Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SANKARANARAYANAN POTTI (DEAD) BY L.RS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
K. SREEDEVI & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/03/1998
BENCH:
S.B. MAJMUDAR, K. VENKATASWAMI, A.P. MISRA
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
S.B. Majmudar, J.
Leave granted.
I.A. No.4, Application for substitution of the heirs of
deceased original petitioner, is granted. We have heard
learned senior counsel for the appellants, heirs of the
original petitioner in the S.L.P. as well as learned senior
counsel for the respondents finally.
A Bench of two Judges of this Court has referred the
Special Leave Petition from which this appeal arises for
decision of a larger Bench of three Judges by order dated
25th October 1996 and that is how these proceedings have
been placed before us for final disposal. The reference as
aforesaid has been made presumably on the ground that there
is an apparent conflict between two decisions rendered by
two Judge Benches of this Court in the case of Mathevan
Padmanabhan alias Ponnan (Deed) through L.Rs. v.
Parmeshwaran Thampi and others [1995 Supp. (1) SCC 479] and
in the case of Chettiam Veettil Ammad and another etc. etc.
v. Taluk Land Board and others etc. etc. [AIR 1979 SC 1573].
In order to highlight the controversy arising in the present
appeal it will be necessary to note a few relevant
background facts.
Background Facts
The present appellants’ predecessor was defendant no.2
in a civil suit O.S. 75 of 1958 filed by the original
plaintiff for setting aside Sale Deed dated 27th July 1955
executed by defendant no.1. one of the co-owners of the suit
property, in favour of defendant no.2 and also for
redemption of the suit mortgage being otti mortgage (an
anomalous mortgage) executed by the original mortgagors in
favour of defendant no.2-mortgagee. Wee shall refer to the
parties to this appeal as defendants and plaintiffs
respectively in the latter part of this judgment for the
sake of convenience. The said mortgage dated 01st December
1944 was executed by the Tarwad of the plaintiffs in favour
of one Parameswaran Pillai and his sons. In the said suit
for redemption a preliminary decree was passed by the Trial
Court on 22nd January 1963 for redemption of the otti
mortgage of defendant no.2 on payment of mortgage amount and
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value of improvements by the plaintiffs. Defendant no.2
challenged the said preliminary decree by filing regular
appeal A.S. 527 of 1963 before the Appellate Court. The said
appeal came to be dismissed on 27th November 1965.
Thereafter defendant no.2 carried the matter in Second
Appeal No.334 of 1966 before the High Court of Kerala. The
said second appeal with another cognate second appeal was
dismissed by the High Court on 19th February 1969. Thus the
preliminary decree for redemption of the suit mortgage and
for partition of the suit property became final as no
further proceedings were initiated by defendant no.2 against
the aforesaid decision of the High Court in second appeal.
Thereafter Original Suit No. 75 of 1958 remained pending at
the stage passing final decree. In the meantime Kerala Land
Reforms Act, 1963 [hereinafter referred to as ‘the Land
Reforms Act’] which has come into force with effect form
01st April 1964 got amended by Amending Act 35 of 1969.
According to defendant no.2 the said Amending Act gave him a
statutory right to purchase the suit mortgage property as he
got covered by the wider definition of ‘tenant’ as envisaged
by the said Amending Act. On that ground defendant no.2
filed an application under Section 72B of the Land Reforms
Act before the Land Tribunal. The Land Tribunal by its order
dated 18th July 1974 issued a preliminary order holding that
the applicant was a tenant entitled to purchase landlord’s
rights. Thereafter final orders were passed by the Land
Tribunal on 28th October 1974 directing issuance of a
certificate of purchases in favour of the applicant-
defendant no.2. Accordingly certificate of purchases was
issued to him under Section 72K of the Land Reforms Act on
25th July 1975. A few years later, in the pending suit O.S.
