Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
VATTICHERUKURU VILLAGE PANCHAYAT AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NORI VEKATRAMA DEEKSHITHULU AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT26/04/1991
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1991 SCR (2) 531 1991 SCC Supl. (2) 228
JT 1991 (5) 140 1991 SCALE (1)818
ACT:
A.P. Gram Panchyat Act, 1964-Section 64 and 65-
Property of income belongs to or administered for benefit
of villagers in common- Vests in Gram Panchayat.
A.P. Gram Panchayat Act 1964- Section85-Vesting of
Water courses and tanks, lands used by public with Gram
Panchayat- Assumption of management by Government, Subject
to villagers’ prescriptive right.
A.P. Inams (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari)
Act, 1956- Section 8-Tank-Grant of ryotwari patta to users
of inam land- Conclusive nature of their right , title and
interest.
Constitution of India, 1950- Preamble, Chapter IV read
with section9, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908- Social
legislation-Conferrring power and jurisdiction on
tribunals-Orders passed by them Finality-Exclusion of
jurisdiction of Civil Courts-Purpose of-Decisions of
Revenue Courts under section 3 read with section7, Inams
Act-|Whether retriable in Civil Court.
Words and Phrases- ’Vest’, Vested’, ’Vesting’-Meaning of.
HEADNOTE:
Civil Appeal Nos. 931 of 1977 and 200 of 1978 relate
to the same dispute though arose from, two suits and
separate judgements.
Civil Appeal No. 931 of 1977 arose out of the suit for
possession by the Gram Panchayat against the descendants of
the grantee of inam. The suit was dismissed by the Trial
Court and was confirmed by the High Court and the High Court
granted leave under Art.133.
Civil Appeal No. 200 of 1978 arose out of the suit for
possession and mesne profits which was laid by the
descendants of the grantee of inam. The pleadings are the
same in both cases.
A Zamindar granted 100 acres of land inam to dig,
preserve
532
and maintain a tank in favour of the predecessors of the
respondents of C.A. No. 931/77.
In 1700 A.D.i.e., 1190 Fasli, the tank was dug by the
villagers and ever since, the villagers were using the tank
for their drinking purpose and perfected their right by
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prescription.
In course of time the tank was silted up and fresh
water existed only in and around 30 acres. The grantee’s
descendants-respondents did not make any repairs, Grass and
trees had been grown in the rest of the area and was being
enjoyed.
Under section 3 of the A.P.Inams ( Abolition and
Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, ( Act XXXVII of 1956)
Ryotwari Patta was granted to the respondents in
individuals capacity and on appeal the Revenue Divisional
Officer confirmed the same and it became final, as it was
not challenged any further.
On 7.7.1965, the Gram panchayat- the appellant in C.A.
No. 931/77 took unilateral possession of the tank and ever
since , it was exercising possession, supervision and
control over it.
After the expiry of three year from the date of
dispossession, the respoondents filed a suit for possession
based on title. Earlier thereto the appellant- Gram-
Panchayat had filed a suit for possession.
The Trial Court found that the tank was a ’public
trust’, the appellants would be hereditary trustees and
could be removed only by taking action under s. 77 of the
A.P. Hindu Charitable and Religious Institutions and
Endowments Act, 1966 and that the respondents had acquired
title by adverse possession. Accordingly the suit for
possession was decreed relegating the filing of separate
application for mesne profit.
On appeal, the High Court reversed the decree and held
that the tank was a public tank, and the tank and the lands
stood vested in the Gram Panchyat under A.P. Gram Panchayat
Act,1964. Since, the Gram Panchayat was in possession from
July 7, 1966, though dispossessed the respondents forcibly
and as the suit was not under s. 6 of the Specific Relief
Act, 1963, but one based on title, it called for
interference and dismissed the suit. This court granted
leave to appeal under article 136.
533
The respondents in C.A. No. 931/77 (the appellants in
C.A. No. 200/78) contended that in view of the entries of
the Inam Fair Register, the tank was a public trust and not
a public tank; they could not be dispossessed until recourse
made under section 77 of the A.P. Charitable and Religious
Institutions and Endowments Act; that under the Gram
Panchayat Act, the lands did not vest in the gram Panchayat;
and that since the grant of ryotwari patta under the Inams
Act had become final, S. 14, thereof barred the jurisdiction
of the Civil Court to entertain the suit.
The appellant-Gram Panchayat in C.A. No. 931/77 (the
respondents in C.A. No. 200/78) contended that the tank and
the appurtenant land was correctly held as public tank by
the High Court that by operation of sections 85 and 64 of
the Gram Panchayat Act, the land and the tank stood vested
in the Panchayat, that the entries in the Inam Fair Register
established that the grant of land was for preservation,
maintenance and repairs of the tank and therefore, the grant
should be in favour of the institution, i..e., the tank and
the respondents thereby did not acquire any title, that
ryotwari patta was only for the purpose of land revenue;
that the Gram Panchayat acquired absolute right, title and
interest in the land; and the suit was not a bar in the
facts of the case.
Dismissing both appeals, this Court
HELD: 1.01. Any property or income, which belongs to or
has been administered for the benefit of the villagers in
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common or the holders in any of the village land generally
or of land of a particular description or of lands under
particular source of irrigation shall vest in Gram Panchayat
and be administered by it for the benefit of the villagers
or holders. The lands or income used for communal purpose
shall either belong to the Gram Panchayat or has been
administered by the Gram Panchayat. It is not the case of
the Gram Panchayat nor any finding recorded by the courts
below to that effect. So. s. 64 is not attracted though
the villagers acquired prescriptive right to use the water
from the tank for their use and of their cattle. [554D-F]
1.02. All public water-courses, springs, reservoirs,
tanks, cisterns, etc. and other water works either existing
on the date of the Act or made thereafter by the Gram
Panchayat, or otherwise including those used by the public
ripened into prescriptive right for the use and benefit of
the public and also adjacent or any appurtenant land not
being private property shall vest in the Gram Panchayat
under s. 85(1) and be subject to its control. [554F-G]
534
2.01. The word‘vesting’ in s. 85 would signify that the
water-courses and tanks, lands etc. used by the public to
such an extent as to give a prescripvtive right to their
use, are vested in the Gram Panchayat, and placed them under
the control and supervision of the Gram Panchayat. It
confers no absolute or full title. It was open to the
Government, even after vesting, to place restriction upon
the Gram Panchayat in the matter of enjoyment and use of
such tanks, and appurtenant lands etc. The assumption of
management by the Government would be subject to the
prescriptive right of the villagers, if any. The vesting of
the tanks etc. in the Gram Panchayat was with absolute
rights and the village community rights would over-ride
against rights of the Government. [546C-F]
2.02. The tank is a public tank and not a public trust
and that under s. 85(1) and s. 64, the vesting of the tanks,
the appurtenant land and the common land is only for the
purpose of possession, supervision, control and use thereof
for the villagers for common use subject to the over-riding
title by the Government and its assumption of management
should be in terms of sub-s. (3) of s. 85 of the Act and
subject to the prescriptive right in the water, water spread
tank for common use. [547A-B]
Gram Panchayat, Mandapaka & Ors. V. Distt. Collecctor,
Eluru & Ors. AIR 1982 AP 15, approved.
Anna Narasimha Rao & Ors. v. Kurra Venkata Narasayya &
Ors., [1981] AWR 325, OVER-RULED.
3.01. Under A.P. Land Encroachment Act, 1905; Talengana
Area Land Revenue Act, relevant Abolition Acts like A.P.
Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948,
Inams Abolition Act etc. give absolute rights or vesting in
the State over the forest land, tanks, rivers, mines,
poramboke, land, etc. free from all encumbrances and the
preexisting rights in the other land stood abolished and
will be subject to the grant of Ryotwari Patta etc. [546F-H]
3.02 Grant of Ryotwari patta is not a title but a right
coupled with possession to remain in occupation and
enjoyment, subject to payment of the land revenue to the
State. [546H]
3.03. The entries in the Inam Fair Register are great
acts of the State and coupled with the entries in the survey
and settlement record
535
furnishes unimpeachable evidence. On construction of these
documents, it would clearly emerge that the original grant
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was made for the preservation and maintenance of the tank
and tax-free Inam land was granted for that purpose, though
it was in the name of the individual grantee. The grant was
for the preservation and maintenance of the tank. [548C-D]
3.04. The grant was for the institution. Under s. 3 of
the Inams Act, the enquiry should be, whether (1) a
particular land is Inam land; (2) Inam land in a Ryotwari,
Zamindar or Inam Village; and (3) is held by any
institution. In view of the finding that the grant was for
the preservation and maintenance of tank, the Inam land in
an inam village was held by the institution, namely, the
tank. Ryotwari patta shall, therefore, be in favour of the
institution. Undoubtedly the ryotwari patta was granted in
favour of the descendants. [548D-F]
3.05. The pattas were obtained in the individuals name,
the trustees of an institution cannot derive personal
advantage from the administration of the trust property. The
grant of patta was for the maintenance of the trust. [548G]
3.06. The descendants, though enjoyed the income from
the properties, did not effect the repairs and neglected the
maintenance and upkeep of the tank. They rendered the tank
disused and abandoned. By operation of s. 85 of the Act the
lands and tank stood vested in the Gram Panchayat for
control, management and supervision. [550E-F]
3.07. A hereditary trustee is entitled to be the
Chairman of a Board of Trustees, if any, constituted under
the Endowment Act or else be in exclusive possession and
management of the public trust registered thereunder until
he is removed as per the procedure provided therein. Since
the tank always remained a public tank and not being a
public trust, the Endowment Act does not apply. Therefore,
the question of initiating action under s. 77 of the
Endowment Act for removal of the descendants as trustees
does not arise. [550F-G]
Arunachalam Chetty v. Venkatachalpathi Garu Swamigal,
AIR 1919 P.C. 62 at P. 65; Syed Md. Mazaffaral Musavi v.
