Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MITHLESH KUMARI AND ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FATEH BAHADUR SINGH AND ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/02/1991
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
BENCH:
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
PUNCHHI, M.M.
CITATION:
1991 SCR (1) 699 1991 SCC (2) 236
JT 1991 (2) 75 1991 SCALE (1)313
ACT:
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950-
Scope and object of.
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950-
Section 3(8a)-Definition of ’fragment’-Addition-Purpose of.
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950-
Sections 168-A, 167-Object, scope and application of-Sale of
fragments of a fragment to non-tenure holders-Whether hit by
the provisions.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent No. 1 sued the second respondent
(defendant No. 1) and the appellants (defendant Nos. 2 and
3) for specific performance of a contract whereunder the
second respondent had agreed to sell his lands to the first
respondent for Rs. 5,000 out of which Rs.4,000 were paid,
and the balance Rs.1,000 was to be paid within 5 years
whereafter the second respondent was to execute a sale deed
in favour of the first respondent.
The Munsif decreed the suit only for recovery of
Rs,4,850 plus pendente lite and future interest on Rs.4,000
and this order was confirmed by the Civil Judge by
dismissing the appeal of respondent No.1.
A second appeal was preferred to the High Court by
respondent N. 1 contending that the transfers in favour of
the appellants, by respondent No. 2 were void being in
contravention of Section 168-A of the U.P. Zamindari
Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950. The appellants
contested the appeal contending that for a transfer being
hit by Section 168-A of the Act should be in respect of a
specific piece of land and not a share in a holding and that
the transfers were of a portion of the shares of respondent
No. 1 in the disputed plot.
The High Court allowed the appeal holding that the two
transfers made were clearly hit by the provisions of Section
168-A(2) of the Act and that the benefit of Section 43 of
the Transfer of property Act could not be availed of by the
appellants as the sale deeds were void in the eye of law.
700
The appellant in their appeal to this Court contended
that the sale made by respondent No. 2 to the 2nd appellant
being hit by the provisions of Section 168-A of the Act, the
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subject matter of transfer got vested in the Government and
the interest of respondent No. 2 in that part of the holding
stood extinguished on the date of transfer and that the sale
being void, he was left only with the subject matter of
transfer, and that the respondent No. 2 having transferred
that whole portion to the first appellant by sale deed such
transfer being a transfer of the whole area it would be
covered by the proviso under Section 168-A and as such, the
sale would not be hit by the provisions of Section 168-A.
The first respondent contended that as the sale deeds
in favour of the two appellants have been held to be void,
the High Court rightly decreed the suit; that he having been
in possession of the land and the second respondent’s
fragmented sales having been found to be void, even if the
land would vest in the State, the first respondent would not
be divested automatically and the State has to seek
possession in accordance with the law.
On the question as to what would be the effect of the
two fragmented sales in favour of the appellants, setting
aside the order of the High Court and remanding the matter,
this Court,
HELD: 1. The U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms
Act was passed as it was considered expedient to provide for
the abolition of the Zamindari system which involved
intermediaries between the tiller of the soil and the State
in Uttar Pradesh and for the acquisition of their rights,
title and interest and to reform the law relating to land
tenure consequent upon such abolition and acquisition and to
make provision for other matters connected therewith. [705E-
F]
2. The original Act did not define fragment. The
definition of ’fragment’ was added by Section 2 of the U.P.
Act XVIII of 1956 with a view to prevent fragmentation and
promote consolidation of holdings in order to avoid
uneconomic units. [705F-G]
3. The object of the section 168-A(1) was to prevent
fragmentation of land situated in a conolidated area and
transfers that would result in fragmentation or further
fragmentation shall be void and to such transfers, Section
167 will mutatis mutandis be applicable, when a fragment
situated in a consolidated area is transferred. If transfer
of a fragment is made in favour of tenure-holder who has a
plot contiguous to the fragment, the purpose of law is not
defeated inasmuch as it will be
701
consolidated with the contiguous plot of the transferee.
