Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE COLLECTOR OF SOUTH SATARA & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAXMAN MAHADEV DESHPANDE & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
13/02/1963
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
WANCHOO, K.N.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1964 AIR 326 1964 SCR (2) 48
CITATOR INFO :
R 1973 SC 190 (3)
R 1980 SC1759 (3)
E&R 1982 SC 887 (29)
ACT:
Watan lands--Resumption by Government--Nature of the tenure
of land held originally as watan land, after commutation of
service-Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874 (III of 1874),
ss. 4,15 (1) (2), cl. (3), 22--Loss of Watan rights in land
--Grant of compensation if contemplated--Bombay Paragana and
Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950 (Bom. LX of 1950),
ss. 3, 4, 6, 9 (1) (2) (3) (4).
HEADNOTE:
On abolition of his watan, the respondent applied to the
Collector claiming compensation under s. 9 of the Bombay
Paragana and Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950, for
extinction of his right in the watan land, and of his "right
to enjoy part of the land revenue." The Collector rejected
the application and in appeal the order was affirmed by the
Revenue Tribunal. The High Court in a petition under Art.
227 of the Constitution set aside the order of the Collector
and directed him to assess and pay compensation to the
respondent under s. 9 (1) of the Act.
Held, that the watan property-if any-the hereditary ice, and
the rights and privileges attached thereto, together
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constitute a watan, and a hereditary ice does not lose its
character merely because the service originally appertaining
to the ice has ceased to be demanded. Commutation of
service does not in the absence of an express agreement to
that effect alter the tenure of the land held as watan. By
agreement, the State may relieve the holder of the ice and
his successors of the duty to perform the service for which
the grant was made,but the ice and the grant continue,
subject to the terms of the settlement under s. 15 of the
Bombay Hereditary Offices Act, 1874.
Appaji Bapuji v. Keshav Shamrav, (1890) 1. L. R. 15 Bom. 13
and Bachharam Datta Patil v. Viswanath Pundalik Patil,
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[1956] S. C. R. 675, referred to.
Held, further, that after the commutation settlement, the
holder being relieved of the obligation to perform service,
the ice of watandar survives in name only but the land
granted as watan remains subject to the restrictions imposed
by the Watan Act. By the regrant of the land in occupancy
right, on abolition or extinction of the watan, the holder
is not in truth prejudicially affected. Loss of watan
rights in land, and the watan ice is compensated by the
regrant of occupancy rights in the land. Grant of
compensation was contemplated under sub-s. (2) of s. 9 of
the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act for
abolition, extinction or modification of rights other than
the rights of a watandar, to land or cash allowance or
remission of land revenue.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 289 of 1961.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
February 6, 1959, of the Bombay High Court in Special Civil
Appeal No. 2647 of 1958.
M. C. Setalvad, C. K. Daphtary Solicitor General of India,
S. B. Jathar and R. H. Dhebar, for the appellants.
S. G. Patwardhan and A. C. Ratnaparkhi, for respondent No.
1.
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1963. February 13. The judgment of the Court was
delivered by
SHAH J.-With special leave, the Collector of South Satara
has appeared against the order of the High Court of
judicature at Bombay directing him to assess compensation
payable to the respondent under s. 9 (1) of the Bombay
Pargana and kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act, 1950.
Laxman Mahadev Deshpande-hereinafter called ’the
respondent’-was the holder of Paragana Watan land bearing
Survey Nos. 503/2. and 504/1 in Mouza Aitwade, Taluka Valve,
District South Satara. Performance of service in respect of
the Watan had been commuted under an arrangement made in or
about 1864 under a commutation settlement popularly known as
"Gordon Settlement" whereby the holder was, on agreeing to
pay a fixed sum, relieved of the obligation to perform
service as a Village Officer.
The Legislature of the State of Bombay enacted an Act called
the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act LX
of 1950, which abolished all Paragana and Kulkarni Watans.
The respondent applied to the Collector of South Satara for
an order under s. 9 of the Act awarding Rs. 10,479-2-8 as
compensation for extinction of his right in the watan land,
and of his "right to enjoy part of the land revenue." By his
order dated April 29, 1957, the Collector rejected the
application, and the order of the Collector was affirmed by
the Bombay Revenue Tribunal in appeal under s. 9 (4) of the
Act. But in petition under Art. 227 of the Constitution the
High Court of Bombay set aside the order of the Collector
and directed that officer to assess and pay compensation to
the respondent under s. 9 (1) of the Abolition Act.
