Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3861 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Draupadi Devi & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Union of India & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/09/2004
BENCH:
K.G. Balakrishnan & B.N. Srikrishna
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
with
Civil Appeal No. 3862 of 2001
SRIKRISHNA, J.
Civil Appeal No. 3862 of 2001 :
This appeal by special leave impugns the judgment dated 8.12.2000
rendered by the Division Bench of the Delhi High Court in an appeal
RFA (OS) No. 19 of 1989. The Division Bench overturned the decree
granted by the learned Single Judge and dismissed the suit of the original
plaintiff. Legal representatives of the original plaintiff are appellants before
us while the three defendants in the suit ( Union of India, State of Punjab
and Sukhjit Singh) are respectively the respondents before us. For the sake
of convenience, we shall refer to the parties as arrayed in the suit.
Facts :
The plaintiff instituted a suit in 1960 before the Civil Court at Delhi
which ultimately came to be transferred to the Original Side of the Delhi
High Court and was disposed of by a learned Single Judge. The suit was for
declaration of title to the property being land and building situated at 3,
Mansingh Road, New Delhi.
By an indenture of lease dated 13.7.1921, Khan Bahadur Abdul
Hamid, the then Chief Minister of Kapurthala State, had been granted a
perpetual lease of the plot of land situate at 3, Mansingh Road, New Delhi.
He raised a construction thereupon called ’Kapurthala House’. It is this land
together with the structures thereupon which is the subject matter of the suit
and shall henceforth be referred to as ’the suit property’.
Khan Bahadur Abdul Hamid sold the house to Jagatjit Singh, the then
Maharaja of Kapurthala, by a registered sale deed dated 19.1.1935. The
records of the Land and Development Office were mutated and Maharaja
Jagatjit Singh was recorded as the owner of the suit property.
The title to the suit property was claimed by the plaintiff on the
ground that the plaintiff had purchased the suit property by a registered sale
deed dated 10.1.1950 for a consideration of Rs. 1.50 lacs from Maharaja
Paramjit Singh, son of late Maharaja Jagatjit Singh, erstwhile Ruler of
Kapurthala State, who was the rightful owner thereof and in whose name the
property stood mutated in the official records of the Government at the
material time.
Kapurthala was a Sovereign State (1928\0261948) till its merger in
’Patiala and East Punjab States Union’ (hereinafter referred to as ’PEPSU’)
and subsequent merger of PEPSU into the Dominion of India.
It is the case of the plaintiff that Maharaja of Kapurthala, Jagatjit
Singh, owned properties extensively, some of which were owned by
Kapurthala State, (also referred to as ’Kapurthala Darbar’) while some
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others were owned by him in his personal capacity purchased out of the
personal funds of the Maharaja.
The plaintiff claimed that the suit property was one such property
which had been bought by Maharaja Jagatjit Singh out of his personal funds
and, hence, it was the personal property of the said Maharaja.
The plaintiff pleaded that on 1.3.1937 Lt. Col. C.P. Fisher, the then
Prime Minister of Kapurthala State, had prepared an aide memoire in
respect of the financial arrangements pertaining to bifurcation of Oudh estate
income and rest of the Kapurthala State income and other matters. There is
no dispute that in this aide memoire Lt. Col. Fisher had listed out the
properties held by the Kapurthala State and the private properties of the
Maharaja separately. It is also common ground that the suit property was
described as State property in this aide memoire prepared by Lt. Col. Fisher.
The plaintiff alleged that on 1.1.1940 the then Maharaja of Kapurthala
State in his capacity as a Sovereign Ruler of the State had issued a
’command’ under the signature of Tika Raja, (heir apparent), President State
Council, commanding that in future all the houses in Mussoorie and
Kapurthala House in New Delhi would be considered as his personal and
private property and that the aide memoire dated 1.3.1937 shall be
inoperative and ineffectual so far as the said properties were concerned.
Maharaja Jagatjit Singh died sometime in 1940 and all his properties
including the suit property passed on to his eldest son Paramjit Singh, who
became the Maharaja of Kapurthala and was recognised as such by the
Government of India. The plaintiff claimed that by a duly registered deed of
conveyance dated 10.1.1950 Maharaja Paramjit Singh had sold and
conveyed the suit property jointly to the plaintiff and one Dewan Jarmani
Dass for a consideration of Rs. 1.50 lacs. It is also the plaintiff’s case that,
subsequently, Dewan Jarmani Dass, who had been shown as vendee only
for the purpose of ’convenience’, conveyed all his right, title and interest in
the suit property to the plaintiff by a duly registered indenture of transfer
dated 21.2.1951. Thus, the plaintiff claimed that he had full title to the suit
property and sought the declaration and reliefs as indicated.
If history had not overtaken him, the plaintiff perhaps would have had
no problem for successful culmination of his suit. Historical developments
left their impact on the aforesaid transaction the plaintiff had with the
Maharaja of Kapurthala and for that reason they need careful notice.
The Independence Act was enacted in 1947 and all the independent
Sovereign Rulers of the States in India were successfully persuaded to sign
instruments of accession. As recorded in the ’White Paper on Indian States’
published by the Government of India in 1948 (of which judicial notice has
been taken by this Court in several cases), the strategy adopted by the
Government of India immediately before independence was to persuade
individual States to sign instruments of accession for accession of the States
to the Dominion of India on three subjects, namely, defence; external affairs
and communication.
The accession of the Indian States to the Dominion of India was the
first phase of the process of fitting them into the constitutional structure of
India. The second phase which rapidly followed, involved a process of two-
fold integration, the consolidation of States into sizeable administrative
units, and their democratisation .
Where there were small States, they were persuaded to form Unions
of States on the basis of full transfer of power from the Rulers to the people.
These Unions were to be headed by a Rajpramukh as the constitutional head
of the State who was to be elected by the Council of Rulers .
Pursuant to this strategy, the Rulers of all individual States were
persuaded to enter into an instrument of accession dated 16.8.1947 with the
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Government of India. This was then followed by covenants between
different Rulers by which the Unions of States was brought into existence,
which were to be finally merged into the Dominion of India.
As far as the present appeal is concerned, it is significant that the
States of Kapurthala, Jind, Nabha, Faridkot, Malerkotla and the States of
Nalagarh and Kalsia came together and entered into a covenant on 5.5.1948.
The Division Bench has reproduced the full text of the covenant executed on
5.5.1948 by the Seven Rulers including the Maharaja of Kapurthala by
which the erstwhile seven States merged into a Union of States. The
general effect of the said covenant was that the covenanting States agreed to
unite and integrate their territories in one State with a common executive,
legislature and judiciary by the name of ’Patiala and East Punjab States
Union’ (PEPSU) which was referred to in the covenant as ’the Union’.
Articles VI and XII of the said covenant provided as under:
"ARTICLE VI
(1) The Ruler of each covenanting State shall, as
soon as may be practicable, and in any event not later
than the 20th of August, 1948, make over the
administration of his State to the Raj Pramukh and
thereupon -
(a) all rights, authority and jurisdiction belonging
to the Ruler which appertain, or are incidental
to the Government of the Covenanting States
shall vest in the Union and shall hereafter be
exercisable only as provided by this covenant
or by the Constitution to be framed thereunder;
(b) all duties and obligations of the Ruler
pertaining or incidental to the Government of
the Covenanting State shall devolve on the
Union and shall be discharged by it;
(c) all the assets and liabilities of the Covenanting
State shall be the assets and liabilities of the
Union, and
(d) the military forces, if any, of the Covenanting
State shall become the military forces of the
Union.
