Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
YELLAPPAGOUDA SHANKARGOUDA PATIL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BASANGOUDA SHIDDANGOUDA PATIL
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
09/03/1960
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
BENCH:
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 808 1960 SCR (3) 221
ACT:
Hereditary Office-Decree for partition of Watan land upheld
by Privy Council in appeal-Abolition of Privy Council’s
jurisdiction-Issue of certificate by Collector-Application
for cancellation of decree, if can be entertained by the
Supreme Court-Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 (Bom. III
of 1874), s. Abolition of Privy Council Jurisdiction Act,
1949 (V Of 1949), ss. 5, 8-Constition of India, Arts.
374(2), 135.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent brought a suit for partition against the
petitioner in respect of certain Watan lands. The trial
court decreed the suit but the High Court of Bombay reversed
that decree.in appeal. The Privy Council restored the
decree of the trial court and an Order-in-Council was drawn
up accordingly. Execution of the said decree was resisted
by the petitioner on the ground that the lands in suit being
admittedly remuneration attached to the office of the Patil
and as such governed by the Bombay Hereditary Offices Act,
1874 (Bom. III of 1874) were not liable to partition. A
certificate under s. 1o of the Act was issued by the
Collector at the instance of the petitioner and the
executing Court cancelled the execution case. The
respondent appealed to the High Court and that court
following its own Full Bench decision in Rachapa v.
Amingouda, (1881) V Bom. 283, held the certificate to be
invalid since it was not addressed to the Privy Council
which had passed the decree and set aside the order of the
executing court. Thereafter a fresh certificate under s. 1o
of the Act was issued by the Collector and addressed to this
Court and the petitioner applied to this Court under that
section for the cancellation of the said decree granted by
the Order-in-Council, the Privy Council having ceased to
have any jurisdiction in the meantime. ’The question for
decision was whether as a result of the constitutional
changes this court could be said to have passed the decree
and could entertain the petition.
Held, that the petition must be allowed.
The combined effect of ss. 5 and 8 of the Abolition of the
Privy Council jurisdiction Act, 1949, and Arts. 374(2) and
135 of the Constitution was that this petition which lay to
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the Privy Council before it ceased to exercise its
jurisdiction, could be presented to the Federal Court before
the commencement of the Constitution and thereafter to this
Court.
The certificate issued by the Collector and addressed to
this Court was, therefore, valid and must be given effect
to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Misc. Petition NO. 530
of 1959.
222
Petition for cancellation of the decree dated November 25,
1949, granted to the Respondent by the Order-in-Council in
Privy Council Appeal No. XI of 1948.
C. K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India and B. R. L.
Iyengar, for the petitioner.
K. R. Bengeri and A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the respondent.
1960. March 9. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
GAJENDRAGADKAR, J.-This petition has been made under s. 10
of the Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 (hereinafter
called the Act), for cancellation of the decree granted to
the respondent by the Order in Council dated November 25,
1949, in so far as the said decree purports to operate on or
include any right to the office of the Patilki and 11 Watan
lands attached thereto. These lands are situated at
Kirtgeri in the Taluk of Gadag. They form part of a Watan
and, according to the revenue records, they have been
assigned as remuneration to the officiator for the time
being under s. 23 of the Act. The petitioner has obtained a
certificate prescribed under s. 10, and he contends that as
a result of the said certificate this Court should cancel
the decree as claimed by him in
the petition.
It appears that the respondent had filed a suit against the
petitioner in the Court of the First Class Sub Judge at
Dharwar (Civil Suit No. 18 of 1934) and in the said suit he
had claimed partition and possession of the properties as an
adopted son of Shiddangouda. These properties were and are
in the possession of the petitioner. The trial court passed
a decree in favour of the respondent. The petitioner then
preferred an appeal, No. 182 of 1935, in the High Court of
Bombay. His appeal was allowed and the decree passed by the
trial court was reversed. The respondent then challenged
the High Court decree and went up to the Privy Council in
Appeal No. 11 of 1948. His appeal was allowed, and the
Privy Council held that the decree passed by the trial court
should be restored. Accordingly an Order-in-Council was
drawn up on November 25, 1949; under this order
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the respondent was entitled to recover by partition a half
share in the properties in suit. He was also entitled to
mesne profits, past and future, till the recovery of
possession or three years and an enquiry was directed in
that behalf. Amongst the properties in which the respondent
had thus become entitled to claim a share are the 11 lands
in question.
