Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
SHRI AUDH BEHARI SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GAJADHAR JAIPURIA AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/04/1954
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
BENCH:
MUKHERJEA, B.K.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
MAHAJAN, MEHAR CHAND (CJ)
BOSE, VIVIAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
CITATION:
1954 AIR 417 1955 SCR 70
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1962 SC1476 (3,22,25,31)
R 1966 SC1977 (3,6)
ACT:
Custom-Pre-emption-City of Banaras-Local Custom of Pre-
emption-Such right-Incident of property and attaching to
land.
HEADNOTE:
HEld, that a local custom of pre-emption exists in the
city of Banaras and the right attaches at least to all house
properties situated within it and no such incident of custom
is proved which would make the right available only between
persons who are either natives of Banaras or are domiciled
therein.
When a right of pre-emption rests upon custom it becomes the
lex loci or the law of the place and affects all lands
situated in that place irrespective of the religion or
nationality or domicile of the owners of the lands except
where such incidents are proved to be a part of the custom
itself.
The right of pre-emption is an incident of property and
attaches to the land itself.
Byjnath v. Kapilmon (24 W.R. 95) and Parsashth Nath v.
Dhanai’ (32 Cal. 988) disapproved.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 15 of 1951.
Appeal from the Judgment and Decree, dated the 29th August.
1944, of the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad (Mulla
and Yorke JJ.) in First Appeal
71
No. 157 of 1942, arising out of the Judgment and Decree,
dated the 19th November, 1941, of the Court of the Civil
Judge at Banaras in Original Suit No. 79 of 1941.
Achhru Ram, (N. C. Sen and R. C. Prasad, with him) for the
appellant.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
C.K. Daphtary, Solicitor-General for India and S. P.Sinha, (J.
C. Mukherji, Shaukat Husain, and S. P. Varma, with them)
for respondent No. 1.
1954. April 23. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
MUKERJEA, J.-The plaintiff, who is the appellant before us,
commenced the suit, out of which this appeal arises, in the
Court of the Civil Judge at Banaras (being Original Suit No.
79 of 1941) for enforcement of his right of pre-emption in
respect of an enclosed plot of land with certain structures
upon it, situated within Moballa Baradeo in the city of
Banaras and bearing Municipal No. D 37/48. The premises in
suit admitted by belonged to defendants Nos. 2 to 5, who are
residents of Calcutta and they sold. it by a conveyance
executed on the 29th March, 1941, and registered on the 3rd
of April following, to defendant No. 1, also a resident of
Calcutta, for the price of Rs. 7,000. The plaintiff is the
owner of the two premises to wit, premises Nos. D 37/85 and
D 37 /44, within the same Mohalla of the city of Banaras,
which are in close proximity to the property in dispute and
adjoin it on the northern and eastern sides respectively.
It is averred by the plaintiff that there is from very
early, time a custom prevalent in the city of Banaras
according to which the plaintiff was entitled to claim pre-
emption of the property in dispute on the ground of
vicinage. It is said that as soon as the plaintiff received
news of the sale, he made an immediate assertion or demand
of his rights and repeated the same in the presence of the
witnesses as required by Muhammadan Law and he further sent
a registered notice to defendant No. I on the 21st May,
1941, askine the latter to transfer the property to the
plaintiff on receipt of the price which he had actually paid
to the vendors. As the defendant No. 1 did not comply with
this demand the present suit was brought,
72
The defendant No. 1 alone contested the suit and the pleas
taken by him in his written statement can be classified
under four heads. In the first place, he denied that there
was any custom of pre-emption amongst nonMuslims in the city
of Banaras as alleged by the plaintiff. The second plea
taken was that even if there was any custom of pre-emption
it could not be availed of in a case like this where neither
the vendors nor the vendee were natives of or domiciled in
Banaras but were residents of a different province. The
third contention raised was that the plaintiff had not made
the two demands in the proper manner as required by
Muhammadan Law and by reason of non-compliance with the
essential pre-requisites to a claim for preemption, the suit
-was bound to fail. Lastly, it was contended that as the
plaintiff himself was the landlord of the property in suit
and the, vendors were his tenants, he could not, under any
law or custom, eject his own tenants by exercise of the
right of pre-emption.
