Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAM SARUP
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MUNSHI AND OTHERS(And Connected Appeals)
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
30/08/1962
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
BENCH:
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1963 AIR 553 1963 SCR (3) 858
CITATOR INFO :
D 1965 SC1049 (10)
D 1967 SC 940 (10)
D 1968 SC1205 (7)
R 1970 SC 349 (3)
R 1971 SC 89 (5,7)
R 1975 SC 17 (32)
R 1975 SC 733 (30)
RF 1975 SC1835 (5)
R 1979 SC 798 (8)
F 1985 SC 111 (9)
RF 1986 SC 859 (1,8,11)
RF 1987 SC1140 (3)
RF 1989 SC 222 (3)
RF 1992 SC 207 (2)
ACT:
Pre-emption-Constitutional validity of enactment-Amending
legislation providing that no decree should be passed for
pre-emption in certain cases-Retrospective operation of
pending appeal-Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887 (Punjab 17 of
1887), s.3-Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913 (Punjab 1 of 1913),
as amended by Punjab Act 10 of 1960, ss.
3(a),3(4),3(6),6,14,15, 23, 31-Constitution of India, Arts.
19(1) (f),19(5).
Appeal-Abatement-Decree for pre-emption against vendees
-Appeal by vendees-Death of one appellant pending appeal-
Legal representatives not brought on record-Maintainability
of appeal.
HEADNOTE:
The owner of certain agricultural land in Punjab sold it to
the second respondent by a deed dated December 12, 1957 The
son of the vendor claimed that he had a right of Pre.
emption and instituted a suit against the appellant who pur-
chased the land from the first respondent, and relied upon
the provisions in s.15 (a) of the Punjab Pre-emption Act,
1913. The appellant pleaded (1) that the right of Pre-
emption conferred by s. 15(a) of the Punjab Pre-emption Act,
1913, had ceased to be enforceable on the repeal of the
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Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900, by the Adaptation of
Laws (Third Amend. ment ) Order, 1951, in view of ss.
3(a),3(4), 6,14,23 of the Pre-emption Act of 1913, and (2)
that, in any case, s 15(a) of the Punjab Pre-emption Act,
1913, was repugnant to Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution of
India.
Held, that (1) the repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land
Act, 1900, ’had no effect on the continued operation of the
Punjab Pre-emption Act, 1913, and that the expression
,,agricultural land" in the later Act had to be read as if
the definition of the Alienation of Land Act had been bodily
transposed into it.
Clark v. Bradlaugh,(1881)8 Q.B.D. 63, relied on.
859
(2) the effect of the repeal of the Punjab
Alienation of Land Act, 1900, was that the restrictions
imposed by ss. 14 and 23 of the Punjab Pre-emption Act,
1913, would disappear, leaving the court with an unfettered
power to grant decrees to those who satisfied the terms of
s.15.
(3) the restriction on the right of free alienation
imposed by s. 15(a)being intended (i) to preserve the
integrity of the village and the village community, and (ii)
to implement the agnatic rule of succession, are reasonable
and culculated to further the interest of the general
public. The provisions contained in s. 15(a) as it
originally stood as well as in the modified form after the
amendment effected by Act 10 of 1960 do not transgress the
limits of reasonableness required by Art. 19(5) of the
Constitution and are valid,
Bhau Ram v. Baij Nath, (1962) Supp. 3 S. C.R. 734 and Uttam
Singh v. Kartar Singh & Others, A.I.R. 1954 Punjab 55,
relied on.
In Civil Appeal No. 510 of 1961, the sale which give rise to
the suit was under a deed dated December 29, 1949, in favour
of the appellant and the first respondent’s claim to pre-
empt was based on s. 15(c)"thirdly" of the Punjab Preemption
Act, 1913. The suit was decreed by the trial court on
November 8,1951 and when the matter was under appeal in
which the question of the constitutional validity of s.15(c)
"thirdly" was raised, the Act was amended by Punjab Act 10
of 1960, by which, inter alia, (1)s.15 of the original Act
was repealed and in its place was substituted a new
provision which omitted to confer a right of pre-emption in
the case of persons "owning land in the estate" as the
original s. 15(c) thirdly" had done, and(2) retrospective
effect was given to the provisions contained in the Amending
Act by the insertion of a new s. 31, which provided that "no
court shall pass a decree in a suit for pre-emption whether
instituted before or after the commencement of the Punjab
Pre emption (Amendment) Act, 1960, which is inconsistent
with the provisions of the said Act."
Held, (1) the restriction on the right of a vendor in cases
arising out of s.19 (c)"thirdly" of the Punjab Pre-emption
Act 1913, was a reasonable one and that the provisions in
the section were not repugnant to Art. 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution.
Bhau Ram v. Baij Nath & Others. (1962) Supp. 3 S.C.R. 724
followed.
