Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
INDER SINGH & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/04/1967
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ)
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 1776 1967 SCR (3) 603
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1972 SC2097 (18)
ACT:
Pepsu Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1955 (Pepsu 13 of
1955) s. 32-FF-Limit of holding by Hindu undivided family,
if defeats right of its member-If infringes Art. 19 and
protected by Art. 31-A.
Constitution of India, Arts. 19 and 31-A-Validity of s. 32-
FF of Pepsu Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act
HEADNOTE:
While ascertaining the surplus land under the Pepsu Tenancy
and Agricultural Lands Act, the excess over 30 acres owned
by the appellants, a Hindu undivided family was declared
surplus. In ascertaining the surplus, the authorities
ignored the transfer of land by the Karta of the family to
an outsider by a registered deed. The appellants
unsuccessfully filed writ petition. In appeal to this
Court, the appellants contended that s. 32-KK deprives a
coparcener in a Hindu undivided family of his rights of
property. in that it takes away the rights of the
descendants of the land-owner to claim for themselves the
permissible area and vest them in the head of the family
alone so that there is not only an infringement of the right
to hold property under Art. 19(1) (f) but also
discrimination in favour of the head of the family
infringing thereby Art. 14 and that the section cannot be
said to be legislation whose object is agrarian reform and,
therefore, is not protected by Art. 31-A.
HELD:The appeal must fail.
In Pritam Singh v. State of Punjab [(1967) 2 S.C.R. 536]
this Court upheld the validity of s. 32-FF and held that
that section was protected by Art. 31-A against any
challenge under Art. 19. If a transfer or a disposition of
land can validly be ignored under s. 32-FF for the purpose
of ascertaining surplus land and acquisition of such surplus
land bit-he State and that section is protected by Art. 31-
A, it is difficult to say why s. 32-KK which, equates a
Hindu undivided family with an individual landowner for the
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limited purpose of the Act without affecting the other
rights of its members is not equally protected by that
Article. The object of enacting s. 32-KK was to prevent the
landowner and his descendants by reason of their
constituting a Hindu undivided family from each of them
claiming in his own right the permissible area from the
joint holding of the family and thus retain for themselves
in the aggregate area larger than 30 standard acres and
preventing thereby distribution of surplus area. [608 F-H]
The contention that the section is not one relating to
agrarian reform is hardly sustainable in view of the
objects of the Act in general and of s. 32-KK in particular.
Similarly, the contention that the section has the affect of
defeating the rights of a member of a Hindu undivided family
from the family property also cannot be sustained because
his rights in the permissible area retained by the landowner
and his right to compensation in respect of the surplus area
are not touched by the section. Nor is it possible to say
that the section results in the transfer of rights of the
descendants of a landowner in the permissible or surplus
area in favour of such landowner. The section does not
effect any change in the rights of
604
the descendants as members of a Hindu undivided family or
the relationship of the family inter se except to the extent
of depriving the descendants of their right to claim the
ceiling area for each of them. [609 B-E]
The decision of Ranjit Singh v. The State of Punjab ([1965]
1 S.C.R. 82) points out that the fixing of ceiling on lands
and provisions relating to it would form part of and
constitute agrarian reform and, therefore, such provisions
would have the protection of Art. 31-A. [607 H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 92 of 1966.,
Appeal from the order dated May 30, 1963 of the Punjab High
Court in Letters Patent Appeal No. 148 of 1963.
R. V. S. Mani and M. L. Agarwal, for the appellants.
Dipak Dutt Chaudhuri and R. N. Sachthey, for the respon-
dents.
S. K. Mehta, and K. L. Mehta, for the interveners.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. The appellants are members of a Hindu undivided
family of which the first appellant is the Karta. Prior to
August 21, 1956, the family owned 64.35 standard acres of
land in village Kurali, District Patiala. The land stood in
the revenue records in the name of the first appellant. On
December 23, 1957, the first appellant transferred 26
standard acres to one Babu Singh by a registered deed.