ARTICLE XII :
(1) The Ruler of each Covenanting State shall be
entitled to the full ownership, use and
enjoyment of all private properties (as distinct
from State properties) belonging to him on the
date of his making over the administration of
that State to the Raj Pramukh.
(2) He shall furnish to the Raj Pramukh before the
20th day of September, 1948, an inventory of
all the immovable properties, securities and
cash balances held by him as such private
property.
(3) If any dispute arises as to whether any item of
property is the private property of the Ruler or
State property, it shall be referred to such
person as the Government of India may
nominate in consultation with the Raj Pramukh
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and the decision of that person shall be final
and binding on all parties concerned.
Provided that no such dispute shall be so
referable after the 31st of December, 1948."
The organisation of the different organs constituting the
administration of the PEPSU was indicated in the covenant. There were
also an elected Raj Pramukh and an Up-Raj Pramukh who were to be
appointed in the manner indicated in the covenant for carrying out the
administration of the PEPSU. There were several other details with regard
to the Union of PEPSU and for privy purses to be paid to each of the
erstwhile Rulers. To this covenant, the Government of India in the Ministry
of States was a party and the Government of India declared: "The
Government of India hereby concur in the above Covenant and guarantee
all its provisions." The said covenant was signed on behalf of the
Government of India by V.P. Menon, then Secretary to the Government of
India in the Ministry of States.
The White Paper on Indian States further records that on 15.7.1948
the Patiala and East Punjab States Union was inaugurated. Soon thereafter,
the second step of integration took place.
Then followed correspondence between the Maharaja of Kapurthala
and the Government of India on the issue of fixing his privy purse as well as
bifurcation and recognition of the properties owned by him into State and
private properties.
The Maharaja of Kapurthala kept pleading with the Government of
India that he had ruled the State of Kapurthala as a model Ruler; that in
recognition of his signal services to the British Government he had been
granted the estates in Oudh income from which he was gracious enough to
divert to the State treasury of Kapurthala as Kapurthala income was very
low; that his personal income from Oudh estates and the State income of
Kapurthala were merged till 1937 and that it was only as the result of the
efforts of Col. Fisher that a bifurcation was made with the Oudh estates
being earmarked as personal income of the Maharaja. The Maharaja,
therefore, pleaded with the Government of India that some of the immovable
properties purchased by him outside Kapurthala State such as in Mussoorie
and Delhi be permitted to be retained by him as his private properties and
that the Government of India should declare them to be so.
The White Paper on Indian States indicates that the case of each Ruler
was considered individually and a decision was taken in each case
depending on the facts and circumstances pertaining thereto. Paragraph 157
in Part VII of the White Paper on Indian States places on record the manner
in which the Government of India solved this complex problem of
distinguishing between private properties and State properties owned by the
Rulers. The State properties were merged finally into the Dominion of India
while certain properties recognised as private properties were permitted to
be retained under the full ownership of the erstwhile Rulers. Para 157 of the
White Paper on Indian States reads as follows:
"157. In the past the Rulers made no distinction between
private and State property; they could freely use for
personal purposes any property owned their respective
States. With the integration of States it became necessary
to define and demarcate clearly the private property of the
Ruler. The settlement was a difficult and delicate task
calling for detailed and patient examination of each case.
As conditions and customs differed from State to State,
there were to precedents to guide and no clear principles
to follow. Each case, therefore, had to be decided on its
merit. The Government of India were anxious that the
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new order in States should be ushered in in an atmosphere
free from any controversies or bitterness arising from any
unhappy legacy of the past. A rigid and legalistic
approach would have detracted from the spirit of good-
will and accommodation in which the political
complexion of the States had been so radically altered.
By and large the inventories were settled by discussion
between the representatives of the Ministry of States, the
Rulers concerned and the representatives of the
Governments of the Province or the Union as the case
may be. The procedure generally adopted was that after
the inventories had been received and scrutinised by the
Provincial or the Union Government concerned and after
the accounts of the States taken over had been examined,
the inventories were discussed across the table and settled
in a spirit of give and take. In all discussions with the
Rulers of the States forming Unions, the Rajpramukhs
were associated; the private properties of Rajpramukhs
were settled by the Government of India in informal
consultation with the Premiers of the Unions. This
method made it possible to settle these properties on an
equitable basis within a remarkably short period and
without recourse even in a single case to arbitration. The
settlements thus made are final as between the States and
the Rulers concerned."
Although, generally, user was the criterion for distinguishing State
property from private property, there was no such hard and fast rule, and
depending on the facts and circumstances of each case appropriate decision
was taken by settlement with the Ruler concerned. This process was
obviously a long one stretching from 20.9.1948 (the last date for furnishing
to the Raj Pramukh the inventory of all the immovable properties, securities
and cash balances held by the Rulers as private property) till the actual date
of the decision. Article XII of the covenant of accession provided that if
there was a dispute as to whether any item of private property of the Ruler
or State property, it would be decided by a nominee of the Government of
India appointed in consultation with the Raj Pramukh and the decision shall
be final and binding on all parties concerned, provided that no such dispute
was referable after 31.12.1948. According to the recitals in the White
Paper, in all cases the decision jointly taken by the Government of India
after discussion with the Ruler concerned and the Raj Pramukh was
accepted by the Ruler and no case was referred for arbitration as provided
under Article XII of the covenant.
The correspondence between Maharaja of Kapurthala, Jagatjit Singh,
his son Paramjit Singh (Tika Raja) with the Government of India which has
been extensively quoted in the judgments of the learned Single Judge and
the Division Bench bears out what is stated in the White Paper. The tenor of
the letters written by the Maharaja to the Government of India does not
indicate that the Maharaja was raising a dispute with regard to the
immovable properties outside Kapurthala State. On the contrary, the tenor
of the correspondence emanating from the Maharaja suggests that, having
agreed to the decision taken in the meeting with the Government of India’s
representatives he was attempting to prevail upon the Government of India
to declare some of the properties as his personal properties for reasons
which he advanced. It is interesting to notice that at no point did the
Maharaja of Kapurthala take up the stand that the properties owned outside
the Kapurthala State, particularly the suit property in Delhi, was beyond the
purview of the covenant and was his exclusive personal property.
During the ongoing process of identification and bifurcation of the
immovable properties into State and personal properties, Maharaja Jagatjit
Singh attempted to sell some land. On coming to know of the move of the
Maharaja, on 19.3.1949 a telegram (Ex.D2W4/1) was sent by the Raj
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Pramukh to Maharaja Jagatjit Singh calling upon him to refrain from doing
so when the process of identification of properties was going on.
While the discussions with the Government of India for identification
and classification of immovable properties held by the Maharaja of
Kapurthala were still going on, it appears that Dewan Jarmani Dass, then
Chief Minister of Kapurthala State, prevailed upon the Maharaja to quietly
sell the property jointly to him and the original plaintiff, late R.M. Seksaria.
Although, the Division Bench of the High Court has made scathing remarks
that Dewan Jarmani Dass had acted clandestinely and malafide in order to
grab the property even before the decision of the Government on the nature
of the property, it is unnecessary for us to pronounce on these facets of the
matter for the decision on legal issues does not turn upon these findings.