860
(2) the language used in s, 31 was comprehensive
enough so as to require an appellate court to give effect to
the substantive provisions of the amending Act whether the
appeal before it was one against a decree granting pre-
emption or one refusing that relief. Consequently) in view
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of S. 31, the decree for preemption passed by the trial
court could not be sustained.
Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul v. Keshwar Lal Chaudhuri, [1940]
F.C.R. 84, relied on.
Ram Lal v. Raja Ram, (1960) 62 P.L.R. 291 approved.
In Civil Appeal No. 214 of 1961, the properties in respect
of which respondents 1 to 4 bad instituted a suit claiming a
right of preemption had been sold to the appellants by a
deed dated April 25, 1957, for a consideration of Rs.
22,750, out of which appellants 1 and 2 had paid one half
amounting to Rs. 11,375, while the other three appellants
had paid the other half. The recitals showed that it was
not a case of sale of separated items of the properties in
favour of the two sets of the vendees but that they were to
be enjoyed by them in equal shares. A decree for pre-
emption was passed against the vendees who took the matter
on appeal. While the appeal was pending the first appellant
died but no application was made to bring on record his
legal representatives.
Held. that the appeal must be dismissed as having abated on
the death of the first appellant without legal
representatives being brought on record.
Where a decree is a joint one and a part of the decree has
become final by reason of abatement, the entire appeal must
be held to be abated.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 139, 147,
214 and 510 of 1961.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and decrees dated
October 8, 21. 28. 1959, and March 4,1959, of the Punjab
High Court in R. S. A. No. 473 of 1959, L.P.A. No. 332 of
1959, R.S.A. Nos. 921 of 1959 and 508 of 1953.
J. P. Goyal, for the appellant (in C. A. No. 139 of 1962).
861
Nanak Chand, for respondent No. 1. (in C. A. No. 139 of
1962).
Hardyal Hardy and N. N. Keswani, for the appellants (in C.
A. No. 147 of 1961).
Dayal Swarup Mehra and K. R. Choudhuri, for respondent No. 1
(in C. A. No. 147 of 1961).
Hardev Singh and Y. Kumar, for appellants Nos. 2 to 5 ’in C.
A, No. 214 of 1961).
K. L. Gosain and M. L. Aggrawala, for respondents Nos. 1
to 4 (in C. A. No. 214 of 1961).
P. S. Safeer, for the appellant (in C. A. No. 510 of
1961).
Achhru Ram and B. D. Jain, for the respondent (in C. A. No.
510 of 1961).
1962. August 30. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
AYYANGAR, J.- These four appeals which have been filed
pursuant to special leave granted by this Court principally
raise for consideration the constitutional validity of s. 15
of the Punjab Preemption Act (Act 1 of 1913), hereinafter
referred to as the Act. The property involved in these
appeals are agricultural lands and in each one of them
decrees have been passed in favour of the preemptors whose
claim to preempt was based on different sub-clauses of s.
15, and the vendees who are the appellants in the several
appeals challenge the constitutional validity of the law
under which the suits have been decreed.
One of the appeals-Civil Appeal No. 214 of 1961 however
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could be decided without considering the constitutional
point regarding the validity
862
of s. 15 of the Act and it would therefore be convenient to
dispose it of first. The facts giving rise to the appeal
are briefly as follows The 5th and 6th respondents before us
owned certain agricultural land in village Dugri which they
sold to the appellants by a deed dated April 25, 1957. Res-
pondents 1 to 4 instituted a suit against the appellants to
which the vendors-respondents 5 & 6 were also impleaded as
co-defendants. The right of preemption was based on the
plaintiffs being the nearest collaterals of the vendors and
heirs according to the rule of succession. There were
certain points of dispute on the facts but these are not now
material and it is sufficient to state that the suit was
decreed by the Subordinate Judge on December 10, 1958. This
judgment in favour of respondents 1 to 4 was affirmed by the
District Judge on appeal and on further appeal, by the High
Court. It is from this judgment and decree of the High
Court that the vendees who are the appellants before us have
brought the matter to this Court.
The appellants were five in number. They fell into two
groups constituted respectively by the 1st and 2nd
appellants who are brothers and by appellants 3, 4 and 5.
While the appeal was pending in this Court the 1 at
appellant Mehar Singh died on May 18, 1960, leaving a widow
and five children- four daughters and a son, as his heirs.
No application was, however, made to bring on record the
legal representatives of the deceased 1st appellant- Mehar
Singh and learned Counsel appearing for the other four
appellants informed the office that the legal
representatives were not being brought on record and that he
would proceed with the appeal on behalf of the four
surviving appellants.