According to them, they had Planted an orchard in 10 acres
of land. Their contention was that the said 26 standard
acres and the said 10 standard acres could not be taken into
account while ascertaining surplus land under the Pepsu
Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, XIII of 1955. Both
these claims were rejected by the authorities. By his order
dated January 20, 1961’, respondent ’No. 3 declared 34.35
standard acres out of the said 64.35 standard acres as
’Surplus land. The appeal filed by the appellants against
the said order was rejected. They then filed a revision
application before respondent No. 1. While that was pending
they filed a writ petition in the High Court. During the
pendency of that writ petition. the Punjab Legislature
passed the Amendment Act, XVI of 1962 inserting S. 32-KK in
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the principal Act. The learned Single Judge,. who heard the
writ petition, held (1) that the finding that the appellants
had not planted the said orchard within the statutory period
was one of fact and could not be challenged in the writ
petition and (2) that the said transfer of 26 standard acres
was hit by S. 32-FF and therefore was rightly ignored while
ascertaining the surplus land. The main contention urged
before the High Court, however, was that each of the three
appellants who constituted the said family was entitled to
,retain 30 standard acres, that as the total holding was
only 64.35
605
standard acres, there was no surplus land liable to be
acquired under the Act and, therefore, the order declaring
34.35 Standard acres, as surplus land was illegal. The High
Court following its earlier decision in Bhagat v. State of
Punjab(1) "missed the writ petition. A Letters Patent
Appeal against that judgment was dismissed in limine. The
present appeal by certificate is directed against the
dismissal of the said writ petition.
Mr. Mani’s contentions were: (1) that under Hindu Law every
coparcener in a Hindu undivided family acquires right in the
property of such coparcenery on birth and is entitled to a
right of joint possession and enjoyment of its entire
property, that S. 32KK deprives such a coparcener of his
rights of property in that that it takes away the rights of
the descendants of the landowner to claim for themselves the
permissible area and vest them in the head of the family
alone so that there is not only an infringement of the right
to hold property under Art. 19 (1 ) (f ) but also dis-
crimination in favour of the head of the family infringing
thereby Art. 14; (2) that the effect of s. 32-KK is that
where an undivided family is possessed of land, instead of
each of the descendants getting a ceiling area of 30
standard acres, the head of the family alone gets 30
standard acres and therefore the section is violative of
Art. 31; (3) that the section, being applicable only to
Hindu undivided families infringes Art. 15(1) inasmuch as it
discriminates by reason only of religion such families as
against other undivided families in Punjab amongst
communities other than Hindus and (4) that the section
cannot be said to be legislation whose object is agrarian
reform and, therefore, is not protected by Art. 31 A.
Section 32-KK, the validity of which is impeached in this
appeal, reads as follows :-
"Notwithstanding anything contained in this
Act or in any other law for the time being in
force :-
(a) where, immediately before the
commencement of this Act, a landowner and his
descendants constitute a Hindu undivided
family, the land owned by such family
shall, for the purposes of this Act, be deemed
to be the land of that landowner and no
descendant shall, as member of such family, be
entitled to claim that in respect of his share
of such land he is a landowner in his own
right".
The section first lays down a fiction and then its result.
The fiction is that where a landowner and his descendants
form a Hindu undivided family, the land owned by such a
family shall be, deemed to be. the land of that landowner.
The fiction so en-
(1) I.L.R. (1963) 16 (1) Punjab 5O.
6O6
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-acted is limited only for the purposes of the Act. The
result of the fiction again for the purposes of the Act is
that no descendant shall, as a member of such family, be
entitled to claim that in respect of his share of such land
he is a landowner in his own right. There is no doubt that
the section has a direct adverse ,effect on the rights of
the descendants of a landowner. It treats such a family as
one unit equating the landowner and his descendants with an
individual landowner depriving by such equation the
descendant of the right to hold a ceiling area for himself.
Prima facie, such a provision would infringe Art. 19(1) (f)
and Art. 31 and would be hit by Art. 13. Article 31-A,
however, provides that notwithstanding anything contained in
Art. 13, no law providing for the acquisition by the State
of any ,estate or of any rights therein or the
extinguishment or modification of any such rights shall be
deemed to be void on the ground that it is inconsistent with
or takes away or abridges any of the rights conferred by
Arts. 14, 19 or 31. If, therefore, S. 32-KK falls within
the scope of Art. 31-A, it is obviously protected there
under and the validity of the section is placed beyond
any ,challenge on the ground of its infringing any of the
rights under Arts. 14, 19 or 31.
