Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BAI ACHHUBA AMAR SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SRI KALIDAS HARNATH OJHA AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
06/12/1963
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
BENCH:
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
SUBBARAO, K.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1967 AIR 651 1964 SCR (5) 853
ACT:
The Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (67 of
1948) ss. 84, 84A-Scope of s. 84A-If prospective-If affects
adjudication where transfer has already been declared
invalid-Application under s. 84-If must be by landlord.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant was the owner of fields bearing survey numbers
231 and 260 in a village in Gujarat. Respondent No. 1 was
the manager of her estate for some time and while occupying
that position, he obtained from her a sale deed in respect
of those fields. The appellant made an application to the
Mamlatdar for a declaration that the sale was invalid as it
was in contravention of ss. 63 and 64 of the Bombay Tenancy
and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948. Certain villagers also
made an application the Collector under s. 84 for the
summary eviction of respondent no. 1 on the ground that the
transaction was void as being in violation of provisions of
ss. 63 and 64 of the Act. The Collector passed an order
that the sale made by the appellant should be treated as
void and the village records be corrected accordingly. The
revision was dismissed by the Revenue Tribunal. A writ
petition was filed in the High Court which remanded the case
to the Collector. The Collector again declared the sale to
be void and his order was confirmed by the Revenue Tribunal.
A writ petition against the order of Revenue Tribunal was
dismissed by the High Court.
In 1956, the Act of 1948 was amended and s. 84-A was added.
Fresh proceedings were started by respondent No. 1 under s.
84-A
854
and the Mamaltdar validated the transfer of land in his
favour. However, his orders were set aside by the
Collector. A writ petition was again filed in the High
Court and the same was accepted. It was held that the
provisions of s. 84-A applied in the present case. The
appellant came to this court by Special Leave. Accepting
the appeal,
Held: (per Subba Rao and Mudholkar, JJ., Raghubar Dayal J.,
dissenting)
(i)The provisions of s. 84A are prospective in the sense
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that they bar the making of any declaration or a finding
that a transfer is invalid after its coming into force. It
does not affect an adjudication in which the transfer had
already been held to be invalid. In the present case, the
Collector had declared the sale to be invalid and his order
had been confirmed by the Revenue Tribunal. The writ
petition against that order was ultimately dismissed. The
order of the Collector having become final, could not be
questioned after the inclusion of s. 84A in 1956.
(ii)For invoking the provisions of s. 84, it is not
necessary that an application must be made by the landlord
alone. Any person interested can resort to the remedy
provided therein and when that is done, it is the duty of
the Collector to decide whether the person sought to be
evicted is or is not in possession in pursuance of an
invalid transfer.
Per Raghubar Dayal, J:
Though the Collector has necessarily, in certain proceedings
under s. 84 of the Act, to record a finding that a certain
sale is invalid and consequently the person in possession,
on its basis, is in unauthorised possession, he has no power
to formally declare the sale deed to be invalid.
Ordinarily, it is for the Civil Court to make a formal
declaration about the validity of a deed. However, the
order of the Collector deciding that the sale deed was
invalid, had not become final by the time s. 84A was
introduced in the Act on August 1, 1956 and hence the
respondent No. 1 could take advantage of the provisions of
s. 84A. He could have his sale deed validated on payment of
the requisite penalty under s. 84-A 1. Hence the Mamaltdar
had correctly issued the certificate of validity and the
order of the High Court setting aside the order of the
Collector and the Revenue Tribunal and restoring that of
Mamaltdar, was according to law.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 397 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order Sated
July 1, 1959, of the Bombay High Court (now Gujarat High
Court) in Special Civil Application No. 302 of 1959.
S.H. Sheth, Mangaldas Shah and M. V. Goswami, for the
appellant.
855
G.B. Pai, and O.C. Mathur, for respondent No. 1.
K.L. Hathi for R.H. Dhebar, for respondent No. 2.
December 6, 1963. The Judgment of K. Subba Rao and J.R.
Mudholkar, JJ. was delivered by Mudholkar, J. Raghubar
Dayal, J. delivered a dissenting Opinion.