At the hearing of the appeal learned Counsel for the
respondents submitted that the appeal ought
863
to be dismissed as incompetent since the same had abated on
the death of the first appellant without his legal
representatives being brought on record. Learned Counsel
for the appellants, however, contended that whatever might
be the position as regards the share to which Mehar Singh
was entitled in the property purchased, the interest of the
deceased was distinct and separate from that of the others
and that the abatement could be in any event only partial
and would not affect the continuance of the appeal by the
surviving appellants at least as regards their share in the
property. As the deed of sale under which the appellants
purchased the property was not among the printed records of
this Court, the appeal was adjourned in order to enable
learned Counsel for the appellants to produce. it and
substantiate his contention that the interest of the
deceased Mehar Singh wag distinct and separate. An English
translation of the deed of sale has now been produced before
us and a perusal of it indicates that the submission made on
behalf of the appellants is not sustainable. The
consideration for the sale is a sum of Rs.22,750/and the
conveyance recites that Mehar Singh and the second appellant
bad paid one half amounting to Rs. 11,375/- while the other
three appellants had paid the other half It is therefore not
a case of a sale of any separated item of property in favour
of the deceased-appellant but of one entire set of
properties to be enjoyed by two sets of vendees in equal
shares. It is clear law that there can be no partial pre-
emption because preemption is the substitution of the pre-
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emptor in place of the vender and if the decree in favour of
the preemptors in respect of the share of the deceased Mehar
Singh has become final it is manifest that there would be
two conflicting decrees if the appeal should be allowed and
a decree for
864
preemption insofar as appellants 2 to 5 are concerned is
interfered with. Where a decree is a joint one and a part
of the decree has become final by reason of abatement, the
entire appeal must be held to be abated. It is not
necessary to cite authority for so obvious a position but we
might refer to the decision of this court in Jhanda Singh v.
Gurmukh Singh (deceased) (1). The result is that the appeal
fails as having abated and is dismissed with costs.
Civil appeal No. 139 of 1961
The material provision of s. 15 of the Act relevant for the
consideration of the constitutional point raised in this
appeal is s. 15(a), but as the validity of other clauses of
the same section are challenged in the other appeals, we
consider it convenient to set out the other relevant ones
also:
"15. Subject to the provisions of section 14
the right of preemption in respect of
agricultural land and village immoveable
property shall vest-
(a) where the sale is by a sole owner or
occupancy tenant or, in the case of land or
property jointly owned or held, is by all the
co-sharers jointly, in the persons in order of
succession, who but for such sale would be
entitled, on the death of the vendor or
vendors, to inherit the land or property sold:
(b) where the sale is of a share out of
joint land or property, and is not made by all
the co-sharers jointly,firstly, in the lineal,
descendants of the vendor in order of
succession;
(1) Civil Appeal No. 344 of 1956, decided on
April IO, 1962.
865
secondly, in the co-sharers, if any, who are
agnates, in order of succession;
(c) If no person having a right of pre-
emption under clause (a) or clause (b) seeks
to exercise it :-
.......................................
thirdly, in the owners of the estate;
The following few facts are necessary to be stated to
appreciate the manner in which the question arises. One Ram
Nath sold certain agricultural land of an area of about 65
bighas in village Durjanpur in District Sangrur of Punjab to
the second respondent Pooran by a deed of sale dated
December 12, 1957. The vendee-Pooransold the land he had
purchased, in favour of Ram Sarup- appellant before us.
Subsequently Munshi the first respondent brought a suit
Suit 297 of 1958 in the Court of the Subordinate Judge
First Class at Narwana stating that he was the son of vendor
Ram Nath and claiming preemption under is. 15 of the Act.
There were rival claims for preempting the same property and
another suit was filed in regard to it which was tried along
with the suit by Munshi, but this failed and is no longer of
relevance. The main contest to the suit by Munshi was based
upon a denial of the fact that be was the son of Ram Nath.
This issue was found in favour of the respondent by the
Subordinate Judge who decreed the suit, which judgment was
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confirmed successively by the District Judge on appeal and
thereafter by the High Court on second appeal. It was
therefore common ground that if s. 15(a) was
constitutionally valid, the sale by Ram Nath was subject to
the right of Munshi, to preempt and that consequently his
suit was properly decreed.
866
The constitutional validity of s. 15 was not contested
before the High Court because of the decision of a Full
Bench of that Court which had upheld its validity. It was
only at the stage of an application for a review of the
Judgment of the High Court that this point was raised but
the learned Judges rejected it and it was on the ground of
this constitutional point that special leave was granted and
that is the only point for consideration in this appeal.
Before adverting to the points urged by learned Counsel as
regards the constitutional validity of s. 15 it is necessary
to notice an argument urged on behalf of the appellant for
sustaining a contention that even apart from the
unconstitutionality of the provision the right of pre-
emption conferred by s. 15(a) has ceased to be enforceable.
The argument under this head was rested on the opening words
of s. 15 and certain other provisions to which we shall
immediately advert. It would be noticed that a. 15 opens
with the words "Subject to the provisions of section 14 the
right of preemption in respect of agricultural land.........
shall vest". Section 14 runs in these terms:
"14. No person other than a person who was at
the date of sale a member of an agricultural
tribe in the same group of agricultural tribes
as the vendor shall have a right of pre-
emption in respect of agricultural land sold
by a member of an agricultural tribe."
