Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THAKUR RAGHUBIR SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF AJMER (NOW RAJASTHAN) AND OTHERS(and connected
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
14/11/1958
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN (CJ)
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
SUBBARAO, K.
CITATION:
1959 AIR 475 1959 SCR Supl. (1) 478
CITATOR INFO :
R 1960 SC 796 (3,6)
R 1962 SC 50 (5)
R 1962 SC 137 (8)
R 1962 SC1044 (12)
RF 1992 SC1277 (22)
ACT:
Land Reform-Abolition of Intermediaries-Validity of Enact-
ment-Competency of Legislature-Liability to resumption of
jagir estates-Ajmer Abolition of Intermediaries and Land
Reforms Act,1955 (Ajmer III of 1955) ss. 8, 38-Constitution
of India, Seventh Schedule, List I, entry 33, List II, entry
36, List III, entry 42.
HEADNOTE:
Section 4 Of the Ajmer Abolition of Intermediaries and Land
Reforms Act, 955, provided for vesting of all estates held
by intermediaries, as defined in the Act, in the State from
a date to be notified, and the petitioners who were affected
thereby filed petitions under Art. 32 Of the Constitution of
India challenging the validity of the Act and, in particular
ss. 8 and 38 of the Act on the grounds that (1) entry 36 of
List 11 of the
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Seventh Schedule to the Constitution gave power to the State
legislature to acquire property for purposes other than the
purposes of the Union, while the property acquired under the
Act vested in the President and therefore the Union after
its acquisition, and the Act was really for the acquisition
of property for the purposes of the Union and could not have
been passed by the, Ajmer legislature, (2) s. 8 provided for
retrospective cancellation of leases granted at a time when
the land-owner had a right to dispose of his property as he
liked under Art. 19(1)(f) of the Constitution and there was
no restriction on such right, and (3) s. 38 which fixed a
maximum rent was an unreasonable.restriction on the right of
the land-owner to let his holding. It was also contended
for some of the petitioners who were assignees of land
revenue as also owners of land that, under the Act, -an
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intermediary included a jagir and that as a jagirdar was
merely an assignee of land revenue, only that assignment
could be said to have been acquired under the Act.
Held, (1) that the purposes for which the estates were
acquired were purposes of the State of Ajmer and,
consequently, the Act was within the competency of the Ajmer
legislature as it fell within entry 36 of List II of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution, and it was not
necessary to consider where the property should vest after
acquisition in deciding the ambit of the competence of the
legislature under the entry ;
(2) that the provisions in s. 8 of the Act which gave power
to the Collector to cancel leases which were found to have
been made in anticipation of legislation for abolition of
intermediaries and which were, consequently, a fraud upon
the Act, subserve the purposes of the Act and would,
therefore, be an integral part of the Act, though ancillary
to its main object, and were protected under Art. 31-A(1)(a)
of the Constitution ;
(3)that the intention of the Act was that the intermediaries
who were allotted lands should cultivate them personally and
the object of s. 38 was to discourage them from letting the
land and becoming a new kind of intermediaries, and,
consequently, the section being an ancillary provision
necessary for the purposes of carrying out the objects of
the Act, was protected under Art. 31-A(1)(a) of the
Constitution; and
(4)that in view of the origin of the title of the holders of
these estates who were called jagirdars, a distinction could
not be made between jagirdars as assignees of land revenue
and the same persons as land owners, and therefore, the
State could take over the entire interest in the estate
under s. 4 Of the Act.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 230-239, 241, 249-251,
256, 257, 290, 303, 306-349, 351, 352, 355-357 of 1955 and
Nos. 33 & 36 of 1956.
Petitions under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
480
Achhru Ram and Naunit Lal, for the petitioners in Petitions
Nos. 239, 241 & 251 of 1955.
Naunit Lal, for the petitioners in Petitions Nos. 249
& 250 of 1955.
B.D.. Sharma and K. L. Mehta, for the petitioners in
Petitions Nos. 290, 303, 306-349, 351, 355-357 of 1955 and
36 of 1956.
B. D. Sharma, for the petitioner in Petition No. 33
of 1956.
