Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THAKORE SOBHAG SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THAKUR JAI SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
31/01/1968
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
BHARGAVA, VISHISHTHA
CITATION:
1968 AIR 1328 1968 SCR (3) 848
CITATOR INFO :
R 1974 SC 994 (94)
APL 1990 SC 334 (27)
ACT:
Jaipur Matmi Rules, 1945-Whether have force of law-Adoption
prior to promulgation of Rules without sanction of
Ruler--validity.
Board of Revenue, Rajasthan-Jurisdiction to decide questions
of adoption and succession to jagirs in Jaipur State.
HEADNOTE:
The Board of Revenue, Rajasthan. without recording a finding
on the factum of respondent’s adoption to the last holder of
the jagir, rejected his claim to be recognised as the
adopted son, on the around that, under the Matmi Rules, the
adoption, without the previous sanction of the Ruler, could
not be recognised for the purpose of determining succession
to the jagir. In the writ petition filed by him, the High
Court dealt- with the dispute on merits and, holding (a)
that the Jaipur Matm Rules had no statutory force because
the Ruler had not given his assent to them; (b) that on the
death of the last holder without any issue the jagir would
vest in the respondent if it was proved that he was adopted
in accordance with the personal law of the last jagirdar;
and (c) that rule 14(2) requiring the previous sanction of
the Government of the State to adopt is prospective and
could have no application to an adoption made before the
Rules were promulgated, directed the Board to decide the
case in accordance with the law declared by the High Court.
The Board held that the respondent was proved to have been
adopted by the last jagirdar and directed that he should be
recognised as the jagirdar.
In appeal to this Court, against the order of the Board of
Revenue it was contended by the appellant, who claimed to
have a preferential right to the jagir, that : (1) the Board
of Revenue had no jurisdiction to decide the dispute
relating to adoption as it was triable by a civil court, and
(2) since the Jaipur Matmi Rules (Validation) Act, of 1961,
was passed after the judgment of the High Court, the Board
was bound to dispose of the matter in the light of the
Rules.
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HELD : (1) Under the Rajasthan Jagir Decisions and
Proceedings (Validation) Act, 1955, the power to deal with
and decide disputes relating to succession to jagir-estates
was vested, in respect of proceedings pending at the date of
the Act and instituted thereafter, in the Revenue Courts.
Therefore, the Board of Revenue was competent to decide the
question relating to the respondent’s adoption, and its
decision on the factum of adoption recorded on appreciation
of evidence must be accepted. [852 D-E, HI
(2) It was not open to the appellant to contend that the
right of the respondent, as the adopted son, to the jagir
had to be decided by the Board on the basis of the Matmi
Rules and not in accordance with the personal law of the
last jagirdar.
(a) Though the State legislature enacted the Validation
Act, declaring that the Matmi Rules ’shall have and shall be
deemed always to have had, the force of law and shall be
treated as being and as having been an existing jagir law
within the meaning of s. 2(d) of the Rajasthan Land Reforms
and Resumption of Jagirs Act, 1952, notwithstanding anything
849
contained in any judgment of any court, the Act did not
supersede the judgment of the High Court and therefore, the
Board was incompetent to consider and decide the question
whether the Government may, in the absence of its previous
sanction, refuse to recognise the adoption of the respondent
on the basis of the Matmi Rules. [854 A-C]
(b) According to the personal law applicable to the last
jagirdar, the respondent could have been adopted by him and
the finding of the High Court that the jagir would vest in
the respondent as the adopted son in accordance with such
personal law operated as res judicata and could not be
reopened before the Board of Revenue; and, it was not open
to the appellant to contend in the appeal to this Court that
the decision of the high Court on questions decided in the
writ petition was erroneous. The order of the High Court on
the writ petition was not an interlocutory order. [854 E-G]
(c) Rule 14(2) is on its terms prospective and the
Validation Act does not give retrospective operation to the
Matmi Rules. [853 F]
(d) It could not be contended that the judgment of the High
Court should not be treated as res judicata, on the ground
that if it was regarded is binding between-the parties, the
equal protection clause of the Constitution would be
violated if another person similarly situated were to be
differently treated by the Board of Revenue. [855 E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 568 of
1965.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
October 23, 1962 of the Board of Revenue, Rajasthan at Ajmer
in Matmi Case No. 40 (Jhunjhunu) of 1961.