In K. K. Kochuni v. The State of Madras(1), this Court laid
,down that Art. 31-A properly construed envisages agrarian
reform and provides for the acquisition, extinguishment or
modification of proprietary and various other kinds of
subordinate rights in a tenure called the ’estate’ solely
for that purpose and must be limited to it. The Court held
that the Act impugned there did not ,contemplate any
agrarian reform or seek to regulate the rights inter se
between the landlords and tenants or modify or extinguish
any of the rights appertaining to janmam right leaving all
the characteristics intact and, therefore, did not come
within the purview of Art. 31-A. In Ranjit Singh v. The
State Punjab (2), this Court considered the scope of that
decision and held that the ’Word ’estate’ in Art. 31 -A
should be given a liberal meaning and that the changes
proposed by the Punjab Consolidation Acts passed since 1948
and onwards were included in the general scheme of planning
of rural areas and the productive utilisation of vacant and
waste lands, that if agrarian reforms were to succeed, mere
distribution of land to the landless was not enough, that
there should be a proper planning of rural economy and
conditions and that a scheme which makes villages self-
sufficient cannot but be regarded as part of larger reforms
which consolidation ,of holdings, fixing of ceilings on
lands, distribution of surplus lands and utilising of vacant
and waste lands contemplate. It is not necessary to refer
to other decided cases as this decision clearly points out
that the fixing of ceiling on lands and provisions
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
(2) [1965]1 S.C.R. 82.
607
relating to it would form part of and constitute agrarian
reform and, therefore, such provisions would have the
protection of Art. 3 1 -A.
A brief outline of the provisions of the Act will show the
objects and the policy the legislature had in mind in
passing the Act and while amending it from time to time.
The Act declares that it was passed to amend and consolidate
law relating to tenancy and agricultural lands and to
provide for certain measures of land reforms. Section 3
defines " permissible limit" as meaning 30 standard acres of
land. Section 5 entitles ,very landowner owning land
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exceeding the permissible limit to select for personal
cultivation from the land held by him any parcel or parcels
of land not exceeding in aggregate the permissible area.
Chapter III provides for the rights of tenants and section 7
therein lays down that no tenancy shall be terminated except
in accordance with the provisions of the Act or except on
any of the grounds therein set out. Section 7-A lays down
additional grounds for termination of tenancy in cases such
as where the land comprising the tenancy has been reserved
by the landowner for his personal cultivation or where the
landowner owns 30 standard acres or less of land and the
land falls within the permissible limit. Section 9 provides
the maximum amount of rent payable by a tenant. Chapter IV
deals with acquisition or proprietary rights by a tenant on
such tenant paying compensation determined in accordance
with the principles set out in section 26. Chapter IV-A,
which was added by Act 15 of 1956, deals with ceiling on
lands and acquisition and disposal of surplus land. Section
32-A provides that no person shall be entitled to own or
hold as landowner or tenant land exceeding the permissible
limit. Section 32-B obliges a person owning or holding as
landowner or tenant land which exceeds the permissible limit
to furnish to the Collector a return giving particulars of
all his land and stating therein his selection of land not
exceeding the permissible limit which he desires to retain
and of lands in respect of which he claims exemption from
the ceiling. Section 32-D directs the Collector to prepare
a draft statement on the basis of the information given in
the said returns showing the total area of land owned or
held by such person and the land selected by him by way of
permissible limit the exemption claimed by him and the
surplus area. Section 32-E provides that in the case of
surplus area of a landowner or a tenant which is not
included within the permissible limit such area shall on the
date on which possession thereof is taken by the State
Government, be deemed to have been acquired by the State
Government for a public purpose. Section 32-F authorises
the Collector to direct the landowner or the tenant in
possession of the surplus area to deliver possession thereof
within the prescribed time. Section 32-FF provides that no
transfer or
608
other disposition of land made after August 21, 1956 shall
affect the right of the State Government to the surplus area
to which it would be entitled to but for such transfer or
disposition. Section 32-G lays down principles on which
compensation in respect of surplus area is to be determined.
Section 23-J deals with disposal of such surplus area.
Section 32-KK already recited above was inserted in the Act
by Punjab Act XVI of 1962.
It is clear from these provisions that the objects of the
Act are : (a) to secure the rights of tenants, (b) to
provide for acquisition of proprietary rights in the land,to
the tenant, (c) to provide for permissible limit of 30
standard acres, (d) to acquire surplus areas and distribute
them amongst certain classes of persons including landless
persons, and (e) to provide for compensation at prescribed
rates payable by tenants and by Government on its acquiring
surplus land. The principle laid down by the, Act is that
no person, whether a landowner or tenant, should hold land
more than the permissible area so that the surplus land can
be distributed amongst the more needy sections of society.
