Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3872 of 1992
PETITIONER:
MORESHWAR BALKRISHNA PANDARE & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VITHAL VYANKU CHAVAN & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/05/2001
BENCH:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri & S.N. Phukan
JUDGMENT:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri, J.
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This appeal, by special leave, is from the judgment and
order of the High Court of judicature at Bombay, allowing
Writ Petition No.1560 of 1981, filed by the respondents, on
July 19, 1991.
Before adverting to the contentions of the parties it
will be appropriate to refer to the relevant facts. The
predecessor- in-interest of the appellants was the landlord
of agricultural land bearing Survey No.238/1 measuring acres
2 & guntas 5 in village Kalgaon, District Satara,
Maharashtra State (for short, the land). He filed tenancy
case No.252/61 before the Tenancy Aval Karkun Karad (for
short, the Mamlatdar) against Vyanku Daji Chavan, the
tenant of the land, claiming exemption certificate under
sub-section (4) of Section 88C of the Bombay Tenancy &
Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 (all sections referred to in
this judgment are of the said Act unless otherwise stated).
During the pendency of the tenancy case both the landlord as
well as the tenant died. The appellants are the legal
representatives of the landlord and the respondents are the
legal representatives of the tenant. By order dated April
26, 1972 the Mamlatdar granted exemption certificate under
sub- section (4) of Section 88C in favour of the appellants.
The aggrieved respondents carried the matter in appeal
before the Sub-Divisional Officer, Satara Division, who set
aside the order of the Mamlatdar by order dated February 25,
1974. The appellants challenged the validity of the said
order in the Bombay High Court in Special Civil Application
No.2526 of 1974. On January 11, 1979 the High Court set
aside the said order of the Sub-Divisional Officer holding
that for purpose of Section 88C the total income of the
deceased landlord as on April 1, 1957 should be the criteria
and not that of the appellants and thus restored the order
of the Mamlatdar by allowing the said writ petition.
Immediately thereafter the appellants terminated the tenancy
by issuing notice to the respondents on January 27, 1979 and
making application to the Mamlatdar for possession of the
land for personal cultivation under Section 33B(3)(b) read
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with Section 29 in March 1979. On August 2, 1979, during
the pendency of the said application, the respondents
applied under Section 88D(1)(iv) for revocation of exemption
certificate on the ground that the income of the appellants
had exceeded Rs.1500/- per year. The Additional
Commissioner, Pune Division, Pune, having regard to the
order of the High Court in the Writ Petition No.2526 of 1974
dated January 11, 1979, rejected the application of the
respondents as not maintainable by order dated January 17,
1981. The respondents assailed the correctness of that
order in the High Court in Writ Petition No.1560 of 1981.
By the impugned order dated July 19, 1991, the High Court
quashed the order of the Additional Commissioner holding
that the application for revocation of the certificate was
maintainable and remanded the case for fresh disposal on
merits. It is that order which is the subject matter of the
appeal before us. The first contention of Mr.A.S.Bhasme,
the learned counsel appearing for the appellants, is that as
the High Court had restored the order of the Mamlatdar
granting exemption certificate in favour of the appellants
on the ground that the annual total income of the deceased
landlord as on April 1, 1957 was less than Rs.1,500/- which
had become final, therefore, now the income of the
appellants cannot be taken into account which would amount
to reopening the issue before the Additional Commissioner in
proceedings under Section 88D as such the High Court erred
in quashing the order of the Additional Commissioner.
Mr.V.B.Joshi, the learned counsel appearing for the
respondents, has argued that Section 88D gives an
independent right to the tenant to have the exemption
certificate revoked on establishing, inter alia, that the
annual income of the landlord had exceeded Rs.1,500/-,
therefore, the contention that the exemption certificate has
attained finality, is untenable. Here, it will be useful to
read Section 88D(1)(iv) under which revocation of the
certificate is applied for and it runs as follows :
88D. Power of Government to withdraw
exemption.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Sections 88,
88A, 88B and 88C, if the State Government is satisfied, -
(i) to (iii) *
(iv) in the case of lands referred to in Section 88C,
that the annual income of the person has exceeded Rs.1,500
or that the total holding of such person exceeds an economic
holding, the State Government may, by order published in the
prescribed manner, direct that with effect from such date as
may be specified in the order such land or area, as the case
may be, shall cease to be exempted from all or any of the
provisions of this Act from which it was exempted under any
of the sections aforesaid, and any certificate granted under
Section 88B or 88C, as the case may be, shall stand
revoked.