75 of 1958, 11th defendant Kamala Bai filed an application
being I.A. No. 5092 of 1979 dated 17th November 1979
requesting the Trial Court to pass a final decree in the
light of the preliminary decree which had become final
between the parties. She also filed I.A. No. 630 of 1980 on
15th February 1980 before the Trial Court for condoning the
delay in filing the application for final decree. Defendant
no.2 on the other hand filed objection on I.A. No. 5092 of
1979 contending that the application for final decree was
barred by limitation and the otti sought to be redeemed is a
tenancy coming within the purview of the provisions of the
Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment) Ant and that the order of
the Land Tribunal, finding him to be entitled to fixity of
tenure and assignment of the landlords’ rights, required the
suit against him to be dismissed. The Trial Court by its
order dated 07th April 1982 dismissed I.A. No.5092 of 1979
filed by the 11th defendant, for passing the final decree,
on the ground that the application for final decree was
barred by limitation. Application for condonation of delay
was also dismissed. Thereafter 11th defendant filed A.S.
No.198 of 1982 against the dismissal of her I.A. No. 5092 of
1979 for passing final decree. The learned District Judge
allowed the appeal of defendant no. 11 on 10th January 1983.
It was held by the learned District Judge that the final
decree application was not barred by limitation. The learned
District Judge also directed that t he Trial Court should
consider other objections raised by defendant no.2 to the
final decree proceedings. It was also held that the 11th
defendant was entitled to file application for passing of
final decree. Defendant no.2 thereafter carried the matter
to the Kerala High Court in Civil Miscellaneous Appeal No.
114 of 1984 challenging the judgment of the District Court
in A.S. No. 198 of 1982 by which proceedings were remanded
to the Trial Court for proceeding further in connection
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with the passing of final decree. The said miscellaneous
appeal was dismissed by the High Court on 19th August 1989.
It is not in dispute between the parties that no further
proceedings were initiated by defendant no.2 against the
decision of the High Court in C.M.A. No. 114 of 1984. It is
thereafter that on 30th August 1994 defendant no.2 filed
I.A. No. 1307 of 1994 in O.S. 75 of 1958 praying that the
question whether the plaintiffs were entitled to get final
decree may be decided as a preliminary issue. Same
contentions were re-agitated by him by submitting that as he
was armed with a certificate of purchase issued by the Land
Tribunal the title of landlord was extinguished and it was
also contended that since more than 30 years, after t he
time statutorily fixed for deposit of redemption money, had
expired redemption price could not longer be deposited, nor
could the property be redeemed. This I.A was dismissed by
the Trial Court on 31st May 1995. Thereafter defendant no.2
carried the matter in revision before the High Court by way
of S.R.O. No. 1271 of 1995 which came to be dismissed by the
impugned judgment dated 18th October 1995. It is this
judgment of the High Court which is challenged in the
present appeal on grant of special leave to appeal.
Rival Contentions
Leave senior counsel Shri T.R.G. Warriyar, appearing
for the appellants, submitted that after the preliminary
decree got confirmed by the High Court the Kerala Land
Reforms Act got amended and under the amending provisions a
new statutory right got conferred on defendant no.2 to
become a deemed purchaser of the suit land which was earlier
held by him as otti mortgagee and as this was a new
statutory right he was entitled to get it enforced through
the Tribunal and that is what he had done and had obtained
purchase certificate from the competent tribunal, which had
become final between the parties and, therefore, on the
principle of res judicata the said certificate which had
become conclusive under the Amending Act had to be given
effect to by the Trial Court and the final decree
proceedings were required to be dismissed qua defendant
no.2. It was also submitted that the decision of this Court
in the case of Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra) was required to
be re-considered as it had erroneously held that proceedings
under Section 72B of the Amending Act could not be
entertained by the Tribunal till the Civil Court resolved
the controversy whether the claimant was a tenant or not.
That the Amending Act was a complete code in itself laying
down its own machinery for adjudication of rights of parties
and as the decision was rendered by the competent tribunal
which had become final inter parties it could not be held as
laid down in the aforesaid decision of this Court that
Section 72B proceedings could not be entertained by the
Tribunal till the question of tenancy was finally decided by
the Civil Court in the hierarchy of appeals. In this
connection strong reliance was placed on the earlier
decision of two Judge Bench of this Court in the case of
Chettiam Veettil (supra) for submitting that once the Land
Tribunal issues certificate of purchase under Section 72K of
the Amending Act it becomes final and conclusive and cannot
be gone behind by the Civil in Chettiam Veettil (supra) was
not noticed in the latter decision rendered by two Judge
Bench of this Court in Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra). Learned
senior counsel for the appellants, therefore, contended that
I.A No. 1307 of 1994 was wrongly rejected by the Trial Court
as well as by the High Court and should have been granted.