K. L. Mehta, for the petitioner in Petition No. 352
of 1955.
I. N. Shroff, for the petitioners in Petitions Nos. 230-
238, 256-257 of 1955.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India,
M. N. Kaul and T. M. Sen, for the respondents.
1958. November 14. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO, J.-These sixty-nine petitions under Art. 32 of the
Constitution by various land-owners in the former State of
Ajmer attack the validity of the Ajmer Abolition of
Intermediaries and Land Reforms Act, 1955 (Ajmer III of
1955) (hereinafter called the Act). The petitions disclose
a large number of grounds on which the validity of the Act
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is impugned; but learned counsel, Mr. Achhru Ram and Mr. B.
D. Sharma, appearing for various petitioners, have confined
their arguments only to certain grounds raised in the peti-
tions. We propose, therefore, to consider only the grounds
urged before us.
The Act was passed by the Ajmer Legislative Assembly and
received the assent of the President on May 29, 1955.
Section 4 of the Act provided for vesting of all estates
held by intermediaries, as defined in the Act, in the State
Government from a date to be notified. The Act came into
force on June 23, 1955, and August 1, 1955, was notified as
the date on which the estates held by intermediaries would
vest in the State Government. The present petitions
followed on the fixing of this date.
It is not disputed that the Act is protected under Art. 31 -
A(l)(a) of the Constitution inasmuch as it is a
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piece of legislation for acquisition by the State of any
estate or of any rights therein. The argument is that in
spite of this protection, either the whole Act or certain
provisions of it are invalid, for reasons urged by learned
counsel on behalf of the petitioners. Mr. Achhru Ram
attacks only ss. 8 and 38 of the Act. Mr. Sharma attacks
the competency of the Ajmer legislature to pass the Act and
also urges that in any case it does not apply to the case of
jagirdars, one of whom is a petitioner before us in Petition
No. 33 of 1956. These four are the only grounds that have
been urged before us, and we shall deal with them seriatim.
Re. s. 8.
Section 8 is in these terms-
" Where an intermediary has on or after the 1st day of June,
1950, (a) granted a lease of any land in the estate or any
part thereof for any non-agricultural purposes other than
mining for a period of three years or more; or
(b) granted a lease or ’entered into a contract relating to
any forest, fishery or quarry in his estate for a period of
three years or more ; Or
(c)granted a lease for the cultivation of any area of bir or
pasture or waste land ;
and the Collector is satisfied that such lease or contract
was not made or entered into in the normal course of
management but in anticipation of legislation for the
Abolition of Intermediaries, the Collector may, subject to
any rules made under this Act, by order in writing, cancel
the lease or the contract as the case may be."
It provides for cancellation of certain leases granted on or
after June 1, 1950, where the lease is for a period of three
years or more with respect to matters dealt with in cls. (a)
and (b) and where the lease is for any period in respect of
matters dealt with in cl. (c). The Collector has been given
the power to cancel such leases if they are not, made in the
normal course of management but in " anticipation - of
legislation for abolition of intermediaries. The argument
is that
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482
there can be no retrospective cancellation of leases granted
at a time when the land-owner had a right to dispose of his
property as he liked under Art. 19(1)(f) and there was no
restriction on such right. It is said that in certain
contingencies the cancellation of a lease might expose the
land-owner to the risk of paying compensation to the lessee,
particularly in cases where the land-owner might have
realised the entire lease-money in one lump sum for a lease
of more than three years’ duration. We are of opinion that
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there is no force in this contention. The legislature was
certainly competent, under entry 18 of List 11 of the
Seventh Schedule to the Constitution relating to Land, to
make this provision. It cannot be disputed that the
legislature has power in appropriate cases to pass even
retrospective legislation. Provisions for cancellation of
instruments already executed are not unknown to law; for
example, the Insolvency Acts provide for setting aside
transfers made by insolvents under certain circumstances.