In due course the respondent filed an execution application
Darkhast No. 41 of 1950, in the Court of the Subordinate
Judge at Dharwar. The petitioner then contended that the 11
lands in question were governed by the provisions of the
Act, they were assigned as remuneration to the office of the
Patil, and as such they could not be partitioned. It was
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also urged on his behalf that in the original suit the
respondent had not claimed any declaration that he was
entitled to the office of Patil and that without such a
claim the 11 lands in question could not be claimed by the
respondent. In support of these pleas the petitioner relied
upon the provisions of the Act contained in ss. 7, 10, 11,
13, 24, 25 and 36.
Pending the execution proceedings the petitioner applied for
the grant of the prescribed certificate under s. 10 of the
Act, and a certificate was accordingly issued by the
Collector addressed to the Civil Judge, Senior Division,
Dharwar. Thereupon the said court acted upon the
certificate and cancelled the execution process which had
been issued against the Patilki-assigned property of
Kirtgeri. The respondent challenged the said order before
the Bombay High Court and his challenge was upheld by the
said High Court. The High Court followed its own earlier
Full Bench decision in Rachapa v. Amingouda (1) and held
that the certificate issued by the Collector under s. 10 was
invalid in that it was addressed not to the Privy Council
which was the court which passed the decree but to the Civil
Judge at Dharwar. In the result the order cancelling the
execution process which had been passed by the executing
court was set aside and a direction was issued that the
execution proceedings should proceed according to law.
Thereafter the petitioner applied for a reissue of a
certificate under s. 10 and prayed that the certificate
(1) (1881) V BOM. 283.
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should be addressed to this Court as in the meanwhile the
Privy Council had ceased to have any jurisdiction and this
Court had become its successor. A certificate has
accordingly been issued on January 13, 1958, addressed to
this Court. The certificate says that the property in
question has been assigned as remuneration to the office of
Patil and as such it is inalienable and not liable to
process of civil court and so the process of attachment
levied against the said property should be removed and the
decree in so far as it relates to the said property should
be cancelled. It appears that after this certificate was
issued by the Assistant Commissioner, Gadag Division, the
respondent filed an appeal to the Deputy Commissioner,
Dharwar. His appeal, however, failed and the certificate
issued by the Assistant Commissioner has been confirmed. It
is with this certificate that the petitioner has moved this
Court for the cancellation of the decree in question in
regard to the 11 properties at Kirtgeri.
On behalf of the respondent it has been urged before us that
the decision of the Bombay High Court operates as res
judicata and so, in view of the said decision, the present
certificate also should be held to be invalid. The argument
is that the effect of the decision of the Bombay High Court
is that the certificate should have been addressed to the
Privy Council, and since it is addressed to this Court it is
invalid. We are not impressed by this argument. What the
Bombay High Court has held is that the certificate must be
issued to the court which passed the decree, and if in law
this Court can be said to- be in effect and in substance the
Court that pssed the decree then the Certificate must be
held to be perfectly valid. Therefore, there is no
substance in the argument of res judicata. The main
’question which falls to be considered is whether this Court
can,. in view of the constitutional changes which have taken
place in the meantime, be said to be the Court that has
passed the present decree.- In our opinion, the answer to
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this question must be in favour of the petitioner. Lot us,
therefore, proceed to consider the relevant statutory
Provisions.
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Section 2 of the Abolition of the Privy Council Jurisdiction
Act, 1949, has provided, inter alia, that as from the
appointed day which was October 10, 1949, the jurisdiction
of His Majesty in Council to entertain’ appeals and
petitions’from or in respect of any judgment, decree or
order of any court or tribunal within the territory of India
shall cease save hereinafter provided. Section 4(b)
provides that nothing contained in s. 2 shall affect the
jurisdiction of His Majesty in Council to dispose of any
Indian appeal or petition on which the, Judicial Committee
has, after hearing the parties, reserved judgment order.