M. M. Tiwari, D. D. Varma and Ganpat Rai, for the
appellants.
A. K. Sen, D. P. Gupta, Sobhag Mal Jain and B. P. Mahesh-
wari, for respondent No. 1.
K. B. Mehta and Miss Indu Soni, for respondent Nos. 2 to 4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah, J. This is an appeal brought with special leave
against the judgment dated October 23, 1962 in Matmi Case
No. 40 of 1961, of the file of the Board of Revenue,
Rajasthan.
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Thakur Sabhal Singh-hereinafter called ’Sabhal Singh’-a
jagirdar of Thikana Jhakora in Shekhawati area in the former
Indian State of Jaipur applied on November 3, 1933 to
recognize Jai Singh-the first respondent in this appeal-as
his adopted son for succession to the Thikana. On May 23,
1936, the Ruler of Jaipur in Council ordered that he "saw no
reason at the present moment to recognize the adoption
advocated by" Sabhal Singh, and that the "alleged adoption
of Jai Singh shall in no way be deemed to be an adoption
that will in any sense bind the Darbar as regards the
question of succession". On June 16, 1947, Sabhal Singh
preferred another application to the Prime Minister of
Jaipur for recognizing the adoption of Jai Singh, The
application was
850
sent to the Board of Revenue for enquiry and report under
the Jaipur Matmi Rules, 1945. The Board of Revenue reported
that in view of the Council Resolution dated May 23, 1936,
the application was not maintainable since Sabhal Singh was
living at the date of the application. But before this
application could be finally disposed of by the Government
of the State of Jaipur Sabhal Singh died and the Prime,
Minister of Jaipur directed that necessary enquiries be held
under the Matmi Rules, and for that purpose the record ’be
sent to the Deputy Commissioner for taking action according
to the Rules. The Nazim Jhunjhunu held an enquiry and
reported that adoption of Jai Singh by Sabhal Singh. could
not be recognized, for, under the Council Resolution dated
May 23, 1936, the Government had refused to ant any recog-
nition to the adoption. In the view of the Nazim, the
adoption of Jai Singh by Sabhal Singh without the previous
sanction of the Government was invalid, and evidence of the
"factum of adoption" was inadmissible, but that did not
debar Jai Singh from setting up a claim to succeed to the
Thikana as a descendant in the senior line of the original
grantee. An appeal against that order to the Deputy
Commissioner was dismissed. A second appeal was then
carried to the Board of Revenue. In the view of the Board,
on the terms of the Council Resolution dated May 23, 1936,
an enquiry into the factum of adoption could not be shut
out. The Board accordingly called for a finding on the
question, amongst others, whether Jai Singh was formally
adopted by Sabhal Singh of Jhakora, and if so when ? The
Nazim reported that the adoption of Jai Singh stood proved
satisfactorily, but the adoption could not be recognized
because no previous sanction of the Ruler had been obtained.
Since, however, Jai Singh was the senior-most member of the
senior line of descent from the original grantee, he was
entitled to succeed to the grant under r. 14 (I) of the
Jaipur Matmi Rules, 1945, in preference to any other
claimant. The papers were then submitted to the Collector,
Jhunihunu. The Collector confirmed the finding of the Nazim
that Jai Singh was adopted by Sabhal Singh, but in the
absence of previous sanction of the Ruler the adoption could
not be recognized. The Collector did not, however, agree
with the Nazim that Jai Singh was the senior member of the
senior line of the original grantee : he held that Sobhag
Singh-appellant in this appeal-was the senior member of the
senior line of the original grantee and recommended that
"the Matmi be granted in favour of Sobhag Singh." The Board
of Revenue agreed with the Collector that Jai Singh was not
the senior member of the senior line of the original grantee
of the grant in question, and that the appellant Sobbag
Singh bad a preferential claim to the grant of Matmi. The
Board without recording a finding on the issue of adoption
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accepted the recommendation of the Collector.
