged to them was water which
they took out from the river and appropriated to their use;
they were, however, not entitled to claim title over the
flowing water of the river and so, the diversion of the
flowing water of the river cannot sustain their claim for
compensation. The decree passed by the trial Court in
respect of compensation for the wrongful use of the lands
was not challenged by the respondents. In the result, the
High Court modified the decree passed by the trial Court by
setting aside that part of it which related to, the
compensation for the use of the water of the Valdevi river
by the military authorities and confirmed the rest of the
directions issued by the decree. It is against this decree
that the appellant has come to this Court with a certificate
issued by the High Court ; and the main point which has been
urged before us by Mr. Pathak on behalf of the appellant is
that the high Court was in error in rejecting the
appellant’s claim that the Inamdars of the village were the
owners of the running water of the river Valdevi during its
course within the limits of the Inam village of Vadner.
In support of the appellant’s case, Mr. Pathak has urged
that in construing the Sanad on which the appellant’s title
is founded, it would be necessary to
891
bear in mind two important considerations. The first
consideration is that the flowing water of a river
constitutes property which can belong to a citizen either by
grant or otherwise and assistance is sought for this
argument from the provisions of section 37 of the Bombay
Land Revenue; Code (Act V of 187(9). Section 37 (1)
provides, inter alia, that all public roads, lanes and paths
which are not the property of individuals, belong to the
Crown, and amongst the items of property specified in this
clause are included rivers, streams, nallas, lakes, tanks
and all canals and watercourses, and all standing and
flowing water The argument is that this sub-section
Postulates that the items of property specified by it can
belong to private individuals, and it provides that if they
are not shown to belong to private individuals, they would
vest in the State. Therefore, in construing the Sanad, We
ought to remember that the river and its flowing water
constitute property which can be granted by the Ruler to a
citizen.
The other consideration on which Mr. Pathak has relied is
that tinder the provisions of section 8 of the Transfer of
Property Act, it should be assumed that unless a different
intention is expressly or necessarily implied, a transfer of
property passes forthwith to the transferee all the interest
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which the transferor is then capable of passing in the
property, and in the legal incidents thereof. Mr. Pathak
contends that assuming that prior to the grant, the Peshwa
Government as the ruling power of the day was the owner of
the river and its flowing water,, when the said Government
made a grant to the appellant’s predecessors, the principle
enunciated by s. 8 of the Transfer of Property Act should
be applied and the grant should be construed to include all
rights, title and interest of the grantor, unless there is a
contrary provision either expressly made, or implied by
necessary implications.
892
Bearing those two considerations in mind, let us consider
the terms of the Sanad itself. The Sanad is drawn in terms
which are consistent with the pattern prevailing in that
behalf in those days and contains the usual familiar
recitals. The relevant portion of the Sanad reads as
follows :-
"’Seeing the respectable Erahsins, performing
Snan Sandhya (bath and prayer) leading ascetic
life, devoted to the performance of their
duties as laid down in Shrities and Smrities,
the Government has constructed houses there
and given to (them). Thinking that if the
same are given to them, it would be beneficial
to the Swami and to the Kingdom of Swami, the
village of mouje Vadner, Pargana aforesaid in
(a) - (b)
Swarajya as well as Moglai-Dutarfa (on both
sides) has been given to them as Nutan (New)
(c) (d)
Inam together with Sardeshmukhi, Inam Tizai,
(e) (f) (g)
Kulbab-Kulkanu, Hali-Patti, and Pestr-Patti
excluding (the rights of) Hakkadar and Inamdar
and together with water, trees, grass, wood
stones and hidden treasures, for maintenance
of their families."
The Sanad then defines the shares in the current revenue of
the said village amongst the respective shares. In the
concluding portion, it makes certain other provisions with
which we are not concerned in the present appeal. -This
Sanad was executed in 1773 A. D. During the British rule,
this Sanad was confirmed in 1858 A. D. It is common ground
that the material terms which have been construed for the
purpose of determining the title of the appellant are
contained in the earlier sanad.
It would be noticed that the Sanad refers to the rights in
water, trees, grass, wood, stones and hidden
893
treasures. It is well settled that the word "water (jal)"
refers to water in tanks or wells and does not refer to the
flowing water of the river. Indeed, if a grant of the river
including its flowing water is intended to be made, the
Sanad would have definitely used the word "’river (nadi)",
because it is wellknown that when rivers, drains or culverts
are intended to be gifted, the Sanads usually use the words
"nadi and nalla". Therefore, on a plain construction of the
relevant words used in the Sanad, there can be no doubt that
what is conveyed to the grantee by the Sanad is stationary
or static water in the ponds or wells and not the flowing
water of the river. The specific reference to water meaning
water of the well or the pond serves two purposes ; it
defines the kind of water which is conveyed, and by
necessary implication, excludes the grant of flowing water
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of the river. Sanads containing words like these have
frequently been considered by the Bombay High Court in the
past and it has been consistently held that the word "water"
means only water in the ponds or wells and does not refer to
the flowing water of the river, vide Annapurnabai Gopal v.
Government of Bombay (1). Therefore, the two considerations
on which Mr. Pathak strongly relied in support of his
construction of the Sanad do not really assist him. The
language of the Sanad precisely defines the nature of the
water that is conveyed and in doing so, by necessary
implication, excludes the flowing water of the river.