The Civil Judge who tried the suit held, on the evidence
adduced in the case, that there was in fact a custom of pre-
emption in the city of Banaras, the incidents of which were
the same as in Muhammadan Law. He held however that the
custom being a local custom it could not be enforced against
either the vendors or the vendee in the present case, as
none of them were natives of or domiciled in Banaras. The
trial judge also found that the ’plaintiff did not make the
requisite demands which are -mandatory under Muhammadan Law.
The result was that the plaintiff’s suit was dismissed and
in view of the findings arrived at by him, the Civil Judge
did not consider it necessary to decide the question as to
whether the plaintiff being himself a landlord could assert
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
any claim for pre-emption against his tenants on the basis
of a custom.
Against this decision the plaintiff took an appeal to the
High Court of Allahabad which was heard by a Division Bench
consisting of Mulla and Yorke JJ. The learned Judges agreed
with the trial Court in holding that although there was a
custom of pre-emption in the city of Banaras, -yet the
necessary condition for enforcing the custom in that
locality was that the vendor
73
and the vendee must be natives of or domiciled in the city.
As this condition was not fulfilled in this case the
plaintiff’s claim could not succeed. In the result the High
Court affirmed the decision of the trial judge and dismissed
the appeal. The other questions as to whether the plaintiff
had made thedem’ands in strict compliance with the rules of
Muhammadan Law and whether he could claim pre-emption
against his own tenants on the basis of a right by custom
were left undecided. The judgment of the High Court is
dated the 29th August, 1944. After this, the plaintiff
applied for leave to appeal to the Judicial Committee. This
application was refused by the High Court but he got special
leave under an order of the Judicial Committee, dated the
11th December, 1945. After the abolition of the
jurisdiction of the Judicial Committee the appeal stood
transferred to this Court for disposal.
The contentions that have been raised before us by the
parties to this appeal practically centre round one point.
It is not disputed by either side that there is a custom of
pre-emption in the entire city of Banaras; but whereas the
respondents contend that the custom obtains exclusively
amongst persons who are inhabitants of the city ’or-are
domiciled therein, the case of the appellant is that the
custom admits of no such restriction or limitation and all
those who own property in the city are governed by the
custom, it being immaterial whether or not they are the
natives of the place or are or are not resident owners.
Various contentions have been raised by the learned counsel
on both sides in support of their respective cases and we
have been treated to an elaborate discussion regarding the
nature of the right of pre-emption as is recognised in the
Muhammadan Law and the incidents that attach to it, when it
is not regulated by law but is founded on custom said to be
obtaining in a particular locality.’
Before we examine the arguments that have been placed before
us by the learned counsel appearing for the parties, it may
be necessary to make a few general observations regarding
the law or laws which govern the exercise of the right of
pre-emption in India at the present day.
10
74
The Privy Council has said in more cases than one(1), that
the law of pre-emption was introduced in this country by the
Muhammadans. There is no indication of any such conception
in the Hindu Law and the subject has not been noticed or
discussed either in the writings of the Smriti writers or in
those of later commentators. Sir William Macnaghten in his
Principles and Precedents of Mahomedan Law (2 ) has referred
to a passage in the Makanirvana Tantra which, according to
the learned author, implies that pre-emption was recognised
as a legal provision according to the notions of the Hindus.
But the treatise itself is one on mythology, not on law and
is admittedly a recent production. No value can be attached
to a stray passage of this character the authenticity of
which is not beyond doubt.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
During the period of the Mughal emperors the law of pre-
emption was administered as a rule of common law of the land
in those parts of the country which came under the
domination of the Muhammadan rulers, and it was applied
alike to Muhammadans and Zimmees (within which Christians
and Hindus were included), no distinction being made in this
respect between persons of different races and creeds(3).
In course of time the Hindus came to adopt pre-emption as a
custom for reasons of convenience and the custom is largely
to be found in provinces like Bihar and Gujerat which had
once been integral parts of the Muhammadan empire.