The expression "agricultural tribe" referred
to in s. 14- is defined in s. 3(4) of the Act
thus: "member of an agricultural tribe and
group of agricultural tribes shall have the
meanings assigned to them respectively
under the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900.
"
867
Next it would be seen that a. 15 employs the
words "in respect of agricultural land".
"Agricultural land" is defined in s. 3(1) of
the Act thus:
"’agricultural land’ shall mean land as
defined in the Punjab Alienation of Land Act,
1900 (as amended by Act 1 of 1907), but shall
not include the rights of a mortgagee whether
usufructuary or not, in such land,;
Section 6 of the Act enacts;
"6. A right of preemption shall exist in
respect of agricultural land and village
immoveable property, but every such right
shall be subject to all the provisions and
limitations in this Act contained".,
and s. 23 enacts:
"No decree shall be granted in a suit for pre-
emption in respect of the sale of agricultural
land until the plaintiff has satisfied the
Court-
(a) that the sale in respect of which pre-
emption is claimed is riot in contravention of
the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900: and
(b) that he is not debarred by tile
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provisions of section 14 of this Act from
exercising the right of preemption."
Now, by the Adaptation of Laws (Third Amendment) Order,
1951, the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900, has been
repealed and the argument urged by the learned Counsel for
the appellant was that by reason of the repeal of that Act
the right of preemption granted by s. 15(a) has become
unavailable. The argument was somewhat on these lines. It
is under s. 6 that the right of preemption is recognised and
granted, though s. 15
868
sets out the circumstances in which it arises. Under s. 6
the right is (a) in respect of "agricultural land ", and (b)
the right conferred by the Act is subject to every provision
and limitation contained in it. In the Act, as originally
framed before the amendment effected by the Adaptation of
Laws (Third Amendment) Order, 1951 i. e., before the repeal
of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900, there were two
principal limitations on the right of preemption in respect
of "agricultural land:" (1) it applied only to such land as
was defined in the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, and (2) by
virtue of s. 14 there was a limitation of the group of
persons who might claim the right of preemption if a sale
took place by "a member of an agricultural tribe", and the
expression "member of an agricultural tribe" was as defined
by the Punjab Alienation of Land Act. Section 15 therefore
was subject to the limitations of s. 14 and to the
definition of ’agricultural land’ and ’agricultural tribe’
and this read in conjunction with the positive provision in
s.23 has become wholly inapplicable and unworkable after the
repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act of 1900. The
problem here raised is dependent upon the construction which
the several provisions which we have set out earlier would
bear after the repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act,
1900. One thing is clear and that is that the authority
which effected the repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land
Act did not consider that Punjab Act 1 of 1913 had itself to
be repealed. We shall now consider the effect of the repeal
of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act with reference to each
of the provisions:-
Definition of "agricultural land’ under 8.3(1): Where the
provisions of an Act are incorporated by reference in a
later Act the repeal of the earlier Act
869
has, in general, no effect upon the construction or effect
of the Act in which its provisions have been incorporated.
The effect of incorporation is stated by Brett, L. J., in
Clarke v. Bradlaugh: (1)
"Where a statute is incorporated, by
reference, into a second statute the repeal of
the first statute by a third does not affect
the second."
In the circumstances, therefore, the repeal of
the Punjab Alienation of Land Act of 1900 has
no effect on the continued operation of the
Preemption Act and the expression
’agricultural land’ in the later Act has to be
read as if the definition in the Alienation of
Land Act had been bodily transposed into it.
Section 2 of the Punjab Alienation of Land
Act, 1900, as amended by Act 1 of 1907 defined
‘Land’ as follows:
"The expression ’land’ means land which is not
occupied as the site of any building in a town
or village and is occupied or let for
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agricultural purposes or for purposes sub-
servient to agricultural or for pasture, and
includes........................... "
It is not in dispute that the land concerned in the claim
for preemption made in the appeal satisfies this definition.
We shall next take up the effect of the repeal of the Punjab
Alienation of Land Act, 1900, on s.14 of the Act and of the
definition contained in a. 3 (4) thereof of the expression
"member of an agricultural tribe" and the effect of these on
the right of preemption conferred by s. 15(a). With the
repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900, it is
manifest that s.14 would lose all
(1) (1881) 8 Q.B. D, 63.
870
significance, but this does not help, in any manner, the
contentions urged by learned Counsel for the appellant. It
would be seen that s. 14 is restrictive, in that in the case
of the alienations by persons referred to in that section
the right of preemption is conferred upon a limited group.
With the repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900,
the restriction imposed by s. 14 as regards the availability
of the right of preemption to particular agricultural tribes
would disappear. In other words, the effect of the removal
of the limitation of s. 14 would only be that the opening
words of s. 15 cease to operate. In such circumstances s.