When the land held by a person in a consolidated area is
already a fragment then as was provided previous to the
amendment in 1961 the whole of the plot to which the
fragment pertained was to be transferred. [708F-709A]
4. After the amendment, the invalidity and
applicability of Section 167 is limited to a case where the
transfer is not in favour of any such tenure-holder and to
the whole or so much of the plot in which the person has
bhumidhar rights which pertains to fragment is thereby
transferred. If the transferor has bhumidhari rights on the
whole of the fragment the whole has to be transferred. If
the person has bhumidhari rights only in a part of the plot
that part on which he has bhumidhari rights can be
transferred. The part on which the person has not
bhumidhari rights is not covered by the provisions not
because that would not result in further fragmentation but
because he had transferable bhumidhari rights only on that
portion and not on the other portion. [709A-C]
5. The substitution of the words "bhumidhar with
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transferable rights" for the word "bhumidhar" would not make
any difference when the bhumidhar had transferable rights
but would make a difference where the bhumidhar had also
lands with non-transferable rights. [710C-D]
6. Under the amended provisions the interest of a
bhumidhar with transferable rights in his holding or in part
thereof shall be extinguished when the holding or part
thereof with bhumidhar rights has been transferred or let
out in contravention of the provisions of the Act. In other
words, when he had bhumidhar rights on the entire holding
and the same is transferred or let out in contravention of
the provisions of the Act his interest shall be
extinguished. If he had bhumidhari rights only on a part
thereof and it has been transferred or let out in
contravention of the provisions of the Act his interest in
bhumidhari rights in that part shall be extinguished. The
reason behind the provision to make fragmentation is the
need to prevent further fragmentation if the bhumidhar with
his bhumidhari rights over a fragment tries to transfer the
fragment, his right over the fragment is extinguished.
[710D-E]
7. In the instant case, the bhumidhar respondent No.
2’s land measuring 10 bighas, 12 biswas and 10 biswansis was
a fragment. He entered into an agreement to sell the land
on 5.4.1966 and the first respondent on payment of advance
of Rs.4,000 is stated to have had possession of the land.
That sale would attract the provisions of Section
702
168-A, if it resulted in transfer of the fragment. The
sales to the appellant No. 1 was dated 2.9.1966 and to
appellant No. 2 was dated 21.12.1966. These two sales would
be convered by the old provisions of sections 166 and 167,
which section did not deal with the case of bhumidhar but
only by sirdar or asami. But section 168-A would be
attracted and the provisions of Section 167 would mutatis
mutandis be applicable. [710G-711B]
8. The High Court did not examine the facts of the case
in light of the laws prevailing at the time. Festination
justiate est noverea informateeni. Hasty justice is step-
mother of misfortune. Injustuim est nisitota lege inspecta,
de una aliqua ejus particula proposita judicare vel
respondere. It is unjust to decide or respond to any
particular part of a law without examining the whole of the
law. [711B, 711D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2597 of
1983.
From the Judgment and Order dated the 27th October,
1980 of the Allahabad High Court in Second Appeal No. 567 of
1973.
K.V. Vishwanathan, S.R. Setia, K.V. Venkataraman and
C.S. Vaidyanathan for the Appellants.
Yogeshwar Prasad, P.K. Bajaj, Ms. Rachna Gupta, Ms.
Rani Chhabra for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
K.N. SAIKIA, J. This appeal is from the Judgment of the
Allahabad High Court dated 27.10.1980 in Second Appeal No.
567 of 1973 allowing the appeal and decreeing the suit of
the first respondent for specific performance of contract
dated 5.4.1966, wherein it was stipulated that the defendant
No. 1 (second respondent) had executed a fictitious sale
deed dated 2.9.1966 for Rs.1,000 in favour of defendant No.
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2 Kalawati, in respect of half of the suit chak and another
sale deed dated 21.12.1966 for Rs.2,000 in favour of
defendant No.3 Mithilesh Kumari. Accordingly the plaintiff
(first respondent) prayed for directing the defendants 2 & 3
(appellants herein) to execute the required sale deed in
case it was not possible for the court to get it executed by
defendant No. 1.
The first respondent Feteh Bahadur sued the second
respondent
703
Jang Bahadur and the appellants in O.S. No. 278 of 1970, for
specific performance of his contract whereunder the second
respondent Jang Bahadur had agreed to sell his chak No. 249
admeasuring 10 bighas, 12 biswas and 10 biswansis to the
first respondent of Rs. 5,000 out of which Rs. 4,000 were
paid and the balance Rs. 1,000 to be paid within 5 years
whereafter second respondent Jang Bahadur was to execute a
sale deed in favour of the first respondent Fateh Bahadur.