Opinions differ as to whether the custom of preemption
amongst village communities in Punjab and other parts of
India was borrowed from the Muhammadans or arose
independently of the Muhammadan Law, having its origin in
the doctrine of "limited right" which has always been the
characteristic feature of village communities(4). Possibly
much could be said in support of either view, and there is
reason to think that even where the Muhammadan Law was
borrowed
(1)Vide Jadulat v, Janki Koer, 39 I.A. 101, 106; Digambar
Singh v. Ahmad, 42 I.A. 10, 18.
(2) Vide, page 14.
(3) Vide Hamilton’s Hedaya, Vol. III, P. 592.
(4) Vide P.R. 98 of 1894.
75
it was not always borrowed in its entirety. It would be
useful to refer in this connection to the following
observations of the Judicial Committee in Digambar v.
Ahmad(1):
" In some cases the sharers in a village adopted or followed
the rules of the Mahomedan Law of pre-emption, and in such
cases the custom of the village follows the rules of the
Mahomedan Law of pre-emption. In other cases, where a
custom of pre-emption exists, each village community has a
custom of pre-emption which varies from the Mahomedan Law of
pre-emption and is peculiar to the village in its provisions
and its incidents. A custom of pre-emption was doubtless in
all cases the result of agreement amongst the shareholders
of the particular village, and may have been adopted in
modern times and in villages which were first constituted in
modern times."
It is not necessary for our present purpose to pursue this
discussion any further.
Since the establishment of British rule in India the
Muhammadan Law ceased to be the general law of the land and
as pre-emption is not one of the matters respecting which
Muhammadan Law is expressly declared to be the rule of
decision where the parties to a suit are Muhammadans, the
Courts in British India administered the Muhammadan Law of
pre-emption as between Muhammadans entirely on grounds of
justice, equity and good conscience’ Here again there was no
uniformity of views expressed by the different High Courts
in India and the High Court of Madras definitely held that
the law of pre-emption, by reason of its placing
restrictions upon the liberty of transfer of property, could
not be regarded to be in consonance with the principles of
justice, equity and good conscience(2). Hence the right of
pre-emption is not recognised in the Madras Presidency at
all even amongst Muhammadans except on the footing of a
custom. Rights of preemption have in some provinces like
Punjab, Agra and Oudh been embodied in statutes passed by
the Indian Legislature and where the law has been thus
codified
(1) 42 I.A. 10, 18.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
(2) Vide Krishna Menon v. Keshavan, 20 Mad. 305.
76
it undoubtedly becomes the territorial law of the place and
is applicable to persons other than Muhammadans by reason of
their property being situated therein. In other parts of
India its operation depends upon custom and when the law is
customary the right is enforceable irrespective of the
religious persuasion of the parties concerned. Where the
law is neither territorial nor customary, it is applicable
only between Muhammadans as part of their personal law
provided the judiciary of the place where the property is;
situated does not consider such law to be opposed to the
principles of justice, equity and good conscience. Apart
from these a right of pre-emption can be created by contract
and as has been observed by the Judicial Committee in the
case referred to above, such contracts are usually found
amongst sharers in a village. It is against this background
that we propose to examine the contentions that have been
raised in the present case.
The first question that has been mooted before us is,
whether the burden and benefit of a right of pre-emption are
incidents annexed to the lands belonging respectively to the
vendor and the Pre-emptor or is the right merely one of re-
purchase, which a neighbour or co-sharer enjoys under
Muhammadan Law, and which he can enforce personally against
the vendee in whom the title to the property has already
vested by sale. The learned counsel for the appellant has
pressed for acceptance of the first view while the
Solicitor-General appearing for the respondents has
contended, that by no accepted principles of jurisprudence
can the preemptor be said to have an interest in the
property of the vendor. It is pointed out that the right of
preemption arises for the first time when there is a com-
pleted sale and the title of the purchaser is perfected and
if the right was one attached to the property, it must have
existed prior to the sale and should have been available not
merely in case of sale but in all other kinds of transfer
like gift and lease.
This latter line of reasoning found favour with the majority
of a Full Bench of the Calcutta High Court in the case of
Sheikh Kudratulla v. Mahini Mohan(1),
(1) Beng. L.R. (Full Bench Rulings) page 134.