In following this principle the Act lays down two
corollaries, namely, (1) not to recognise any transfer or
disposition made by a landowner after a certain date as
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otherwise the scheme of distribution of surplus land would
be frustrated, and (ii) to equates an individual landowner
and a Hindu undivided family consisting of a landowner and
his descendants so that both the units are entitled to hold
only the permissible area of 30 standard acres. In our
view, it cannot be gainsaid that section 32-KK deals with an
estate within the meaning of Art. 31-A and is concerned with
agrarian reform. The decision in Kochuni’s case(1) cannot,
therefore, avail the appellants.
In Pritam Singh v. The State of Punjab (2) , this Court up-
held the validity of s., 32-FF and held that that section
was protected by Art. 31-A against any challenge under Art.
19. If a transfer or a disposition of land can validly be
ignored under s. 32FF for the purpose of ascertaining
surplus land and acquisition of such surplus land by the
State and that section is protected by Art. 31-A, it is
difficult to say why s. 32-KK which, as aforesaid, equates a
Hindu undivided family with an individual landowner for the
limited purpose of the Act without affecting the other
rights of its members is not equally protected by that
Article. The object of enacting s. 32-KK was to prevent the
landowner and his descendants by reason of their
constituting a Hindu undivided family from each of them
claiming in his own right the permissible area from the
joint holding of the family and thus retain for themselves
in the aggregate area larger than 30 standard’ acres and
preventing thereby distribution of surplus area. As to
(1) [1960] 3 S.C.R. 887.
(2) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 536.
609
the pros and cons of such a provision much can be said on
either side. The appellants could have perhaps contended
that such a provision amounted to an unreasonable
restriction. But such a contention is debarred by Art. 31 A an
d a challenge to the validity of that Article is no
longer possible in view of the recent decision in 1. C.
Golak Nath v. The State of Punjab(1).
The contention that the section is not one relating to
agrarian reform is hardly sustainable in view of the above-
mentioned objects of the Act in general and of S. 32-KK in
particular. Similarly, the contention that the section has
the affect of defeating the rights of a member of a Hindu
undivided family from the family property also cannot be
sustained because his rights in the permissible area
retained by the landowner and his right to compensation in
respect of the surplus area are not touched by the section.
Nor is it possible to say that ’the section results in the
transfer of rights of the descendants of a landowner in the
permissible or surplus area in favour of such landowner.
The section does not effect any change in the rights of the
descendants as members of a Hindu undivided family or the
relationship of the family inter se except to the extent of
depriving the descendants of their right to claim the
ceiling area for each of them. The contention as to the
validity of S. 32-KK, therefore, must fail.
The next contention was that the section infringes Art. 15
inasmuch as by limiting it only to Hindu undivided families
it discriminates against descendants forming such families
on the ground of religion only. It was argued that the
customary law in Punjab recognises joint and undivided
families amongst non-Hindu persons also and since the
section affects only the Hindu undivided families, it
violates Art. 15. In support of this contention passages
from Rattigan’s Digest of Customary Law, 14th Ed. pp. 35 to
36 were relied on to show that the institution of undivided
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family exists amongst certain classes of Muslims in certain
districts of Punjab. Support was also sought from the
decisions in Banarsi Das v. Wealth Tax Officer.(2) and
Mammad Kevi v. Wealth Tax Officer (3). The former was
concerned with the question whether a Hindu undivided family
is embraced within the term ’individuals’ in Entry 56 of
List 1 of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution for
purposes of the Wealth Tax Act, 1957. The latter decision
does not touch the question under Art. 15. Neither of the
two decisions, therefore, can assist. On the other hand, in
the case of Bhagat v. State of Punjab(4) the High Court of
Punjab has held that section 32-KK does not create any
discrimination on the ground of religion. In ’the present
case, it is not possible to give
(1) [1967] 2 S.C.R. 762.
(3) [1966] 50 I.T.R. 737.
L7Sup.Cl/67-9
(2) [1965] 56 I.T.R. 224.
(4) I.L.R. [1963] 16 (1) Punj. 500.
610
any concluding answer to the contention raised by Mr. Mani
firstly because such a point was not raised in the writ
petition and secondly because the appellants have not placed
before us sufficient data to enable us to go into the
question. We, therefore, refrain from examining that
contention.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Y.P. Appeal dismissed.
611