The Court of Munsif, Fatehpur decrced the suit only for
recovery of Rs. 4,850 plus pendent lite and future interest
on Rs. 4,000. Fateh Bahadur’s apeal therefrom having been
dismissed by the Civil Judge he preferred second appeal No.
567 of 1973 in the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad,
contending that the transfers in favour of defendant NOs. 2
& 3, the appellants herein, by Jang Bahadur were in
contravention of the provision of Section 168-A of the U.P.
Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 (U.P. Act No.
1 of 1951) hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’, and thus
were void and that the view taken by the lower court that
the title of Jang Bahadur came to an end since void
transfers were made in favour of appellants Kalawati and
Mithlesh Kumari, and thus, Jang Bahadur was no longer the
holder of any title which could be conveyed to Fateh Bahadur
was erroneous in law. Reliance was placed on a decision of
the High Court in Parmanand v. Board of Revenue, U.P.,
Allahabad reported in 1966 ALJ 963. The defendants 2 & 3 who
are appellants herein, contended that the two transfers made
by Jang Bahadur in their favour were not hit by the
provision of Section 168-A of the Act inasmuch as the
transfers were of a portion of the shares of Jang Bahadur
in the plot in dispute. It was urged that for a transfer
being hit by provision of Section 168-A of the Act the same
should be in respect of a specific piece of land and not a
share in a holding. Reliance was placed on a decision of the
same High Court in Bibhuti v. Kashi Ram, 1977 AWC 491.
It was not disputed that the area of land transferred
under the two sale deeds in favour of appellants Kalawati
and Mithlesh Kumari amounted to fragments under the Act. The
High Court considered the question as to whether a transfer
which had been made not of the entire share of a holder in a
holding but of a fragment would be hit by the provisions of
Section 168-A of the Act and took the view that the two
transfers made in favour of Kalawati and Mithlesh Kumari
were clearly hit by the provisions of Section 168-A of the
Act in view of the provisions of sub-clause (2) of that
section and that the benefit of Kalawati and Mithlesh Kumari
only if the sale deeds executed in their favour could be
looked into and as those sale deeds were void in the
704
eye of law it would be presumed as if no legal transfer took
place in their favour and there being no legal transfer no
question of applicability of Section 43 of the Transfer of
Property Act arose. As Jang Bahadur executed the agreement
of sale in favour of Fateh Bahadur and as the sale deeds in
favour of Kalawati and Mithlesh Kumar were held to have
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been void, Fateh Bahadur, according to the High Court, was
entitled to a decree of specific performance against
Kalawati and Mithlesh Kumari on payment of Rs. 1,000 within
a period 2 months from the date of receipt of the record in
the trial court failing which the court would execute the
sale deed in favour of the plaintiff. The appeal was
accordingly allowed and the suit decreed as above.
Mr. K.V. Vishwanathan, the learned counsel for the
appellants submits that the sale made by Jang Bahadur to the
2nd appellant Kalawati on 2.9.1966 being hit by the
provisions of Section 168-A of the Act the subject matter of
transfer i.e. 5 bighas, 6 biswas and 5 biswansis of Plot No.
249 in village Kichakpur got vested in the Government and
the interest of Jang Bahadur in that part of the holding
stood extinguished on the date of transfer i.e. 2.9.1966;
that the sale made to Kalawati being void, Jang Bahadur was
left only with 5 bighas, 6 biswas and 5 biswansis in Plot
No. 249 of village Kichakpur. Jang Bahadur having
transferred that whole or entire portion to the first
appellants Mithlesh Kumari by sale deed dated 21.12.1966
such transfer being a transfer of the whole area of the
Bhumidhar it would be covered by the proviso under Section
168-A and as such, the sale would not be hit by the
provisions of Section 168-; that Sections 166, 167,168, 168-
A and 189 (aa) form a scheme and if the sale is hit by the
provision of 168-A, the result would be that on the date of
sale, the interest of the vendor in the subject matter of
sale would stand extinguished under Section 189 (aa) and
hence 189 (aa) is the provision which extinguishes the right
of the vendor in that part of the holding which he
contracted to sell in violation of Section 168-A and that
the interest of the transferee would stand extinguished
under Sections 167 & 168 when the Gaon Sabha or the
landholder ejects the transferee from the premises.
According to counsel, harmoniously construing Sections 168
and 189(aa), it would be amply clear that while 189(aa)
extinguishes the interest of the vendor on that part of the
property which he contracted to sell in violation of 168-A
on the date of transfer itself, the interest of the
transferee would be extinguished on ejectment from the suit
premises; and the High Court erred in directing the
appellants to specifically execute the sale deed in favour
of the first respondent.