In the alternative it was contended that in any case final
decree proceedings would not survive as they were barred by
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limitation and that the earlier decision of the Appellate
Court holding that the final decree proceedings were not
barred by limitation and hence remanding the proceedings for
decision on merits was a remand order which was confirmed by
the High Court in Miscellaneous Appeal but against the said
decision the appellant could not have filed a special leave
petition as it was at an interlocutory stage but now before
this Court he can legitimately contend that the final decree
proceedings were barred by limitation and even on that
additional ground his application I.A. No.1307 of 1994 ought
to have been granted. In support of this contention it was
submitted that the preliminary decree was dated 22nd January
1963 while the final decree application was moved by
defendant no.11 as late as on 17th November 1979. It was,
therefore, filed beyond the permissible period of three year
under the residuary Article in the scheme of Limitation Act
for filing such applications. In any case, placing reliance
on a decision of this Court in the case of Mohd. Abdul
Khader Mohd. Kastim and another v. Pareethij Kunju Sayed
Ahammed and others [(1996) 11 SCC 83], it was submitted that
as the redemption money was not deposited within statutory
period of six months by the plaintiff or by any of the other
supporting defendants the final decree proceedings could not
b e continued any further and the application for passing
the final decree was required to be dismissed even on that
ground. He, however, lastly submitted that in case this
Court is inclined to remand the application of the
appellant, I.A. No.1307 of 1994, for a fresh decision by the
Civil Court on the issue of tenancy of defendant no.2 then
the question of limitation may also be kept open for
consideration of the Trial Court.
Learned senior counsel Shri T.L.V. Iyer, appearing for
the respondents on the other hand submitted that there is no
conflict between he aforesaid two decisions of the two
Division Benches of this Court. That in the case of Mathevan
Padmanabhan (supra) K. Ramaswamy, J. speaking for the Bench
had to consider the question whether in a suit filed after
the amendment of the Kerala Land Reforms Act in 1969 when
the issued of tenancy arose for consideration and was not
finally decided, an application under Section 72B by such a
claimant could have been granted. The said decision on the
facts of that case was rightly rendered by holding that 72B
application should have been kept pending by the Land
Tribunal till the question of tenancy of the claimant was
finally decided in the hierarchy of proceedings. It was also
submitted that the said view propounded by the Division
Bench of two learned Judges of this Court is not in conflict
with the earlier decision of the other tow Judge Bench in
Chettiam Vettil (supra) as in that case an entirely
different question was considered namely, when a claimant
had got his tenancy right adjudicated upon by the Tribunal
and got a certificate of purchase under Section 72K which
was final and conclusive whether in a separate and
independent proceedings under the very Act before the Land
Revenue Board for deciding the question of surplus holding
of such tenant the said certificate could be gone behind by
the Land Revenue Board. Thus the controversy posed for
consideration of the earlier Bench of this Court in Chettiam
Veettil (supra) was entirely different and consequently it
cannot be said that there was any conflict of the decisions
rendered by the two Benches of this Court. It was next
contended that even assuming that the Amending Act could be
pressed in service by defendant no.2, as he was seeking to
invoke the provisions of this Act pending the civil
litigation between the parties Section 108 sub-section (3)
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of the very same Amending Act on which he placed reliance
would stare in the face and would have required him to move
the Civil Court for appropriate direction under the Amending
Act read with the parent Act and under these circumstances
proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 125 of the parent Act
would get attracted to such a controversy and as it was a
pending suit wherein such a question was raised it was for
the Civil Court to decide this question and consequently the
Land Tribunal would naturally have no jurisdiction to go
into this question. As a result whatever decision the Land
Tribunal might have rendered in favour of defendant no.2 and
the consequential purchase certificate issued to him would
all be an exercise in futility and would be without
jurisdiction. Hence the Trial Court rightly rejected
defendant no.2’s application I.A. No.1307 of 1994 and
consequently the impugned decision of the High Court in
revision application confirming that order of the Trial
Court cannot be found fault with. He, however, fairly stated
that even in earlier proceedings the Appellate Court had
clearly observed while remanding the final decree
proceedings for decision of the Trial Court that all other
contentions which could be put forward by defendant no.2
would be open for scrutiny of the Court and consequently
whether he can get benefit of the protection of the Kerala
Land Reforms (Amendment) Act could even now be considered by
the Civil Court afresh without in any way being influenced
by the incompetent and infructuous proceedings earlier
initiated by defendant no.2 before the Land Tribunal and the
certificate of purchase obtained by him consequent thereto.