Bibi Jabeda & Ors., AIR 1930 Pc 1031; Bhojraj v. Sita Ram &
Ors, AIR 1936 P.C. 60; M. Srinivasacharyulu & Ors. V.
Dinawahi Pratyanga Rao & Ors., AIR 1921 Madras 467; Ravipati
Kotayya & Anr. v. Ramaswamy Subbaraydu & Ors., [1956] 2
A.W.R. 739, referred to.
536
K.V. Krishna Rao v. Sub-Colletor, Ongole, [1969] 1
S.C.R. 624, followed.
Nori Venkatarama Dikshitulu & Ors. v. Ravi
Venkatappayya & Ors., [1959] 2 A.W.R. 357, approved.
Krishan Nair Boppudu Punniah & Ors. v. Sri Lakshmi
Narasimhaswamy Varu, [1963] 1 A.W.R. 214; Bhupathiraju
Venkatapathiraju & Ors. V. The President Taluq Board,
Narsapur & Ors.; [1913] 19 1.C. 727 (Mad.) (D.B.),
distinguished.
Tagore Law Lecture, ‘‘Hindu Religious Endowments and
Institutions at p. 6, distinguished.
4.01. In the laws made to restructure the social order
creating rights in favour of the citizens and conferring
power and jurisdiction on the hierarchy of Tribunals or the
authorities constituted thereunder and giving finality to
their orders or decisions and divested the jurisdiction of
the established civil courts expressly or by necessary
implication Departure in the allocation of the judicial
functions would not be viewed with disfavor for creating the
new forums and entrusting the duties under the statutes to
implement socio-economic and fiscal laws. Courts have to
consider, when questioned, why the legislature made the
departure. The reason is obvious. The tradition bound civil
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courts gripped with rules of pleading and strict rules of
evidence and tardy trial, four tier appeals, endless
revisions and reviews under C.P.C. are not suited to the
needed expeditious dispensation. The adjudicatory system
provided in the new forums is cheap and rapid,. The
procedure before the Tribunal is simple and not hide bound
by the intricate procedure of pleadings, trial,
admissibility of the evidence and proof of facts according
to law. Therefore, there is abundant flexibility in the
discharge of the functions with greater expedition and
inexpensiveness. {552D-H]
4.02. In order to find out the purpose in creating the
Tribunals under the statues and the meaning of particular
provisions in social legislation, the Court would adopt the
purposive approach to ascertain the socials ends envisaged
in the Act, to consider scheme of the Act as an integrated
whole and practical means by which it was sought to be
effectuated to achieve them. Meticulous lexographic analysis
of words and phrases and sentences should be subordinate to
this purposive approach. The dynamics of the interpretative
functioning of the Court is to reflect the contemporary
needs and the prevailing values consistent with the
constitutional and legislative declaration of the policy
envisa-
537
ged in the statute under consideration. [552H-553B]
4.03. The law should, therefore, respond to the clarion
call of social imperatives evolve in that process functional
approach as means to subserve ‘‘social promises’’ set out in
the Preamble, Directive Principles and the Fundamental
Rights of the Constitution. [553d]
4.04. Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908
provides that whenever a question arises before the Civil
Court whether its jurisdiction is excluded expressly or by
necessary implication, the court naturally feels inclined to
consider whether remedy afforded by an alternative provision
prescribed by special statute is sufficient or adequate. In
cases where exclusion of the civil court’s jurisdiction is
expressly provided for, the consideration as to the scheme
of the statue in question and the adequacy of sufficiency of
the remedy provided for by it may be relevant, but cannot be
decisive. Where exclusion is pleaded as a matter of
necessary implication such consideration would be very
important and inconceivable circumstances might become even
decisive. [553G-554B]
4.05. The jurisdiction of a Tribunal created under
statute may depend upon the fulfilment of some condition
precedent or upon existence of some particular fact. Such a
fact is collateral to the actual matter which the Tribunal
has to try and the determination whether it existed or not
is logically temporary prior to the determination of the
actual question which the Tribunal has to consider. At the
inception of an enquiry by a Tribunal of limited
jurisdiction, when a challenge is made to its jurisdiction,
the Tribunal has to consider as the collateral fact whether
it would act or not and for that purpose to arrive at some
decision as to whether it has jurisdiction or not. There may
be Tribunal which by virtue of the law constituting it has
the power to determine finally, even the preliminary facts
on which the further exercise of its jurisdiction depends;
but subject to that, the Tribunal cannot by a wrong decision
with regard to collateral fact, give itself a jurisdiction
which it would not otherwise have except such tribunals of
limited jurisdiction when the statue not only empowers to
enquire into jurisdictional facts but also the rights and
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controversy finally it is entitled to enter on the enquiry
and reach a decision rightly or wrongly. If it has
jurisdiction to do right, it has jurisdiction to do wrong.
It may be irregular or illegal which could be corrected in
appeal or revision subject to that the order would become
final. [554B-F]
4.06. The Inams Act did not intend to leave the
decisions of the revenue courts under s. 3 read with s. 7 to
retry the issue once over in the civil court. [561D-E]
538
4.07. The glimpse of the object of the Inams Act,
scheme, scope and operation thereof clearly manifest that
Inams Act is a self contained code, expressly provided
rights and liabilities; prescribed procedure; remedies; of
appeal and revision, excluded the jurisdiction of the civil
court, notwithstanding anything contained in any law, given
primacy of Inams Act though inconsistent with any law or
instrument having force of law. The jurisdictional findings
are an integral scheme to grant or refuse ryotwari pattta
under s. 3, read with s. 7 and not collateral findings. It
was subject to appeal and revision and certiorari under Art
226. The decision of the Revenue Tribunal, are final and
conclusive between the parties or persons claiming right,
title or interest through them. The trick of pleadings and
the camouflage of the reliefs are not decisive but the
substance or the effect on the order of the tribunal under
the Inams Act are decisive. The civil suit except on grounds
of fraud, misrepresentation or collusion of the parties is
not maintainable. The necessary conclusion would be that the
civil suit is not maintainable when the decree directly
nullifies the ryotwari patta granted under s. 3 of the Inams
Act. [561E-562A]
Deena v. Union of India, [1984] ISCR, referred to.
Kamala Mills Ltd. v. State of Bombay, [1966] 1 SCR 64;
Secretary of State v. Mask & Co., [1940] L.R. 67 I.A. 222;
Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. V. Governor-General in Council,
L.R. 74 I.A. 50; Firm and Illuri Subbayya Chetty & Sons v.
State of Andhra Pradesh, [1964] 1 SCR 752; Deesika Charyulu
v. State of A.p., AIR 1964 SC 807; Dhulabhai & Ors v. State
of M.P. & Anr., [1968] 3 SCR 662; Hati v. Sunder Singh,
[1971] 2 SCR 163; Muddada Chayana v. Karam Narayana and Anr.
Etc., [1979] 3 SCR 201; T. Munuswami Naidu v. R. Venkata
Reddy, AIR 1978 A.P. 200; O. Chenchulakshmamma & Anr. v. D.
Subramanya Reddy, [1980] 1 SCR 1006; A. Bodayya & Anr. V. L.
Ramaswamy(dead) by Lrs., [1984] Suppl. SCC 391; Doe v.
Bridges, [1831] 1 B & Ad. 347 at p. 359; Premier Automobiles
Ltd. v. Kamlakar Shantaram Wadke and Ors., [1976] 1 SCR
427; State of Tamil Nadu v. Ramalinga Samigal Madam, [1985]
4 SCC 10; Syamala Rao v. Sri Radhakanthaswami Varu, [1984] 1
A.P.L.J. 113; Jyotish Tahakur & Ors. v. Tarakant Jha & Ors.,
[1963] Suppl. 1 SCR 13; Sri Athmanathaswami Devasthanam v.
K. Gopalaswami Aiyangar, {1964] 3 SCR 763; Sri VEdagiri
Lakshmi Narasimha Swami Temple v. Induru Pattabhirami Reddy,
[1967] 1 SCR 280; Shree Raja Kandragula Srinivasa Jagannadha
Rao Panthulu Bahadur Garu v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1970]
2 SCR 714; Dr. Rajendra Prakash Sharma v. Gyan Chandra &
Ors., [1980] 3 SCR 207; Anne Basant National Girls High
School v. Dy.