MUDHOLKAR J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
judgment of the High Court of Bombay allowing a writ
application preferred before it by the first respondent and
setting aside the order of the Bombay Revenue Tribunal which
had upheld the order of the Prant Officer in a matter
arising under the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948 (Bom. LXVII of 1948) hereafter referred to as the Act.
The appellant was admittedly the owner of Survey Nos. 231
and 260 of the village Duchakwada, Taluka Deodar, District
Banaskantha in the State of Gujarat. Survey No. 231 was
leased out to a tenant, Vira Pana, while Survey No. 260 had
been reserved by her in the year 1950 for grazing cattle.
Possibly other cattle in the village were also allowed to
graze there because of paucity of grazing facilities
therein.
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The appellant is a jagirdar and evidently possesses
considerable property. The respondent no. 1 was for some
time her karbhari (manager of her estate). While he was
occupying that position he obtained from her a sale deed on
October 31, 1950, in respect of both these fields.
According to the appellant she received no consideration for
the transaction. However, that is not material. Shortly
thereafter, the appellant made an application to the
Mamlatdar, Deodar, for a declaration that the sale deed was
invalid as being in contravention of ss. 63 and 64 of the
Act. It would appear that at about the same time certain
villages of Duchakwada made an application before the
Collector, Banaskantha, under s. 84 of the Act for the
summary eviction of the respondent no. 1 on the ground that
the transaction was
856
rendered void by virtue of the provisions of ss. 63 and 64
of the Act and also seeking the reservation of Survey No.
260 for grazing purposes. It seems that the appellant’s
application also went before the Collector, inasmuch as the
order he made dealt with the appellant’s contention also.
It ran thus:
"Taking into consideration all the
circumstances it is hereby ordered that the
sale made by Shrimati Achhuba in respect of
two fields Vidvalu and Vaghdelavalu should be
treated as void under section 64(3) of the
Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act and
the village records corrected accordingly.
Shrimati Achhuba should be persuaded to set
apart these two fields as grazing area for the
grazing of village cattle of Dudhakwada in
order to maintain the standard as fixed by the
Government. If she agrees, the persons in the
present occupation of the land should be
evicted and the fields kept open for free
grazing of village cattle".
An application for revision preferred by the respondent no.
1 before the Bombay Revenue Tribunal was dismissed by it.
Thereupon he preferred a writ petition before the High
Court. The High Court while it affirmed the order of the
Revenue Tribunal, insofar as Survey No. 231 was concerned,
remanded the matter to the Collector for deciding two
points, one being whether the respondent no. 1 was an agri-
culturist and the other whether there was a tenant on the
land and if it found that there was no tenant whether the
Collector was justified in declaring the sale void under s.
63(1). When the matter went back to the Revenue Tribunal
after remand it was contended ,on behalf of the respondent
no. 1 that the Collector had no jurisdiction to declare the
sale to be void without passing a consequential order under
s. 84. The Tribunal held that since this point had not been
raised at the earlier stages of the proceedings nor even
before the High Court the point should not be allowed to be
raised. The Tribunal further held that the respondent no.
1 was not an agriculturist. It also held
857
that the Collector was justified in declaring the sale even
of Survey No. 260 void. A second writ petition was
preferred by the respondent no. 1 against this order; but
it was dismissed by the High Court.
It will thus be seen that it bad finally been held in the
proceedings to which the respondent no. 1 was a party
that the entire transaction in his favour was void and
that he was in unauthorised occupation not only of Survey
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No. 231 but also of survey No.260.