Ms. Rachna Gupta, the learned counsel for the first
respondent.
705
submits that as the sale deeds in favour of the two
appellants have been held to be void the High Court rightly
decreed the suit for specific performance against them on
payment of the balance or Rs.1,000 and that he having been
in possession of the land and the second respondent’s
fragmented sales having been found to be void, even if the
land would vest in the State, the first respondent would not
be divested automatically and the State has to seek
possession in accordance with the law.
The only question that falls for determination is what
would be the effect of the two fragmented sales in favour of
the appellants. In other words, whether as a result of the
two sales the entire holding of the bhumidhar Jang Bahadur
would vest in the State or only the half in the first sale
would vest in the State and the remaining half would
thereafter constitute the whole in the hand of the bhumidhar
Jang Bahadur and the second sale being of the whole of his
remnant holding would be valid so as to convey and transfer
right to the vendee Mithlesh Kumari.
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There is no dispute that the land of 10 bighas, 12
biswas and 10 biswansis was itself a fragment as defined in
clause 8(a) of Section 3 of the Act being less than 3.125
acres. There is also no dispute that the suit land is in a
consolidated area and that the appellants were not tenure-
holders. It would, therefore, follow that the two halves
sold to the appellants were fragments of a fragment.
The Act was passed as it was considered expedient to
provide for the abolition of the Zamindari system which
involved intermediaries between the tiller of the soil and
the State in Uttar Pradesh and for the acquistion of their
rights, title and interest and to reform the law relating to
land tenure consequent upon such abolition and acquisition
and to make provision for other matters connected therewith.
The original Act did not define fragment. The definition of
‘fragment’ was added by Section 2 of the U.P. Act XVIII of
1956 with a view to prevent fragmentation and promote
consolidation of holdings in order to avoid uneconomic
units. Sections 152 to 175 of the Act dealt with transfer.
Section 152 provided:
"The interest of a bhumidhar with tranferable
rights shall subject to the conditions hereinafter
contained, be transferable.
(2) Except otherwise expressly permitted by this
Act or
706
any other law for the time being in force, the
interest of a bhumidhar with non-transferable
rights shall not be transferable.
(3) A bhumidhar referred to in sub-section (2)
may, in such circumstances as may be prescribed,
mortgage, without possessions his interest in his
holding, as security for a loan taken from the
State Government by way of taqavi, or from a
cooperative society or from the State Bank of
India, or from any other bank, which is a scheduled
bank within the meaning of clause (e) of Section 2
of the Reserve Bank of India Act, 1934, or from the
Uttar Pradesh State, Agro-Industrial Corporation
Limited, and may also transfer by way of gift, the
interest in his holding, except the part thereof
which has been so mortgaged, to a recognised
educational institution for any purpose connected
with instructions in agriculture, horticulture and
animal husbandry."
The interests of sirdar or asami were originally not
transferable as Section 153 said: "Except as expressly
permitted by this Act, the interest of a sirdar and asami
shall not be transferable." Sections 154 to 170 dealt with
transfer of land by bhumidhar. Section 166 originally
provided that any transfer made by or an behalf of a sirdar
or asami in contravention of the provisions of that chapter
was to be void. Section 166 has undergone amendments. The
section was substituted by the present section by U.P. Act
No. XX of 1982 with effect from 3.6.1981. The present
section says: "Every transfer made in contravention of the
provisions of this Act shall be void." What was the
position in 1966 on the dates of the instant sales has to be
known and correctly applied. Section 167 earlier provided
for the consequences of void transfers in the following
language:
167. (1) Where a sirdar or asami has made any
transfer in contravention of the provision of this
Act, the transferee and every person who may have
thus obtained possession of the whole or part of
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the holding shall be liable to ejectment on the
suit of the Gaon Sabha or the landholder, as the
case may be.
(2) A decree for ejectment under sub-section (1)
may direct the ejectment of the sirdar or asami
from the whole or part of the holding as the Court
may, having regard to
707
the circumstances of the case, direct."