77
where the question arose whether, when a Muhammadan sold his
property to a Hindu purchaser the cosharer of the former
could enforce a right of pre-emption against the Hindu
vendee under the Muhammadan Law. The question was answered
in the negative by the majority of the Full Bench and Mitter
J. who delivered the leading judgment, while discussing the
nature of the right of pre-emption observed as follows:
" If that right is founded on an antecedent defect in the
title of the vendor, that is to say on a legal disability on
his part to sell his property to a stranger, without giving
an opportunity to his coparceners and neighbours to purchase
it in the first instance, those coparceners and neighbours
are fully entitled to ask the Hindu purchaser to surrender
the property, for although as a Hindu, he is not necessarily
bound by the Mahomedan Law, he was at any rate bound by the
rule of justice, equity and good conscience to inquire into
the title of his vendor; and that very rule also requires
that we should not permit him to retain a property which his
vendor had no power to sell. If, on the contrary, it can be
shown, that there was no such defect in the title of the
vendor, or in other words that he was under no such
disability, even under the Mahomedan Law itself, it would
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
follow as a matter of course, that there was no-defect in
the title of the purchaser, at the time of its
creation........... Now, so far as I can judge of the
Mahomedan Law of pre-emption from the materials within my
reach, it appears to me to be perfectly clear that a right
of pre-emption is nothing more than a mere right of re-
purchase, not from the vendor but from the vendee, who is
treated, for all intents and purposes, as the full legal
owner of the property which is the subject-matter of that
right."
The minority judges consisting of Norman and Macpherson JJ.
took a different view and held that the law of pre-emption
was to be treated as a real law, that is a law affecting and
attaching to the property itself. The liability to the
claim of pre-emption is a quality impressed upon and
inherent in the property which is subjected to it; or in
other words an incident of that property.
78
The identical point came up for consideration before a Full
Bench of the Allahabad High Court(1), where also the
question for decision was whether a Muhammadan pre-emptor
could enforce his right against a Hindu vendee from a
Muhammadan vendor. The learned Judges took a view contrary
to that taken by the majority of the Calcutta Full Bench and
answered the question in the affirmative. It was held that
the right of pre-emption was not one of re-purchase from the
vendee. It -was a right inherent in the property and hence
could be followed in the hands of the purchaser whoever he
might be. Mr. Justice Mahmood elaborately reviewed all the
original authorities of Muhammadan Law on the point and
expressed the opinion that the right of pre-emption under
Muhammadan Law partakes strongly of the nature of an
easement right, the dominant tenement " and the "servient
tenement of the law of easement being analogous to what the
learned Judge described respectively as the " pre-emptive
tenement " and " preemptional tenement." in other words the
right of pre-emption is a sort of legal servitude running
with the land. The right exists, as the learned Judge said,
in the owner of the pre-emptive tenement for the time being
which entitles him to have an offer of sale made to him,
whenever the owner of the pre-emptional property desires to
sell it. But the right could not be a right of re-purchase
either from the vendor or the vendee involving a new
contract of sale. " It is simply a right of substitution
entitling the pre-emptor, by reason of a legal incident to
which the sale itself was subject, to stand in the shoes of
the vendee in respect of all the rights and obligations
arising from the sale under which he has derived his title.
It is in effect, as if in a sale deed the vendee’s name was
rubbed out and the pre-emptor’s name was substituted in its
place. The learned Judge pointed out that the decision of
the Calcutta Full Bench was based upon a mis-translation of
the Arabic word " Tajibo " in Hamilton’s Hedaya. Hamilton
translated the word as meaning "established" but it really
means " becomes obligatory, necessary or
(1) Vide Govinda Dayal v. Inayatulla, 7 All. 775.
79
enforceable." The right has not got to be established at
all. It is attached and continues to be attached to the
tenement concerned and can under certain circumstances be
enforced forthwith against the adjoining tenements sold.
This decision was followed by the Patna High Court in
Achyutananda v. Biki (1). A Division Bench of the Bombay
High Court in a case decided in 1928 (2) accepted the view
taken by the majority of the Calcutta Full Bench but the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
reasons given in that decision were held to be unsupportable
by a later Fall Bench (3) of the same High Court which held
the right of preemption to be an incident of property and
agreed substantially with the view taken by Mahmood J. in
the Allahabad Full Bench.