In the year 1956 the Act was extensively amended.The
amendment came into force in August, 1956. One of the new
provisions in the Act is s. 84-A. This provision reads
thus:
"Section 84A(1): A transfer of any land in
contravention of section 63 or 64 as it stood
before the commencement of the Amending Act,
1955 made after the 28th day of December, 1948
(when the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural
Lands Act, 1948 came into force) and before
the 15th day of June, 1955 shall not be
declared to be invalid merely on the ground
that such transfer was made in contravention
of the said sections if the transferee pays to
the State Government a penalty equal to one
per cent of the consideration or Rs. 100,
whichever is less:
Provided that, if such transfer is made by the
landlord, in favour of the tenant in actual
possession, the penalty leviable in respect
thereof shall be one rupee:
Provided further that if any such transfer is
made by the landlord in favour of any person
other than the tenant in actual possession,
and such transfer is made either after the
unlawful eviction of such tenant, or results
in the eviction of the tenant in actual
possession, then such transfer shall not be
deemed to be validated unless such tenant
has failed to apply for the possession of
the land under sub-section (1) of section 29
within two years from the date of his eviction
from the land.
858
(2) On payment of such penalty, the Mamlatdar
shall issue a certificate to the transferee
that such transfer is not invalid.
(3)Where the transferee fails to pay the
penalty referred to in sub-section (1)within
such period as may be prescribed, the transfer
shall be declared by the Mamlatdar to be
invalid and thereupon the provisions of sub-
sections (3) to (5) of section 84C shall
apply."
Seeking to avail himself of this provision the respondent
no. 1 made an application before the Mamlatdar, Deodar for
validation of the transfer in his favour.This application
was granted by the Mamlatdar. Shortly after this happened
the Collector of Banaskantha took up the matter suo motu in
revision and set aside the order of the Mamlatdar. A
revision application preferred against the order of the
Collector was dismissed by the Revenue Tribunal. Thereafter
the respondent no. 1 preferred a writ petition before the
High Court which was thus his third writ petition. That
petition having been allowed, the appellant has come up
before this Court, as already stated, by special leave.
The High Court, in allowing the application, came to the
conclusion that the previous adjudication to the effect that
the transaction upon which the respondent no. 1 relies is
invalid, does not, in so far as Survey No. 260 is concerned,
come in the way of applying the provisions of sub-s. (1) of
s. 84A. The High Court observed that a transfer in contra-
vention of ss. 63 and 64 becomes invalid by operation of law
and has not to be declared to be such and, therefore, the
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mere fact that the Collector has declared a transfer to be
invalid because it contravenes either of these sections
would not render the new provisions inapplicable.
In coming to this conclusion the High Court has apparently
overlooked the provisions of s. 84 and also the fact that it
was under this provision that the appellant as well as the
villagers had sought redress from the Collector, upon the
ground that
859
the sale deed on which the respondent based his claim to
possession of the fields was in contravention of the
provisions of ss. 63 and 64. We are no longer concerned
with Survey No. 231 but are concerned only with Survey No.
260
It is no doubt true that ss. 63 and 64 render certain
transactions invalid. But where advantage is sought to be
taken of the invalidity of a transaction on the ground that
it contravenes ss. 63 and 64 and relief such as that
awardable under s. 84 of the Act is sought, it becomes
necessary for the Collector to adjudicate upon the dispute
and decide whether the transaction is or is not rendered
invalid by either of these provisions. It is because of
this that the Collector did proceed to adjudicate upon the
validity of the transaction.
It was contended before us that all that was before the
Collector was an application made by certain residents of
Duchakwada who had been deprived of their grazing rights
over Survey No. 260. That is not correct because there is
the admission of the respondent no. 1 himself in his writ
petition before the High Court, dated February 17, 1959,
that the villagers had sought the cancellation of the sale
deed which comprised of the fields and that the appellant
also had made an application for the cancellation of the
sale deed in his favour. Even assuming that the appellant
had not moved the Collector under s. 84 or that her
application was not properly before the Collector, we may
point out that for invoking the provisions of s. 84 of the
Act it is not of the essence that an application must be
made by the landlord alone. Upon the language of that
provision any person interested can resort to the remedy
provided therein and when its provisions are resorted to it
becomes the bounden duty of the Collector to decide under
cl. (a) thereof as to whether the person sought to be
evicted is or is not in possession in pursuance of an
invalid transfer.