851
Jai Singh then moved a petition under Art. 226 of the
Constitution before the High Court of Rajasthan. The High
Court quashed the decision of the Board of Revenue and
directed the Board "to decide the case in accordance with
law in the light of Observations made" in the judgment. In
the opinion of the High court, the Jagir devolved according
to the personal law applicable to the last holder, and the
personal law included the custom or usage relating to the
particular Jagir; that the custom or usage applicable to the
Jagir in question was that the adopted son must be a direct
male lineal descendant of the original grantee, and that
Nahar Singh was the original grantee of the Jagir in
question and Jai Singh as a descendant of Nahar Singh was
entitled to take he Jagir if it was proved that the adoption
had been made in accordance with the personal law, that the
Matmi Rules had no statutory force because it was not proved
that assent of the Ruler of Jaipur had been given thereto,
and that even assuming that the rules were "existing Jagir
law" they did not govern adoptions lade before they were
brought into force. An application for certificate to
appeal to this Court against the judgment of the High under
Art. 133 of the Constitution was rejected on the round that
the dispute had not been finally decided, and a number of
issues remained to be decided.
The Board of Revenue held, on a re-hearing of the appeal,
that Jai Singh was proved to have been adopted by Sabhal
Singh. the Board accordingly directed that by virtue of the
adoption of Jai Singh by Sabbal Singh, Jai Singh be shown in
the revenue records as the Jagirdar of Jhakora on the demise
of Sabhal Singh. Against that order, Sobhag Singh who
claimed to have a preferenal right to the Jagir of Jhakora
has appealed to this Court.
A large number of grounds were canvassed at the Bar in sup-
port of this appeal : they fall into three broad divisions :
(1) That the Board of Revenue had no
jurisdiction to decide a dispute relating to
adoption which dispute was -triable by the
Civil Court alone;
(2) Since the Jaipur Matmi Rules had been
validated by the Jaipur Matmi Rules
(Validation) Act, 1961 (Act 21 of 1961), the
Board was bound to decide the appeal in the
light of the Rules; and
(3) That on the evidence it is not proved
that Jai Singh was in fact adopted by Sabhal
Singh as his son on Kartik Sudi 13 Samvat Year
1987.
The first and the third grounds present no difficulty. The
Rajasthan Legislature enacted the Rajasthan Jagir Decisions
and Proceedings (Validation) Act 18 of 1955 to validate
certain decisions
85 2
given, and proceedings taken, in respect of matters relating
to the resumption of Jagirs in the covenanting States of
Rajasthan, and the recognition according to the law of
succession to the rights and titles of Jagirdars therein,
and to provide the forum for the disposal of such cases and
proceedings. The State of Jaipur was or of the covenanting
States. By s. 3 of that Act it was provided that all
decisions of the various grades of Revenue Courts or officer
in cases or proceedings arising out of, or under, the laws
of the covenanting States providing for the resumption of
jagirs in those States and the recognition of succession to
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the rights and titles of jagirdars therein shall be valid
and shall be deemed always to have been valid and shall not
be liable to be called in question in any Civil Court.
Section 4 provided for continuance of pending cases and
proceedings before the Revenue Courts as if they were
properly instituted. Section 5 provided that all cases or
proceedings of the nature referred to in S. 3 may after the
Act be instituted in the Court of the Collector exercising
jurisdiction in ’the area within which the subject-matter of
the case or proceeding is situate. Provision was made for
appeals from the orders of the Revenue Courts by S. 8, and
by S. 12 the order of the Board of Revenue was declared
final. The jurisdiction of the civil court to entertain
suits or proceedings referred to in s.5 was expressly
excluded by S. 13. The power to deal with and decide
disputes relating to succession to jagir estates was there-
fore vested in respect of proceedings pending at -the date
of the Act and instituted thereafter, in the Revenue Courts.