539
Director of Public Instruction & Ors., [1983]
1 SCC 200; Raja Ram Kumar Bhargava (dead) by Lrs. v. Union
of India, [1988] 2 SCR 352; Pabbojan Tea Co., Ltd., etc. v.
the Dy. Commissioner, Lakhimpur, etc., [1968] 1 SCR 260 and
K. Chintamani Dora & Ors. v. G. Annamnaidu & Ors., [1974] 2
SCR 655, distinguished.
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D.V. Raju v. B.G. Rao & Anr., [1961] 2 A.W.R. 368,
approved.
P.pedagovindayy v. Subba Rao, [1969] 2 A.L.T. 336,
over-ruled.
5.01. The word ‘vest’ clothes varied colours from the
context and situation in which the word came to be used in a
statue of rule. [545B-C]
5.02. The word [vest’], means, to give an immediate,
fixed right of present or future enjoyment, to accrue to, to
be fixed, to take effect, to clothe with possession, to
deliver full possession of land or of an estate, to give
seisin to enfeoff. [545C-D]
5.03. The word, ‘vest’, in the absence of a context, is
usually taken to mean, ‘vest’ in interest rather than vest
in possesion’.[545E-F]
5.04. ‘Vest’. ‘‘generally means to give the property
in’’. [545E-F]
5.05. The word, ‘vested’ was defined, ‘as to the
interest acquired by public bodies, created for a particular
purpose, in works, such as embankments, whcih are ‘vested’
in them by statute.’ {545D-E]
5.06. ‘‘Vesting’’ in the legal sense means, to settle,
secure, or put in fixed right of possession; to endow, to
descend, devolve or to take effect, as a right’. [545C]
Chamber’s Mid-Century Dictionary at P. 1230; Blacks Law
Dictionary, 5th Edition at P. 1401; Stroud’s Judicial
Dictionary, 4th Edition Vol, 5 at P. 2938, Item 12, at P
2940, Item 4 at P. 2939; Port of London Authority v. Canvey
Island Commissioners, {1932] 1 Ch. 446; Fruit and Vegetable
Merchants Union v. Delhi Improvement Trust, [1957] S.C.R. 1,
referred to.
6. Under the Gram Panchayat Act the statutory
interposition of vesting the tank and the appurtenant land
in the Gram Panchayat made it to retain possession, control
and supervision over it, though the Gram Panchayat
unlawfully took possession. The need to grant decree for
possession in favour of the Gram Panchayat is thus
redundant. The suit
540
of the descendants normally to be decreed on the finding
that ryotwari patta under s. 3 of the Inams Act was granted
in their favour and that they were unlawfully dispossessed.
Since the grant of ryotwari patta, though in the name of
individuals, was to maintain the public tank whcih stood
vested under s. 85 of the Act in the Gram panchayat, the
descendants are divested of the right and interest acquired
therein. Thus the suit of the descendants also is liable to
be dismissed. [562A-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 931/77
& 200/78.
Appeals by Certificate from the Judgment and Decree
dated 1.4.76 and from the Judgment and Decree dated
19.6.1975 of the Andhra Pradesh High Court in A.S. NO. 71/73
and Appeal No. 259 of 1972.
B. Kanta Rao for the Appellants.
C. Sitaramiah, and B. Parthasarthi for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by:
K.RAMASWAMY, J. Civil Appeal Nos. 931 of 1977 and 200
of 1978 relate to the same dispute though arose from two
suits and separate judgements. The Bench that heard Civil
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appeal No. 931 of 1977 directed on January 24, 1991 to list
Civil Appeal No. 200 of 1978 for common disposal. Civil
Appeal No. 200 of 1978 arose out of O.S. No 118 of 1968 on
the file of the Court of Add. Subordinate Judge. Guntur and
Appeal No. 259 at 1972 dated June 19, 1975 of the A.P. High
Court. The suit for possession and mesne profits was laid by
the descendants of Nori Lakshmipathi Somayaajulu of
Vatticherukuru, Guntur Taluq and District, for short
‘N.L.S.’. The dispute relates to the tank known as ‘Nori
Lakshmipathi Somayajulu’s Western Tank’ ‘‘Vooracheruva’’
(Village Tank). It consists of 100 acres of which roughly 30
acres is covered by water spread area marked A’ Schedule ‘B’
Schedule consists of 70 acres (silted up area). The tank was
dug in Fasli 1190 (1700 A.D.) Zamindar, Raja Mainikya Rao
made a grant of the land for digging the tank and its
preservation, maintenance and repairs. It is the
descendants’ case that it is a private tank enjoyed by the
‘grantee’, N.L.S. as owner and thereafter the descendants
and perfected the title by prescription. It was found as a
fact by the High Court and the descendants are unable to
persuade us from the evidence to differ from the findings
that the tank is a ‘‘public tank’’ dug by
541
the village. The descendants’ plea and evidence adduced in
support thereof that it is their private tank, was negated
by both the courts. The Trial Court found that the tank is
a ‘public trust’, the appellants would be hereditary
trustees and could be removed only by taking action under s.
77 of the A.P. Hindu Charitable and Religious Institutions
and Endowments Act, 1966 for short ‘the Endowments Act’. It
also held that the descendants acquired title by adverse
possession. Accordingly the suit for possession was decreed
relegating to file a separate application for meesne
profits. On appeal the High Court reversed the decree and
held that the tank is a public tank and the tank and the
lands stood vested in the Gram Panchayat under A.P. Gram
Panchayat Act 2 of 1964 for short ‘the Act’. Since the Gram
panchayat was in possession from July 7, 1965, though
dispossessed the descendants forcibly and as the suit is not
under s. 6 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 but one based on
title, it called for no interference. It dismissed the suit.
This Court granted leave to appeal under Article 136.
Civil Appeal No. 931 of 1977 arose out of the suit for
possession in O.S. No. 57 of 1966 on the file of the court
of Subordinate Judge at Guntur filed by the Gram Panchayat
against the descendants. The suit was dismissed by the Trial
Court and was confirmed by the High Court in A.S. No. 71 of
1973 and the High Court granted leave under Art. 133 on Dec.
10. 1976. The pleadings are the same as in the other suit.
In addition the descendants further pleaded in the written
statement that the Gram Panchayat unlawfully took possession
of the tank on July 7, 1965. They also acquired title by
grant of ryotwari patta under s. 3 of the A.P. Inams
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act (Act XXXVII of
1956), for short ‘the Inams Act’. The Gram Panchayat had no
manner of right to interfere with their possession and
enjoyment. They also pleaded and adduced evidence that they
were leasing out the fishery rights and grass and trees
grown on the land. The income was being utilized for the
repairs of tank. The Trial Court and the High Court found
that the lands were endowed to N.L.S. for the maintenance of
the tank and the descendants obtained ryotwari patta under
Inams Act and are entitled to remain in possession and
enjoyment as owners subject to maintain the tank.
Accordingly the suit was dismissed. On appeal in A.S. No. 71
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of 1973 by judgment dated April 1, 1976 the High Court
confirmed the decree on further finding that by operation of
s. 14 of the Inams Act, Civil Suit was barred. Thus both the
appeals are before this Court.
542
In Civil Appeal No. 200 of 1978, Shri
Seetharamaiah learned Senior Counsel for the descendants
N.L.S. have no exclusive personal right title or interest in
the tank and the appurtenant total land of 100 acres. In
view of the entries of the Inams Fair Register for short
‘I.F.R.,’ it is a public trust and not a public tank. Unless
recourse is had to remove them from trusteeship under s. 77
of the Endowments Act, the appellants cannot be
dispossessed. Since admittedly N.L.S. and the descendants
were enjoying the property till date of dispossession,
presumption of the continuance of the enjoyment anterior
thereto as owners could be drawn. The High Court thereby
committed error of law in holding that the lands stood
vested in the Gram Panchayat under the Act and that it is a
public tank. In Civil Appeal No. 931 of 1977, it was further
contended that since the grant of Ryotwari patta under the
Inams Act had became final s. 14 thereof bars the
jurisdiction of the Civil Court to entertain the suit. Shri
B.Kanta Rao, learned counsel for the Gram Panchayat
contended that the finding of the High Court that the tank
and the appurtenant land, namely, the plaint schedule
property, as ‘public tank’, is based on evidence that the
tank was dug by the villagers and that they have been using
for their drinking purposes and the cattle is a finding of
fact. By operation of ss. 85 and 64 of the Act, the land and
the tank stood vested in the Gram Panchayat. Entries in the
I.F.R. establishes that the grant of the land was for
preservation, maintenance and repairs of the tank.
Therefore, the grant should be in favour of the institution,
namely, the tank. The pattas obtained by the descendants
should be for the benefit of the tank, though granted in
individual names. By operation of s. 85 of the Act, the
descendants acquired no personal title to the property.
Ryotwari patta is only for the purpose of land revenue. The
Gram Panchayat acquired absolute right title and interest in
the land. The Civil Suit is not a bar on the facts in this
case.