The land was granted to an ancestor of the respondent as
remuneration for performance of Paragana service some time
in the sixteenth century
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by the Ruler of Satara, and that grant was confirmed by the
British Government. The original grant and the confirmation
sanad have not been produced, but it is common ground
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between the parties that the grant was of the soil and not
merely of the royal share of revenue. In adjudging the
claim made by the respondent for compensation under s. 9 of
the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni Watans (Abolition) Act it
is necessary in the first instance to ascertain the true
character of the rights of a watandar in the land granted as
remuneration for performance of service and the effect of
the commutation settlement, in the light of the material
provisions of the Bombay Hereditary ices Act, III of 1874,
commonly known as the Watan Act. By s. 4 of the Watan Act
‘Watan property’ is defined as meaning-"’moveable or
immovable property held, acquired, or assigned for providing
remuneration for the performance of the duty appertaining to
an hereditary ice x X"
’Hereditary ice’ is defined as meaning "every ice held
hereditarily for the performance of duties connected with
the administration or collection of the public revenue or
with the village police, or with the settlement of
boundaries, or other matters of civil administration. The
expression includes such ice even where the services
originally appertaining to it have ceased to be demanded.
The watan property, if any, and the hereditary ice and the
rights and privileges attached to them together constitute
the watan" and the expression ‘watandar’ means a person
having an hereditary interest in a watan : it includes a
person holding watan property acquired by him before the
introduction of the British Government into the locality of
the watan, or legally acquired subsequent to such
introduction, and a person holding such property from him by
inheritance. Section 15 of the Act provides for commutation
of service.
By sub-s. (1) it is provided :
"The Collector may, with the consent of the
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holder of a watan, given in writing, relieve him and his
heirs, and successors in perpetuity of their liability to
perform service upon such conditions, whether consistent
with the provisions of this Act or not, as may be agreed
upon by the Collector and such holder."
By sub-s. (2) which was repealed by Act XVI of 1895, it was
provided :
"’Any settlement made for this purpose before the date of
this Act coming into force by any Collector or other officer
acting on behalf of Government with the holder of any watan
shall have the same force as if made under this Act." Clause
(3) provides :
"Every settlement made or confirmed under this section shall
be binding upon both the State Government and the holder of
the watan and his heirs and successors."
It is clear that the watan property, if any, the hereditary
ice, and the rights and privileges attached thereto,
together constitute a watan and a hereditary ice does not
lose its character merely because the service originally
appertaining to the ice has ceased to be demanded.
Commutation of service does not therefore, in the absence of
an express agreement to that effect alter the tenure of the
land held as watan. By agreement, the State, for
consideration, may agree to relieve the holder of the ice
and his successors of the duty to perform the service for
performance of which the grant was made, but the ice and the
grant continue, subject to the terms of the settlement under
s. 15 of the Bombay Hereditary ices Act, 1874.
In Appaji Bapuji v. Keshav Shamrav (1), the nature of the
tenure of land held originally as
(1) (1890) I.L,R. 15 Bow. 13.
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watan.land, after commutation of service, fell to be
determined before the Bombay High Court, Sargent
C. J., observed at p. 23 :
"What is termed a Gordon Settlement was an arrangement--
entered into in 1864 by a Committee, of which Mr. Gordon, as
Collector, was chairman, acting on behalf of Government with
the vatandars in the Southern Maratha Country, by which the
Government relieved certain vatandars in perpetuity from
liability to perform the services attached to their ices in
consideration of a ’judi’ or quit-rent charged upon the
vatan lands. x x x x x x the reports of Mr.
Gordon’s Committee on the Satara and Poona Districts and
their correspondence with Government can, we think, leave no
doubt that the settlements made by that committee, unless it
was otherwise specially provided by any particular
settlement, were not intended by either party to these
settlements, to convert the vatan lands into the private
property of the vatandars with the necessary incident of
alienability, but to leave them attached to the hereditary
ices, which although freed from the performance of service
remained intact, as shown by the definition of hereditary
ice in the declaratory Act III of 1874."
But the Commutation settlement does not confer an
indefeasible title to the grantee, for the right affirmed by
the settlement under s. 15 (3) of the Watan Act is liable to
be determined by lapse, confiscation or resumption (s. 22 of
the Watan Act). The State having created the watan, is
entitled to put an end to the watan i. e. to cancel the
watan and to resume the grant : Bachharam Datta Patil v.
Vishwanath Pundalik Patil (1). Therefore if there be mere
commutation of service, the watan ice ordinarily
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 675.