From a plain reading of the provisions, extracted above,
it is evident that in view of the opening words -- a
non-obstante clause -- Section 88D(1) overrides Sections 88,
88A, 88B and 88C provided the requirements thereof are
satisfied. Thus, it follows that a certificate granted
under sub-section (4) of Section 88C which is final in view
of sub-section (5), can be revoked under Section 88D(1) if
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the State Government is satisfied that in the case of the
land referred to in Section 88C, the total annual income of
the person holding the certificate has exceeded Rs.1,500/-
or that the total holding of such person exceeds the
economic holding, as the case may be. It may be noted that
for grant of certificate under Section 88C(4) income of the
applicant-landlord as on April 1, 1957 is the criteria but
for the purpose of revocation of the certificate what is
relevant is the income of the person holding the certificate
as on the date of the application for revocation of the
certificate. The words employed in clause (iv), noted
above, are, the annual income of the person has exceeded
Rs.1500/-. They imply that even if on April 1, 1957 the
total income was not exceeding Rs.1500/- but subsequently it
has exceeded that amount as on the date of the revocation
application, clause (iv) will be attracted. Therefore, the
first contention of Mr.Bhasme cannot but be rejected.
Mr.Bhasme next contended that after the appellants
terminated the tenancy of the respondents by notice in
writing and applied for possession of the land for bonafide
personal cultivation under Section 33B, the respondents
could not seek the revocation of the certificate under
Section 88D. Mr.V.B. Joshi, however, argued that in the
absence of any constraint in Section 88D with regard to
either the limitation or the stage of any proceedings, the
respondents could solicit revocation of the certificate and
that termination of tenancy would not bar their application
for revocation of the certificate unless the Mamlatdar has
already passed order on the application. The germane
question that arises for consideration is : whether the
application of the respondents under Section 88D(1)(iv), for
revocation of the exemption certificate granted under
Section 88C(4), filed after termination of their tenancy by
issuing notice and filing of application for possession of
the land by the appellant, under Section 33B read with
Section 29, is maintainable.
It is a common ground that the Act is a beneficial
legislation and it confers valuable rights on the tenants of
agricultural lands. Among others Section 32 provides that
on April 1, 1957 (the Tillers Day) every tenant shall be
deemed to have purchased from his landlord free of all
encumbrances, subsisting thereon as on that date, the land
held by him as tenant. Such deemed purchase is subject to
the provisions of that Section and Sections 32A to 32R.
Side by side the benefits conferred on tenants, a few rights
of the landlords are preserved to terminate tenancy under
Sections 14, 31, 43(1B) and in somewhat truncated form, a
right embodied in Section 88C read with Section 33B.
Now, we shall refer to Section 88C. It will be
appropriate to quote it here. 88C. Exemption from
certain provisions to lands leased by persons with the
annual income not exceeding Rs.1,500. -
(1) Save as otherwise provided by Sections 33A, 33B and
33C, nothing in Sections 32 to 32R (both inclusive) shall
apply to lands leased by any person if such land does not
exceed an economic holding and the total annual income of
person including the rent of such land does not exceed
Rs.1,500:
Provided that the provisions of this sub- section shall
not apply to any person who holds such lands as a permanent
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tenant or who has leased such land on permanent tenancy to
any other person.
(2) Every person eligible to the exemption provided in
sub-section (1) shall make an application in the prescribed
form to the Mamlatdar within whose jurisdiction all or most
of the pieces of land leased by him are situate within the
prescribed period for a certificate that he is entitled to
such exemption.
(3) On receipt of such application, the Mamlatdar shall,
after giving notice to the tenant or tenants of the land,
hold inquiry and decide whether the land leased by such
person is exempt under sub-section (1) from the provisions
of Section 32 to 32R.