14 would lose all significance because the post-Constitution
law does not recognise membership of tribes as conferring
any special rights and consequently the elimination of s. 14
would leave a. 15 without the limitation originally imposed
upon it. In the same manner the restriction imposed upon
the passing of decrees by s. 23 could also not operate after
the repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act but that
would leave the Court with an unfettered power to grant
decrees under the provisions of the Act, i. e., without the
limitations imposed by a. 23.
We are therefore clearly of the opinion that neither the
repeal of the Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900, nor the
consequential removal of the fetters imposed by ss. 14 and
23 have the effect of rendering the substantive provision
contained in s. 15 not available to those who satisfy its
terms. In these circumstances we have necessarily to
consider the main question raised by learned Counsel for the
appellant, viz., that the rights conferred upon the pre-
emptor is an unreasonable restriction on the right of
vendors "to hold and dispose of property)" and of
prospective vendees to acquire property" guaranteed to
citizens of India by Art. 19(1) (f) of the Constitution.
871
Before proceeding to consider the question about the
constitutional validity of a. 15(a) of the Act, it is
necessary to mention that s. 15 of the Act has been the
subject of very substantial amendments effected by the
Punjab Preemption (Amendment) Act of 1960 (Act 10 of 1960).
This however makes no difference to the present appeal since
the relevant portion of s. 15 as amended reads :
"15. (1) The right of preemption in respect of
agricultural land and village immoveable
property shall vest-
(a) where the sale is by a sole owner-
FIRST, in the son or daughter or son’s son or
daughter’s son of the vendor;"
In view of this feature, it is needless to consider in this
appeal as to whether the amending Act is retrospective and
if so, the degree of retrospectivity- a question which falls
for decision only in Civil Appeal No. 510 of 1961.
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It is common ground that the right of preemption granted by
the statute is a restriction on the right "to hold and
dispose of property" on the part of the vendor- the right
guaranteed by Art.19(1)(f) of the Constitution. The
question, however, is whether the restriction imposed is
reasonable and in the interest of the general public within
Art. 19(5) of the Constitution. The general question about
the impact of the right conferred by Art. 19(1)(f) on the
right of preemption has been dealt with exhaustively in the
judgment of this Court in Bhau Ram v. Baij Nath (1) and it
is
(1) (1952) Supp. 3 S.C.R. 724.
872
unnecessary to cover the ground again. The proper approach
to the question would be as to whether the grounds which are
stated to underlie the provision are reasonable judged in
the light of present day standards and needs of the
community and are in the interests of the general public.
The question about the reasonableness of this restriction
contained in 3. 15 of the Act was considered by a Full Bench
of the High Court of Punjab in Uttam Singh v. Kartar Singh
(1) and as the grounds stated there have been referred to
with approval in subsequent decisions of the Punjab High
Court and were relied on before us by learned Counsel for
the respondent we might as well extract the passage in full
:
"It is plain that the objects underlying as.
15 and 16 of the Act may be briefly enumerated
as follows :
(1) to preserve the integrity of the village
and the village community;
(2) to avoid fragmentation of holdings;
(3) to implement the agnatic theory of the
law of succession;
(4) to reduce the chances of litigation and
friction and to promote public order and
domestic_comfort; and
(5) to promote private and public decency
and convenience."
The reference here in the above passage to "the promotion of
public order and domestic comfort" and to "Private and
public decency and convenience" obviously have relevance to
urban immoveable property dealt with in s. 16. The
(1) A. 1. R. 1954 Punjab 55.
873
grounds on which the reasonableness of the right of pre-
emption granted by law in regard to agricultural property
dealt with in s. 15 would therefore appear to be the first
four of the above. Among them much stress could not be laid
on the avoidance of chances of litigation and friction
because the existence of the right of preemption could also
give rise to litigation which otherwise might not exist. Nor
can the ground of avoidance of fragmentation of holdings
afford assistance to sustain the claim of a son to preempt
in the event of a sale by a sole owner-father, for that
criterion has primary relevance to the right of preemption
enjoyed by co-sharers and the like. The grounds for
upholding s. 15(a) as reasonable and in the interest of the
general public therefore finally resolve themselves into
two:
(1) to preserve the integrity of the village and the
village community; and
(2) to implement the agnatic rule of succession.
The objective underlying the first ground is prima facie
reasonable and calculated to further the interest of the
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general public. It was however pointed out by learned
Counsel for the appellant that with the large scale
migration of population into Punjab consequent on the
problems created by partition there has been a
disintegration of the village community and that in the
circumstances, what is at the present date imperatively
required is not the keeping out of strangers from rural
areas but rather for their being absorbed into the village
community and that in that context the existence of a law
which prevented such absorption could not be characterized
as being either reasonable or in the interests of the
general public. Though we see some force in this submission
of learned
874
Counsel we are unable to accept it as a final and conclusive
answer to the argument against the reasonableness of the
provision for we find that in the schemes for rehabilitation
of the refugees the principle of the integrity of the
village community and the need to maintain some degree of
cohesion as regards the population in each village has been
observed and, indeed, forms the basis of the methods by
which different groups of refugees were settled in various
parts of the Punjab. It has thus been possible to reconcile
somewhat the needs of the refugees being settled in India,
with the preservation of the integrity of the village
community.