Before appreciating the diverse contentions, the facts
emerged from the findings in both the appeals could be
gathered thus. Admittedly the Zamindar. Raja Manikya Rao
granted 100 acres of land in Inam village to dig the tank
and the grant was for its preservation and maintenance, the
grant was in favour of N.L.S. In 1700 A.P., i.e. 1190 Fasli,
the tank was dug by the villagers and ever since the
villagers have been using the fresh water tank for their
drinking purposes and of the cattle and perfected their
right by prescription. In course of time the tank was silted
up and in and around 30 acres the water spread area, fresh
water is existing. No. repairs were effected by the
descendants. The rest of the land was silted up. Grass and
trees have been
543
grown thereon and was being enjoyed. On July 7, 1965, the
Gram Panchayat took unilateral possession of the tank and
ever since was exercising possession, supervision and
control over it. After expiry of three years from the date
of dispossession, the descendants filed O.S. No.57 of 1966
for possession based on title. Earlier thereto the Gram
Panchayat field the suit for possession. Under the Inams
Act, Ryotwari patta under s. 3 was granted to the
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descendants in individual capacity and on appeal the Revenue
Divisional Officer, Guntur confirmed the same. It became
final as it was not challenged by filing any writ petition.
Both the suits now stood dismissed. The counsel on other
side have taken us through the evidence and we have
carefully scanned the evidence.
From these facts the first question emerges is whether
the tank and the appurtenant land stood vested in Gram
panchayat.
Section 64 of the Act reads thus:
‘‘Vesting of common property or income in Gram
Panchayat-Any property or income which by custom
belongs to or has been administered for the
benefit of the villagers is common, or the holders
in common of village land generally or of land of
a particular description or of lands under a
particular source of irrigation, shall vest in the
Gram Panchayat and be administered by it for the
benefit of the villagers or holders aforesaid’’.
Section 85 reads thus:
‘‘Vesting of water works in Gram Panchayat-(1) All
public water-courses, springs, reservoirs, tanks,
cisterns, fountains, wells, ponds an other water
works (including those used by the public to such
an extent as to give a prescriptive right to their
use) whether existing at the commencement of this
Act or afterwards made, laid or erected and
whether made, laid or erected at the cost of the
Gram Panchayat or otherwise for the use or benefit
of the public, and also any adjacent land, not
being private property, appertaining thereto shall
vest in the Gram Panchayat and be subject to its
control’’.
Provided that nothing in this sub-section shall
apply to any work which is, or is connected with,
a work of irrigation or
544
to any adjacent land appertaining to any such
work.
(2) Subject to such restrictions and control as
may be prescribed, the Gram Panchayat shall have
the fishery rights in any water work vested in it
under sub-section (1), the right to supply water
from any such work for raising seed beds on
payment of the prescribed fee, and the right to
use the adjacent land appertaining thereto for
planting of trees and enjoying the usufruct
thereof or for like purpose.
(3) The Government may, by notification in the
Andhra Pradesh Gazettee, define or limit such
control or may assume the administration of any
public source of water-supply and public land
adjacent and appertaining thereto after consulting
the Gram Panchayat and giving due regard to its
objections, if any’’.
(emphasis supplied)
A bird’s eye view of the provisions brings out vividly
that any property or income which belongs to or has been
administered for the benefit of the villagers in common or
the holders in any of the village land generally or of land
of a particular description or of lands under particular
source of irrigation shall vest in the Gram Panchayat and be
administered by it for the benefit of the villagers or
holders aforesaid. The lands or income use for communal
purpose shall either belong to the GRam Panchayat or has
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been administered by the Gram Panchayat. It is not the case
of the Gram Panchayat nor any finding recorded by the courts
below to the effect. So s. 64 is not attracted, though the
villagers acquired prescriptive right to use the water from
the tank for their use and of their cattle.
All public water-courses, springs, reservoirs, tanks
cisterns, etc. and other water works either existing on the
date of the Act or made thereafter by the Gram Panchayat, or
otherwise including those use by the public ripened into
prescriptive right for the use and benefit of the public and
also adjacent or any appurtenant land not being private
property shall vest in the gram Panchayat under s. 85(1) and
be subject to its control. The proviso is not relevant for
the purpose of this case. Under sub-s (2), the Gram
Panchayat shall have fishery rights therein subject to any
restriction or control prescribed by the Govt. by rules. The
Gram Panchayat also shall have the right to use the adjacent
land appertaining thereto for planting trees and enjoying
the usufruct thereof or for like purposes. Sub-section (3)
gives over-riding power to
545
the Govt., by a notification published in the A.P. Gazettee
to define or limit the control or supervision by the Gram
Panchayat or the Govt. may assume administration of any
public source of water supply and public land adjacent and
appertaining thereto. The only condition precedent thereto
is prior consultation of the Gram Panchayat and to have due
regard to any objections. If raised, by the Gram Panchayat
and issue notification published in the Gazette resuming
the water sources or the land etc.
The word ‘vest’ clothes varied colours from the context
and situation in which the word came to be used in a statute
or rule. In Chamber’s Mid-Century Dictionary at p. 1230
defined ‘‘vesting’’ in the legal sense ‘to settle, secure,
or put in fixed right of possession; to endow, to descend,
devolve or to take effect, as a right’. In Black’s Law
Dictionary, 5th Edition at p. 1401, the word, ‘vest’, to
give an immediate, fixed right of present or future
enjoyment, to accure to, to be fixed, to take effect, to
clothe with possession, to deliver full possession of land
or of an estate, to give seisin to enfeoff. In Stroud’s
Judicial Dictionary, 4th Edition, Vol. 5 at p. 2938, the
word ‘vested’ was defined in several senses. At p. 2940 in
item 12 it is stated thus ‘as to the interest acquired by
public bodies, created for a particular purpose, in works
such as embankments which are vested in them by statue, see
Port of London Authority v. Canvey Island Commissioners,
[1932] 1 Ch. 446 in which it was held that the statutory
vesting was to construct the sea wall against inundation or
damages etc. and did not acquire fee simple. Item 4 at p.
2939, the word ‘vest’, in the absence of a context, is
usually taken to mean vest in interest rather than vest in
possession’. In item 8 to ‘vest’,. ‘‘generally means to
give the property in’’. Thus the word ‘vest’ bears variable
colour taking its content from the context in which it came
to be used. Take for instance, the land acquired under the
Land Acquisition Act. By operation of ss. 16 & 17 thereof,
the property so acquired shall vest absolutely in the
Government free from all encumbrances. Thereby, absolute
right, title and interest is vested in the Government
without any limitation divesting the pre-existing rights of
its owner. Similarly, under s. 56 of the Provincial
Insolvency Act, 1920, the estate of the insolvent vests in
the receiver only for the purpose of its administration and
to pay off the debts to the creditors. The receiver acquired
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no personal interest of his own in the property. The
receiver appointed by the court takes possession of the
properties in the suit on behalf of the court and administer
the property on behalf of the ultimate successful party as
an officer of the court and he has no personal interest in
the property vested thereunder. In Fruit and Vegetable
Merchants Union v. Delhi
546
Improvement Trust, [1957] SCR p. 1 the question was whether
the Delhi Improvement Trust was vested of the Nazul land
belonging to the Government with absolute right, when the
property was entrusted under the scheme for construction of
the markets etc. It was held by this court that placing the
property at the disposal of the trust did not signify that
the Government had divested itself of its title to the
property and transferred the same to the trust. The clauses
in the agreement show that the Government had created the
Trust as its agent not on permanent basis but as a
convenient mode of having the scheme of improvement
implemented by the Trust subject to the control of the
Government.
The word ‘vesting’ in s. 85 would signify that the
water courses and tanks, lands etc. used by the public to
such an extent as to give a prescriptive right to their use,
are vested in the Gram Panchayat, and placed them under the
control and supervision of the Gram Panchayat. It confers no
absolute or full title. It was open to the Government, even
after vesting, to place restrictions upon the Gram Panchayat
in the matter or enjoyment and use of such tanks, and
appurtenant lands etc. Sub-section (3) of s. 85 expressly
makes the matter clear. It empowers the Government to assume
the administration of any such tank or lands or to define or
limit the control which is vested in the Gram Panchayat.
Gram Panchayat being a statutory body is bound by the
restrictions imposed by sub-S3 (3) The assumption of
management by the Govt. would be subject to the prescriptive
right of the villagers if any. The Division Bench in Gram
Panchayat, mandapaka & Ors. V. Distt. Collector Eluru &
Ors., AIR 1981 AP 15 considered the meaning of the word
‘vesting and correctly laid the law in its interpreting s.
85 of the Act. Anna Narasimha Rao & Ors. V. Kurra Venkata
Narasayya & Ors., [1981] 1 AWR p. 325 relied on by Shri
Kanta Rao, though supports his contention that the vesting
of the tanks etc. in the Gram panchayat was with absolute
eights and the village community rights would over-ride
against rights of the Government, in our view the law was
not correctly laid down. Under A.P. Land Encroachment Act,
1905; Talengana Area Land Revenue Act, relevant Abolition
Act like A.P. Estates (Abolition and Conversion into
Ryotwari) Act, 1948, Inams Abolition Act etc. give absolute
rights of vesting in the State over the forest land, tanks,
rivers, mines, poramboke, land, etc. free from all
encumbrances and the pre-existing rights in the other land
stood abolished and will be subject to the grant of Ryotwari
patta etc. It is also settled law that grant of Ryotwari
patta is not a title but a right coupled with possession to
remain in occupation and enjoyment subject to payment of the
land revenue to the State. Therefore, we
547
agree with the High Court that the tank is public tank and
not a public trust and that under s. 85(1) and s. 64, the
vesting of the tanks, the appurtenant land and the common
land is only for the purpose of possession, supervision,
control and use thereof for the villagers for common use
subject to the over-riding title by the Government and its
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assumption of management should be in terms of sub-s. (3) of
s. 85 of the Act and subject to the prescriptive right in
the water; water spread tank for common use.