(4) If the Mamlatdar decides that the land is so exempt,
he shall issue a certificate in the prescribed form to such
person.
(5) The decision of the Mamlatdar under sub- section
(3), subject to appeal to the Collector, shall be final.
An analysis of the Section, quoted-above, discloses that
sub-section (1) of Section 88C postulates : (a) exemption
of the land leased by any person, if such land does not
exceed an economic holding and the total annual income of
the person including the rent of such land does not exceed
Rs.1500/-, from the provisions of Section 32 to 32R (both
inclusive); (b) the exemption is subject to the provisions
of Sections 33A, 33B and 33C; and (c) the exemption does
not apply to a person who holds such lands as a permanent
tenant or who has leased such land on permanent tenancy to
any other person from its provisions. Sub-section (2) which
is procedural, provides that every person eligible for
exemption under sub-section (1) shall make an application in
the prescribed form, within the prescribed period, for a
certificate that he is entitled to such exemption, to the
Mamlatdar within whose jurisdiction all or most of the
pieces of land leased by him are situate. Sub- section (3)
castes an obligation on the Mamlatdar to hold inquiry after
notice of such application to tenant or tenants of the land
and to decide as to whether the land leased by such person
is exempt, under sub-section (1), from the provisions of
Sections 32 to 32R; in otherwords he has to decide whether
the twin requirements of sub-section (1), namely, (i) the
land leased does not exceed an economic holding and (ii) the
total income of the applicant including the rent of such
land does not exceed Rs.1,500/-, are satisfied. In the
event of the Mamlatdar deciding that the said requirements
are satisfied and therefore the land is so exempted,
sub-section (4) enjoins on him to issue a certificate in the
prescribed form to such person. Sub-section (5) declares
that the decision of the Mamlatdar under sub- section (3),
subject to appeal to the Collector, shall be final. We have
already held above that certificate of exemption issued
under Section 88C(4), notwithstanding its finality, is
liable to be revoked under Section 88D(1).
Inasmuch as sub-section (1) of Section 88C says save as
otherwise provided by Sections 33A, 33B and 33C, it will be
necessary to notice them here. Section 33A defines two
expressions, employed in the aforesaid provisions: (i)
certificated landlord to mean a person who holds a
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certificate issued to him under sub-section (4) of Section
88C but a landlord within the meaning of Chapter III-AA (a
serving member of armed forces) holding a similar
certificate is not included within the meaning of the
expression; and (ii) excluded tenant to mean a tenant
of land to which Sections 32 to 32R (both inclusive) do not
apply by virtue of sub-section (1) of Section 88C.
Section 33B confers a special right on the certificated
landlords to terminate tenancy for personal cultivation. It
is necessary to advert to it which is as follows :
33B. Special right of certificated landlord to
terminate tenancy for personal cultivation.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in Section 31,
31A or 31B a certificated landlord may, after giving notice
and making an application for possession as provided in
sub-section (3), terminate the tenancy of an excluded
tenant, if the landlord bona fide requires such land for
cultivating it personally.
(2) The notice may be given and an application made by a
certificated landlord under sub-section
(3), notwithstanding that in respect of the same tenancy
an application of the landlord made in accordance with
sub-section (2) of Section 31
(i) is pending before the Mamlatdar or in appeal before
the Collector, or in revision before the Maharashtra Revenue
Tribunal, on the date of the commencement of the Bombay
Tenancy and Agricultural Lands (Amendment) Act, 1960
(hereinafter referred to in this section as the
commencement date), or
(ii) has been rejected by any authority before the
commencement date.
(3) The notice required to be given under sub- section
(1) shall be in writing, and shall be served on the tenant
(a) before the first day of January 1962, but
(b) if an application under Section 88C is undisposed of
and pending on that date then within three months of his
receiving such certificate, and a copy of the notice shall,
at the same time, be sent to the Mamlatdar. An application
for possession of the land shall be made thereafter under
Section 29 to the Mamlatdar before the 1st day of April
1962, in the case falling under (a) and within three months
of his receiving the certificate in the case falling under
(b).