In our opinion it would not be ’correct to say that the
right of pre-emption under Muhammadan Law is a personal
right on the part of the pre-emptor to get a re-transfer of
the property from the vendee who has already become owner of
the same. We prefer to accept the meaning of the word "
Tajibo " used in the Hedaya in the sense in which Mr.
Justice Mahmod construes it to mean and it was really a mis-
translation of that word by Hamilton that accounted to a
great extent for the view taken by the Calcutta High Court.
It is true that the right becomes enforceable only when
there is a sale but the right exists antecedently to the
sale, the foundation of the right being the avoidance of the
inconveniences and disturbances which would arise from the
introduction of a stranger into the land. We agree with Mr.
Justice Mahmood that the sale is a condition precedent not
to the existence of the right but to its enforceability. We
do not however desire to ex-press any opinion on the view
taken by the learned Judge that the right of pre-emption
partakes strongly of the character of an easement in law.
Analogies are not always helpful and even if there is
resemblance between the two rights, the differences between
them are no less material. The correct legal position seems
(1) 1 Pat. 578.
(2) Vide Hamed Miya v. Benjamin, 53 BOm. 525.
(3) Vide Dasharathilal v. Bai Dhondu Bai, I.L.R. 1941 Bom.
460.
80
to be that the law of pre-emption imposes a limitation or
disability upon the ownership of a property to the extent
that it restricts the owner’s unfettered right of sale and
compels him to sell the property to his cosharer or
neighbour as the case may be. The person who is a co-sharer
in the land or owns lands in the vicinity consequently gets
an advantage or benefit corresponding to the burden with
which the owner of the property is saddled; even though it
does not amount to an actual interest in the property sold.
The crux of the whole thing is that the benefit as well as
the burden of the right of pre-emption run with the land and
can be enforced by or against the owner of the land for the
time being although the right of the pre-emptor does not
amount to an interest in the land itself. It may be stated
here that if the right of preemption had been only a
personal right enforceable against the vendee and there was
no infirmity in the title of the owner restricting his right
of sale in a certain manner, a bona fide purchaser without
notice would certainly obtain an absolute title to the
property, unhampered by any right of the pre-emptor and in
such circumstances there could be no justification for
enforcing the right of pre-emption against the purchaser on
grounds of justice, equity and good conscience on which
grounds alone the right could be enforced at the present
day. In our opinion the law of pre-emption creates a right
which attaches to the property and on that footing only it
can be enforced against the purchaser.
The question now arises as to what is the legal position
when the right is claimed not under Muhammadan Law but on
the footing of a custom. It cannot be and is not disputed
that if the right of pre-emption is set, up by non-Muslims
on the basis of a custom, the existence of the custom is a
matter to be established by proper evidence. But as has
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
been laid down by the Judicial Committee (1) following the
decision of the Calcutta High Court in Fakir Rawat v. Emman
(2), that when the existence of a custom under which the
Hindus
(1) Vide Jadutal v. Janki Koer, 39. I. A. 101,
(2) 1863 B.L.R. Sup. VOl. 35.
81
claim to have the same rights of pre-emption as
Muhammadans, in any district, is generally known and
judicially recognised, it is not necessary to prove it by
further evidence. A long course of decisions has esta-
blished the existence of such custom in Bihar, Sylhet and
certain parts of Gujerat.
So far as the present case is concerned, a large number of
judgments have been put in evidence by the plaintiff in
proof of the existence of a custom of preemption in -the
entire city of Banaras. There are at least three reported
cases (1) in which the High Court of Allahabad has affirmed
the existence of such rights in Banaras. The defendants in
the present case do not dispute the existence of the custom
and the whole dispute is as regards the incidents of the
same, the defendants’ case being that the custom is
available as between persons who are natives of or domiciled
in the place and cannot be extended to an outsider even
though he owns property in the city which is the subject-
matter of the claim.