Admittedly, N.S.L. or the descendants used the plaint
schedule property till July 7, 1965. The question then is
what rights the descendants acquired therein. Admittedly
within six months from the date of dispossession no suit
under s. 6 of the Specific Relief Act was laid. Therefore,
though the Gram Panchayat was not justified to take law into
its own hand to take unilateral possession without due
course of law, since the suit filed by the descendants was
based on title the descendants in Civil Appeal No.200 of
1978 have to establish their better title. Their claim was
based on the Ryotwari patta granted under s. 3 of the Inams
Act. Therefore, entries in I.F.R. bear great evidenciary
value to ascertain their rights. In Arunachalam Chetty v.
Venkatachalpathi Garu Swamigal, AIR 1919 PC. p. 62 at 65
the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council considered the
effect of the columns in the I.F.R. and held thus :
‘‘It is true that the making of this Register was
for the ultimate purpose of determining whether or
not the lands were tax-free. But it must not be
forgotten that the preparation of this Register
was a great act of State, and its preparation and
contents were the subject of much consideration
under elaborately detailed reports and minutes. It
is to be remembered that the Inam Commissioners
through officials made enquiry on the spot, heard
evidence and examined documents, and with regard
to each individual property, the government was
put in possession not only of the conclusion come
to as to whether the land was tax-free, but of a
statement of the history and tenure of the
property itself. While their Lordships do not
doubt that such a report would not displace actual
and authentic evidence in individual cases, yet
the board, when such is not available, cannot fail
to attach the utmost importance, as part of the
history of the property, to the information set
forth in the Inam Register’’.
548
Construction of the relevant entries in the I.F.R. is a
question of law. Col. 2, the general class to which the land
belongs, described as ‘Dharmadayam’ endowment for a
charitable ‘‘institution’’, Col. 7, description of tenure
for the ‘‘preservation and repairs’’ of Nori Lakshmipathi
Somayajulu Western Tanks at Vatticherkuru, Col. 9 tax-free,
Col. 10, nature of the tenure, permanent, Col. 11, guarantor
of the land Raja Manikya Rao in 1190 Fasli (1700 A.D.), Col
13, name of the original grantee ‘Nori Lakshmipathi
Somayajulu’, Col. 21 to be confirmed under usual conditions
of service and Col. 22, confirmed. In the survey and
settlement record of the year 1906 of the same columns have
been repeated. The land in the tank were classified as
Village ‘Poramboke’ and the tank as ‘village tank’. In the
village map also the same remarks were reiterated.
Therefore, the entries in the I.F.R. are great acts of the
State and coupled with the entries in the survey and
settlement record furnishes unimpeachable evidence. On
construction of these documents, it would clearly emerge
that the original grant was made for the preservation and
maintenance of the tank and tax-free Inam land was granted
for that purpose through it was in the name of the
individual granted. We are of the view that the grant was
for the preservation and maintenance of the tank. In K.V.
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Krishna Rao v. Sub Collector, Ongole, [1969] 1 SCR 624 this
court held under the Inam Act that the tank is a charitable
institution. Thereby we conclude that the grant was for the
institution. Under s. 3 of the Inams Act, the enquiry should
be whether (1) a particular land is Inam land; (2) Inam land
in a Ryotwari, Zamindar or Inam Village; and (3) is held by
any institution. In view of the finding that the grant was
for the preservation and maintenance of tank, the Inam, land
in an inam village was held by the institution, namely, the
tank. Ryotwari patta shall, therefore, be in favour of the
institution. Undoubtedly the ryotwari patta was granted in
favour of the descendants. In Nori Venkatarama Dikshitulu &
Ors. v. Ravi Venkatappayya & Ors., [1959] 2 A.W.R.357 in
respect of the tope dedicated to the public benefits in the
same village, namely Vatticherukuru, one of the question
that arose was whether the patta granted in the individuals’
names, would be their individual property or for the
endowment. The Division Bench held that though the pattas
were obtained in the individuals’ name, the trustees of an
institution cannot derive personal advantage from the
administration of the trust property. It was held that the
grant of patta was for the maintenance of the trust. We
approve that the law was correctly laid down.
In Krishan Nair Boppudi Punniah & Ors. v. Sri Lakshmi
Narasimhaswamy Varu, by its trustees & Ors., [1963] 1 A.W.R.
214
549
relied on by Shri Sitaramaiah, on the basis of the entries
in I.F.R., the finding was that the grant was in favour of
the individual burdened with service and not to an
institution. Therefore, the ratio therein does not assist us
to the facts in this case. Moreover, in view of the stand
taken by Shri Sitaramaiah that the lands are not the private
property of N.L.S. or his descendants but held by them as
trustees, the grant of Ryotwari patta to the individuals by
necessary implication, as a corollary, is of no consequence.
The question then is whether the enjoyment of the usufruct
by the descendants would clothe them with any right as
owners of the land. In view of the concurrent finding that
descendants did not acquire title by prescription, the
passage in Tagore Law Lecture, ‘Hindu Religious Endowment
and Institutions’ at p. 6 relied on by Shri Sitaramaiah to
the effect ‘dedication of tanks and trees’ as private
property also renders no assistance to the descendants.
Undoubtedly, a presumption of an origin in lawful title
could be drawn, as held in Syed Md. Mazaffaralmusavi v. Bibi
Jabeda & Ors., AIR (1930) P.C. 1031 that the court has so
often readily made presumption in order to support
possessory rights, long and quietly enjoyed, where no actual
proof of title is forth coming. It is not a mere branch of
the law of evidence. It was resorted to because of the
failure of actual evidence. The matter is one of presumption
based upon the policy of law. It was also further held that
it is not a presumption to be capriciously made nor is it
one which a certain class of possessor is entitled to, de
jure. In a case such as the one in question where it was
necessary to indicate what particular kind of lawful title
was being presumed, the Court must be satisfied that such a
title was in its nature practicable and reasonably capable
of being presumed without doing violence to the
probabilities of the case. It is the completion of a right
to which circumstances clearly point where time had
obliterated any record of the original commencement. The
longer the period within which and the remoter the time when
first a grant might be reasonably supposed to have occurred
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the less force there is an objection that the grant could
not have been lawful. In Bhojraj v. Sita Ram & Ors., AIR
(1936) P.C. 60 it was further held that the presumption, not
to supplement but to contradict the evidence would be out of
place. A presumption should be allowed to fill in gaps
disclosed in the evidence. But the documentary evidence in
the I.F.R. and the survey and settlement records furnish the
unerring evidence. Though the original grant was not
produced, the grant was for the institution and not to the
individuals. Therefore, the colour of title though enabled
them to enjoy the usufruct for personal use, once the tank
and the appurtenant land was found to be public tank, the
descendants acquired no personal right over it. The decision
in Bhupathiraju
550
Venkatapathiraju & Ors. v. The President, Taluq Board,
Naraspur & Ors., [1913]19.I.C.727(Mad.) (D.B.) relied by
Shri Sitaramaiah the finding was that the grant was to the
plaintiffs’ family subject to conditions of service. Their
right to take the usufruct of the trees therein was held to
be for the benefit of the grantee. In that view its ratio
cannot be applied to the facts in this case. In M.
Srinivasacharyulu & Ors. v. Dinawahi Pratyanga Rao & Ors.,
AIR (1921) Madras 467 one of the contentions raised was that
since the produce was being enjoyed by the trustees for over
many years for personal use, it must be construed that the
trust was for personal benefit of archakas. It was repelled
holding that it would be a dangerous proposition to lay down
that if the trustees of the religious trusts have for many
years being applying the income to their own personal use,
the trust-deed must be construed in the light of such
conduct. The decree of the trial court that the enjoyment
was for the institution was upheld. The finding in Civil
Appeal No. 931 of 1977, that since the endowment was the
dashabandam the descendants are entitled to the Ryotwari
patta cannot be upheld. Dashabandam grant of land burdened
with the service of a public nature was made at a time when
maintenance of water sources and water courses to the
benefits of the villagers was left to the villagers. In
Ravipati Kotayya & Anr.v. Ramansami Subbaraydu & Ors.,
[1956] (2) A.W.R. 739 it was held that in the case of
dashabandam inams situated in Ryotwari villages, the
government has the right of resumption on default of
service. The lands burdened with dashabandam service which
is service of public nature, are inclinable as being
against public policy. We, therefore, hold that the
descendants, though enjoyed the income from the properties,
did not effect the repairs and neglected the maintenance and
upkeep of the tank. They rendered the tank disused and
abandoned. By operation of s.85 of the Act the lands and
tank stood vested in the Gram Panchayat for control,
management and supervision.