(4) Where the certificated landlord belongs to any of
the following categories, namely
(a) a minor,
(b) a widow,
(c) *
(d) a person subject to any physical or mental
disability, then if he has not given notice and not made an
application as required by sub-sections (1) and (3), such
notice may be given and such application made
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(A) by the landlord within one year from
the date on which he, -
(i) in the case of category (a)
attains majority;
(ii) *
(iii) in the case of category (d),
ceases to be subject to such
physical or mental disability;
and
(B) in the case of a widow, by the
successor-in-title within one year
from the date on which widows
interest in the land ceases :
Provided that, where a person belonging to any category
is a member of a joint family, the provisions of this
sub-section shall not apply if any one member of the joint
family does not belong to any of the categories mentioned in
this sub-section, unless the share of such person in the
joint family has been separated by metes and bounds before
the 31ast day of March 1958 and the Mamlatdar on inquiry is
satisfied that the share of such person in the land is
separated (having regard to the area, assessment,
classification and value of the land) in the same proportion
as the share of that person in the entire joint family
property, and not in a larger proportion.
(5) The right of a certificated landlord to terminate a
tenancy under this section shall be subject to the following
conditions, that is to say, -
(a) If any land is left over from a tenancy in respect
of which other land has already been resumed by the landlord
or his predecessor-in-title, on the ground that that other
land was required for cultivating it personally under
Section 31 (or under any earlier law relating to tenancies
then in force), the tenancy in respect of any land so left
over shall not be liable to be terminated under sub- section
(1).
(b) The landlord shall be entitled to terminate a
tenancy and take possession of the land leased but to the
extent only of so much thereof as would result in both the
landlord and the tenant holding thereafter in the total an
equal area for personal cultivation the area resumed or
the area left with the tenant being a fragment,
notwithstanding, and notwithstanding anything contained in
Section 31 of the Bombay Prevention of Fragmentation and
Consolidation of Holdings Act, 1947.
(c) The land leased stands in the Record of Rights (or
in any public record or similar revenue record) on the 1st
day of January 1952 and thereafter until the commencement
date in the name of the landlord himself, or of any of his
ancestors (but not of any person from whom title is derived
by assignment or Court sale or otherwise) or if the landlord
is a member of a joint family, in the name of a member of
such family.
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(6) The tenancy of any land left with the tenant after
the termination of the tenancy under this Section shall not
at any time afterwards be liable to termination again on the
ground that the landlord bona fide requires that land for
personal cultivation.
(7) If, in consequence of the termination of the tenancy
under this section, any part of the land leased is left with
the tenant, the rent shall be apportioned in the prescribed
manner in proportion to the area of the land so left with
the tenant.
A close reading of the section, quoted above, shows that
sub-section (1) enables a certificated landlord who bona
fide requires the land, covered by the certificate, for
cultivating it personally, to terminate the tenancy of the
excluded tenant by giving him notice and making an
application for possession, in the manner prescribed in
sub-suction (3). The said sub-section requires the
certificated landlord to give notice in writing which shall
be served on the excluded tenant on or before January 1,
1962; however, in a case where the application of such
landlord under Section 88C is not disposed of and pending on
that date, he can do so within three months of his receiving
such certificate sending simultaneously a copy of the notice
to the Mamlatdar. The application for possession of the
land has to be made under Section 29 to the Mamlatdar before
April 1, 1962 in the case where notice was served before
April 1, 1962 on the tenant and in a case where notice was
served on him within three months of receiving a certificate
under Section 88C, the application can be made for
possession under Section 29 within three months of his
receiving the certificate. The right conferred on a
certificated landlord to terminate the tenancy of an
excluded tenant is an independent right and is not affected
by the provisions of Sections 31, 31A and 31B. It may be
noticed here that under the scheme of the Act a landlords
right to terminate the tenancy of an agricultural land is
regulated by the provisions contained in Section 31 which
enables a landlord to terminate the tenancy of his tenant of
an agricultural land for personal cultivation or for
non-agricultural purposes. Sections 31A and 31B incorporate
conditions subject to which the tenancy shall stand
terminated and enumerate cases in which tenancy cannot be
terminated under Section 31. Sub-section (2) of Section 33B
clarifies that even if in respect of the same tenancy an
application of the landlord under Section 31(2) is pending
before the Mamlatdar or in appeal before the Collector, or
in revision before the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal on the
commencement date*; or if it has been rejected before the
commencement date by any authority, notice under sub-section
(1) may be given.