The Privy Council in Jadhulal v. Janki Koer expressly laid
down that when a custom of pre-emption is established by
evidence to prevail amongst non-Muslims in a particular
locality "it must be presumed to be founded on and co-
extensive with the Muhammadan Law on that subject unless the
contrary is shown; that the Court may as between Hindus ad-
minister a modification of the law as to the circumstances
under which the right may be claimed when it is shown that
the custom in that respect does not go to the whole length
of the Muhammadan Law of preemption, but that the assertion
of right by suit must always be preceded by an observance of
the preliminary forms prescribed in the Muhammadan Law which
forms appear to have been invariably observed and insisted
on through the whole of the cases from the earliest times of
which we have record."
In the case before us no attempt was made by the defendants
to show that the custom of pre-emption set up
(i) Vide Chakauri Devi v. Sundari DeVi, 28 All- 590; Ram
Chandra v. Goswami Ram Puri, 45 All. 501 ; Gouri Sankar v,
Sitaram, 54 All. 76.
(2) 39 I.A. 101.
11
82
and proved by the plaintiff was of a character different
from that which is contemplated by Muhammadan Law. The only
difference that is noticed in one of the decided authorities
(1) is that the custom of pre-emption prevalent in the city
of Banaras is confined to house properties only and does not
extend to vacant lands; but this view again has been
modified in a subsequent decision(2) which held that
building sites and small parcels of land even though vacant
are not excluded from the ambit of the custom. The various
judgments which have been made exhibits in this case do not
give any indication whatsoever that under the custom, as it
prevails in the city of Banaras, pre-emption could be
claimed only against persons who are the inhabitants of the
place or are domiciled therein and that it could not be
enforced in respect of a property situated in the city, the
owner of which is not a native of that place. In fact no
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
such question was raised or discussed in any of these cases.
The ambit or extent of a custom is a matter of proof and the
defendants were certainly competent to adduce evidence to
show that the custom of pre-emption prevailing in the city
of Banaras was available not against all persons who held
lands within it, but only against a particular class of
persons. But this they did not attempt to do at any stage
of the litigation. Their contention, which has been
accepted by both the Courts below is, that, as a matter of
law, a local custom of pre-emption does not affect or bind
persons who are not the natives of or domiciled in that
area. In support of this proposition the Courts below have
relied primarily upon the statement of law made by Roland
Wilson and other text book writers on Muhammadan Law which
purport to be based upon certain decided authorities.
At page 391 of his book on Anglo-Mahammadan Law(3) Roland
Wilson states the law in the following manner:
"Where the custom is judicially noticed as prevailing,
amongst non-Muhammadans in a certain local area,
(1) Vide Ram Chandra v. Goswami, 45 All. 501.
(2) Vide Goari Sankar v. Sitallam, 54 All. 76.
(3) Vide 6th edition, paragraph 352.
83
it does not govern non-Muhammadans who, though holding land
therein for the time being, are neither natives of, nor
domiciled in, the district."
Two cases have been referred to in support of this
proposition, one of which is Byjnath Pershad v. Kapilmon
Singh(1) and the other Parsashth Nath Tewari v. Dhanai(2).
Mulla repeats the law almost, in the same terms in his
Muhammadan Law. In Tyabji the rule is thus laid down(3):
"The law of pre-emption is personal. It is not territorial,
nor an incident of property. A person who is not a native
of or domiciled within a locality where pre-emption is
enforced by law or custom but who owns lands within the same
locality will not necessarily be subject to the law of pre-
emption."
This statement clearly indicates the foundation of the whole
doctrine. The law of pre-emption is stated to be a purely
personal law even when it rests on custom. It is no
incident of property and the right which it creates is
enforceable only against persons who belong to a particular
religious community or fulfil the description of being
natives of a particular district. In the case of Byjnath
Pershad v. Kapilmon Singh(1), which can be said to be the
leading pronouncement on the subject, the vendor of a house
situated in the town of Arah, in the province of Bihar, was
one Rajani Kanta Banerjee who was a native of lower Bengal
but resided at Arah where he carried on the profession of a
lawyer. Rajani Kanta sold the property to the defendant,
and the plaintiff brought a suit claiming pre-emption on the
ground of vicinage. It was admitted that the custom of pre-
emption did prevail amongst non-Muslims in Bihar, but still
the suit was dismissed on the ground that the vendor, who
was not a native of the district, was not bound by it. The
right of pre-emption, it was held, arises from a rule of law
by which the owner of the land is bound and it no longer
exists if he ceases to be an owner, who is bound by the law
either as a Muhammadan or by custom.