Undoubtedly, a hereditary trustee is entitled to be the
Chairman of a Board of Trustees, if any, constituted under
the Endowment Act or else be in exclusive possession and
management of the public trust registered thereunder until
he is removed as per the procedure provided therein. Since
the tank always remained a public tank and not being a
public trust, the Endowment Act does not apply. therefore,
the question of initiating action under s. 77 of the
Endowment Act for removal of the descendants as trustees
does not arise.
In the suit of the descendants the High Court did not
consider the effect of grant of ryotwari patta under Inams
Act and in the suit of the
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551
Gram (Village) Panchayat the effect of vesting under s.85 of
the Act on the grant of ryotwari patta was not considered.
Only s. 14 i.e. the bar of civil suit was focussed.
Consequently both the suits were dismissed by different
division benches. The question is whether the suit is
maintainable.
All communal lands, porambokes, tanks, etc., in inam
villages shall vest in the government under s.2A of Inams
Act free from all encumbrances. Section 3 determines the
inam lands whether held by the individual or the
institution, provides procedure for determination and s.3(4)
gives right of appeal. Section 4 converts those lands into
ryotwari lands and accords entitlement to grant of ryotwari
patta. Section 5 gives power to restitute the lands to the
tenants in occupation though were ejected between specified
dates. Section 7 gives power to grant ryotwari patta to the
tenants to the extent of two thirds share in the land and
one third to the land-holder. If it was held by the
institution, two third share would be to the institution and
one third to the tenants. Section 3 grants right of
permanent occupancy to the tenants in inam lands held by
institutions. Section 9 prescribes procedure for eviction of
the tenants having right of permanent occupancy. Section 10-
A provides right to ryotwari patta to tenants in Ryotwari or
Zamindari village with the right of permanent occupancy,
even in the lands, held under customary right etc. Section
12 fastens liability on the ryotwari pattadars to pay land
assessment. Section 13 gives exclusive power of jurisdiction
to Tehsildar, the Revenue court and the collector to try the
suit as per the procedure as of a Civil Court under the Code
of Civil Procedure. Section 14 of the Inams Act reads thus:
14. " Bar of jurisdiction of Civil Courts: No suit
or other proceedings shall be instituted in any
Civil Court to set aside or modify any decision of
the Tahsildar, the Revenue Court, or the Collector
under this Act, except where such decision is
obtained by misrepresentation, fraud or collusion
of parties.".
Section 14-A and Section 15 provides that:
"14-A Revision (1) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this Act, the Board of Revenue may, at
any time either suo moto or on application made to
it, call for and examine the records relating to
any proceedings taken by the Tahsildar, the Revenue
Court or the Collector under this act for the
purpose of satisfying itself as to the regularity
of
552
such proceeding or the correctness, legality or
propriety of any decision made or order passed
therein; and if, in any case, it appears to the
Board of revenue that any such decision or order
should be modified, annulled, reserved or remitted
for consideration, it may pass order accordingly.
(2) No order prejudicial to any person shall be
passed under sub-section (1) unless such person has
been given an opportunity of making his
representation.
15. Act to override other laws: "Unless otherwise
expressly provided in this Act the provision of
this act and of any orders and Rules made
thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any
other law for the time being in force or any
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instrument having effect by virtue of any such
law".
The Constitution intends to herald an egalitarian
social order by implementing the goals of socio-
economic justice set down in the Preamble of the
Constitution. In that regard the Constitution
created positive duties on the State in Part IV
towards individuals. The Parliament and the State
legislatures made diverse laws to restructure the
social order; created rights in favour of the
citizens; conferred power and jurisdiction on the
hierarchy of Tribunals or the authorities
constituted thereunder and given finality to their
orders or decisions and divested the jurisdiction
of the established civil courts expressly or by
necessary implication. The Inam Act is a step in
that direction as part of Estate Abolition Act.
Therefore, departure in the allocation of the
judicial functions would not be viewed with
disfavour for creating the new forums and
entrusting the duties under the statutes to
implement socio-economic and fiscal laws. We have
to consider, when questioned, why the legislature
made this departure. The reason is obvious. The
tradition bound civil Courts gripped with rules of
pleading and strict rules of evidence and tardy
trial, four tier appeals, endless revisions and
reviews under C.P.C are not suited to the needed
expeditious dispensation. The adjudicatory system
provided in the new forums is cheap and rapid. The
procedure before the Tribunal is simple and not
hide bound by the intricate procedure of pleadings,
trial, admissibility of the evidence and proof of
facts according to law. Therefore, there is
abundant flexibility in the discharge of the
functions with greater expedition and
inexpensiveness.
In order to find out the purpose in creating the
Tribunals under
553
the statutes and the meaning of particular provision in
social legislation, the Court would adopt the purposive
approach to ascertain the social ends envisaged in the Act,
to consider scheme of the Act as an integrated whole and
practical means by which it was sought to be effectuated to
achieve them. Meticulous lexographic analysis of words and
phrases and sentences should be subordinate to this
purposive approach. The dynamics of the interpretative
functioning of the Court is to reflect the contemporary
needs and the prevailing values consistent with the
constitutional and legislative declaration of the policy
envisaged in the statute under consideration.
In Denna v. Union of India, [1984] 1 SCR 1 this Court
held that the "Law is a dynamic science, the social utility
of which consists in its ability to keep abreast of emerging
trends in social and scientific advance and its willingness
to readjust its postulates in order to accommodate those
trends. Law is not static. The purpose of Law is to serve
the needs of life". The law should, therefore, respond to
the clarion call of social imperatives evolve in that
process functional approach as means to subserve "social
promises" set out in the Preamble, directive principles and
the fundamental Rights of the Constitution.
It is seen that the Inam’s Act is an integral part of
the scheme of the Andhra Pradesh Estates (Aboilition and
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Conservation into Ryotwari) Act, 26 of 1984 for short
’Estate Abolition Act’ to cover the left over minor Inams.
It determined the pre-existing rights of the Inamdars and
the religious institutions; envisages grant of ryotwari
patta afresh to the concerned and seeks to confer permanent
occupancy rights on the tenants. It also regulates the
relationship between institutions and its tenants. It
created appellate and revisional and forums and declared
finality to the orders passed by the tribunals and expressly
excluded the jurisdiction of the Civil Court,
notwithstanding anything contained in any other law or
inconsistent therewith the Inams Act shall prevail. The
exception engrafted was that a suit would lie to challenge
the decision obtained by fraud, misrepresentation and
collusion by parties.
Section 9 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908
provides that whenever a question arises before the
Civil Court whether its jurisdiction is excluded
expressly or by necessary implication, the Court
naturally feels inclined to consider whether remedy
afforded by an alternative provision prescribed by
special statute is sufficient or adequate. In cases
where exclusion of the Civil Court’s jurisdiction
is expressly provided for, the consideration as to
the scheme of the statute in question
554
and the adequacy or sufficiency of the remedy provided for
by it may be relevant, but cannot be decisive. Where
exclusion is pleaded as a matter of necessary implication
such consideration would be very important and in
conceivable circumstances might become even decisive.
The jurisdiction of a Tribunal created under statute
may depend upon the fulfilment of some condition precedent
or upon existence of some particular fact. Such a fact is
collateral to the actual matter which the Tribunal has to
try and the determination whether it existed or not is
logically temporary prior to the determination of the actual
question which the tribunal has to consider. At the
inception of an enquiry by a Tribunal of limited
jurisdiction, when a challenge is made to its jurisdiction,
the Tribunal has to consider as the collateral fact whether
it would act or not and for that purpose to arrive at some
decision as to whether it has jurisdiction or not. There may
be Tribunal which by virtue of the law constituting it has
the power to determine finally, even the preliminary facts
on which the further exercise of its jurisdiction depends;
but subject to that, the Tribunal cannot by a wrong decision
with regard to collateral fact, give itself a jurisdiction
which it would not otherwise had. Except such tribunals of
limited jurisdiction when the statute not only empowers to
enquire into jurisdictional facts but also the rights and
controversy finally it is entitled to enter on the enquiry
and reach a decision rightly or wrongly. If it has
jurisdiction to do right, it has jurisdiction to do wrong.
It may be irregular or illegal which could be corrected in
appeal or revision subject to that the order would become
final. The questions to be asked, therefore, are whether the
Tribunal has jurisdiction under Inam Act to decide for
itself finally; whether the institution or the Inamdar or
the tenant is entitled to ryotwari patta under ss. 3,4 and
7 and whether the Tribunal is of a limited jurisdiction and
its decision on the issue of patta is a collateral fact.
The consideration as to exclusion of the jurisdiction
of Civil Court is no longer res integra. This Court
in bead-roll of decisions considered this question
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in diverse situations. In Kamala Mills Ltd. v.
State of Bombay, [1966] 1 SCR 64 the questions
arose were whether an assessment made in violation
of the Bombay Sales Tax Act could claim the status
of an assessment made under that Act, and whether
the nature of the transactions was a decision of
collateral fact. A Bench of seven Judges of this
Court held that if it appears that a statute
creates a special right or liability and provides
for the determination of the right or liability to
be dealt with by tribunals specially constituted in
that
555
behalf would be considered whether all questions of
said right and liability shall be determined by the
tribunals so constituted and it becomes pertinent
to enquire whether remedies normally associated
with actions in Civil Courts are prescribed by the
said statute or not. It was held that the Court was
satisfied that the Act provided all the remedies
associated with actions in Civil Courts and the
remedy for refund of the tax illegally collected
was provided and it was not collateral. Section 20
prohibits such a claim being made before an
ordinary Civil Court and held that the civil suit
was not maintainable. The leading decision of the
Privy Council in Secretary of State v. Mask & C0.,
[1940] L.R. 67I.A.222; Raleigh Investment Co. Ltd. v.