Therefore, the Ajmer Legislature certainly had the power to
enact such a provision, and in the circumstances in which
this provision has been made in the Act, it cannot be said
that it is not protected under Art. 31-A. The provision is
not an independent provision; it is merely ancillary in
character enacted for carrying out the objects of the Act
more effectively. The intention of the legislature was to
give power to the Collector after the estates vested in the
State Government to scrutinise leases of this kind made
after June 1, 1950, which was apparently the date from which
such legislation was under contemplation and to see whether
the leases were such as a prudent land-owner would enter
into in the normal course of management. Such leases would
be immune from cancellation ; but if the Collector found
that the leases were entered into, not in the normal course
of management but designedly to make whatever the land-
owners could before the estate came to be transferred to the
State Government, he ’Was given the power to -cancel the
same, as they would obviously be a fraud- upon the Act.
Such, cancellation would subserve the purposes of the Act,
and
483
the provision for it would therefore be an integral part of
the Act, though ancillary to its main object, and would thus
be protected under Art. 31-A (1)(a) of the Constitution.
Re. s. 38.
Section 38 reads as follows
Notwithstanding any agreement, usage, decree or order of a
court or any law for the time being in force, the maximum
rent payable by a tenant in respect of the land leased to
him shall not exceed one and half times the revenue payable
in respect of such land."
This section provides for fixing the maximum rent at fifty
per cent. above the land revenue, and it is urged that this
is an unreasonable restriction on the right of the land-
owner to let his holding. The object of this legislation is
to do away with intermediaries, and for that reason the
estates held by intermediaries have been’ made to vest in
the State Government tinder s. 4. Chapter VI of the Act,
however, provides for allotment of lands for personal
cultivation to intermediaries whose estates have been taken
over upto a certain limit and the intermediaries who have
been allotted lands under s. 29 of the Act are called
Bhuswamis or Kashtkars according to the nature of the lands
allotted to them; (see s. 30). Bhuswamis and Kashtkars hold
land directly from the Government and pay revenue to the
Government; (see s. 32). The intention of the Act,
therefore, is that intermediaries who have been allotted
lands should cultivate them personally. But s. 37 permits
Bhuswamis to let the whole or any part of the land allotted
to them, while Kashtkars are forbidden from letting any part
of their land except in certain circumstances when they are
suffering from some disability. In order, however, that the
main object of the Act (namely, that the land should be
cultivated by the person to whom it is allotted and that
there should be no rackrenting) is attained, s. 38 has been
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provided fixing the maximum rent at 50 per cent. above the
land revenue. Thus the profit which a Bhuswami
484
can make by letting his land is so reduced compared to what
he would earn if he cultivated it himself as to discourage
him from letting the land and becoming a. new kind of
intermediary. Section 38, therefore, is another ancillary
section, like s. 8, and is meant to subserve the purposes of
the Act, namely, the abolition of all intermediaries and
encouragement of self-cultivation of the land. We are,
therefore, of opinion that s. 38 is also protected under
Art. 31-A(l)(a) of the Constitution as an ancillary
provision necessary for the purposes of carrying out the
objects of the Act.
Re. The competency of the Ajmer Legislation.
The argument in this behalf is put in this way. The Act is
a piece of legislation for the acquisition of estates.
Before the Constitution (Seventh Amendment) Act, 1956, came
into force on November 1, 1956, there were two entries
relating to acquisition of property in the Seventh Schedule,
namely, entry 33 of List 1 (acquisition or requisitioning of
property for the purpose of the Union) and entry 36 of List
II(acquisition or requisitioning of property, except for the
purposes of the Union, subject to the provisions of entry 42
of List 111). The argument continues that the Act was
passed by the Ajmer legislature under the power it was
supposed to have under entry 36 of List 11 read with s. 21
of the Government of part C States Act, 1951 (XLIX of 1951).
But entry 36 of List 11 only gives power to the State
legislature to acquire property for purposes other than the
purposes of the Union. As, however, the property aquired
under the Act vested in the President and therefore the
Union after its acquisition, the Act was really for the
acquisition of property for the purposes of the Union and
could not have been passed by the Ajmer legislature.
In support of this argument Mr. Sharma referred us to
various Articles of the Constitution in Part XII thereof
relating to Finance, Property, Contracts and Suits, and also
Arts. 73 and 239. He contends that these provisions show
that before the Government of Part C States Act was passed,
the legislative power with respect to the areas comprised in
Part C States
485
was in the Union which also through the President had
executive power over the subjects over which the Parliament
could legislate with respect to what were Part C States.