On the question of limitation it was submitted that once the
application for passing final decree was held to be within
limitation by the Appellate Court which remanded the
proceedings for decision on merits and as that decision was
confirmed by the High Court in Miscellaneous Appeal, this is
not the stage in the special leave petition arising out of
the decision on interim application No. 1307 of 1994 for
raising such a contention and if at all such a contention
may be open to the appellants for being canvassed on any
legally permissible grounds centering round the question of
limitation it can be raised only when the final decree
proceedings culminate against them in the hierarchy of
proceedings and if an occasion arises for the appellants to
ultimately come to this Court in further S.L.P. against such
final decree if passed against them. But even in those
future proceedings at least up to the stage of the High
Court such a contention would not be open for being
canvassed again. In this connection our attention was
invited to a decision of a Bench of three learned Judges of
this Court in the case of Satyadhyan Ghosal and others v.
Smt. Deorajin Debi and another [AIR 1960 SC 941].
Points for determination
In view of the aforesaid rival contentions the
following points arise for our consideration ;
1. Whether the decision rendered on 18th July 1994 by the
Kerala Land Tribunal holding defendant no.2 to be a
tenant entitled to purchase the landlord’s rights and
the final order dated 28th October 1974, directing
issuance of certificate of purchase, passed by the
Tribunal and the certificate of purchase no.53 dated
25th July 1975 issued to him under Section 72K of the
Kerala Land Reforms Act as amended by Act 35 of 1969
can be treated to be final and conclusive an d binding
on the parties and on account of which the final decree
proceedings against defendant no.2 should be held to be
incompetent and are required to be closed.
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2. If the answer to the aforesaid point is in the negative
whether the Trial Court in the final decree proceedings
which are pending between he parties can consider the
contention that defendant no.2 had got the benefit of
the provisions of the Amending Act 35 of 1969 as a
cultivating tenant to purchase the suit land.
3. If the appellants are held entitled to agitate the said
contention and if ultimately the said contention is
held in their favour in the hierarchy of proceedings
can the appellants thereafter request the Land Tribunal
to issue appropriate certificate of purchase under
Section 72K of the Kerala Land Reforms Act in the light
of the final decision of the Civil Court rendered in
their favour on this aspect.
4. Whether there is any conflict between the decisions of
this Court in the case of Chettiam Veettil (supra) and
in the case of Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra).
5. Whether the final decree proceedings are barred by
limitation.
6. What final order ?
We will deal with these points seriatim.
Point No. 1
So far as this point is concerned we must keep in view
the salient facts of the case which have stood well
established on the record. It is not in dispute between the
parties that original defendant no.2 was an otti mortgagee
pursuant to the mortgage dated 01st December 1944 binding
between the parties. It is also not in dispute that the Ste
Deed said to have been executed by original defendant no.1
in favour of defendant no.2 on 27th July 1955 is finally
held to be not legal and operative and consequently
defendant no.2 could be treated to be only an otti mortgage.
It is also not in dispute between the parties that
preliminary decree for redemption which had been passed by
the Civil Court has stood confirmed up to the High Court in
Second Appeal No. 334 of 1966 which was dismissed by the
High Court on 19th February 1969 and thus the preliminary
decree has become final. It was thereafter that defendant
no.2 during the pendency of final decree proceedings before
the Civil Court tried to agitate his contention before the
Kerala Land Tribunal that he was a protected tenant as per
the provisions of the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment) Act 35
of 1969 and on the basis of that contention he ultimately
got order in his favour from the Tribunal. The question is
whether, pending the civil suit against him for redemption,
such an exercise could have been legally undertaken by him
before the Tribunal and whether the Land Tribunal acting
under the provisions of the Amending Act 35 of 1969 had
jurisdiction to grant him any such relief. For deciding this
question relevant provisions of the Kerala Land Reforms Act.