The Government of India was not aware of the sale and conveyance
of the suit property to Dewan Jarmani Dass and the plaintiff, till or about
6.3.1950. It is only thereafter that a discussion took place on 7.3.1950
between the representatives of the Government of India headed by V.P.
Menon, Secretary, Ministry of States and the Maharaja of Kapurthala. The
minutes which were recorded on 11.3.1950, with reference to the suit
property, state:
"The sale of Kapurthala House in Delhi should be
revoked. The vendee should be asked to refund the
consideration money to His Highness. This decision was
communicated to Dewan Jarmani Dass by Secretary."
On 14.3.1950, Paramjit Singh, who had by then become the Maharaja
of Kapurthala State, wrote to V.P. Menon, Secretary, Ministry of States in
which he referred to the previous talk on the issue and said:
"Since my talk I find that present owner of the House
i.e. M/s Jarmani Dass and Seksaria Brothers are not
prepared to voluntarily rescind or cancel the sale
deed of Kapurthala House in their favour."
He further stated:
"That my secretary, Shanti Sagar Mahendra, had been
authorised to pay the amount of Rs. 1.50 lacs to M/s
Jarmani Dass and Seksaria Brothers and get back the
Kapurthala House at New Delhi if they so agree and have
the sale deed registered in his own name. In case this is
not possible I request you to please be good enough as to
see that Kapurthala House, New Delhi, is declared my
personal and private property and I am not made to return
the money." (emphasis ours)
This does not at all sound like any assertion of title to the suit property, but
more like an imploration to the Government of India to declare the property
as private property so that Maharaja was not required to refund the money
which he had taken from M/s Dewan Jarmani Dass and Seksaria Brothers.
The determination of the issue as to whether the suit property was the
private property of the Ruler of Kapurthala State recognised as such by the
Government of India or whether it was the State property of Kapurthala
State, which merged into the PEPSU and thereafter transferred by the
Government of India to the State of Punjab (Defendant No. 2), is crucial and
decides the fate of the present litigation. It is crucial because the plaintiff
claims title from the Maharaja of Kapurthala; if the Maharaja’s title to the
suit property was good, then the plaintiff has good title; conversely, if the
Maharaja had no title to the suit property as on the date of the conveyance
dated 10.1.1950, then the plaintiff gets no title and, therefore, his suit must
fail. Nemo dat quoad non habet.
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The Commands of 1940 and 1948:
The plaintiff attempted to prove his title by showing that the Maharaja
had a good title because the suit property was the private property of the
Maharaja bought from his personal funds and not the State property of
Kapurthala purchased from State funds. Despite the allocation made by the
aide memoire on 1.3.1937 prepared by Col. Fisher, the plaintiff’s case is that
by reason of the subsequent command of the Maharaja dated 1.1.1940 the
classification made by the aide memoire was overridden and the property
remained as personal property of the Maharaja. Consequently, under the
covenant it was bound to be recognised as personal property which was
guaranteed under the covenant. Since the suit property was the personal
property of the Maharaja, the Maharaja had good title which had passed to
the plaintiff, is the line of argument of the plaintiff. A number of legal
arguments in support and voluminous documents have been placed on
record. The Division Bench of the High Court meticulously considered
everyone of the documents on record and totally disbelieved the case of the
plaintiff as to the existence of this alleged command of the Maharaja dated
1.1.1940 and another alleged command dated 11.8.1948 declaring the suit
property as his private property. There is serious controversy as to whether
the said documents were ever issued, whether the said documents were
proved on record, and if so, what the legal consequences would be. We may
add here that, apart from these two disputed documents, the only other
document in which there is any reference to the command of 1940 (without
indicating the specific date) is a letter dated 11.4.1950 written by Dewan
Jarmani Dass to V.P. Menon which appears to have been written: "in order
to clear my position and to clear some misunderstanding" as to the sale of the
said property to Dewan Jarmani Dass. In this letter, it is stated that Maharaja
of Kapurthala in 1940 passed an order in unequivocal terms that ’Kapurthala
House’ should be considered as his personal property. Hence, Dewan
Jarmani Dass said this should be treated as personal property of the Maharaja
and, consequently, his own rights should remain protected.
Having carefully perused the documents placed on record, and
considered the arguments of the learned counsel, we are inclined to agree
with the findings of the Division Bench about both these documents. As to
the command of 1940, it has been held proved by the learned Single Judge
only on the basis of adverse inference and secondary evidence. The Division
Bench has correctly pointed out the circumstances under which secondary
evidence could have been let in did not exist at all. The inconsistency in the
pleadings as to the particulars of the documents led to the resulting confusion
in the defendants admitting possession and denying possession in succession.
One thing, however, strikes us that in the entire correspondence, which the
Maharaja contemporaneously had up to the sale of the suit property, there
was no reference to this command at all. While it may not be possible to
agree with the positive conclusion drawn by the Division Bench that this
command was fabricated and clandestinely inserted by the plaintiff in the
records of the Archives Department, we too agree that these documents have
not been proved in accordance with law.
The Division Bench of the High Court rightly points out that the aide
memoire prepared by Lt. Col. Fisher on 1.3.1937 indubitably declared that
House in Delhi was a "State House". This document was signed by Col.
Fisher in his capacity as Prime Minister as also by the Ruler of Kapurthala.
There is no dispute about this document, or that it had been signed by the
Ruler of Kapurthala. In other words, as early as 1.3.1937, the Maharaja of
Kapurthala accepted that the House in Delhi (the suit property) was State
property. It would appear that in order to help the plaintiff in his suit, the
third defendant, who is the grand son and successor of the Maharaja, and the
plaintiff, introduced the theory that the Maharaja by his Commands dated
1.2.1940 and 11.8.1948 had nullified the effect of Lt. Col. Fisher’s aide
memoire dated 1.3.1937.
The fact that there was no reference whatsoever to these documents in
any of the contemporaneous correspondence between the Ruler of
Kapurthala and the Government of India lends credence to the dubitable
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nature of these two documents. In fact, at no point of time did the Maharaja
put forward a claim with the Government of India that the suit property had
ceased to be State property and become his private property by reason of his
aforesaid commands or otherwise. As we have already noticed, the tone and
tenor of the correspondence between the Maharaja and the Government of
India during the material period was abjectly supplicant and demonstrated
only an anxiety on his part to protect his privy purse and to bargain for
certain concessions from the Government. Never was there an assertion of
rightful title to the suit property, his efforts being directed towards wresting
greater concessions. The Division Bench has rightly analysed the evidence
on record and came to the finding that till 1934, the income from Oudh
estates and Kapurthala State were treated as one consolidated account. It was
only on the advice of the Lt. Col. Fisher that the accounts were separately
maintained after 1936. Even in the Note dated 28.5.1948 (Vol. 9 page 17)
sent by the Maharaja and the Tika Raja, President of State Council to V.P.
Menon, Secretary, Ministry of States, it is pointed out that the income from
Oudh estates were merged in the income of Kapurthala State upto 1934, and
it was bifurcated only on the recommendation of Lt. Col. Fisher. The reason
for this is explained thus:
"This step was taken only with the idea of earmarking the
income of the Oudh estates for my Civil List. As it has
been my desire for some time to amalgamate once again
the income of my Oudh estates with the revenue of my
State, I am pleased to order that steps should be taken
with regard to the amalgamation of the Oudh estates with
the Kapurthala State."