Even if this ground cannot serve to sustain the
constitutionality of the provision, we consider that the
other ground viz., that the next in succession should have
the chance of retaining the property in the family, would
suffice to render the restriction reasonable and in the
interest of the general public within Art. 19(5). In this
connection we might refer to the reasoning in the decision
of the Rajasthan High Court in Siremal v. Kantilal(1) where
the learned Judges struck down as unconstitutional a
provision in a. 3 of the Marwar Preemption Act which granted
a right of preemption "to persons related within three
degrees to the vendor of the house or building-plot provided
that the nearer in degree shall have priority over one more
remote" as an unreasonable restriction on the right
conferred by Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution. The basis
of this ruling was that the impugned enactment conferred the
right of preemption on all relations within three degrees
and did not restrict it to the members of the family. Under
s.15 of the Act, particularly after the amendment effected
by Act 10 of 1960, the right of preemption is confined to
the members of the family
(1) A.I.R. 1954 Rajastban 195.
875
of the vendor, i. e., those who would have succeeded to the
property in the absence of any alienation.
The relevant portion of s. 15 (1) after amendment reads:
"15. (1) The right of preemption in respect of
agricultural land and village immoveable
property shall vest-
(a) where the sale is by a sole owner,FIRST,
in the son or daughter or son’s son or
daughter’s son of the vendor;
SECONDLY, in the brother or brother’s son of
the vendor;
THIRDLY, in the father’s brother or father’s
brother’s son of the vendor;
FOURTHLY,.................. "
No doubt, the son and the other members of the family would
not have been entitled to a present interest in the property
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alienated and consequently would not have a right to prevent
the alienation (in which event, however, it is needless to
add that a right to preempt wan wholly unnecessary as a
means of preserving the property), but they would have a
legitimate expectation of succeeding to the property-an
expectation founded on and promoted by the consciousness of
the community. If the social consciousness did engender
such feelings, and taking into account the very strong
sentimental value that is attached to the continued
possession of family property in the Punjab, it could not be
said that the restriction on the right of free alienation
imposed by s. 15(1)(a) limited as it is to small class of
near relations of the vendor is either unreasonable or not
in the interest of the general public. The result is the
appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
876
Civil Appeal No. 147 of 1961.
The facts giving rise to this appeal are briefly as follows
: The appellant Dalip Singh purchased under a deed dated
June 1,, 1957, agricultural land measuring 98 bighas and 10
biswas situated in village Bailerkha in district Sangrur
under a registered deed of sale. The vendors were Nihal
Singh, Wazir Singh and Gurdial Singh who are respondents 2
to 4 before us. Sunder Singh brother of respondents 2 & 3
and uncle of the 4th respondent filed a suit in the Court of
the Sub-Judge, Narwana, for preemption basing his claim
under s. 15(a) of the Act. It is manifest that even under
the amended s. 15 a person in the position of the first
respondent has a right to preempt. It would be seen that
under s. 15(a), as it originally stood, the right of pre-
emption is conferred upon persons who would succeed as heir
to the vendor in the event of his death. In other words,
preemption in such cases is the grant of an option to the
heirs to retain property in the family. As we have already
pointed out in dealing with the claim by a vendor’s son in
Appeal 139 of 1961, we consider that the provisions
contained in s. 15(a), as it originally stood, as well as in
the modified form in which it has been reenacted do not
transgress the limits of reasonableness required by
Art.19(5) of the Constitution. As the constitutionality of
s.15(a) was the only ground which was or could be canvassed
before us in this appeal and as we are rejecting it follows
that the appeal fails. It is accordingly dismissed with
costs.
Civil Appeal No. 510 of 1961
What now remains to be dealt with is Civil Appeal 510 of
1961. This appeal arises out of a suit filed by the first
respondent as plaintiff for preemption of certain
agricultural land in village
877
Fatehabad in Amritsar district. The sale which gave rise to
the suit was under a deed dated December 29, 1949, in favour
of the appellate Singh. The claim to preempt was based on
s. 15 (c) "thirdly" of the Punjab Preemption Act, 1913,
which has already been set out. The expression " estate"
which is used in cl. (c) "thirdly" is not defined by the Act
but by reason of its s. 3 (6) the definition in s. 3 of the
Punjab Land Revenue Act, 1887, is attracted to it. Turning
now to s. 3 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act (Act XVII of
1887), it defines an ’estate’ as meaning, inter alia, "any
area for which a separate record-of-rights has been made."
It was the case of the plaintiff-first respondent before us
that he owned land in the "estate" whereas the under--the
appellant before us did not own any land there. The
defendant while not disputing that the plaintiff owned land
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in the village or the correctness of the allegation that the
land was in an "estate", sought to prove that he too owned
land in the same village and "estate" but in this he failed.