1963 as amended by the Amending Act 35 of 1969 will have to
be seen. Learned senior counsel for the appellants fairly
stated that the parent Act being Kerala Land Reforms Act,
1963 which came on the Statute Book with effect from 01st
April 1964 did not give defendant no.2 any right of tenancy
and the further right to become a deemed purchaser of the
land. However, according to him, after the Amending Act 35
of 1969 became operative from 01st January 1970 the
situation changed and a fresh statutory right came to inhere
in defendant no.2. In order to appreciate this contention it
is necessary to note a few relevant provisions of the said
Act.
With effect from 01st January 1070 pursuant to the
Amending Act 35 of 1969 the definition of ‘Kanam as found in
Section 2(22) was amended by the legislature and it is this
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amended definition which is pressed in service by the
learned senior counsel for the appellants for submitting
that defendant no.2 became a kanam-holder. The very same Act
defines a ‘tenant’ as per Section 2(57), amongst others, to
include a kanamdar. Putting store on these provisions
defendant no.2 straightaway approached the Land Tribunal
under Section 72B of the Act alleging that as he was a
cultivating tenant of the land he had a right to get the
land assigned to him under the said provision and it was
that application which was allowed by the Tribunal which
fixed the purchase price as per Section 72D of the Kerala
Land Reforms Act as amended by the Amending Act and then
certificate of purchase was issued in favour of defendant
no.2 under Section 72K. The moot question is whether pending
the civil suit between the parties it was open to defendant
no.2 to directly approach the Tribunal for getting the
aforesaid orders which according to learned senior counsel
for the appellants have become binding as res judicata
between the parties. It is now well settled that even if a
decision if right or wrong if it is rendered by a competent
court inter parties it would bind as res judicata.
Therefore, the short question is whether the Land Tribunal
under the amending provisions had jurisdiction to grant the
said relief to defendant no.2. So far as this question is
concerned the very same Amending Act 35 of 1969 contemplated
a class of claimants of tenancy rights who had already
suffered decrees for possession from competent civil courts
passed prior to the coming into force of the Amending Act or
against whom civil suits for such reliefs were pending on
the date on which the amending provisions came into force,
that is, 01st January 1970. These two provisions which were
styled as transitory provisions in the Amending Act are
required to be noted. Section 108 sub-section (2) and (3)
read as under :
"108(2)- Any decree passed before
the commencement of this section
for the dispossession of a person
from the land in his possession,
pursuant to which dispossession has
not been effected, may, on the
application of such person to the
court which passed the decree be
reopened and the matter may be
disposed of in accordance with the
provisions of the principal Act as
amended by this Act.
(3) - If in any suit, application,
appeal, revision, review,
proceedings in execution of a
decree or other proceedings pending
at the commencement of this section
before any court, tribunal, officer
or other authority, any person
claims any benefit, right or remedy
conferred by any of the provisions
of the principal Act or the
principal Act as amended by this
Act, such suit, application,
appeal, revision, review,
proceedings, in execution or other
proceedings shall be disposed of in
accordance with the provisions of
the principal Act as amended by
this Act."
It is not in dispute that these transitory provisions still
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hold the field. A mere look at Section 108(2) as found in
the Amending Act shows that it would apply in cases where
decrees for possession are already finally passed against
persons who seek benefit of the Amending Act. In the present
case as the civil suit for partition and redemption was
pending at the stage of passing final decree it could not be
said that there was a final decree for redemption and
possession passed against defendant no.2. Hence Section
108(2) is out of picture. However, Section 108 sub-section
(3) would directly apply to the facts of the present case.