Governor-General in Council, L.R. 74 I.A. 50 and
the ratio in Firm and Illuri Subbayya Cheety & Sons
v. State of Andhra Pradesh, [1964] 1 SCR 752 were
approved. In Desika Charyulu v. State of A.P.., AIR
1964 SC 807 a Constitution Bench was to consider
whether the jurisdiction of the Settlement Officer
and the Tribunal created under the Estates
Abolition Act to determine whether Shotrium Village
was an inam estate was exclusive and the Civil
Court’s jurisdiction to try the dispute was barred.
Despite the fact that no express exclusion of the
Civil Court’s jurisdiction was made under the Act
it was held that very provision setting up an
hierarchy of judicial tribunals for the
determination of the questions on which the
applicability of the Act depends was sufficient in
most cases to infer that the jurisdiction of the
Civil Courts to try the same was barred.
Accordingly it was held that the jurisdiction of
the Settlement Officer and the Tribunal by
necessary implication was exclusive and that the
Civil Courts are barred from trying or retrying the
question once over. The decisions of the Settlement
Officer and of the Tribunal were held final and
conclusive.
In Dhulabhai & Ors. v. State of M.p. & Anr. [1968] 3
SCR 662 another Constitution Bench reviewed the entire case
law on the question of maintainability of civil suit and
laid down seven propositions. Propositions 1 and 2 are
relevant, which read thus:
"(1) Where the statute gives a finality to the
orders of the special tribunals the Civil Court’s
jurisdiction must he held to be excluded if there
is adequate remedy to do what the Civil Courts
normally do in a suit. Such provision, however,
does not exclude those cases where the provisions
of the particular Act have not been complied with
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or the statutory tribunal has not acted in
conformity with the fundamental principles of
judicial procedure.
556
(2) Where there is an express bar of the
jurisdiction of the Court, an examination of the
scheme of the particular Act to find the adequacy
or the sufficiency of the remedies provided may be
relevant but is not decisive to sustain the
jurisdiction of the civil court.
Where there is no express exclusion the
examination of the remedies and the scheme of the
particular act to find out the intendment becomes
necessary and the result of the inquiry may be
decisive. In the latter case it is necessary to see
if the statute creates a special right or a
liability and provides for the determination of the
right or liability and further lays down that all
questions about the said right and liability shall
be determined by the tribunals so constituted, and
whether remedies normally associated with actions
in Civil Courts are prescribed by the said statute
or not."
It was held therein that the civil suit was not
maintainable to call in question of assessment made under
the Madhya Bharat Sales Tax Act. In hatti v. Sunder Singh,
[1971]2 SCR 163 the tenant had a declaratory relief before
the authorities under Delhi land Reforms Act that he was
Bhoomidar. When it was challenged in the civil suit as not
being binding, this Court held that the civil suit was not
maintainable.
In Muddada Chayana v. Karam Narayana and Anr. etc.,
[1979] 3 SCR 201 under s. 56(1) (c) of the Estates Abolition
Act, the dispute whether who the lawful ryot in respect of
any holding is, shall be decided by the Settlement Officer.
Whether it is liable to be questioned in the Civil Court.
Chinnappa Reddy, J., who had intimate knowledge as an
Advocate and the Judge on the subject reviewed the law and
held that the Act is a self-contained code in which
provision was also made for the adjudication of various
types of disputes arising, after an estate was notified, by
specially constituted tribunals. On the general principles
it was held that the special tribunals constituted by the
Act must necessarily be held to have exclusive jurisdiction
to decide dispute entrusted by the statute to them for their
adjudication. Dealing with the object of the Act it was held
at p. 207 C-D that the Act intended to protect ryots and not
to leave them in wilderness. When the Act provides machinery
in s. 56(1)(c) to discover who the lawful ryot of a holding
was, it was not for the Court to denude the Act of all
meaning and by confining the provision to the bounds of ss.
55 and 56(1)(a) and (b) on the ground of contextual
interpretation. Interpretation of a statute, contextual or
otherwise must further and
557
not frustrate the object of the statute. It was held that
the civil suit was not maintainable and approved the Full
Bench judgment of 5 judges of the High Court of Andhra
Pradesh in T. Munuswami Naidu v. R. Venkata Reddy., AIR 1978
A.P. 200. The same view was reiterated in O.
Chenchulakshmamma & Anr. v.D. Subramanya Reddy, [1980] 1 SCR
1006 and held that the order of the Addl. Settlement Officer
was final in so far as the dispute between the rival
claimants to the ryotwari patta was concerned and not liable
to be questioned in any court of law. In A. Bodayya & Anr.
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v.L. Ramaswamy (dead) by Lrs. [1984] (Suppl). SCC 391 while
reiterating the ratio in both the judgments, Desai, J.
Speaking for a Bench of 3 Judges held that under Estate
Abolition Act, who the lawful ryot was decided. Self-same
question directly and substantially raised in the suit
cannot be decided by the Civil Court as it had no
jurisdiction to decide and deal with the same but Settlement
Officer had the exclusive jurisdiction to decide and deal
with it. In Doe v. Bridges, [1831] 1 B & Ad. 347 at p. 859
the oft quoted dictum of Lord Tenerden, C.J. reads that:
"where an act creates an obligation and enforces
the performance in a specified manner, we take it
to be a general rule that performance cannot be
enforced in any other manner."
In Premier Automobiles Ltd. v. Kamlakur Shantaram Wadke
and Ors., [1976] 1 SCR 427 a Bench of three Judges after
reviewing the case law held that if a dispute was not
industrial dispute, not does it relate to enforcement of any
right under the Industrial Dispute Act, the remedy lies only
in the civil court. If the dispute arises out of the right
or liability under the general common law and not under the
Act, the jurisdiction of the civil court is always
alternative, leaving it to the election of the suitor to
choose his remedy for the relief which is competent to be
granted in a particular remedy. If the dispute relates to
the enforcement of a right or obligation of the Act,the only
remedy available to the suitor is to get an application
adjudicated under the Act. In that view, it was held that
the civil suit was not maintainable.
In State of Tamil Nadu v. Ramalinga Samigal Madam,
[1985] 4 SCC 10 strongly relied on by Shri Kanta Rao, the
question therein was whether the jurisdiction of the civil
court was ousted to redetermine the nature of the land
rendered by the settlement officer under s. II of the Estate
Abolition Act, Tulzapurkar, J. speaking for the Division
Bench proceeded on three fundamental postulates namely that
the decision of the Settlement authorities under s. 11 of
the Act was for (I)
558
revenue purposes’," that is to say for fastening the
liability on him to pay the assessment and other dues and to
facilitate the recovery of such revenue from him by the
Government; and therefore, any decision impliedly rendered
on the aspect of nature and character of the land on that
occasion will have to be regarded as incidental to and
merely for the purpose of passing the order of granting or
refusing to grant the patta and for no other purpose". (II)
only revision against the order and not an appeal; and (III)
that by Madras Amendment, s. 64-c was deleted. It was
unfortunate that it was not brought to the notice of the
court that the purpose of Estate Abolition Act was not
solely for the purpose of collecting the revenue to the
State. The Act had its birth from a long drawn struggle
carried on by the ryots in Madras Presidency for permanent
ryotwari settlement of tenures and grant of permanent
occupancy rights and the Indian National Congress espoused
their rights and passed resolution at Arvadi Session to make
a legislation in that regard. The recovery of revenue was
only secondary. In Syamala Rao v.Sri Radhakanthaswami Varu
[1984] 1 A.P.L.J. 113 a division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh
High Court to which one of us (K.R.S.,J) was a member
considered the historical background, the purpose of the Act
and the scheme envisaged therein in extenso and held that
the preamble of the Estate Abolition Act was to repeal the
permanent settlements, the acquisition of the rights of the
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land-holders in the Estates and introduction of the ryotwari
settlement therein; under s. 1(4) by issuance of the
notification the prexisting rights shall cease and
determined; shall vest in the State free from all
encumbrances and declared that all rights and interests
created in particular over the State ’shall cease and
determine as against the Government’ protected only
dispossession of a person in possession of the ryoti land
who was considered prima facie entitled to a ryotwari patta.
Section 11 envisaged to enquire into "the nature of the
land" and whether "ryotwari land immediately before the
notified dates" to be properly included or ought to have
been properly included in the holding of the ryot". The
enquiry under the Act was entrusted to the Revenue
Authorities who have intimate knowledge of the nature of the
lands and the entries in the revenue records of the holders,
etc. Act created hierarchy of the tribunals, namely Asstt.