After the passing of the Government of Part C States Act, by
virtue of the power conferred on Parliament by Art. 240,
there was no change so far as the executive power in Part C
States was concerned and it is still vested in the
President. Any property acquired for the purposes of Part C
States vests in the President or the Union. Therefore,
according to him, the Ajmer legislature would have no power
to enact a law for acquiring estates under entry 36 of, List
11; for the property so acquired would really be for the
purposes of the Union and no law under that, entry could be
made for acquiring property for the purposes of the Union.
We are of opinion that the argument, though plausible, must
be rejected. Assuming, without deciding. that even after
the passing of the Government of. Part C States Act, any
property acquired for a Part C State vested in the Union
Government by virtue of the provisions of Part XII of the
Constitution, the question still remains whether the Ajmer
legislature could make a law under entry 36 of List II
acquiring estates even though the estates when acquired may
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legally vest in the Union Government. Now, entry 33 of List
I refers to acquiring of property for the purposes of the
Union. It does not lay down in whom the property should
vest after it has been acquired. Similarly, entry 36 of
List 11 speaks of acquisition of property, except for the
purposes of the Union, and makes no mention in whom the
property should vest after it has been acquired. Entry 42
of List II which deals with compensation for such
acquisition as well as for acquisition for any other public
purpose, also does not speak where the property should vest
after acquisition. It is not necessary, therefore, to
consider where the property should vest after acquisition in
deciding the ambit of the competence of the legislature
under those two entries. The key to the interpretation of
these two entries is not in whom the property would vest
after it has been acquired ’but whether the
486
property is being acquired for the purposes of the Union in
one case or for purposes other than the purposes of the
Union in the other. It is in this context that the
competency of the Ajmer legislature to enact this law under
entry 36 of List 11 is to be judged.
Section 21 of the Government of Part C States Act created a
Legislative Assembly for Ajmer and gave that legislative
assembly power to make laws for the whole or any part of the
State with respect to any of the matters enumerated in List
II or List III of the seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
Ajmer legislature was thus given power to pass laws with
respect to acquisition of property for purposes other than
those of the Union. In other words, it bad the power to
make law to acquire property for the purposes of the State
of Ajmer or for any other public purpose. The question then
is whether the Act was passed acquiring estates in the State
of Ajmer for the purposes of the State of Active of where
the title may vest. The answer to this question to our mind
can only be one; the Act was passed by the State legislature
for acquiring estates within the State and it could only
have been for the purposes of the State. There is no reason
to limit the meaning of these general words, namely, ’the
purposes of the State’, by importing in them the idea of
where the property would vest after its acquisition. That
the purposes for which the estates were acquired were
purposes of the State of Ajmer would be quite clear from the
fact that now- that the State of Ajmer is part of the State
of Rajasthan, the estates acquired under the Act have gone
to Rajasthan and have not been kept by the Union on the
ground that the title vested in the Union. Therefore, as
the estates were acquired in this case for the purposes of
the State of Ajmer the Act would be within the competency of
the Ajmer legislature as it falls within the plain words of
entry 36 of List 11.
Re. Jagirdars.
The contention on behalf of the petitioner in petition No.