Thereafter, the Maharaja pleads his case that he should be granted
Rs. 25 lacs to be transferred to his household account out of the State
Reserve Fund.
On 4.6.1948, the Ministry of States wrote to the Maharaja that
transferring such a large amount would invite serious public criticism and
would not be acceptable to the Government. Discussions followed
thereafter. The Maharaja took the advice of Chaudhary Niamat Ullah, a
retired Judge of the Allahabad High Court, and addressed a note dated
24.8.1948 to the Chief Minister of Kapurthala. Even in the memorandum the
plea made was with regard to injustice that was likely to result: "if my privy
purse is determined solely on the basis of the revenue of the Kapurthala State
Property". The aide memoire prepared by the Maharaja in July, 1948 (Ex.
D2/5) also reiterates this.
In view of this clear evidence, the Division Bench was justified in its
finding that the Maharaja of Kapurthala had clearly admitted that the income
from Oudh estates formed an integral part of State of Kapurthala and all
along maintained in his correspondence with the Government of India that
the nature of the suit property could not be decided merely from the source
of income aspect.
Article 363 of the Constitution of India / Act of State:
For the appellants, it was contended that the source of income was not
really the index of the nature of the property, namely, whether it was State
property or private property of the Maharaja, but that the principle adopted at
the time of accession was the principle of user of the property.
The learned counsel for the appellants urged that the evidence on
record shows that the suit property in Delhi had been personally used by the
Maharaja all along and at no point of time was it used for State purposes.
Hence, he contended that this property was the private property of the
Maharaja.
Even assuming that the learned counsel for the appellants may be right
in his contention that applying the test of user the suit property was liable to
be determined to be the private property of the Maharaja, the question that
arises is: Did the Government of India recognise the suit property as the
private property of the Maharaja? If they did not, could a suit be maintained
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for a declaration that the suit property was the private property of the
Maharaja? Answering this question, the Division Bench holds that the suit
was not maintainable and barred by reason of Article 363 of the Constitution
of India.
The learned counsel for the State of Punjab and the Union of India
contended that the suit of the plaintiff was clearly barred and the court had
no jurisdiction to entertain the suit by reason of Article 363 of the
Constitution of India. Article 363 reads thus:
"363. Bar to interference by courts in disputes
arising out of certain treaties, agreements, etc.\027
(1) Notwithstanding anything in this Constitution but
subject to the provisions of article 143, neither the
Supreme Court nor any other court shall have
jurisdiction in any dispute arising out of any provision of
a treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement, sanad or
other similar instrument which was entered into or
executed before the commencement of this Constitution
by any Ruler of an Indian State and to which the
Government of the Dominion of India or any of its
predecessor Governments was a party and which has or
has been continued in operation after such
commencement, or in any dispute in respect of any right
accruing under or any liability or obligation arising out
of any of the provisions of this Constitution relating to
any such treaty, agreement, covenant, engagement,
sanad or other similar instrument.
(2) In this article-
(a) "Indian State" means any territory recognised before
the commencement of this Constitution by His Majesty
or the Government of the Dominion of India as being
such a State; and
(b) "Ruler" includes the Prince, Chief or other person
recognised before such commencement by His Majesty
or the Government of the Dominion of India as the Ruler
of any Indian State."
Counsel for the State of Punjab contended that the act of accession of
Kapurthala State to the Dominion of India, which was brought about by an
instrument of accession dated 16.8.1947 resulting in the Union of PEPSU
coming into being on 15.7.1948 as well as the execution of the covenant
dated 5.5.1948 between the Maharaja and the Government of India, were
acts of the State. They were the resultants of exercising political power
which could not be questioned in the municipal courts. Learned counsel
placed heavy reliance on the judgment of the Constitution Bench of Seven
learned Judges of this Court in State of Gujarat v. Vora Fiddali
Badruddin Mithibarwala .
In Vora Fiddali (supra) a Constitution Bench of this Court had
examined whether the Government of India was bound to recognise and
implement the rights created by a "Tharao" of the Ruler of the erstwhile
Sant State granting special rights with regard to certain forests after the
Maharaja of Sant State had by an instrument of merger agreement dated
19.3.1948 acceded to the Dominion of India, the Government of India,
having refused to recognise any rights flowing under the grants made under
the ’Tharao’ of the erstwhile Ruler. The Constitution Bench approved of the
following dicta of Lord Dunedin in Vaje Singhji Jorwar Singh v.
Secretary of State for India :
"When a territory is acquired by a sovereign state for the
first time that is an act of State. It matters not how the
acquisition has been brought about. It may be by
conquest, it may be by cession following on treaty, it may
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be by occupation of territory hitherto unoccupied by a
recognised ruler. In all cases the result is the same. Any
inhabitant of the territory can make good in the municipal
courts established by the new sovereign only such rights
as that sovereign has through his officers, recognised.
Such rights as he had under the rule of predecessors avail
him nothing. Nay more, even if in a treaty of cession it is
stipulated that certain inhabitants could enjoy certain
rights, that does not give a title to those inhabitants to
enforce these stipulations in the municipal courts. The
right to enforce remains only with the high contracting
parties."
It also expressly disagreed with the ratio of an earlier judgement of this
Court in Virendra Singh & Ors. v. The State of Uttar Pradesh that such
grants were merely voidable and continue to bind the parties till they were
expressly revoked by the new Sovereign. The majority judgment in Vora
Fiddali (supra) rendered by Hidayatullah, J. succinctly sets forth the concept
of ’Act of State’ in the following words:
"To begin with, this Court has interpreted the integration
of Indian States with the Dominion of India as an Act of
State and has applied the law relating to an Act of State
as laid down by the Privy Council in a long series of
cases beginning with Secretary of State in Council for
India v. Kamachee Boye Saheba and ending with
Secretary of State v. Sardar Rustam Khan and
Other . The cases on this point need not be cited.
Reference may be made to M/s Dalmia Dadri Cement
Co. Ltd. v. Commissioner of Income-tax , The State
of Saurashtra v. Menon Haji Ismali Haji , Jaganath
Agarwala v. State of Orissa , and State of
Saurashtra v. Jamadar Mohamed Abdulla and
Others . In these cases of this Court, it has been laid
down that the essence of an Act of State is an arbitrary
exercise of sovereign power on principles which are
paramount to the Municipal Law, against an alien and the
exercise of the power is neither intended nor purports to
be legally founded. A defence that the injury is by an Act
of State does not seek justification for the Act by
reference to any law, but questions the jurisdiction of the
court to decide upon the legality or justice of the action.
The Act of State comes to an end only when the new
sovereign recognises either expressly or impliedly the
rights of the aliens. It does not come to an end by any
action of subordinate officers who have no authority to
bind the new sovereign. Till recognition, either express
or implied, is granted by the new sovereign, the Act of
State continues."
The decision also holds that merely because the issue of recognition of the
new rights was pending with the Government, it cannot be postulated that
the act of State had come to an end. The act of State could only come to an
end if the Government recognises the rights which were granted by the
erstwhile Ruler. The Government may take time to consider; and delay does
not mitigate against the act of State. [See, Jaganath Agarwala v. State of
Orissa (supra)].