The Board of Revenue was, therefore, competent to decide the
question relating to the adoption of Jai Singh by Sabhal
Singh.
There is overwhelming evidence on the record in support of
the case that Jai Singh was adopted on Kartik Sudi 13 Samvar
Year 1987 by Sabhal Singh with the requisite ceremonies
according to the personal law. Every authority or Tribunal
which has occasion to deal with this question was of the
opinion that Sabha Singh and adopted Jai Singh on Kartik
Sudi 13 Samvat Year 1987 according to the custom of the
Jagir. Apart from the oral evidence, there is the deed of
adoption, a copy of an invitation sent to an invitee to
attend the adoption ceremony and the recitals in the
application submitted by Sabhal Singh requesting recognition
of the adoption of Jai Singh. The Board of Revenue in the
judgment under appeal has carefully analysed the evidence,
and we see no reason to enter upon a reappraisal of the
evidence in this appeal with special leave. The view
recorded by the Board of Revenue on appreciation of evidence
that Jai Singh was adopted as a son by Sabhal Singh must be
accepted.
The second contention may now be considered. In 1945 the
Jaipur Matmi Rules were published in the State Government
Gazette. By r. 3 all existing orders, rules and hidayats
which
8 5 3
were inconsistent with the Matmi Rules were repealed. Rule
4 sub-r. (3) defined "Matmi" as meaning mutation of the name
of the successor to a State grant on the death of the last
holder. By r. 5 it was provided that all State grants shall
be subject to matmi with certain exceptions not relevant in
this case. Rule provided
I ) Subject to the provisions of rule 1 3,
succession in the absence of a direct male
lineal descendant of the last holder shall be
restricted to the lineal male descendants of
the original grantee, preference being given
to the senior member of the senior line
Provided, firstly, that in the case of a grant
for the maintenance of a temple, mosque or
other religious place, other than a Jain
temple, it shall be within the discretion of
Government to select as successor any one of
the male lineal descendants of the original
grantee, with due regard to his suitability
for the performance of worship; and
Provided, secondly,
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(2) No adoption shall be recognised for the
purpose of succession to a State grant unless
a holder has obtained the previous sanction of
the Government to adopt, such sanction being
given only in favour of a direct male lineal
descendant of the original grantee
Provided, firstly,
Provided, secondly,
That rule is plainly prospective, and can have no
application to an adoption made before the Rules were
promulgated. Previous sanction to adopt is not a condition
of the (,rant of recognition for the purpose of succession
to a State grant in respect of a person who is adopted by
the holder of a Jagir before the date of the promulgation of
the Rules. That was the view taken by the High Court in the
writ petition filed by Jai Singh against the order of the
Board of Revenue. The High Court also held that the Matmi
Rules were not sanctioned by the Government, and had not the
force of law. It is true that the State Legislature has
enacted Act 21 of 1961-called ’The Jaipur Matmi Rules
(Validation) Act 1961’. By s. 2 of that Act it is provided
that "notwithstanding anything contained in the Jaipur
General Clauses Act, 1944, or any otherlaw or in any rule
of interpretation or in any judgment decision, decree or
order of any court, notwithstanding any omission or defect
of form or procedure or want of any competent sanction or
approval, it is hereby declared that the Jaipur Matmi Rules,
1945, published in the Jaipur Gazette, Extraordinary, dated
85 4
the 8th December, 1945, under Revenue Branch Notification
No. 15941/Rev., dated 24th November, 1945, shall have, and
shall be deemed always to have had, the force of law and
shall be treated as being and as having been an ’existing
Jagir law’ within the meaning of clause (d) of section 2 of
the Rajasthan Land Reforms and Resumption of Jagirs Act,
1952 (Rajasthan Act 6 of 1 952) for the purpose of that Act
as well as of the Rajasthan Jagir Decisions and Proceedings
(Validation) Act, 1955 (Rajasthan Act 18 of 1955), and any
other law relating to "Jagirs or Jagirdars." But the Act did
not supersede the judgement of the High Court. The Board of
Revenue was therefore incompetent to consider and decide the
question whether the Government may in the absence of the
previous sanction of the Government refuse to recognize the
adoption of Jai Singh. The Act again merely declares that
the Matmi Rules shall be deemed always to have the force of
law and shall be treated as being "existing Jagir law"
within the meaning of cl. (d) of S. 2 of the Rajasthan Land
Reforms and Resumption of Jagirs Act 6 of 1952 and Rajasthan
Act 18 of 1955. But the Act does not purport to give
retrospective operation to the Jaipur Matmi Rules. It is
futile then to contend that the Board of Revenue before
determining the question as to the factum of adoption of Jai
Singh was required to consider whether the adoption was
invalid, because sanction of the Ruler of Jaipur was not
previously obtained by Sabhal Singh before taking Jai Singh
in adoption.