__________________________________________________
*The date of commencement of the Bombay Tenancy and
Agricultural Lands (Amendment) Act, 1960 (Act IX of 1961)
Sub-section (4) which deals with a certificated landlord
who is either a minor, a widow or a person subject to any
physical or mental disability, is not relevant for our
purposes. Sub-section (5) enumerates conditions subject to
which the right of the certificated landlord to terminate a
tenancy under Section 33B can be exercised.
A safeguard is provided for the tenant in sub-section
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(6) which says that the tenancy of any land left with the
tenant after the termination of the tenancy under Section
33B shall not at any time afterwards be liable to
termination again on the ground that the landlord bona fide
requires that land for personal cultivation.
The import of sub-section (7) is to safeguard the
interest of the tenant by causing proportionate reduction in
the rent of the area of the land left with him in
consequence of termination of tenancy under the said
section.
This is so far as Section 33B is concerned.
Section 33C contains a further protection for an
excluded tenant. It may also be relevant to notice the
relevant provisions of Section 33C of the Act here, which
read as follows :
33C. Tenant of lands mentioned in Section
88C to be deemed to have purchased land and
other incidental provisions.
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub- section
(1) of Section 88C, every excluded tenant holding land from
a certificated landlord shall, except as otherwise provided
in sub- section (3), be deemed to have purchased from the
landlord, on the first day of April 1962, free from all
encumbrances subsisting thereon on the said day, the land
held by him as tenant, if such land is cultivated by him
personally, and
(i) the landlord has not given notice of termination of
tenancy in accordance with sub-section (3) of Section 33B,
or
(ii) the landlord has given such notice, but has not
made an application thereafter under Section 29 for
possession as required by the said sub-section (3), or
(iii) the landlord, not belonging to any of the
categories specified in sub-section (4) of Section 33B, has
not terminated the tenancy on any of the grounds specified
in Section 14, or has so terminated the tenancy but has not
applied to the Mamlatdar on or before the 31st day of March
1962 under Section 29 for possession of the land :
Provided that, where the landlord has made such
application for possession, the tenant shall, on the date on
which the application is finally decided, be deemed to have
purchased the land which he is entitled to retain in
possession after such decision.
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5) The provisions of Sections 32 to 32R (both
inclusive) shall, so far as may be applicable, apply to the
purchase of land by an excluded tenant under this section.
Section 33C, quoted above, provides for deemed purchase
of land, dealt with in Section 88C, by the excluded tenant.
A coadunated reading of sub-sections (1) and (3) of Section
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33C discloses that notwithstanding anything contained in
sub-section (1) of Section 88C, every excluded tenant be
deemed to have purchased land held by him as tenant from the
landlord on April 1, 1962 if : (a) such land is cultivated
by him personally; (b) the landlord has not given notice of
termination of tenancy in accordance of sub-section (3) of
Section 33B; or (c) where the landlord has given such
notice but has not made an application thereafter under
Section 29 for possession as required under the said
provision of Section 33B(3); or (d) a landlord, not falling
under any of the categories mentioned in sub-section (4) of
Section 33B, has not terminated the tenancy on any of the
grounds specified in Section 14; or (e) having so
terminated the tenancy has not applied to the Mamlatdar on
or before March 31, 1962 for possession of the land under
Section 29. Sub-sections (2), (3) and (4) are not relevant
for the present discussion. Sub-section (5) declares that
the provisions of Sections 32 to 32R (both inclusive) will
be applicable to the purchase of land by an excluded tenant
under Section 33C. From the examination of the provisions
of Section 88C and Section 33B, it is incontrovertible that
they are enacted to give relief to landlords having small
parcel of land to enable them to cultivate the land
personally and augment their meager income. These
provisions have, therefore, to be so interpreted as to make
them meaningful and not to render them illusory. A combined
reading of Sections 33B and 33C discloses that for purposes
of terminating the tenancy of an excluded tenant both giving
of notice and filing of an application for possession, are
necessary. The certificated landlord should take both the
steps either within the dates specified therein or within
three months from the grant of exemption certificate under
Section 88C(4). In the event of the certificated landlord
not taking the steps, as noted above, the deeming provisions
of Section 33C will be attracted and the excluded tenant
will be deemed to have purchased the land free from all
encumbrances thereon if such land is cultivated by him
personally. Be it noted that the provisions of Section 33C
override the provisions of Section 88C.
