Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHAKUNTLA ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF HARYANA
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/02/1979
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
BENCH:
SHINGAL, P.N.
DESAI, D.A.
CITATION:
1979 AIR 843 1979 SCR (3) 232
1979 SCC (3) 226
ACT:
PEPSU Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1955, S. 32
FF, whether applicable to gift of land by non-related donor.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants were persons to whom gifts of
agricultural lands were made before July 30, 1958, for love
and affection, by non-related donors. The Revenue
authorities decided that these gifts were not protected by
s. 32FF of the PEPSU Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1955, as there had been no valuable "consideration", within
the meaning of that section. A Division Bench of the Haryana
High Court upheld the dismissal of the appellants’ writ
petition, by a single Judge of that court.
Dismissing the appeals the Court,
^
HELD : It is the essence of a gift as defined in the
Transfer of Property Act, that it should be without
"consideration" of the nature defined in s. 2(d) of the
Contract Act, and as section 32FF of the Act saves only the
transfer or disposition of land for "consideration" upto the
limit specified in it, the gifts under dispute, will not
fall within the purview of that section. Any other view of
the section would defeat the purpose of Chapter IV-A of the
Act, which provides for ceiling on land and acquisition and
disposal of surplus area. [234 E, G, H-235 A]
James Newton v. Robert Hargreaves, 135 ER 905;
distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1829-
1831 of 1969.
Appeals by Special Leave from the Judgment and Order
dated 14-1-69 of the Punjab and Haryana High Court in L.P.A.
Nos. 256-258 of 1966.
Y. C. Mahajan and Mrs. Urmila Kapur for the Appellant.
B. Dutta and R. N. Sachthey for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SHINGHAL, J.-The appellants in these three appeals are
aggrieved against a common judgment of the Punjab and
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Haryana High Court dated January 14, 1969, by which the
judgment of a learned Single Judge of that Court dismissing
their writ petitions was upheld on the ground that the gifts
to them did not fall within the purview of the saving clause
of section 32FF of the PEPSU Tenancy and Agricultural Lands
Act, 1955, hereinafter referred to as the Act.
233
It is not in dispute that a gift was made in each of
these cases before July 30, 1958, and in one case after
August 21, 1956 but before July 30, 1958. The donees were
not persons who were not related to the donors, and were
persons to whom gifts were made of agricultural lands for
love and affection. The revenue authorities took the view
that the gifts were not transfers of lands of the nature
protected by section 32FF of the Act as there was no
valuable consideration, and mere love and affection was not
"consideration" within the meaning of that section. As the
High Court has upheld that view, the appellants feel
aggrieved and have come up in appeal to this Court by
special leave.
Section 32FF of the Act which deals with certain
transfers which are not to affect the surplus area of a
landowner provides as follows,-
"32FF. Save in the case of land acquired by the
State Government under any law for the time being in
force or by an heir by inheritance or up to 30th July,
1958 by a landless person, or a small landowner, not
being a relation as prescribed of the person making the
transfer or disposition of land, for consideration up
to an area which with or without the area owned or held
by him does not in the aggregate exceed the permissible
limit no transfer or other disposition of land effected
after 21st August, 1956, shall affect the right of the
State Government under this Act to the surplus area to
which it would be entitled but for such transfer or
disposition :
Provided that any person who has received any
advantage under such transfer or disposition of land
shall be bound to restore it, or to make compensation
for it, to the person from whom he received it."
The section therefore provides that no transfer or other
disposition of land effected after August 21, 1956, shall
affect the rights of the State Government under the Act to
the surplus area to which it would be entitled but for such
transfer or disposition "save" in the case of land acquired
by the State Government under any law for the time being in
force, or by an heir by inheritance or up to July 30, 1958
by a landless person, or small landowner, not being a
relation as prescribed of the person making the transfer or
disposition of land, provided that it is for
"consideration", up to an area which with or without the
area owned or held by him does not in the aggregate exceed
the permissible limit. The only point in controversy before
us is whether the gifts of land which were made in the three
cases
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under appeal on account of natural love and affection, could
be said to be transfers of the lands for consideration ? It
has been argued on behalf of the appellants that the
aforesaid gifts were in the nature of transfer of property
as defined in section 5 of the Transfer of Property Act and
it did not matter if they were by way of gift and did not
amount to sale or exchange.
Section 5 of the Transfer of Property Act defines
"transfer of property" to mean an act by which a living
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person conveys property, in present or in future, inter
alia, to one or more other living persons Such transfer of
property may be made by one of the several modes known to
law e.g. by sale, exchange or gift etc. It is not the case
of the appellants that the transfers under consideration
were by way of sale or exchange or that they were made
otherwise than by way of gift to them.
Section 122 of the Transfer of Property Act defines
"gift" as follows,-
"122. "Gift" is the transfer of certain existing
moveable or immoveable property made voluntarily and
without consideration, by one person, called the donor,
to another called the donee, and accepted by or on
behalf of the donee."
It is therefore one of the essential requirements of a gift
that it should be made by the donor "without consideration".
The word "consideration" has not been defined in the
Transfer of Property Act, but we have no doubt that it has
been used in that Act in the same sense as in the Indian
Contract Act and excludes natural love and affection. If it
were to be otherwise, a transfer would really amount to a
sale within the meaning of section 54 of the Transfer of
Property Act, or to an exchange within the meaning of
section 118 for each party will have the rights and be
subject to the liabilities of a seller as to what he gives
and have the rights and be subject to the liabilities of a
buyer as to that which he takes. It is not necessary for us
to examine the other modes of transfer, for they have no
bearing on the nature of the controversy before us. It would
thus appear that it is of the essence of a gift as defined
in the Transfer of Property Act that it should be without
"consideration" of the nature defined in section 2 (d) of
the Contract Act,
Now what section 32FF of the Act saves is transfer or
disposition of land for "consideration" up to the limit
specified in it, and as a gift is always without
consideration, the gifts which are the subject matter of
controversy before us will not fall within the pur-
235
view of that section, and have rightly been excluded while
calculating the surplus area in the three cases before us.
Any other view of the section would defeat the purpose of
Chapter IV-A of the Act which provides for ceiling on land
and acquisition and disposal of surplus area.
Mr. Mahajan for the appellants tried to argue that
"good consideration" has been defined in Black’s Law
Dictionary (fourth edition) to mean "such as is founded on
natural duty and affection", and would amount to
consideration within the meaning of section 32FF of the Act.
But even there it has been clarified that "good" is
generally used "in antithesis to valuable consideration",
which has necessarily to be excluded in the case of a gift
by virtue of its definition in section 122 of the Transfer
of Property Act. The argument of learned counsel becomes
untenable on a reference to 17 C.J.S. Contract 91-92 on
which he has placed considerable reliance. We have also gone
through James Newton v. Robert Hargreaves,(1) but it cannot
avail the appellants for there the conveyance was by the
father to his two sons in consideration of natural love and
affection and the law acknowledged that to be a "good"
consideration, which is not so in the cases before us.
There is thus no force in these appeals and they are
dismissed with costs.
M.R. Appeals dismissed.
236
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