Vora Fiddali (supra) also holds that although the distinction between
legislative, executive and judicial acts of an absolute Ruler (such as the
Indian Rulers were) was apt to disappear when the source of authority was
the sovereign, this would be true only in so far as the subjects of the Ruler
were concerned, since they were bound to obey not only laws but any orders
of the Ruler, whether executive or judicial. "For them there did not exist any
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difference because each emanation of the will of the sovereign required
equal obedience from them. But it does not mean that the Ruler acted
legislatively all the time and never judicially or executively. If this was the
meaning of the observations of this Court then in Phalke’s case, it would
not have been necessary to insist that in determining whether there was a
law which bound the succeeding sovereign, the character, content and
purpose of the declared will must be independently considered." Applying
the test, the majority came to the conclusion that the "Tharao" was not "law
in force" which continued to operate by reason of Article 372 of the
Constitution of India. It was also held that the municipal courts in India
could not pronounce upon the dispute arising under the agreement or
touching the agreement as the subject was outside the jurisdiction by reason
of Article 363 of the Constitution of India.
The rule that cession of territory by one State to another is an act of
State and the subjects of the former State may enforce only those rights
which the new sovereign recognises has been accepted by this Court. [See
in this connection: M/s Dalmia Dadri Cement Co. Ltd. V. The
Commissioner of Income-tax (supra); Jagannath Agarwala v. State of
Orissa (supra); Promod Chandra Deb and Others v. The State of
Orissa and Others and The State of Saurashtra v. Jamadar
Mohamad Abdulla and Others (supra).]
Applying the law as laid down in Vora Fiddali (supra) it appears to
us that the contention of the State of Punjab and the Union of India must be
upheld. The Maharaja of Kapurthala was an independent sovereign Ruler.
To merge or not to merge with the Dominion of India was a political
decision taken by him and the instrument of accession dated 16.8.1947 was,
without doubt, an act of State. So was the covenant dated 5.5.1948. By the
covenant all rights, authority and jurisdiction of the erstwhile Rulers were
vested in the Patiala and East Punjab States Union and all assets and
liabilities of the covenanting States became the assets and liabilities of the
Union, PEPSU. It is only Article XII which ensured certain rights to the
Ruler with regard to full ownership, use and enjoyment of all private
properties (as distinct from State properties) belonging to him on the date of
his making over the administration of the State to the Raj Pramukh.
Consequently, he was also required to furnish to the Raj Pramukh, before
the deadline, an inventory of all the immovable properties, securities and
cash balances held by him as such private property. This was obviously
done so that the Government of India could ascertain the correctness of the
claim. No doubt, clause (3) of Article XII provides that a dispute arising as
to whether any item of property was the private property of the Ruler or
State property was referable to a nominee of the Government of India and
such nominee’s decision would be final and binding on all the parties
concerned, provided that such dispute was to be referred by the deadline of
31.12.1948. Interpreting this clause, the learned Single Judge took the view
that under the treaty the Government of India could not unilaterally refuse to
recognise any property as private property of the Ruler, and, if it did, it was
obliged to refer it to the person contemplated by clause (3). Failure to do so
would imply recognition of the claim as to private property. In our view, this
reasoning of the learned Single Judge was erroneous on two counts. In the
first place, this interpretation ignores the true nature of the covenant. The
covenant is a political document resulting from an act of State. Once the
Government of India decides to take over all the properties of the Ruler,
except the properties which it recognises as private properties, there is no
question of implied recognition of any property as private property. On the
other hand, this clause of the covenant merely means that, if the Ruler of the
covenanting State claimed property to be his private property and the
Government of India did not agree, it was open to the Ruler to have this
issue decided in the manner contemplated by clause (3). Clause (3) of
Article XII does not mean that the Government was obliged to refer to the
dispute upon its failure to recognise it as private property. Secondly, the
dispute as to whether a particular property was or was not recognised as
private property of the Ruler was itself a dispute arising out of the terms of
the covenant and, therefore, not adjudicable by municipal courts as being
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beyond the jurisdiction of the municipal courts by reason of Article 363 of
the Constitution of India.
Although, Vora Fiddali (supra) was a case which dealt with the
recognition of the rights of the subjects of an erstwhile Ruler after accession
of the Ruler to the Dominion of India, the principles laid down in Vora
Fiddali would apply with greater vigour to the rights claimed by the Ruler
himself.
We are of the view that after the Government of India took over all
the properties of the Ruler of the Kapurthala State, by an act of State,
assuring him by the covenant only that he would be entitled to the full
ownership, use and enjoyment of all private properties. A procedure was
prescribed for recognition of such private properties. The evidence on record
does not suggest that at any point of time the Ruler of Kapurthala had
disputed the power of the Government of India to decide the issue as to
whether the suit property was the property of the State of Kapurthala or
private property of the Ruler. On the contrary, the correspondence placed
on record suggests that at all points of time the Ruler of Kapurthala accepted
the position that the Government of India had the right to decide the nature
of the property and was merely pleading that the suit property be declared as
his private property. Finally, in any event, we are of the view that the issue
as to whether the Government of India was obliged to recognise the private
property of the Ruler of Kapurthala, and whether, under the terms of the
covenant (Article XII of the covenant), the Ruler of Kapurthala was entitled
to have it thus recognised, are disputes which are clearly barred by
Article 363 and the court had no jurisdiction to decide the said issues.
Lex Situs:
The appellants contend that the decision that the suit property could
not be recognised as private property was taken only in 1951 i.e. after the
coming into force of the Constitution of India. By that time, the Maharaja
had acceded to the Union (PEPSU) which was succeeded by the State of
Punjab as a State under the Constitution. Appellants contend that by the
decision taken in 1951 the right to property which was held by a citizen of
the country could not have been taken away by a mere executive act without
the backing of a valid legislative enactment. According to the appellants,
the lex situs would govern the issue. In other words, the law as applicable in
Delhi would have governed the issue whether the Ruler of Kapurthala had a
right to the property under the laws as applicable in Delhi. The Ruler of
Kapurthala had purchased the property by a registered sale deed from Khan
Bahadur Abdul Hamid; thus, he was the true owner of the property and his
ownership rights could not have been extinguished except by a law validly
made under the Indian Constitution. Allied to this argument is also a
subsidiary argument that there cannot be an act of State as against a citizen
or a friendly alien. Reliance was sought to be placed on the judgment of the
House of Lords in Johnstone v. Pedlar and of this Court in The State of
Saurashtra v. Memom Haji Ismail Haji and H.H. Maharajadhiraja
Madhav Rao Scindia etc. v. Union of India and another .
Some recapitulation of contemporaneous facts is in order to
appreciate the merits of this argument.
After the instrument of accession was executed by the Maharaja on
16.8.1947, he executed the covenant on 5.5.1948, and he forwarded the list
of his private property by way of an aide memoire and handed it over on
15.7.1948 to the Raj Pramukh. Logically, this would have been the first
occasion for the Maharaja of Kapurthala to lay claim to the suit property as
his private property. Interestingly, there is no reference made to the suit
property or any other property as private property in this aide memoire. The
only anxiety appears to be to get the privy purse fixed which was a big
amount to be paid regularly by the Government of India.