From the above discussion, it appears to us that where
the landlord has complied with the requirements of Section
33B, by giving notice and applying for possession within the
statutory period of three months after receipt of
certificate under Section 88C, the right of the landlord
crystallises and the exemption certificate gets exhausted,
therefore, thereafter the excluded tenant cannot seek
revocation of exemption certificate granted under Section
88D(1)(iv). The contention that application for revocation
of exemption certificate under Section 88D will be
maintainable till the order is finally passed by the
Mamlatdar on the application for possession of the land,
cannot be accepted for reasons more than one. First, the
provisions of Sections 88C, 33B and 88D(1) cannot be so
construed as to lead to a situation where an excluded tenant
by seeking revocation of the exemption certificate sets at
naught the benefit conferred on the certificated landlord
who has complied with the provisions of Sections 33B as it
will frustrate the provisions of Sections 88C as well as 33B
for no fault of the certificated landlord; where, however,
the certificated landlord fails to give notice in writing
within the prescribed time or having thus given notice,
omits to make application for possession of the land under
Section 29, within the specified period, the certificated
landlord loses the benefit of the exemption certificate as
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the right of the excluded tenant to be a deemed purchaser
will get revived under Section 33C. Secondly, when to
realise the fruits of the certificate given under Section
88C(4) the certificated landlord has taken steps under
Section 33B read with Section 29 and has done what all could
be expected of him delay in disposal of such an application
by the Mamlatdar, cannot be allowed to prejudice the
interest of the certificated landlord. Thirdly, a valuable
right of certificated landlord cannot be allowed to be
defeated with reference to an uncertain event i.e. the date
of passing of order by the Mamlatdar on the application
under Section 29, because the period for disposal of the
application may vary from a day to a decade or even more.
If two landlords similarly situated apply for possession
before the Mamlatdars in two different areas under the said
provisions or even before the same Mamlatdar and in one case
the order is passed immediately, no application under
Section 88D(1)(iv) of the Act could be entertained against
him but in the other case if the proceedings are kept
pending for some years, for no fault of the certificated
landlord, his position would be vulnerable and the
application for revocation of certificate under Section
88D(1)(iv) would be maintainable against him. It would not
be just and reasonable to adopt such an uncertain criteria.
And fourthly, it would not be in conformity with the scheme
of the said provisions to prescribe a criteria which yields
different consequences in similar cases depending upon the
date of passing of the order by the Mamlatdar. In our view,
it will, therefore, be just and reasonable to hold that
after a certificated landlord has complied with the
provisions of Section 33B within the specified time, the
application of the excluded tenant under Section 88D(1)(iv)
for revocation of certificate cannot be entertained.
We shall now advert to the cases cited at the Bar. The
High Court relying on the judgments of Bombay High Court in
Parvatibai Ramchandra Rokade Vs. Mahadu Tukaram Varkhede
[1967 (69) Bombay Law Reporter 383] and Bandu Kesu Jagadale
and Ors. Vs. Gopinath Ramchandra Inamdar and Anr. [AIR
1976 (63) Bombay 216] held that the application under
Section 88D(1)(iv) filed by the respondents prior to passing
of final order by the Mamlatdar on the application in terms
of Section 33B read with Section 29 of the Act, was
maintainable.