Mr. Pathak, however, suggests that it is not disputed by the
respondents that the Sanad in question grants title to the
soil of the village and is not confined to the -royal share
of the revenue only ; and he, argues that the grant of the
soil necessarily means the grant of the bed of the river
while it flows within the limits of the Inam village. If
the bed of the river has been granted to the appellant’s
predecessors by the Sanad, why does it not follow that the
water flowing
(1) (1945) 47 Bom. L.R. 839,
894
on the said bed during the said limits belongs to the
appellant ? The title to the running water of the river
must, Mr. Pathak says, go with the title to the bed of the
river. There are two difficulties in accepting this
contention. The first difficulty is that the use of the
word "water (jal)" in the Sanad, as we have already held,
excludes the running water of the river. Besides, it is by
no means clear that the title to the flowing water of the
river necessarily goes with the title to the bed of the
river. As was observed by Lord Selborne in Lyon v. Fish-
mongers’ Company. "’The title to the soil constituting the
bed of a river does not carry with it only exclusive right
of property in the running water of the stream, which can
only be appropriated by severance, and which may be lawfully
so appropriated by every one having a right of access to it.
Therefore, the argument that the grant of the soil of the
village including the bed of the river must necessarily
include the grant of the title to the flowing water of the
river can not be accepted.
In this connection, it is necessary to remember that the
river Valdevi flows through the village only for the
distance of 2 miles & 2 furlongs. It is not a case where
the whole of the stream of the river from its origin to its
merging in another river runs entirely through this village.
If a river takes its origin within the limits of an Inam
village and its course is terminated within the limits of
the same village, that would be another matter. In the
present case, if the appellant’s right to the following
water of the river is conceded, it would mean that the
Inamdars would be able to divert the water completely and
destroy the rights of the other riparian owners whose lands
are situated outside the village. They may be able to
pollute the water or do anything with it to the prejudice of
the said riparian owners. Such rights cannot be claimed by
the appellant unless the Sanad in his favour makes the grant
895
of,the running water in terms. As we have already seen, the
Sanad not only does not make any such grant, but by
necessary implication also excludes the running water from
the purview of the grant.
Mr. Pathak then attempted to argue that the diversion of
the water of the river Valdevi during the relevant period
affected the appellant’s right as the riparian owner and
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that, according to him, would furnish him with a cause of
action for claiming damages against the respondents. In
this connection, Mr. Pathak invited our attention to the
observations of Parke, B. in Embrey v. Owen. (1). "Flowing
water," said Parke, B., "is public juris in this sense only
that all may reasonably use it who have a right of access to
it, and that none can have any property in the water itself,
except in the particular portion which he may choose to
abstract from the stream and take into his possession, and
that during the time of his possession only.-The right to
have a stream of water flow in its natural state, without
diminution or alteration, is an incident to the property in
the land through which it passes ; but this is not an
absolute and exclusive right to the flow of all the water,
but only subject to the right of other riparian proprietors
to the reasonable enjoyment of it; and consequently it is
only for an unreasonable and unauthorised use of this common
benefit that any action will lie."
In this connection, Mr. Pathak has also referred us to
the decision of the Privy Council in the Secretary of State
for India v. Subbararayudu (1). In that case, the Privy
Council has elaborately considered the nature and extent of
the rights which a riparian owner can claim. "A riparian
owner observed Viscount Dunedin, "is a person who owns land
abutting on a stream and who as such has a certain right to
take water from the stream. In ordinary cases, the fact
that his land abuts on the stream makes him the proprietor
of the bed of the
(1)(1851) 6 E,.c. 353 : 155 E R. 574.
(2) (1931) L,R. 59 I.A. 56, 63-64,
896
stream usque ad medium filum. But he may not be. He may be
ousted by an actual grant to the person on the other side,
or he may be and often is ousted by the Crown when the
stream is tidal and navigable, the solum of the bed belongs
to the Crown." It was also observed that "the right of a
riparian owner to take water is first of all, for domestic
use, and then for other uses connected with the land, of
which irrigation of the lands which form the property is
one. This right is a natural right and not in the strict
sense of the word an easement, though in many cases it has
been called an easement. "
We do not, however, think that it is possible for us to
allow Mr. Pathak to raise this alternative argument before
us, because it is clear that the reliefs claimed by the
appellant were based only on one ground and that was, the
title to the flowing water of the river. In paragraph 8 of
the plaint the appellant has specifically stated that he was
claiming the amount of compensation for the use of water
belonging to the plaintiff and in paragraph 3 it has been
clearly averred that the running water of the river belongs
to the appellant and so, by the unauthorised acts of the
military authorities, the appellant and the Inamdars were
not able to let out their bed of the stream for the
plantation of water-melons etc., and were thus put to loss.
In other words, the plaint has made no allegation even
alternatively that the appellant and the other Inamdars of
the ’village had certain rights in the flowing water of the
river as riparian owners and the illegal acts of the
military authorities had affected the said rights and
thereby caused damage to them. In fact, as the High Court
has pointed out, there is no evidence on the record which
would sustain the appellant’s claim that the acts of the
military authorities had prejudicially affected the
appellant’s rights as a riparian owner to the use of the
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water, and that means, on the record
897
there is nothing to show that any damage had been caused to
the Inamdars of the village as a result of the diversion of
the water caused by the military authorities. Therefore, we
are satisfied that the appellant cannot now make an
alternative case on the ground of his rights as a riparian
owner.
The result is, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs,
two sets; one hearing fee.
Appeal dismissed.