As the case of the plaintiff was directly covered by the
terms of the statute his suit was decreed by the trial Court
on November 8, 1951, and an appeal and second appeal there-
from were also dismissed. It was from this judgment of the
High Court that this appeal has been brought and the
principal point on which leave was granted related to the
constitutionality of the provision in s. 15 of the Pre-
emption Act upon which the respondent based his claim to
preempt.
In regard to the point about the Considerational validity of
s. 15 (c) "thirdly" we consider that the case is clearly
covered by the judgment of this Court in Bhau Ram v. Baij
Nath (1) where the Court upheld the validity of the right of
preemption granted under Ch, XIV of the Berar Land Revenue
Code (Appeal 430 of 1958). In the
(1) [1962] Supp 3 S. C.R 724.
878
case of an estate within s. 3 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act
of 1887, s. 61 of the Act enacts:
"61 (1) In the case of every estate, the
entire estate and the landowner or, if there
are more than one, the landowners jointly and
severally, shall be liable for the land
revenue for the time being assessed on the
estate :
Provided that.
(a) the State Government may by notification
declare that in any estate a holding or its
owner shall not be liable for any part of the
land-revenue for the time being assessed on
the estate except that part which is payable
in respect of the holding; and
(b).....................
(2) A notification under proviso (a) to sub-
section (1) may have reference to any single
estate or to any class of estates or estates
generally in any local area."
Thus it will be seen that an "estate" is an unit of
assessment and there is a joint and several liability on
persons owning land within the "estate’, to pay the entire
assessment due on the estate. Thus though it is not really
the case of a co-sharer, it is somewhat akin to that of a
co-sharer because of the joint liability for payment of land
revenue. We therefore consider that the restriction on the
right of a vendor in such a case is a reasonable one and not
repugnant to Art. 19 of the Constitution. As learned
Counsel for the appellant desired to have time to ascertain
whether there had been a notification of the Local
Government such as is referred to in a. 61 of the Punjab
Land Revenue
879
Code, we adjourned the case to enable him to produce the
notification, if there was one, and we were informed that
there was none.
If therefore the matters had stood as under the law as
enacted in s. 15 of the Act the appeal would have to be
dismissed. The Punjab Legislature, however, effected
substantial amendments to the Punjab Preemption Act of 1913
by Punjab Act 10 of 1960 and it is the impact of this later
legislation on the rights of the parties to this appeal that
now requires to be considered. Punjab Act 10 of 1960
received the assent of the Governor on February 2, 1960, and
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was published in the Punjab Government Gazette two days
later. By s. 4 of the Amending Act s. 15 of the parent Act
was repealed and in its place was substituted a new
provision which omitted to confer a right of Preemption in
the case of persons "owning land in the estate )I as the
original section 15 (c) "thirdly" had done. Retrospective
effect was giving to the provisions contained in the
Amending Act by the insertion of a new s. 31 in the parent
Act Which read:
"31. No court shall pass a decree in a suit
for preemption whether instituted before or
after the commencement of the Punjab Pre-
emption (Amendment) Act, 1959, which is
inconsistent with the provisions of the said
Act".
It may be mentioned that the figure 1959 in s. 31 is an
obvious mistake for 1960 which is the correct year of the
Amending Act. The question now for consideration is whether
by reason of this amendment in the law, the respondent is
entitled to the benefit of the decree which he obtained
under the previously existing enactment. That s. 31 is
plainly retrospective and that it affects
880
rights to preemption which had accrued before the coming
into force of the Amending Act is not in controversy for s.
31, in plain terms, makes the substantive provisions of the
enactment applicable to suits whether instituted "before or
after" the commencement of the Amending Act. It was urged
before us by learned Counsel for the appellant that in view
of the plain language of s. 31 this Court should apply the
substantive law enacted by the Punjab Legislature in the
amended s. 15 of the Preemption Act and set aside the decree
for preemption passed in favour of the first respondent. In
this connection learned Counsel referred us to the judgment
of the Federal Court in Lachmeshwar Prasad Shukul v. Keshwar
Lal Chaudhuri(1) as to the course which this Court would
adopt in giving effect to Amending legislation interfering
with the. rights of parties in pending appeals, and to the
decision of a Division Bench of the Punjab High Court in Ram
Lal v. Raja Ram(2) where the learned Judges, on a
construction of s. 31 of the Act set aside a decree for pre-
emption passed in favour of the respondent before the Court,
giving effect to the provisions contained in Punjab Act 10
of 1960.
Mr. Achhru Ram, learned Counsel for the respondent, however,
submitted that the language employed in the new s. 31 was
not sufficient to permit a decree passed in favour of a pre-
emptor being set aside by an appellate Court merely because
the ground on which preemption had been claimed and decreed
was not one that was included within the amended provisions.