This section was also substituted by the same Act No. XX of
1982 with effect from 3.6.1981. Section 167 now says:
"167.(1) the following consequences shall ensue in respect
of every transfer which is void by virtue of Section 166,
namely-
(a) the subject-matter of transfer shall with
effect from the date of transfer, be deemed to have
vested in the State Government free from all
encumbrances;
(b) the trees, crops and wells existing on the
land on the date of transfer shall, with effect
from the said date, be deemed to have vested
in the State Government free from all encumbrances;
(c) the transferee may remove other movable
property or the materials of any immovable property
existing on such land on the date of transfer
within such time as may be prescribed.
(2) Where any land or other property has vested in
the State Government under sub-section (1), it
shall be lawful for the Collector to take over
possession over such land or other property
and to direct that any person occupying such
land or property be evicted therefrom. For
the purposes of taking over such possession or
evicting such unauthorised occupants, the
Collector may use or cause to be used such force as
may be necessary."
The position before the amendment has been shown to us
to enable us to apply the relevant law to the facts of the
case. Section 168 which dealt with consequences of
ejectment under Section 167 has been omitted by U.P. Act No.
VIII of 1977 with effect from 28.1.1977. What was the
provision in 1966 is not clear to us. We are told that the
section stood as follows in 1966: "S. 168.-Consequences of
ejectment under section 167. All the rights and interests
of the sirdar and asami upon ejectment in a suit under
section 167 in the holding (or part thereof) or in any
improvement made therein or to get compensation for such
improvements shall be extinguished." But we have not been
shown the enactment.
708
Section 168-A was added by Section 9 of U.P. Act XVIII
of 1956, subject to the saving contained in Section 23
thereof. This section now says:
"168-A. Transfer of fragments.-Notwithstanding the
provisions of any law for the time being in force, no
person shall transfer whether by sale, gift or
exchange any fragment situate in a consolidated area
except where the transfer is in favour of tenure-
holder who has a plot contiguous to the fragment or
where the transfer is not in favour of any such
tenure-holder the whole or so much of the plot in
which person has bhumidhari rights, which pertains to
the fragment is thereby transferred.
(2) The transfer of any land contrary to the
provisions of sub-section (1) shall be void.
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(3) When a bhumidhar has made any transfer in
contravention of the provisions of sub-section (1)
the provisions of Section 167 shall mutatis mutandis
apply."
Section 168-A has undergone amendment by Section 2 of U.P.
Act XXVIII of 1961 when for the words "whole of the plot to
which the fragment pertains is hereby transferred", the
present words "the whole or so much of the plot in which the
person has bhumidhari rights which pertains to the fragment
is hereby transferrd" were substituted. This amendment
would not affect the instant case. Some words between ‘167’
and ‘shall’ were omitted by U.P. Act XIII of 1977, with
effect from 28.1.1977. It may be necessary to know what
those were. Sub-section (1) of Section 168-A begins with a
non-obstante clause and it over-rides the provisions of any
law for the time being in force. The expession ‘no
person’ would include the bhumidhar. The object of the
section is to prevent fragmentation of land situated in a
consolidated area and transfers that would result in
fragmentation or further fragmentation shall be void and to
such transfers Section 167 will mutatis mutandis be
applicable. This section comes into play only when a
fragment situated in a consolidated area is transferred. If
transfer of a fragment is made in favour of tenure-holder
who has a plot contiguous to the fragment, the purpose of
law is not defeatd inasmuch as it will be consolidated with
the contiguous plot of the transferee. When the land held
by a person in a consolidated area is already a fragment
then as was provided previous to the amendment in 1961 the
whole of the plot to which the fragment pertained was to be
709
transferred. After the amendment, the invalidity and
applicability of Section 167 is limited to a case where the
transfer is not in favour of any such tenure-holder and to
the whole or so much of the plot in which the person has
bhumidhari rights which pertains to the fragment is thereby
transferred. If the transferor had bhumidhari rights on the
whole of the fragment the whole has to be transferred. If
the person has bhumidhari rights only in a part of the plot
that part on which he has bhumidhari rights can be
transferred. The part on which the person has not
bhumidhari rights is not covered by the provisions not
because that would not result in further fragmentation but
because he had transferable bhumidhari rights only on that
portion and not on the other portion. There is no doubt
that under sub-section (2) transfer of any land countrary to
the provisions of sub-section (1) shall be void and under
sub-section (3) the provisions of section 167 shall mutatis
mutandis apply.