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survives without liability to perform service, and on that
account the character of watan property still remains
attached to the grant. But the State Government may abolish
the ice and release the property from its character as watan
property.
It is in the light of these features of the watan and the
property granted for remuneration of the Watandar that the
relevant provisions of the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni
Watans (Abolition) Act, have to be considered in adjudging
the right to receive compensation claimed by the respondent
on abolition of his watan. By s. 3 of the Abolition Act, it
is provided that :
"With effect from and on the appointed day, notwithstanding
anything contained in any law, usage, settlement, grant,
sanad or order-
(1) all Paragana and Kulkarni watans shall
be deemed to have been abolished ;
(2) all rights to hold ice and any liability
to render service appertaining to the said
watans are hereby extinguished;
(3) subject to the provisions of section 4,
all watan land is hereby resumed and shall be
deemed to be subject to the payment of land
revenue under the provisions of the Code and
the rules made thereunder as if it were an
unalienated land :
Provided that such resumption shall not affect
the validity of any alienation of such watan
land made in accordance with the provisions of
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section 5 of the Watan Act or the rights of an
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alience thereof or any person claiming under
or through him;
(4) all incidents appertaining to the said
watans are hereby extinguished."
The material part of s. 4 provides that :
"A watan land resumed under the provisions of this Act shall
x x x x be regranted to the holder of the watan to which it
appertained, on payment of the occupancy price equal to
twelve times of the amount of the full assessment of such
land x x x x x x and the holder shall be deemed to be an
occupant within the meaning of the Code in respect of such
land x x x; all the provisions of the Code and rules
"relating to unalienated land shall, subject to the
provisions of this Act, apply to the said land:"
By s. 6 right to compensation in lieu of cash allowance or
land revenue is granted. It provides :
"6. Notwithstanding anything contained in any law, usage,
settlement, grant, sanad or order,-
(1) a sum equal to seven times the amount of the cash
allowance due to a holder on the appointed day of a watan in
respect of which a commutation settlement has been effected,
shall be paid to such holder;
(2) in the case of any land or village, in respect of which
the watan property consists of the whole or a part of the
land revenue of such land or village, a sum equal to ten
times the
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amount of such land revenue shall be paid to the holder x x
x x x X."
Section 9 provides for assessment and payment of
compensation for the abolition, extinction or modification
by virtue of s. 3 of rights in property not provided for in
the Act. Sub-section (1) provides :
"If any person is aggrieved by the provisions of this Act as
abolishing, extinguishing or modifying any of his rights to
or interest in property and if compensation for such
abolition, extinguishment or modification has not been pro-
vided for in the provisions of this Act such person may
apply to the Collector for compensation."
Sub-section (2) prescribes the procedure of an application
for compensation and sub-s. (3) precludes the grant of
compensation to any person on the ground that any watan land
which was wholly or partially exempt from the payment of
land revenue has been under the provisions of the Act
subjected to the payment of full assessment.
It appears clear from the scheme of s. 6 that if the
remuneration of the Watandar is merely cash allowance, or
part or whole of the land revenue of the land, compensation
at the rate prescribed is payable to the holder on abolition
of the watan. If the remuneration consists not of cash
allowance or remission of land revenue, but of the land
itself by the combined operation of ss. 3(3) and 4 the
holder of the watan land is entitled to be regranted
occupancy rights as in unalienated land. Section 9 deals
with the rights of persons to receive compensation for
abolition, extinguishment or modification of the right or
interest in watan property by virtue of the provisions of
the Act, in cases where no other provision is made in that
behalf in the Act. There is
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no serious dispute raised about this being the true position
in law.
But two questions remain in controversy between the parties
:
(1) Whether the right to or interest in property of a
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watandar is abolished, extinguished or modified by the
provisions of the Bombay Paragana and Kulkarni Watans
(Abolition) Act; and
(2) Whether provision for compensation for the abolition,
extinguishment or modification or the right or interest in
the watan land of the holder is made by any provision in the
Act, so as to exclude the operation of s. 9(1) of the Act.
The first question presents little difficulty in its
solution. Section 3 in terms provides for abolition of the
watan, extinction of the ice and modification of the right
in which the land is held. The abolition, extinction and
modification arise by the operation of s. 3 of the Act,’ and
not from the exercise of the executive power of confiscation
or resumption, by the State. Undoubtedly the power of
resumption of a watan may be exercised under s. 22 of the
watan Act and such a resumption may destroy the right of the
holder both to the ice and the watan land, and in the
absence of any provision in that behalf no right to
compensation may arise. But where the abolition of the
watan is not by executive action, but by legislative decree,
its consequences must be sought in the statute which
effectuates that abolition.