He placed reliance on the principle that besides the rule of
construction that retrospective operation is not, in the
absence of express words therefore, to be given to a statute
so as to impair existing rights except as regards matters of
procedure, there was a further
(1) [1940] F.C.R. 84.
(2) (1960) 62 P.L.R. 291.
881
well-recognised rule that a statute was not to be construed
to have a greater retrospective operation than its language
rendered strictly necessary. The argument was that though
by the use, in s. 31, of the words "Suit for preemption
instituted before or after the commencement of the Act" a
certain amount of retrospective effect was intended, still
the retrospectivity was but partial in its operation and
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that the words used did not permit the setting aside by an
appellate Court of a decree which was validly passed under
the substantive law applicable to the facts at the date of
the original decree,. In this connection he placed
considerable reliance on the employment of the words "no
decree shall be passed" in the opening words of s. 31 as
indicative of a ban only on the passing of a decree-an event
which be contended would occur, firstly when a trial Court
passed a decree and secondly when the trial Court having
refused a decree, the appellate Court is called upon to pass
a decree which the trial Court should properly have done and
in no other Contingency. On this reasoning the contention
was urged that where a trial Court had passed a decree and
that decree gave effect to the law as it stood up to the
date of that decree, the words of s. 31 did not enable an
appellate Court to set aside that decree on the ground of a
change in the substantive law effected by the Amending Act.
Through we agree that there is a presumption against the
retrospective operation of a statute and also the related
principle that a statute will not be construed to have a
greater retrospective operation than its language renders
necessary, we consider that in the present case the language
used in s. 31 is plain and comprehensive so as to require an
appellate court to give effect, to the substantive
provisions of the Amending Act whether the appeal before it
is one against a decree granting preemption or one refusing
that relief. The decision of the
882
Federal Court in Lachmeshwar Prasad v. Keshwar Lal (1) on
which learned Counsel for the appellant relied fully covers
this case. The question there raised related to the duty of
the Federal Court when an amending Act enacted after the
decree appealed from was passed adversely interfered with
the rights of the respondent before the Court. The learned
Judges held. that the provisions of the Act were clearly
retrospective and should be applied to the decree which was
the subject-matter of appeal before it and the appeal was
accordingly allowed and remitted to the High Court for
effect being given to the new legislation. Mr. Achhru Ram,
however, sought to suggest that the language of s. 7 of the
Bihar Moneylenders Act, 1939 which was the subject of
construction before the Federal Court was differently worded
and was of wider amplitude. That section ran:
"7. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary
contained in any other law or in anything
having the force of law or in any agreement,
no Court shall, in any suit brought by a
money-lender before or after the commencement
of this Act in respect of a loan advanced
before or after the commencement of this Act
or in any appeal or proceedings in revision
arising out of such suit, pass a decree for an
amount of interest for the period preceding
the institution of the suit, which, together
with any amount already realised as interest
through the Court or otherwise, is greater
than the amount of loan advanced, or, if the
loan is based on a document, the amount of
loan mentioned in, or evidenced by such
document."
In particular learned counsel stressed the fact that unlike
in s. 31 of the Act now under consideration, in the Bihar
Act there were specific references to
(1) [1940] F.C.R. 84.
883
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"appeals" and "revision" and that this made a difference.
But in our opinion this makes no difference since it is
admitted that s. 31 even according to the respondent has to
be given effect to, not merely by a trial Court but also by
an appellate Court, only learned Counsel could urge that the
appellate Court could give effect to the Amending Act only
in cases where the trial Court has refused a decree for pre-
emption. No distinction can, therefore, be rested on the
ground that the Bihar Act specifically referred to
",appeals" and "revisions" seeing that the relevant
operative words in s. 7 of the Bihar Act were "no Court
shall pass a decree"- words which occur in s. 31 of the Act
as well. On the other hand the reasoning of the learned
Judges of the Court which was based on the nature of an
appeal under the Indian procedural law as a rehearing and a
court of appeal being not a court of error merely, and the
view expressed that when an appeal was filed the finality
which attached to the decree of the trial court disappeared,
all these lines of reasoning point to the fact that even
when an appellate court dismisses an appeal it also is
passing a decree. In this connection we consider that the
reasoning and the conclusion of the Division Bench of the
Punjab High Court in Ram Lal v. Raja Ram (1) correctly sets
out the principles underlying the scope of an appeal as well
as the proper construction of s. 31 of the Amending Act.
It was not suggested that if the provisions of s. 15 as
amended by Punjab Act 10 of ’1960 had to be applied the
decree in favour of the respondent could be sustained. The
result therefore is that the appeal has to be allowed, the
decree in favour of the respondent set aside and the
respondent’s suit for preemption dismissed. In view,
however, of
(1) (1960) 62 P.L.R. 291.
884
the circumstances that the appellant has succeeded only by
virtue of subsequent legislation, we direct that there shall
be no order as to costs in the appeal.
Appeals Nos. 139, 147 and 214 dismissed.
Appeal No. 510 Allowed.