Section 189 deals with extinction of the interest of a
bhumidhar with transferable rights and Section 190 deals
with extinction of the interest of a bhumidhar with non-
transferable rights. Section 189 earlier provided:
"189. The interest of a bhumidhar in his holding or
any part thereof shall be extinguished-
(a) when he died intestate leaving no heir
entitled to inherit in accordance with the provisions
of this Act;
(b) when the land compromised in the holding has
been acquired under any law for the time being in
force relating to the acquisition of land, or
(c) when he has been deprived of possession and
his right to recover possession is barred by
limitation"
The words "bhumidhar with transferable rights" were
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substituted in the first sentence by U.P. Act XVIII of 1977
with effect from 28.1.1977. Clause (aa) was added by
Section 50 of U.P. Act XXXVII of 1958, so that the amended
section now reads:
"189. Extinction of the interest of a bhumidhar with
transferable rights.-The interest of a bhumidhar with
transferable rights in his holding or any part
thereof shall be extinguished-
710
(a) when he dies intestate leaving no heir
entitled to inherit in accordance with the provisions
of this Act;
(aa) when the holding or part thereof has been
transferred or let out in contravention of the
provisions of this Act;
(b) when the land comprised in the holding has
been acquired under any law for the time being in
force relating to the acquisition of land; or
(c) when he has been deprived of possession and
this right to recover possession is barred by
limitation."
The substitution of the words "bhumidhar with transferable
right" for the word "bhumidhar" would not make any
difference when the bhumidhar had transferable rights but
would make a difference where the bhumidhar has also lands
with non-transferable rights. Thus, under the amended
provisions the interest of a bhumidhar with transferable
rights in his holding or in part thereof shall be
extinguished when the holding or part thereof with
bhumidhari rights has been transferred or let out in
contravention of the provisions of the Act. In other words
when he had bhumidhari rights on the entire holding and the
same is transferred or let out in contravention of the
provisions of the Act his interest shall be extinguished.
If he had bhumidhari right only on a part thereof and it has
been transferred or let out in contravention of the
provisions of the Act his interest in bhumidhari right in
that part shall be extinguished. The reason behind the
provisions to make fragmentation is the need to prevent
further fragmentation if the bhumidhar with his bhumidhari
rights over a fragment tries to transfer the fragment, his
right over the fragment is extinguished. Will the same by
the result if instead of transferring the entire fragment he
transfers a fragment of a fragment? If only a fragment of a
fragment is so transferred would the whole fragment be
vested in State?
Applying the law to the facts of the case in hand we
find that the bhumidhar Jang Bahadur’s land admeasuring 10
bighas, 12 biswas and 10 biswansis was itself admittedly a
fragment. Jang Bahadur entered into an agreement to sell
the land on 5.4.1966 and the first respondent Fateh Bahadur
on payment of advance of Rs. 4000 is stated to have had
possession of the land. That sale would attract the
provisions of Section 168-A if it resulted in transfer of
the fragment. The sales to the appellants. Kalawati
defendant No. 2 was dated 2.9.1966 and to Mith-
711
lesh Kumari defendant No. 3 was dated 21.12.1966. These two
sales would be covered by the old provisions of sections 166
and 167, which sections did not deal with the case of
bhumidhar but only by sirdar or asami. But Section 168-A
would be attracted and the provisions of Section 167 would
mutatis mutandis be applicable.
The High Court did not examine the facts of the case in
light of the laws prevailing at the time of the sales. If
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the sales were in contravention of the provisions of law so
as to entail invalidity of the sale and vesting of the land
sold in the State, the question whether in such a case
specific performance of the contract would be justified or
not would also be germane. While holding both the sales to
the appellants to have been void, the High Court did not
take into consideration the exception as to transfer of "the
whole or so much of the plot in which the person has
bhumidhari rights." The High Court also failed to notice
and apply clause (aa) of Section 189 which was added by
Section 50 of U.P. Act XXXVII of 1958 and was applicable to
the case.
Festinatio justitiae est noverea informateeni. (Hob.
97) Hasty justice is stepmother of misfortune. Injustum est
nisi tota lege inspecta, de una aliqua ejus particula
proposita judicare vel respondere. It is unjust to decide
or respond to any particular part of a law without examining
the whole of the law. But we are in time constraint. By
consensus with the learned counsel for the parties, we set
aside the impugned order and remand this case to the High
Court for disposal in accordance with the law applicable to
the facts of the case expeditiously. The appeal is disposed
of accordingly. We leave the parties to bear their own
costs.
V.P.R. Appeal disposed of.
712