It was next contended on the respondent’s behalf that so far
as Survey No. 260 is concerned the Collector had refused to
pass an order of eviction and,
860
therefore, the declaration as to invalidity of the sale of
Survey No. 260 made by the Collector would be no bar to the
applicability of s. 84A. This contention is also without
any force. We have already quoted the portion of the order
of the Collector in so far as it related to the prayer of
the appellant for evicting the respondent no. 1 from Survey
No. 260. It will be clear from it that the Collector did
grant a conditional relief with respect to this field. For
granting such a relief it was thus necessary for the
Collector to adjudicate upon the validity or otherwise of
the transfer. The Collector’s order was affirmed by the
Revenue Tribunal and the writ petition in which the
respondent challenged it before the High Court was
dismissed. The whole question, including the validity of
the Collector’s order must, therefore, be regarded as having
become final and conclusive between the parties. Even
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assuming that despite all that has happened, it is open to
us to consider whether the order of the Collector declaring
the sale transaction to be void was within his jurisdiction
or not, we have little doubt that it was within his
jurisdiction. No doubt, neither s. 63 or s. 64 nor even s.
84 speaks of making a formal declaration by the Collector
that a transaction is void because it is in contravention
either of s. 63 or s. 64 cannot be just ignored by the
transferor. Some authority must determine whether in fact
the transfer is in contravention of either of these
provisions. The question of obtaining such a determination
will arise where the transferor has lost possession. For
obtaining possession of which the transferor was deprived in
consequence of an invalid transfer the Act enables him to
resort to the provisions of s. 84. Under that provision the
Collector has to ascertain, as already stated, whether the
transfer is in fact in contravention of s. 63 or s. 64. His
finding in that regard is tantamount to a declaration that
the transrer is invalid. We may point out that there is no
provision in the Act which expressly provides for the making
of a formal declaration by any Revenue Authority to the
effect that a transfer in contravention of s. 63
861
or s. 64 is invalid. When the legislature provided in s.
84A that a transfer in contravention of either of the two
sections what it meant was merely this that the transfer
shall not be treated to be invalid even when it is found to
be in contravention of s. 63 or s. 64 of the Act. This is
precisely what the Collector did in this case. Unless we
give this meaning to these words they will be meaningless.
We are further of the view that the provisions of s. 84A are
prospective in their application. A bare perusal of the
provisions of s. 84A would show that what that section does
is to impose an embargo upon the making of a declaration
that a transfer is invalid on the ground that it was made in
contravention of the provisions of ss. 63 and 64. Its
operation is thus prospective in the sense that it bars
making of any declaration or a finding that a transfer is
invalid after it came into force. It does not affect any
adjudication in which a transfer had already been held to be
invalid. Thus it can possibly have no application to a case
like the present wherein a declaration or a finding as to
invalidity had already been made by the Collector and was
followed by an order of eviction, albeit conditional. The
Mamlatdar, therefore, had no jurisdiction to issue the
certificate in question to the respondent. That being the
position we must hold that the High Court was in error in
setting aside the order of the Revenue Tribunal upholding
that of the Collector. We, therefore, set aside the order
of the High Court and restore that of the Revenue Tribunal.
Costs throughout will be borne by the respondent no. 1.
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J.-I am of opinion that the appeal be
dismissed.
The appellant, Jagirdar of village Duchakwada, sold two
fields bearing Survey Nos. 231 and 260, to respondent no. 1,
Kalidas Harnath Ojha, hereinafter called the respondent on
October 28, 1950. On November 24, 1952 the Collector,
District Banaskantha, passed an order, after an enquiry on
aplicacations, by certain persons of that village to the
Govern-
862
ment, to him and to the Deputy Collector, Tharad, that the
sale deed of the two plots was invalid in view of the
provisions of ss. 63 and 64 of the Bombay Tenancy and
Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (Act LXVII of 1948),
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hereinafter called the Act. He ordered the eviction of the
appellant from plot no. 231 as he found that one Harijan
Vira Pana, one of the applicants, was the tenant of that
plot. We are not now concerned with this order with respect
to plot no. 231.