On 16.7.1948 (Ex. D.2/6) the Maharaja addressed a letter to the Raj
Pramukh in which he refers to the copy of the aide memoire already handed
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over. Even in this letter, nothing is said about the nature of the property in
Delhi. The emphasise is purely on ensuring that a large amount of privy
purse fixed.
On 25.8.1948 (Ex.D.2/7), one more letter was addressed by the
Maharaja of Kapurthala to the Raj Pramukh. In this letter, there was a
detailed list of "private properties situated in and outside the Kapurthala
State in accordance with Article XII(2) of the covenant. There is also
reference to the aide memoire personally handed over at Patiala on
15.7.1948. The list refers to several palaces and buildings within Kapurthala
State, and in Mussoorie. For the first time, there is reference to the suit
property as ’Kapurthala House’ situated at 3, Mansingh Road. The issue of
recognition of private property was still very much under process for the Raj
Pramukh wrote back to the Maharaja of Kapurthala on 3.9.1948 (Ex. D.2./8)
requesting him to furnish a list of jewellery, silver ware etc. as per inventory
in the stock registers of the Toshekhana at Kapurthala as it would "help
greatly in the settlement of claims of your private property."
On 22.9.1948 (Ex.D.2/9) there is a letter written by the Maharaja to
the Raj Pramukh with regard to certain animals and articles which he
wanted to be recognised as private property.
On 12.1.1949 (LC/D Vol.6 page 1539) there is a reference made to
"other properties outside the Kapurthala State belonging to me personally"
with a promise that their list would be forwarded for consideration.
At that time, a number of Rulers had acceded to the Government of
India and the White Paper says that their cases were to be considered one by
one individually. Consequently, there was bound to be some time lag in
taking a decision on the claim to private properties made by the Rulers.
While the claim was being processed, on 1.2.1949 (Ex. D2W1/3), the
Finance Secretary, Govt. of PEPSU wrote to N.M. Buch, Joint Secretary,
Government of India to point out that the order passed in 1937 by the
Maharaja clearly bifurcated the division of the properties into the house hold
and State and that this was contrary to the claim he was putting forward. He
also invited attention to the fact that while Mussoorie property was being
divided half and half, the Delhi house necessarily was to be the official
property of the State and that, though the question had been settled, the
Maharaja had raised the issue again.
By letter dated 11.4.1949 (Ex.D.2./10) the Raj Pramukh informed the
Maharaja:
"The question about Kapurthala House in New Delhi will
be settled separately on the same basis as is applied in the
case of houses owned by other Covenanting States, and I
shall be writing to Your Highness further about it."
During this process the Maharaja of Kapurthala sold the suit property
jointly to the plaintiff and Dewan Jarmani Dass on 10.1.1950.
There was a meeting convened on 25.1.1950 between the Raj
Pramukh, the Maharaja of Kapurthala, M.R. Bhide and the Private Secretary
to the Raj Pramukh. Even the minutes ( Ex. D.2/11) recorded of this meeting
do not disclose that the Maharaja had informed M.R. Bhide about the sale of
the property on that day.
When the Government of India came to know of the sale of the suit
property, a meeting was arranged on 7.2.1950 in Kapurthala between V.P.
Menon, Secretary, Ministry of States, M.R. Bhide, Regional Commissioner,
PEPSU, Sardar Hari Sharma, Deputy Secretary of States and the Maharaja
of Kapurthala. The minutes of this meeting, insofar as they pertain to the
suit property, make interesting reading. They read as under (Para 3):
"The sale of Kapurthala House in Delhi should be
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revoked. The vendee should be asked to refund the
consideration money to His Highness. This decision was
communicated to Dewan Jarmanidass by Secretary."
On 14..3.1950 (Ex.PX-13), the Maharaja wrote to V.P. Menon,
Secretary, Ministry of States requesting him to declare the suit property as
his personal property.
On 26.2.1951 a meeting was held between the representatives of the
Government of India and the Maharaja. The minutes were recorded on
1.3.1951 (Ex. D.2W2/2). The material portion of the minutes reads as under:
"Delhi House : His Highness was informed that in the
basis of the information received on him, the house could
not be treated as private property. The intention of the
Government of India, therefore, was to treat the house as
State Property."
Finally, by letter dated 4/5.5.1951 (Ex.P.6/3), the Government of
India informed the Maharaja:
"It has now been decided that Kapurthala House, No. 3,
Man Singh Road, New Delhi, will be State property and
not the private property of Your Highness. We have
informed the PEPSU Government of this decision."
In the light of these developments, it is clear that the act of State
continued from the date when the instrument of accession was signed i.e.
16.8.1947 to the date on which the final decision of the Government of India
was conveyed to the Maharaja. The fact that time was taken in conveying
the decision, or the fact that the Constitution of India had come into force in
the interregnum, do not change the character of the act of the Government of
India in refusing to recognise the suit property as the private property of the
Maharaja of Kapurthala. Agarwala (supra) holds that an act of State need
not be a prompt decision, but could stretch over a period of time. Vora
Fiddali (supra) states that the act of State would continue till the new
sovereign recognises the rights. In this case, however, the act of State
terminated with the final decision of non-recognition being conveyed. What
the Government of India did in the year 1951 was not referable to anything
flowing from the Constitution, but, action albeit delayed, referable to the
instrument of accession and the covenant signed by the Maharaja. Any
dispute with regard to what the covenant guarantees, or whether the act of
the Government of India was justified under the covenant is, beyond the
pale of jurisdiction of the court by reason of Article 363 of the Constitution
of India. The Division Bench of the High Court was, therefore, justified in
making a finding that the suit was barred by Article 363 and was liable to
fail.
Now, we may dispose of the subsidiary argument of Mr. Vellapally,
learned senior advocate, based on the Doctrine of Lex Situs. Vora Fiddali
(supra) is an authority for the proposition that the act of State would
continue till there is recognition (or non-recognition). In our view, all the
rights available to the erstwhile Ruler and his subjects are of no avail till
there is recognition of such rights. The argument of lex situs could have
perhaps prevailed, if the Government of India at any point of time had
recognised the suit property as the private property of Maharaja of
Kapurthala, and, after the coming into force of the Constitution, attempted
to take it away otherwise then by a Constitutionally valid legislative
enactment. On the facts, however, we find that no such recognition was
granted. Merely because the decision not to recognise was conveyed to the
plaintiff in the year 1951, the act of the Union of India did not cease to be an
act of State, nor does it fall outside the protective umbrella of Article 363 of
the Constitution of India. The contention of the learned counsel of the
appellants that the plaintiff claimed title to the property through the
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registered sale deed in his favour under the law applicable in Delhi would be
of no avail. As we have said earlier, if the Maharaja had no title to the
property, the plaintiff can hardly get anything more.
Another interesting sideline in the argument was introduced by the
learned counsel for the appellants that an act of State could never occur with
reference to property that was not in the ceded territory. It is not necessary
for us to examine this argument as the facts on hand are clearly against the
argument. There is not doubt, whatsoever, that the Maharaja of Kapurthala
held properties outside the territory of Kapurthala, say, for example, in
Mussoorie and Delhi. Even with regard to these properties, the Government
took a decision as to their character and whether they could be recognised as
private property of the Ruler. As to Delhi property, the Government of India
decided that it would be treated as State property and in the case of
Mussoorie property, half of it to be treated as State property and half of it to
be treated as private property of the Maharaja of Kapurthala. Further, we
find that Article VI of the Covenant dated 5.5.1948 vests "all" the assets and
liabilities of the covenanting States in the Union of PEPSU and makes
exception only with regard to private properties as contemplated by Article
XII. There is no reference whatsoever therein to the situs of the property.
The covenant, therefore, drew a distinction only between State property and
private property of the Ruler irrespective of where the property was situated.