In Parvatibai (supra) the question before the Division
Bench of the Bombay High Court was: Whether the right of a
certificated landlord to apply in terms of Section 33B for
possession of land from an excluded tenant is personal to
the certificated landlord and lapses on his death or whether
it can be exercised by his successors. In dealing with that
question the Division Bench observed that the object of
section 88C was to give some limited protection to small
holders with limited incomes and on their death, the
successors-in-interest in majority of the cases would also
be small holders of limited income so it would be in
conformity with reason and justice to hold that if a
certificated landlord dies before the expiry of the last
date for filing an application for possession in terms of
Section 33B, his successors-in-interest should be able to
file such an application within the specified time. This
case undoubtedly emphasises that protection is given to
small land holders under the said provisions, but it did not
deal with the question the High Court was concerned with.
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In Bandu Kesu (supra) the question before the Division
Bench of the High Court was : Whether the certificate
granted to a landlord under Section 88C of the Act gets
exhausted when the landlord makes an application for
possession in terms of Section 33B of the Act or only when
the Mamlatdar makes a final order disposing of the said
application of the landlord. There the landlord obtained
the certificate under Section 88C on May 29, 1971 and made
an application on November 15, 1971 for obtaining possession
of the land in terms of Section 33B of the Tenancy Act.
While that application was pending the tenants made an
application under Section 88D(1)(iv) on July 29, 1972. The
said application was disposed of by the Mamlatdar taking the
view that such a certificate got exhausted as soon as the
landlord has instituted proceedings under Section 33B of
that Act so the question of revocation of certificate did
not survive in cases where proceedings in terms of Section
33B have been started. The Mamlatdar was fortified in his
approach by the judgment of a learned Single Judge of Bombay
High Court in Atmaram Onkar Talele vs. Ananda Shrawan
Kolambe [1970 (72) Bom.L.R.287]. However, the High Court
followed an unreported judgment of another Division Bench of
the said court in Special Civil Applications Nos.868 of 1970
and 2085 of 1973 (Bom.) taking the view that though no
express words of limitation or restriction are to be found
in Section 88D of the Act, the scheme of the provisions of
Sections 33B and 33C read with Sections 88C and 88D of the
Act would suggest that the reasonable limitation that could
be put upon the power of the Government or the Commissioner
under Section 88D to entertain an application for
cancellation of exemption certificate thereunder and held
that after the date of final order of the Mamlatdar on the
application of certificated landlord in terms of Section 33B
read with Section 29 of the Act, no request for cancellation
of the exemption certificate under Section 88D(1) would be
entertainable. While we agree with the conclusion of the
Division Bench that under the scheme of the said provisions
reasonable limitation has to be read in Section 88D, we are
unable to subscribe to the view that the date of final order
of the Mamlatdar on the application of the certificated
landlord should be treated as limitation after which no
application under Section 88D(1)(iv) could be entertained.
In our opinion, the proper date should be the date on which
the certificated landlord makes the application in terms of
Section 33B read with Section 29 for possession of the land
after giving notice to the excluded tenant which would meet
the ends of justice and on this aspect we approve the view
taken by the learned Single Judge in the case of Atmaram
Onkar Talele (supra).
It has been pointed out above that the date of passing
of the final order by the Mamlatdar on an application under
Section 29 read with Section 33 of the Act, is an uncertain
factor. Having regard to the various amendments made in the
Act by inserting Sections 88C, 88D, 33B and 33C in the Act
and prescribing a period of three months from the date of
receipt of certificate under Section 88C within which the
certificated landlord may terminate tenancy of the excluded
tenant by issuing a notice and filing of an application in
terms of Sections 33B read with 29(2) of the Act, and for
the afore- mentioned reasons, in our view, it would be just
and appropriate to treat the date of filing of an
application after notice to the excluded tenant in terms of
Section 33B read with Section 29 as the date before which an
application for revocation of exemption certificate under
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Section 88D(1)(iv) of the Act shall be maintainable.
In this view of the matter, we cannot sustain the order
of the High Court under challenge; the order under
challenge is set aside and the order of the Additional
Commissioner is restored. The appeal is accordingly
allowed; in the circumstances of the case we make no order
as to costs.