33 of 1956 is that under the Act the word intermediary
includes a jagirdar. The Act also provides that the
definitions in the Ajmer Tenancy and Land
487
Records Act, 1950 (Ajmer XLII of 1950), will be imported
where the words used in it are not defined. The word I
jagirdar is defined in the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records
Act as a person to whom the revenue of any land has been
assigned under a sanad issued by the Chief Commissioner
before the commencement of the Ajmer Land and Revenue
Regulation, l877 ; (see s. 2 (15) ). It is not in dispute
that a sanad was issued to a predecessor of the petitioner
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before 1877 ; but it is urged that a jagirdar is merely the
assignee of land revenue and so far as that assignment is
concerned it may be said to have been acquired under the
Act. But the petitioner besides being an assignee of land
revenue is also owner of land and that interest of his has
not been acquired under the Act. We are of opinion that
there is no force in this argument. The word I estate’ is
defined in s. 2(v) of the Act as having the same meaning as
assigned to it in the Ajmer Land and Revenue Regulation,
1877. The Ajmer Regulation does not define the word
’estate’ as such, but it has defined the word ’ Malguzar ’
as a person liable under s. 64 for payment of the revenue
assessed upon an estate, under s. 2(d). Further, s. 64
provides that all persons who are bound by the agreement
prescribed by s. 61 and their successors-ininterest shall,
while they continue to be owners of land in the Estate to
which such agreement relates, be jointly and severally
liable for the payment of the whole amount of revenue
assessed upon such estate. The Ajmer Regulation also
defines particular types of estates like’ Istimrari Estate’
and ’Bhum’ but the general meaning of the word ’estate’
under the Ajmer Regulation is an area of land separately
assessed to revenue, which is payable by the holder of the
estate. I Intermediary’ as defined in s. 2 (viii) of the
Act is a holder of an estate and includes a jagirdar. Under
s. 4 all the estates held by intermediaries Vest in the
State Government on the issue of a notification. Therefore,
if the jagirdars are intermediaries, that is holders of
estates, their estates will vest in the State Government
under s. 4 of the Act. The distinction which the learned
counsel for this petitioner draws between the
488
interest of the jagirdar as jagirdar and as land-owner is in
our opinion wholly unfounded. A perusal of annexures B, C
and D, filed by the. petitioner himself, would make this
clear. Anexures B and C are sanads with respect to the
jagirs held by the petitioner. Entry in the remarks column
of annexure IS begins with the words " Grant of this estate
lasts... ". Similarly, in annexure C the opening words in
the remarks column are " The Grant is to the Dudhadhari for
the time being. No part of the estate is transferable by
sale or mortgage... ". Therefore, the grants themselves
designated these jagirs as estates. They were assessed to
revenue, which was, however, remitted and the estates thus
came to be known as revenue-free jagirs and the estate
holder was designated as jagirdar. It was because of this
remission of the land revenue that the word I jagirdar’ was
defined in the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records Act, 1950, as
assignee of land revenue. Annexures B and C also show that
when the grants were made before 1877 a large part of the
area covered by the grant was uncultivated. Annexure D
shows that disputes arose between the jagirdars and the
Biswedars in these jagirs about these uncultivated lands,
and one such dispute was decided as late as 1954. In that
judgment (annexure D) history of jagir tenure was traced and
it was held that the jagirdar was the owner of uncultivated
land in his jagir and not the Biswedar. Therefore, the
distinction which has been drawn by the learned counsel
between the jagirdar as an assignee of land revenue based on
the definition in the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records Act,
1950, and the same person as the land-owner is unfounded.
It appears that though the jagirdar may have been defined as
assignee of land revenue because of the peculiar fact that
in the case of a jagirdar there had been remission of land
revenue by sanads granted before 1877, he was the proprietor
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of his jagir and the grantee of the estate given to him as
jagir There is no question, therefore, of separating the
interest of jagirdar as the assignee of land revenue from,
his interest as the holder of jagir-estate by virtue of a
grant before 1877. The petitioner therefore in petition
489
No. 33 of 1956 is the holder of the jagir-estate and
therefore his entire interest in the estate is liable to
resumption under the Act. In the Ajmer Regulations, (Vol.
H to L) at pp. 564-6, these two estates have been considered
and their history is given, and they are called jagirs. The
history of jagirs in Rajasthan was considered by this Court
in Thakur Amarsinghji v. State of Rajasthan (1), at p. 330
onwards, and the word I jagir’ was hold to connote all
grants which conferred on the grantees rights in respect of
land revenue. In the case of these two jagirs also, as
annexures B and C show, land revenue was remitted and they
were granted as estates for particular purposes. They are,
therefore, clearly estates in view of the origin of the
title of the holder of these estates who is called a
jagirdar and therefore the State could take them over under
s. 4 of the Act.
There is no force in any of the points raised on behalf of
the petitioners, and the petitions fail and are hereby
dismissed with one set of costs to the contesting
respondent.
Petitions dismissed.