In our view, any further dispute with regard to the interpretation of this
clause of the covenant would again be beyond the jurisdiction of the court
by reason of Article 363 of the Constitution of India.
In the result, we uphold the findings of the Division Bench of the
High Court that the suit was not maintainable.
Article 77 of the Constitution of India:
The contention based on Article 77 of the Constitution of India, urged
by the learned counsel for the appellants, also does not have merit. The
contention is that all orders and other instruments made and executed in the
name of the President are required to be authenticated in the manner as
specified in Article 77. That the order, if any, of the Government of India,
not to recognise the suit property as the private property of the Maharaja,
was not executed in this manner and, therefore, is invalid. The judgment of
this Court in State of Rajasthan and anr. v. Sripal Jain and L.G.
Chaudhari v. The Secretary, L.S.G. Dept., Govt. of Bihar and Ors.
were pressed into service in support.
In our view, the argument based on Article 77 is irrelevant. Even
assuming that the appellants are right in the contention that the decision not
to recognise the suit property as private property of the Maharaja of
Kapurthala, was required to be and not taken in the manner contemplated by
Article 77, it would only mean that there was no decision. In our judgment,
the plaintiff cannot succeed by merely showing that the Government of
India had failed to arrive at a decision on the issue. He must further show
that the Government of India had recognised the suit property as private
property of the Ruler of Kapurthala as that could be the only foundation for
his title. There is also another reason why we are not impressed with this
argument. If the act of recognition or non-recognition of the suit property as
private property is relatable to the instrument of accession made in 1947 and
the covenant executed in 1948, the decision would also relate back to the
date of the covenant, and on that date Article 77 of the Constitution was not
in existence. Hence, it would be incorrect to judge the validity of that
decision relatable to the covenant executed in 1948 by the Constitution of
India, which came into existence much later.
Article 372 of the Constitution of India:
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The appellants, relying on the judgment in Vishnu Pratap Singh v.
State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors. , contend that the Ruler of Kapurthala
was an absolute sovereign, who could by his command change the character
of the property from State property to private property, which he did by his
commands of 1940 and 1948; that these commands had the force of law and
continued to operate as ’existing law’ by reason of Article 372 of the
Constitution of India; and they could only be revoked by a law validly
made by Parliament and not by an executive act.
The argument, undoubtedly, allures at first blush; but, it fails when
scrutinized. In the first place, Vishnu Pratap Singh (supra) relied on and is
based on the ratio of Virendra Singh (supra). Vora Fiddali, a decision of
Seven learned Judges, expressly overruled the principle laid down in
Virendra Singh (supra). Consequently, Vishnu Pratap Singh (supra)
cannot be said to be good law. In any event, the test laid down in Vora
Fiddali, if applied to the commands in question (even assuming they have
been proved), is answered negatively. The learned Single Judge was correct
in saying that 1948 command did not amount to law. Even assuming the two
commands of 1940 and 1948 were proved, they would not amount to law,
by applying the test laid down in Vora Fiddali (supra).
Learned counsel for the appellants placed strong reliance on the
judgment in State of Punjab & Ors. v. Brigadier Sukhjit Singh which,
incidentally, is the case of the third defendant himself pertaining to
Kapurthala State. Strong reliance is placed on the observations in Paragraph
11 of the judgment:
"Now it is beyond doubt that the ruler of an Indian State
was in the position of a sovereign and his command was
the law. His Farman had the strength and potency of a
law made by an elected legislature and his acts,
administrative or executive, were sovereign in character."
This judgment would be binding inter parties as far as what it decides. If it is
cited as a precedent on a proposition of law, we are afraid that this judgment
runs counter to what had been laid down by the majority judgment in Vora
Fiddali (supra) and, what is more, strangely, does not refer to Vora Fiddali.
In the teeth of Vora Fiddali, we are unable to accept the cited judgment as
reflecting the correct position of law.
Limitation:
That brings us to the issue of limitation. The learned Single Judge
held that the plea of limitation not having been taken in the pleadings
defendants Nos. 1 and 2 should not be allowed to raise the said plea.
We may notice here that under the Code of Civil Procedure, Order
VII Rule 1(e) requires a plaint to state "the facts constituting the cause of
action and when it arose". The plaintiff was bound to plead in the plaint
when the cause of action arose. If he did not, then irrespective of what the
defendants may plead in the written statement, the court would be bound by
the mandate of Section 3 of the Limitation Act, 1908 to dismiss the suit, if it
found that on the plaintiff’s own pleading his suit is barred by limitation. In
the instant case, the plaint does not plead clearly as to when the cause of
action arose. In the absence of such pleadings, the defendants pleaded
nothing on the issue. However, when the facts were ascertained by evidence,
it was clear that the decision of the Government of India not to recognise the
suit property as private property of the Maharaja was taken some time in the
year 1951, whether in March or May. Dewan Jarmanidass, the plaintiff and
the Maharaja were very much aware of this decision. Yet, the suit was filed
only on 11.5.1960.
The Division Bench was, therefore, right in applying Article 120 of
the Limitation Act, 1908 under which the period of limitation for a suit for
which no specific period is provided in the Schedule was six years from the
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date when the right to sue accrues. The suit was, therefore, clearly barred by
limitation and by virtue of Section 3 of the Limitation Act, 1908, the court
was mandated to dismiss it.
As rightly pointed out by the Division Bench, the learned Single
Judge ought to have permitted the plea to be raised on the basis of the facts
which came to light. The Division Bench has correctly appreciated the plea
of limitation, in the facts and circumstances of the case, and rightly came to
the conclusion that the suit of the plaintiff was liable to be dismissed on the
ground of limitation. We agree with the conclusion of the Division Bench
on this issue.
Alternative Relief:
The last issue which needs consideration relates to the alternative
relief prayed for by the plaintiff in Paragraph 16 of the plaint. The plaintiff
pleaded that in case the court came to the conclusion that the Maharaja
Paramjit Singh had no authority to sell the immovable property to the
plaintiff and Dewan Jarmani Dass and/or that the plaintiff and the said
Dewan Jarmani Dass did not acquire any title to the suit property by virtue
of the Indenture of Conveyance dated 10.1.1950, then the plaintiff was
entitled to a sum of Rs. 4 lacs as damages from the third defendant
(Sukhjit Singh, the then Maharaja of Kapurthala), for "breach of the
covenant of title contained in the said indenture of conveyance" as a result
of which the plaintiff would be deprived of the whole of the suit property by
reason of the said defect found in the title of the Maharaja Paramjit Singh.