This provision applied to ’Appeal No. 11 of 1948 between the
parties then- pending before the Privy Council. Section 5
conferson the Federal Court corresponding jurisdiction to
entertain and dispose of Indian appeals and petitions which
His Majesty in Council has, whether by virtue of His
Majesty’s prerogative or otherwise, immediately before the
appointed day. In other words, after the appointed day the
Federal Court was given jurisdiction to entertain and
dispose of not only Indian appeals but also petitions, and
that would naturally include. a petition like the present
with which we are dealing. Section 8 dealt with the effect
of the orders of His Majesty in Council;’it provided that
any order made by His Majesty in Council on an Indian appeal
or petition, whether before or after the appointed day
shall, for all purposes, have the effect not only as- an
order of His Majesty in Council but also as if it were an
order or decree made by the Federal Court in exercise of the
jurisdiction conferred by this Act. This then was the
position with regard to the jurisdiction and powers of the
Federal Court vis-a-vis the appeals and petitions pending
before the Privy Council and orders made on them.
The next relevant provisions are contained in Art. 374 and
Art. 135 of the Constitution. Art. 374(2) provides that all
suits, appeals and proceedings, Civil or Criminal’ pending
in the Federal Court at the commencement of the
Constitution, shall stand removed to the Supreme Court, and
the Supreme Court shall have jurisdiction to hear and
determine the same and the judgments and orders of the
Federal 29
226
Court delivered or made before the commencement of the
Constitution shall have the same force and effect ,as if
they had been delivered or made by the Supreme Court. It is
with the latter part of Art. 374(2) that we are concerned in
the present petition. We have ’I already seen that the
Order in Council issued in accordance with the judgment of
the Privy Council in Appeal No. 11 of 1948 had to be treated
as if it was an order and decision of the Federal Court
under the relevant provisions of the Act of 1949. Now
another fiction has been introduced by Art. 374(2) and the
said order and decree has now to be treated as if the decree
had been passed and the ’order had been made by the Supreme
Court. That takes us to Art. 135. This article provides
that until Parliament by law otherwise provides the Supreme
Court shall also have jurisdiction and powers with respect
to any matter to which the provisions of Art. 133 or Art.
134 do not apply, if jurisdiction and powers in relation to
that matter were exercisable by the Federal Court imme-
diately before the commencement of this Constitution under
any existing law. We have already noticed that the Federal
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Court had jurisdiction to deal with a petition like the
present before the commencement of the Constitution ; that
jurisdiction can now be exercised by this Court as a result
of Art. 135. The position, therefore, is that the petition
which could have been presented to the Privy Council if the
jurisdiction of the Privy Council had not been abolished
could have been presented before the Federal Court before
the commencement of the Constitution and can be presented to
this Court after the commencement of the Constitution. We,
therefore, feel no doubt that as a result of the relevant
statutory provisions to which we have referred the
certificate issued in the present case to this Court is
valid and must be given effect to.
It is not disputed that the properties in respect of which
the certificate has been issued are properties assigned as
remuneration to Patilki I office and are governed by the
provisions of the Act. It is also conceded that if the
certificate is duly issued under s. 10 of the Act it
makes it obligatory on the court to
227
cancel the decree in regard to the properties covered by the
certificate. Section 10 provides, inter alia, that when it
shall appear to the Collector that by virtue of, or in
execution of, a decree or order of any court any watan or
any part thereof, or any of the profits thereof, recorded as
such in the revenue records or registered under this Act,
and assigned under s. 23 as remuneration of an officiator
has or have, after the date of this Act coming into force,
passed or may pass without the sanction of the State
Government into the ownership or beneficial possession of
any person other than the officiator for the time being, the
court shall, on receipt of a certificate under the hand and
seal of the Collector, stating the particulars mentioned in
the section, cancel the decree or order complained of so far
as it concerns the said watan or any part thereof. The only
objection against the validity of the certificate is that it
has been addressed to a wrong court. Since we have
overruled that objection it follows that portion of the
decree which concerns the watan properties must be
cancelled.
In the result the petition is allowed and the decree in
question in so far as it purports to operate on or include
any right to the office of Patilki and watan lands attached
thereto at Kirtgeri as enumerated in the certificate is
cancelled. Under the circumstances of this case there will
be no order as to costs.
Petition allowed.