On the second question the respondent affirms the contention
which appealed to the High Court that where the grant to a
watandar is of the soil and
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not merely of cash allowance or of remission of land revenue
as remuneration for performance of the duties of his ice,
compensation has to be awarded under s. 9, for Act LX of
1950 makes no provision for payment of compensation to the
watandar for abolition of his ice and rights in the land
held by him. The correctness of this view is challenged by
the appellant. It must be remembered that the power
which the State Government always possessed by the
clearest implication of s. 22 of the Bombay Hereditary ices
Act, 1874, of resumption is statutorily enforced by s. 3 in
respect of the Paragana and Kulkarni Watans. The State
Government having the power to abolish a watan ice, and to
resume land granted as remuneration for performance of the
duties attached to the ice was not obliged to compensate the
wandar for extinction of his rights. But the Legislature
has, as a matter of grace, presumably because of settlements
between the holders and the Government under the Gordon
Settlement, provided by s. 6 that cash compensation be
awarded for loss of the right to cash allowance or remission
of land revenue and has by s. 4 Conferred upon the holder of
the watan land, for loss of his right, a right to regrant of
the land as occupant and free from the obligation imposed by
its original tenure as watan land. Provision is also made
by s. 9 for awarding compensation to persons whose right or
interest in property is abolished, extinguished or modified
by virtue of the section, and no other provision for
compensation for such extinction, abolition or modification
is made by the Act. The right to cash compensation under s.
9 depends upon the existence of two conditions : the
abolition, extinction or modification of rights in property
by virtue of the provisions of the Act; and the absence of
any other provision in the Act for compensation in that
behalf. If, therefore, s. 4 which provides for conferment
of occupancy rights in land, be regarded as a provision for
compensation for abolition, extinction or modification of
the
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right to hold it as watan land, the residuary enactment in
s. 9 will not on the plain terms be attracted. By the
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operation of s. 3 all Paraganas and Kulkarni watans falling
within the Act are abolished, the right to hold ice is
extinguished, and the land granted as remuneration for
performance of service is resumed. The holder of the land
is thereafter liable to pay land revenue, and is entitled,
on payment of the occupancy price at the prescribed rate, to
be regranted occupancy rights as if it is unalienated land.
The right so conferred is, though not a right to cash
compensation, a valuable right of occupancy in the land. By
the resumption of watan land and regrant thereof in
occupancy right, all the restrictions placed upon the holder
of watan land are by the provisions of the Watan Act, and
the terms of the grant, statutorily abolished. But the
right of occupancy granted by s. 4 adequately compensates
the holder for loss of the precarious interest of a
watandar, because the land regranted after abolition of the
watan, is held subject only to the restrictions imposed by
sub-s. (2) of s. 4, and is freed from the incidents of watan
tenure, such as restriction on alienation beyond the life-
time of the holder, devolution according to the special rule
of succession, and the liability to confiscation or
resumption. In our judgment, compensation contemplated to
be awarded, not as a matter of right but as of grace, is not
merely money compensation; it includes grant of occupancy
rights which compensates for the loss of ice and the
interest of a watandar in the land. By s. 4 the Legislature
has granted for the loss suffered by the watandar on
abolition of the watan and the rights in watan land, a right
of occupancy in the land which may properly be regarded as
compensating him for the abolition of his rights. Provision
for levy of what is substantially a nominal occupancy price
will not detract from that character. After the commutation
settlement, the holder being relieved of the obligation to
perform service, the ice of wandar survives in name only,
but the land
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granted as walan remains subject to the restrictions imposed
by the Watan Act. by the regrant of the land in occupancy
right, on abolition or extinction of the watan, the holder
is not in truth prejudicially affected. Loss of watan
rights in land, and the watan ice is compensated by the
regrant of occupancy rights in the land. It would,
therefore, be reasonable to infer that the Legislature
contemplated the grant of compensation under sub-s. (2) of
s. 9 for abolition, extinction or modification of rights
other than the rights of the watandar to land or to cash
allowance or remission of land revenue.
The appeal is therefore allowed and the order passed by the
High Court set aside. We are informed at the Bar that the
respondent has not claimed right of occupancy in the land
which was previously held by him as watan land be granted to
him. Whether he will be entitled thereto in view of his
failure to make a claim to a regrant is a matter on which we
express no opinion. Having regard to the circumstances, we
direct that there will be no order as to costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.
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