It was pleaded that the third defendant was the sole heir of late Maharaja
Paramjit Singh and had inherited all his properties and was, thus, bound and
liable to keep the plaintiff harmless and indemnified against "all losses,
damages costs and expenses which the plaintiff might sustain or incur by
reason of the plaintiff being deprived of the suit property." The plaintiff
alleged that he had sustained damages in the sum of Rs. 4 lacs "as per
particulars hereto annexed and marked as Ex. J." and claimed the said
amount from defendant No. 3. Interestingly, there is no annexure \026 ’Ex.J.’
to the original plaint on record. The third defendant by his written statement
while traversing the allegations on this issue maintained that he was not
liable to keep the plaintiff indemnified against such losses. He also denied
that the plaintiff had lost a sum of Rs. 4 lacs as alleged in his annexure-
Ex.J., the particulars of which he also denied having been supplied to him.
A replication to the written statement of Defendant No. 3 was made by the
plaintiff in which it is repeated that the third defendant was bound and liable
to keep the plaintiff indemnified against any loss, damage, costs etc.
suffered as a result of deprivation of the suit property. The plaintiff
reiterated that the third defendant was liable for the claim in the suit and that
"the particulars of the claim of 4 lakhs are on the court file as Annexure ’J’
and the Defendant No. 3 ought to have inspected the court file". After
anxiously wading through the mass of documents filed in the trial court, we
are unable to locate any such annexure \026’J’ in the plaint. It is not known as
to how the plaintiff arrived at the estimate of the alleged damages claimed
by him from third defendant as an alternative relief (vide prayer clause (e) in
the plaint).
Not only there is no pleading on the issue, but we find that there is no
evidence, whatsoever, let in by the plaintiff on this alternative relief
claimed. All the witnesses examined by the plaintiff were with reference to
the title of the plaintiff. Not a single of the plaintiff’s witnesses has said a
word about this alternative claim for damages in the sum of Rs. 4 lacs.
Apart therefrom, when the third defendant was examined, not a single
question seems to have been addressed to him in cross examination with
regard to this alternative claim of damages in the sum of Rs. 4 lacs.
Issues 9, 10 and 13 framed by the learned Single Judge pertained to
this claim. The learned Single Judge disposed of this claim by observing:
"It has been stated by defendant No. 3, in his evidence,
that he is the only legal heir of his father Maharaja
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Paramjit Singh and he had succeeded to the estate left
behind by him. But in view of the fact that I have held
that the father of defendant No. 3 was the owner of the
property in dispute and had the authority to sell the same,
therefore the question of defendant No. 3 becoming liable
to re-compensate the plaintiff with any amount does not
arise. The issues are decided accordingly."
The Division Bench dealt with this issue and observed (vide Paragraph 595):
"The learned Single Judge took the view that third
defendant was not liable to recompensate the plaintiff. It
was not brought to the notice of the learned Judge that
the plaintiff did not press his claim against defendant No.
3 at the time of the trial."
Although, in the written submissions filed before the High Court as
well as in the appeal before this Court, submissions have been made with
regard to the alternative relief, no arguments were addressed before us on
this issue when the oral submissions were made by the counsel on both
sides. Despite looking for it, we are unable to locate anything on record
which expressly suggests that this claim had been expressly given up by the
plaintiff during the trial. We are unable to find out the basis on which the
Division Bench arrived at this conclusion. This fact, however, does not carry
the case of the plaintiff any further. The burden of establishing that the
plaintiff had sustained damages and the measure of damages was squarely
on the plaintiff. The plaintiff has singularly failed to discharge this onus
both by lack of pleadings and lack of evidence. In the circumstances, this
alternative relief claimed by the plaintiff must fail.
In the result, we find no reason to interfere with the impugned
judgment of the Division Bench of the High Court. The appeal is liable to be
and is dismissed.
In the facts and circumstances of the case, however, there shall be no
order as to costs.
Civil Appeal No. 3861 of 2001:
The facts, insofar as they are relevant for disposal of this appeal are as
under:
On 10.1.1950, the late Maharaja Paramjit Singh, ex-Ruler of
Kapurthala State purported to sell and convey the suit property to Dewan
Jarmani Dass and R.M. Seksaria by a registered sale deed for the
consideration of Rs. 1.50 lacs.
We have already held, by our judgment delivered today in Civil
Appeal No. 3862 of 2001, that Maharaja Paramjit Singh had no title to the
suit property which he could convey to the plaintiff. After purporting to sell
the suit property to M/s Dewan Jarmani Dass and R.M. Seksaria, the
petitioners put them in possession.
On 29.3.1950, the Government of India, in exercise of its power
under Section 3 of the Delhi Premises (Requisition and Acquisition) Act,
1947, issued a notice of requisition to R.M. Seksaria. This was objected to
by R.M. Seksaria, but ultimately an order of acquisition of the suit properlty
was passed on 17.6.1950.
On 4.12.1950, pursuant to the said order of requisition the Estate
Officer took possession of the suit property.
On 21.2.1951, a deed of transfer was signed between Dewan Jarmani
Dass and R.M. Seksaria by which Dewan Jarmani Dass conveyed,
transferred his undivided share, rights, title and interest in the property to
R.M. Seksaria. There was correspondence between R.M. Seksaria and the
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Estate Officer with regard to disposal of the furniture, fittings drapery etc. in
the suit property.
On 14.3.1952, the Delhi Premises (Requisition and Acquisition) Act,
1947 was repealed by the Requisitioning and Acquisitioning of Immovable
Property Act, 1952. Section 24 of the new Act made a deeming provision
under which the properties requisitioned under the repealed Act were
deemed to have been requisitioned under the new Act.
On 11.5.1960, R.M. Seksaria (the plaintiff) filed a suit in the Delhi
High Court for declaration of his title to the suit property.
The Government of India had taken a decision that the suit property
had been refused to be recognised as the private property of the late
Maharaja of Kapurthala. It took the stand that the suit property was State
property and devolved upon PEPSU, and thereafter, on its successor, State
of Punjab. In the meanwhile, the Government of India had allowed the State
of Punjab to use the property.
By 10.3.1987 the requisitioning of the property came to an end. By
this time, however, there was a suit for declaration of title of the property.
The State of Punjab and the Government of India denied that R.M. Seksaria
had derived any title to the suit property, and, therefore, refused to hand it
back to R.M. Seksaria, despite the requisitioning order having come to an
end.
On 18.5.1987, R.M. Seksaria filed a writ petition, CWP No. 1612/87
in the High Court of Delhi for a direction to the Union of India, the Director
of Estate, Ministry of Urban Development and the State of Punjab to give
vacant possession of the suit property to the petitioners. This writ petition
was heard along with the first appeal RFA (OS) No. 19 of 1989 filed by the
State of Punjab and Union of India impugning the decree in favour of the
plaintiff which had been made by the learned Single Judge. When the writ
petition was taken up for hearing, the learned counsel appearing for the
petitioners and the present civil appeal fairly submitted to the court that, if
the court accepted the case of the plaintiff, then the petitioners would be
entitled to the reliefs prayed for in the writ petition. By its judgment dated
8.12.2000, the Division Bench of the High Court dismissed the writ petition
by observing thus in Paragraph 4:
"In the light of the findings rendered by us in RFA(OS)
19/89 the plaintiff has no right at all in the suit property,
the petitioners as legal representatives of the plaintiff in
the suit, have absolutely no right to pray for the issuance
of writ of mandamus and other reliefs."
This decision of the Division Bench can hardly be faulted. We see no
reason to interfere. In the result, this appeal is also dismissed.
No order as to costs.