With regard to plot no. 260, the Collector ordered in view
of the shortage of grazing land for cattle in the village:
"Shrimati Achhuba should be persuaded to set
apart these two fields as grazing area for the
grazing of village cattle of Duchakwada in
order to maintain the standard as fixed by the
Government. If she agrees, the persons in the
present occupation of the land should be
evicted and the fields kept open for free
grazing of village cattle."
The Collector was wrong in mentioning the two fields in the
above quoted order, as one of the fields in dispute before
him was field No. 231 and about which he had earlier, in his
order, directed the Prant Officer to restore that field to
Harijan Vira Pana immediately.
The respondent’s appeal against this order was dismissed by
the Bombay Revenue Tribunal on October 27, 1955. The
Revenue Tribunal treated the Collector’s order to be an
order under s. 84 of the Act. The respondent then
approached the High Court of Bombay with Special Civil
Application no. 2817 of 1955. The High Court allowed the
application on July 2, 1956 with respect to plot no. 260,
set aside the order of the Revenue Tribunal and remanded the
dispute about that plot to be decided by the Tribunal
afresh, according to law. On remand, the Tribunal again
dismissed the respondent’s appeal on June 3, 1957. The
respondent again went
863
to the High Court by Special Civil Application No. 2220 of
1957. The High Court dismissed the petition on December 18,
1957.
In the meantime, on August 1, 1956 the Bombay Tenancy and
Agricultural Lands (Amendment) Act, 1956. (Act XIII of 1956)
came into force. By this Act, s. 84A was added in the
parent Act. This section reads:
"(1) A transfer of any land in contravention
of, section 63 or 64 as it stood before the
commencement of the Amending Act, 1955, made
after the 28th day of December 1948 (when the
Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act,
1948, came into force) and before the 15th day
of the June 1955 shall not be declared to be
invalid merely on the ground that such
transfer was made in contravention of the said
sections if the transferee pays to the State
Government a penalty equal to one per cent of
the consideration or Rs. 1 whichever is less;
Provided that, if such transfer is made by the
landlord, in favour of the tenant in actual
possession, the penalty leviable in respect
thereof shall be one rupee:
Provided further that if any such transfer is
made by the landlord in favour of any person
other than the tenant in actual possession,
and such transfer is made either after the
unlawful eviction of such tenant, or results
in the eviction of the tenant in actual
possession, then such transfer shall not be
deemed to be validated unless such tenant has
failed to apply for the possession of the land
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under sub-section (1) of section 29 within two
years from the date of his eviction from the
land.
(2)On payment of such penalty, the Mamlatdar
shall issue a certificate to the transferee
that such transfer is not invalid.
(3) Where the transferee fails to pay the
penalty referred to in sub-section (1) within
such period
864
as may be prescribed, the transfer shall be
declared by the Mamlatdar to be invalid and
thereupon the provisions of sub-sections (3)
to (5) of section 84C shall apply."
The respondent took advantage of the provisions of this
section, deposited Rs. 35 as fine on December 9, 1957 and
the same day got the order of the Mamlatdar Tenancy Aval
Karkun, recognizing the sale to him of plot no. 260 under
the sale deed of 1950.
The Deputy Collector set aside the order of the Mamlatdar
holding that s. 84A did not apply to the sale of plot no.
260 as that sale had been declared to be invalid by the
Collector prior to the coming into force of s. 84A. The
respondent then went in revision against this order to the
Bombay Revenue Tribunal and was unsuccessful. He then filed
Special Civil Application No. 302 and prayed for the
quashing and the setting aside of the Tribunal’s Order. The
High Court set aside the order of the, Tribunal holding that
s. 84A applied to the sale of plot no. 260 to the appellant,
that the sale was invalid by operation of law and required
no declaration to that effect from the Collector and that
there was nothing in s. 84-A which would justify excluding
from the operation of that section transfers which had been
declared invalid prior to the coming into force of that
provision of law. The High Court restored the order of the
Mamlatdar dated December 9, 1957 by which he had issued a
certificate to the respondent that the transfer of plot no.
260 was not invalid. It is against this order that Bai
Achhuba has preferred this appeal after obtaining special
leave from this Court.