Settlement Officer; Settlement Officer; Director of
Settlements and Board of Revenue; provided revisional powers
to those authorities and ultimately the order is subject to
the decision of the High Court under Art. 226. In that view
it was held that by necessary implication the jurisdiction
of the civil court was ousted, the decision of settlement
authorities under s. 11 was made final and no civil suit was
maintainable. The legislature having made the Act to render
economic justice to the ryots and
559
excluded the dispute between land-holders and the ryots
covered under ss. 12 to 15 and the ryots inter se under s.
56(1)(c), from the jurisdiction of the Civil Court, it would
not be the legislative intention to expose the ryots to
costly unequal civil litigation with the state of the
dispute under s. 11. It is not necessary in this case to
broach further but suffice to state that unfortunately this
historical perspective and the real purpose and proper scope
and operation of Estate Abolition Act was not focussed to
the notice of this court. In Jyotish Thakur & Ors. v.
Tarakant. Jha & Ors.,[1963] Suppl. 1 SCR 13 s. 27 of
regulation III of 1872 provides that in respect of transfer
of ryoti interest in contravention of the regulation revenue
courts shall not take cognizance of such a transfer. It was
contended that by necessary implication the civil suit was
not maintainable. In that context this Court held that
provisions therein were not intended to be exhaustive to bar
the relief in Civil Court. In Sri Athmanathawami Devasthanam
v. K. Gopalaswami Aiyangar, [1964] 3 SCR 763 the question
was whether the civil suit to recover damages and for
ejectment of the ryoti lands belonging to the temple was
barred. The findings were that the lands were ryoti lands
and that the tenant acquired the occupancy rights, but the
lease was granted in excess of 5 years. It was contended
that it was a transfer without permission of the Endowment
department. While upholding that the lands were ryoti lands
and the tenant acquired occupancy rights, this Court
disagreeing with the High Court, held that there was no
transfer and that the tenant is liable to pay the arrears of
rent and the suit was maintainable. In Sri Vedagiri Lakshmi
Narasimha Swami Temple v. Induru Pattabhirami Reddy, [1967]
1 SCR 280 the contention raised was that s. 93 of the Madras
Hindu Religious and Charitable Endowments Act, 1951 was a
bar to maintain suit for rendition of accounts and recovery
thereof against the ex-trustees. This Court repelled the
contention and held that the suit for rendition of accounts
was not expressly or by necessary implication barred the
jurisdiction of the civil court under s. 93. In Shree Raja
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Kandregula Srinivasa Jagannadha Rao Panthulu Bahadur Garu v.
State of Andhra Pradesh, [1970] 2 SCR 714 it was conceded
that the question whether Kalipathnam village is an Inam
estate was to be adjudicated before the tribunals appointed
under the Rent Reduction Act. It was contended that the
tribunals have no jurisdiction to decide the validity of the
notification reducing the rent by operation of s. 8(1)
thereof. It was held that there was no statutory prohibition
to determine the nature of the land contemplated by the Rent
Reduction Act. Accordingly the suit was held to be
maintainable. In Dr. Rajendra Prakash Sharma v. Gyan Chandra
& Ors.,[1980] 3 SCR 207 it was found that under s, 7 of the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, no proceedings
were taken to
560
declare the suit house as on evacuee property. No
notification under sub-s. (3) of 7 was published in the
gazette. Under those circumstances it was held that s. 46
did not bar the civil suit. In Anne Besant National Girls
High School v. Dy. Director of Public Instruction & Ors.
[1983] 1 SCC 200 this Court held that the Civil Court has
jurisdiction to examine whether action or decision of an
administrative authority was ultra vires the relevant rules
of Grant-in-Aid Code and Rule 9 (vii) was held to be ultra
vires. Accordingly the suit was held to be maintainable. In
Raja Ram Kumar Bhargava(dead) by Lrs. v. Union of India,
[1988] 2 SCR 352 two questions were raised, firstly the
validity of the assessment and secondly recovery of the tax
paid under Excess Profit Tax Act, 1940. On the first
question it was held that the suit was not maintainable. On
the second question, without going into the technicalities
of the maintainability of the suit, this Court granted the
relief. In Pabbojan Tea Co., etc. v. The dy. Commissioner
Lakhimpur, etc.[1968] 1 SCR 260 the questions were whether
the workmen were ordinary unskilled labour or skilled
labour; whether the jurisdiction of the authorities under s.
20 of the Minimum Wages Act, 1948 is exclusive and whether
the jurisdiction of the Civil Court was barred. This court
held that the authorities did not hold any inquiry nor
received any evidence for determining that issue. No proper
hearing was given to the parties to tender evidence. Section
20 is not a complete Code as there was no provision for
appeal or revision against the orders passed under s.20(3).
There was no further scrutiny by any higher authority
against the imposition of penalty. The Act in terms does not
bar the employers from instituting a suit. In those
circumstances, it was held that the legislature did not
intend to exclude the jurisdiction of the civil court. The
ratio in K. Chintamani Dora & Ors. v. G. Annamnaidu & ors.
[1974] 2 SCR 655 also does not assist Gram Panchayat for the
reason that the decree therein originally granted became
final. Subsequently it was sought to be reopened in a later
suit. Under those circumstances the civil suit was held to
be maintainable notwithstanding the provisions contained
under the Estate Abolition Act.
Thus we have no hesitation to hold that the ratio in
all these case are clearly distinguishable and render little
assistance to the Gram Panchayat. The scope, ambit and
operation of the Inams Act was considered by P. Jaganmohan
Reddy,J. (as he than was) in D.V. Raju v. B.G. Rao & Anr.
[1961] 2 A.W.R. 368 and held that the paramount object of
the legislature was to protect the tenant in occupation and
is sought to be achieved by making effective orders of
eviction made by the Civil Court either in execution or
otherwise. It further prohibits the institution of any suit
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or proceeding in a Civil
561
Court under s. 14 to set aside or modify any decision of the
Tehsildar, Collector or Revenue Court except where such
decision has been obtained by misrepresentation, fraud or
collusion. Section 15 enjoins that the provisions of the Act
and orders made thereunder shall have effect notwithstanding
anything inconsistent therewith contained in any other law
for the time being in force or any instrument having effect
by virtue of absolute jurisdiction on the Tehsilder, Revenue
Court or the Collector, as the case may be, notwithstanding
any provision of law or any suit or decree of a Civil Court
or for that matter even where evictions have taken place in
pursuance of such decrees, the evicted tenants can be
restored to occupation provided the requirements for the
protection of the possession of the tenants are satisfied.
In that case the occupant in possession laid proceeding
before the Tehsildar for injunction restraining the writ
petitioner from ejecting him from the lands. The Tehsildar
in exercise of the power under Rule 16 of the Rules granted
injuction pending consideration of his right to Ryotwari
patta. The order of injunction was challenged firstly on the
ground of ultra vires of Rule 16 and secondly on the ground
of jurisdiction. While upholding the order on both the
grounds the learned Judge held that Tehsildar, Revenue Court
and the Collector have exclusive jurisdiction and the civil
suit is barred. We respectfully approve it as correct law.
The Inams Act did not intend to leave the decisions of the
revenue courts under s. 3 read with s. 7 to retry the issue
once over in the Civil Court. Undoubtedly the decision of
the division Bench in P. Pedagovindayy v. Subba Rao, [1969]
2 A.L.T. 336 is in favour of the contention that the civil
suit is maintainable. It is not good law.
Thus the glimpse of the object of the Inames Act,
scheme, scope and operation thereof clearly manifest that
Inames Act is a self contained code, expressly provided
rights and liabilities, prescribed procedure; remedies of
appeal and revision, excluded the jurisdiction of the civil
court, notwithstanding anything contained in any law, given
primacy of Inams Act though inconsistent with any law or
instrument having force of law. The jurisdictional findings
are an integral scheme to grant or refuse ryotwari patta
under s. 3, read with s.7 and not collateral findings. It
was subject to appeal and revision and certiorari under Art.
226. The decision of the Revenue Tribunal, are final and
conclusive between the parties or persons claiming right,
title or interest through them. The trick of pleadings and
the camouflage of the reliefs are not decisive but the
substance or the effect on the order of the tribunal under
the Inams Act are decisive. The civil suit except on grounds
of fraud, misrepresentation or collusion of the parties is
not maintainable. The necessary conclusion would be that the
civil suit
562
is not maintainable when the decree directly nullifies the
ryotwari patta granted under s. 3 of the Inams Act. Under
the Gram Panchayat Act the statutory interposition of
vesting the tank and the appurtenant land in the Gram
Panchayat made it to retain possession, control and
supervision over it, though the Gram Panchayat unlawfully
took possession. The need to grant decree for possession in
favour of the Gram Panchayat is thus redundant. The suit of
the descendants normally to be decreed on the finding that
ryotwari patta under s. 3 of the Inams Act was granted in
their favour and that they were unlawfully dispossessed.
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Since the grant of ryotwari patta, though in the name of
individuals, was to maintain the public tank which stood
vested under s. 85 of the Act in the Gram Panchayat, the
descendants are divested of the right and interest acquired
therein. Thus the suit of the descendants also is liable to
be dismissed. Accordingly, the decrees of dismissal of both
the suits are upheld and the appeals dismissed. But in the
circumstances, parties are directed to bear their own costs.
V.P.R. Appeals dismissed.
563