The High Court had also held in the writ petition that on
the death of the holder of the Jagir without having any
issue the Jagir will vest in his adopted son in accordance
with the personal law. That finding is now res judicata and
is binding upon the parties. Counsel for the appellant
contended that the order passed by the High Court was an
interlocutory order remanding the proceeding to the Board of
Revenue, and on that account the decision of the High Court
will not operate as res judicata either before the Board of
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Revenue or in this Court. We are unable to accept that con-
tention. Against the order of the Board of Revenue
rejecting the claim of Jai Singh to be recognized as the
adopted son of Sabhal Singh a writ petition was moved in the
High Court and a prayer for quashing that order was made.
The High Court dealt with the dispute on merits and held
that the order of the Board of Revenue holding that because
of the Matmi Rules the adoption of Jai Singh by Sabhal Singh
without the previous sanction of the Ruler could not be
recognized for the purpose of determining the succession to
the Jagir was erroneous. The High Court did in making the
final order direct the Tribunal to decide the case in
accordance with the law and in the light of the observations
made in the judgment. but the direction was, in our
judgment, a surplusage. The High Court issued a writ in the
nature of certiorari
855
quashing the order of the Tribunal. It was unnecessary
thereafter to direct or advise the Board of Revenue to
perform its statutory duty to decide the dispute according
to law. The Board of Revenue had to decide the dispute in
accordance with the law declared by the High Court. All
questions which had been expressly decided by the High Court
on contest between the parties and other questions which
must be deemed by necessary implication to have been decided
were res judicata and could not be re-opened before the
Board of Revenue. In this appeal it is therefore not open
to the appellant to contend that the decision of the High
Court on the questions decided in the writ petition was
erroneous.
It is unfortunate that the application for certificate to
appeal to this Court filed by Sobhag Singh was erroneously
rejected by the High Court. But that does not affect the
binding character of the judgment of the High Court between
the parties. Unless the decision of the High Court on those
questions was set aside by appropriate proceeding in this
Court, the judgment must be held binding between the
parties. It is, therefore, not open to the appellant to
contend, that the right of Jai Singh as the adopted son to
the Jagir had to be decided otherwise than in accordance
with the personal law of Sabhal Singh. It is undisputed
that according to the personal law applicable to Sabhal
Singh, Jai Singh could have been adopted by him.
It was somewhat faintly contended by counsel for the appel-
lant that if the judgment of the High Court is regarded as
binding between the parties, the equal protection clause of
the Constitution would be violated, and on that account also
the judgment must be held invalid. The argument needs no
serious consideration. It is difficult to appreciate the
contention that two persons similarly situate were or could
be differently -treated by the judgment of the Board of
Revenue, because the decision of the High Court operates as
res judicata between the parties in one case. By the
application of the rule of res judicata the appellant was
not singled out for special or prejudicial treatment. It
may suffice to observe that all adoptions according to the
personal law in the State of Jaipur made by Jagirdars before
the promulgation of the Matmi Rules are valid, even if no
sanction of the Ruler was obtained to the adoptions. That
rule applies to all adoptions by jagirdars in the State of
Jaipur.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs in favour of
the first respondent.
V.P.S. Appeal dismissed.
856
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