(1) 2 4 W. R., 95.
(2) 32 Cal. 988
(3) Tyabji’s Muhammadan Law, page 670, paragraph 523(e).
84
In our opinion the decision proceeds upon a wrong
assumption. The right of pre-emption, as we have already
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
stated, is an incident of property and attaches to the land
itself. As between Muhammadans the right undoubtedly arises
out of their personal law; but that is because the law of
pre-emption is no part of the general law in India.
Muhammadans live scattered all over our country and unless
the right of pre-emption is regarded as part of their
personal law they would lose the benefit of it altogether.
Hence if a Muhammadan owns land in any local area and has
co-sharers or neighbouring proprietors who are also
Muhammadans, a right of pre-emption would accrue to the
latter under the personal law of the Muhammadans, which is
enforced in this country since the British days on grounds
of equity, justice and good conscience. But though arising
out of personal law the right of pre-emption is not a
personal right; it is a real right attaching to the land
itself. When the right is created by custom it would, be,
as the Privy Council, has said, co-extensive with the right
under Muhammadan Law unless the contrary is proved. This
means that the nature and incidents of the right are the
same in both cases. In both it creates a right in the
property and not a mere personal claim against the vendor or
the vendee and the essential pre-requisites to the exercise
of the right and the terms of enforcement are identical in
both But this does not mean that the customary right must be
personal to the inhabitants of a particular locality. It
may be so, if that is the incident of the custom itself as
established by evidence, but not otherwise. Under
Muhammadan Law the right is confined to persons of a
particular religious persuasion because it has its origin in
the Muhammadan Law which is no longer a law of the land.
But when it is the creature of a custom the religious
persuasion of the parties or the community’ to which they
belong are. altogether immaterial. All that is necessary to
prove in such cases is that the right of pre-emption is
recognised in a particular locality and once this is
established, the land belonging to every person in the
locality would be subject to the custom, irrespective of his
being a member of a particular
85
community or group. The whole doctrine, as enunciated
above, is based upon the fallacious assumption that the
right of pre-emption is a personal right arising out of
certain personal conditions of the parties like religion,
nationality or domicile and this fallacy crept into our law
simply because the right of pre-emption as between
Muhammadans is administered as a part of their personal law
in our country.
The correct legal position must be that when a right of pre-
emption rests upon custom it becomes the lex loci or the law
of the place and affects all lands situated in that place
irrespective of the religion or nationality or domicile of
the owners of the lands except where such incidents are
proved to be a part of the custom itself.
it appears that the decision in Byjnath. Kapilmon(1), which
was quite in accordance with the view then taken by the High
Court of Calcutta about the nature of the right of pre-
emption, was the basis of the statement of law in the form
set out above in an earlier edition of Roland Wilson’s book.
The decision in Parslashth Nath v. Dhanai(2), which is the
other authority referred to, is based entirely upon the
statement of law in that earlier edition, and does not carry
the matter any further. In our opinion these decisions
cannot be held to be correct and the contention of the
learned counsel for the appellant should be given effect to.
We accordingly hold that a local custom of preemption exists
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
in the city of Banaras and the right attaches at least to
all house properties situated within it and no incident of
such custom is proved which would make the right available
only between persons who are either natives of Banaras or
-are domiciled therein. The result is that the appeal is
allowed and the judgments of both the Courts below are set
aside. The case shall go back to the High Court for
consideration of the two questions left undecided by it,
namely, whether the plaintiff has made the demands in due
compliance with the forms prescribed by the Muhammadan Law
and secondly whether the plaintiff, being a landlord,
(1) 24 W.R. 95.
(2) 32 Cal 988.
86
could eject his own tenants in exercise of the right of pre-
emption. The appellant will have the costs of this appeal
from respondent No. 1. Further costs will abide the result.
Appeal allowed.