The appellant was a party to all the proceedings subsequent
to the order of the Collector dated November 24, 1952. She
did appear before the Collector during his enquiry. It was
stated at the hearing of the appeal that she had also
applied to the Collector. This was disputed by the
respondent. The matter was considered to be of some
importance in view of the respondent’s contention that the
previous orders on the application of the villagers operated
865
as res judicata, and this Court ordered the appellant, on
March 19, 1963 to file certified copies of the various
documents mentioned in that order. Those documents included
the alleged application made to the Collector and an
affidavit by the appellant showing that she was a party to
the proceedings before the Collector. The appellant filed
copies of certain orders of the various Courts and a copy of
the Special Civil Application No. 2220 of 1957. She did not
file a certified copy of the application said to have been
presented by her to the Collector simultaneously with the
other villagers. Nagarlal Dalpatram Vyas, describing
himself as a Karbhari of the appellant, states in his
affidavit
"I personally went to the Mamlatdar of Deoda
Prant Officer of Radhanpur, the Collector of
Banaskantha, the Bombay Revenue Tribunal and
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the High Court of Gujarat, to obtain a
certified copy of the application made by the
applicant herein to the Collector of
Banaskantha, which resulted into his said
order 24 November 1952, but I have been told
that the record is not there any of those
Courts or Authorities. I was told by the
Collector of Banaskantha the record of the
case had gone to the Bombay High Court. On
inquiry it is found that the Gujarat High
Court does not have it though in ordinary
course it ought to have received it from
Bombay High Court.
The respondent has filed a counter-affidavit stating that
the appellant had not filed any petition or application
before the Collector under s. 84 of the Act seeking his
eviction. On this material, I am not satisfied that the
appellant had applied to the Government or the Collector
simultaneously with the other villagers on whose
applications the Collector made an enquiry and passed the
order of November 24, 1952. The Collector’s order makes no
mention of any application by the appellant and states that
certain persons of village Duchakwada, among whom were
agriculturists and tenants of Duchakwada Jagir, had made
applications praying that the
1/SCI/ 64-55
866
sale deed be declared void and the village records corrected
accordingly. None of the other orders of the Court makes
any reference to the application by Bai Achhuba to the
Collector, even though some of them definitely state about
her application to the Mamlatdar. The order of the Revenue
Tribunal dated June 3, 1957 states:
"The original proceeding started on an
application made to the Collector of
Banaskantha by some villagers of Duchakwada."
The High Court, in its order on Special Civil Application
No. 2220 of 1957 referred to the application of Bai Achhuba
to the Mamlatdar and then said:
"It would appear that shortly before this app-
lication, an application had been made by
certain villagers of the place and by the
application the villagers claimed that the
sale deed should be declared void and the
village records should be corrected
accordingly."
To my mind the following questions arise in this case: (i)
Whether any proceedings started on the application of the
villagers for setting aside the sale deed and the correction
of the record, can be said to be proceedings under s. 84 of
the Act. (ii) Whether the Collector, in such proceedings,
can make a declaration, distinct from deciding or making a
decision, about the invalidity of the sale deed or whether
be can merely decide about the invalidity of the sale deed
in order to form an opinion whether the person proceeded
against was in possession of the land unauthorisedly or
wrongfully and therefore should be evicted or not. (iii)
Whether the order of the Collector, be it of declaration or
of mere decision about the invalidity of the sale deed with
respect to sale of plot no. 260, had become final before the
coming into force of the provisions of s. 84A of the Act on
August 1, 1956. (iv) If such order had become final, whether
that affects the operation of s. 48A in this case.
On the first point it may be assumed that the proceedings
before the Collector in 1952 were pro-
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867
ceedings under s. 84 of the Act as had been treated by the
Revenue Tribunal and the High Court in the various
proceedings before them.
On the second point, I am of opinion that there is nothing
in any provision of the Act which empowers the Collector to
make a declaration about the sale deed to be invalid or void
for contravening the provisions of ss. 63 and 64 of the Act.
The High Court, in its order dated July 2, 1956 in Special
Civil Application No. 2817 of 1955 said, in dealing with the
matter about plot No. 231:
"Again, in our view , an order passed by a
Collector ordering summary eviction of a
person who, in his view, is unauthorisedly
occupying or is in wrongful occupation of the
land does not decide finally any question of
title and we agree with the view of the
Tribunal that it is open to the petitioner
Kalidas Oza to file a civil suit to establish
his title in the Civil Court."
Again, in its order dated December 18, 1957 in Special Civil
Application No. 2220 of 1957, the High Court said:
Mr. Barot argues that a Tenancy Court cannot
give a declaration that a sale in
contravention of either section 63 or section
64 is invalid. Mr. Barot would seem to be
right. A tenancy Court is not competent to
give a declaration. The power is the power of
a Civil Court to give such declaration in
conformity with the provisions of section 42
of the Specific Relief Act. But I do not
agree with the contention of Mr. Barot that a
Tenancy Court cannot decide the question as to
whether section 63 or a breach of section 64
of the Act and it is precisely this question
which the Collector as well as the Bombay
Revenue Tribunal have decided."
It is clear therefore that though the Collector has
necessarily, in certain proceedings under s. 84 of the Act,
to record a finding that certain sale deed is invalid and
consequently the person in possession,
868
on its basis, is in unauthorised possession, he has no power
to formally declare the sale deed to be invalid. Ordinarily
it is for the Civil Court to make a formal declaration about
the validity of a deed. It is only when any other Act
specifically empowers a certain officer or Court to declare
a certain deed invalid that that Court or officer would have
the power to make such a declaration. It follows that the
Collector could not, in proceedings under s. 84 of the Act,
make a declaration about a sale deed to be invalid. All
what he decided by his order dated November, 18, 1952 was
that in view of the provisions of law the sale deed in
favour of respondent no. 1 was invalid. The appellant must
have realised that the decision of the Collector could not
amount to the setting aside of the sale deed declaring it to
be invalid and so she instituted a Civil Suit in 1953 for a
declaration that the sale deed was null and void and for the
recovery of possession over the properties included in the
sale deed. This suit was dismissed under O.IX, r. 8 read
with O.XVII, r. 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
The order of the Collector deciding that the sale deed was
invalid had not even become final by the time s. 84A was
introduced in the Act on August 1, 1956. On July 2, 1956
the High Court remanded the matter to the Revenue Tribunal
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for decision according to law. The Tribunal passed its
order on June 3, 1957.
It follows therefore that apart from the consideration
already mentioned that the Collector had no power to declare
a sale deed invalid while dealing with a matter under s. 84
of the Act, that order had not become final by August 1,
1956 and that therefore the respondent could take advantage
of the provisions of s. 84A. He could have his sale deed
which was executed between December 28, 1948 and June 15,
1955 validated on payment of the requisite penalty under
sub-s. (1) of s. 84A. This section empowers the Mamlatdar
to issue the certificate of validity and by sub-s. (3)
provides that the Mam-
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latdar would declare the transfer to be invalid in case the
transferee failed to pay the penalty. The provisions of s.
84A brought the matter of validity or invalidity of a
transfer deed within the jurisdiction of the Mamlatdar. It
was in the exercise of this jurisdiction that the Mamlatdar
issued a notice or, October 7. 1957 to the respondent for
paying the penalty of Rs. 100 calculated at the rate of 5 %
on the consideration of the sale deed. On December 9, 1957
the Mamlatdar issued the necessary certificate validating
the sale deed on the respondent’s paying Rs.35. consider the
certificate to be good in law.
It is not necessary to express an opinion in this case
whether the Mamlatdar could certify a transfer to be valid
in case it had been legally declared invalid by a competent
Court previously.
I am therefore of opinion that the order of the High Court
under appeal’ is correct and that this appeal be dismissed.
ORDER
In view of the judgment of the majority, the Order of the
High Court is set aside and that of the Revenue Tribunal
restored. The costs throughout will be borne by Respondent
No. 1.