In the present pending suit O.S. No. 75 of 1958 after the
stage of preliminary decree and before final decree is
passed which even till date is not finally disposed of by
the Trial Court and the final decree is still not passed,
defendant no.2’s claim to be a tenant protected by the
provisions of the Amending Act with effect from 01st January
1970 as he claimed such a benefit or right or remedy
conferred by the provisions of the principal Act as amended
by the Amending Act, has to be disposed of by the Trial
Court in accordance with the provisions of the principal Act
as amended by the Amending Act. This is the mandate of
Section 108(3) of the Amending Act. Keeping in view this
legislative mandate we have to find out as to what should
have been done in such a situation by defendant no.2 as well
as by the Civil Court where the suit is pending. In such a
pending suit when a contention is raised by defendant no.2
about his claim of protected tenancy under the Amending Act
the Civil Court obviously has to follow the procedure laid
down in Section 125 of the principal Act. Section 125 with
its sub-sections reads as under :
"125. Bor of jurisdiction of civil
courts.-(1) No court shall have
jurisdiction to settle, decide or
deal with any question or to
determine any matter which is by or
under this Act required to be
settled, decided or dealt with or
to be determined by the Land
Tribunal or the appellate authority
or the Land Board or the Taluk Land
Board or the Government or an
officer of the Government :
Provided that nothing contained in
this sub-section shall apply to
proceedings pending in any court at
the commencement of the Kerala Land
Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1969.
(2) No order of the Land Tribunal
or the appellate authority or the
Land Board or the Taluk Land Board
or the Government or an officer of
the Government made under this Act
shall be questioned in any civil
court, except as provided in this
Act.
(3) If in any suit or other
proceeding any question regarding
rights of a tenant or of a
kudikidappukaran including a
question as to whether a person is
a tenant or a kudikidappukaran
arise, the civil court shall stay
the suit or other proceeding and
refer such question to the Land
Tribunal having jurisdiction over
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the area in which the land or part
thereof is situate together with
the relevant records for the
decision of that question only.
(4) The Land Tribunal shall
decided the question referred to it
under sub-section (3) and return
the records together with its
decision to the civil court.
(5) The civil court shall then
proceed to decide the suit or other
proceedings accepting the decision
of Land Tribunal on the question
referred to it.
(6) The decision of the Land
Tribunal on the question referred
to it shall, for the purposes of
appeal be deemed to be part of the
finding of the civil court.
(7) No civil court shall have power
to grant injunction in any suit or
other proceeding referred to in
sub-section (3) restraining any
person from entering into or
occupying or cultivating any land
or kudikidappu or to appoint a
receiver and property in respect of
which a question referred to in
that sub-section has arisen, till
such question is decided by the
Land Tribunal and any such
injunction granted or appointment
made before the commencement of the
Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment)
Act, 1969, or before such question
has arisen shall stand cancelled.
(8) In this section, "civil court"
shall include a Rent Control Court
as defined in the Kerala Buildings
(Lease and Rent Control) Act,
1965."
Consequently, in the present pending suit the Civil Court’s
jurisdiction would have remained barred to decide or deal
with any of the questions raised by defendant no.2 about his
tenancy but for the proviso to sub-section (1) of Section
125 which clearly states t hat nothing contained in that
sub-section shall apply to proceedings pending in any court
at the commencement of the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment)
Act, 1969. Because of this proviso the net result is that in
the present pending suit there will be no bar of
jurisdiction of the Civil Court in deciding the question
whether defendant no.2 was a protected tenant under the
amended provisions of the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment)
Act with effect from 01st January 1970 or not. This claim of
defendant no.2 could be decided only by the Civil Court in
the present pending suit and consequently there would remain
no occasion for the Civil Court to follow the procedure of
sub-section (3) of section 125 which obviously would apply
to only such suits and other proceedings which are filed
after the Amending Act came into force and wherein such
contentions are raised about the status of a party to the
suit to be a tenant under the Amending Act. It is obvious
that in all types of civil disputes civil courts have
inherent jurisdiction as per Section 9 of the Code of Civil
Procedure unless a part of that jurisdiction is carved out
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from such jurisdiction, expressly or by necessary
implication, by any statutory provision and conferred on any
other tribunal or authority. On a conjoint reading of
proviso to Section 125(1) of the principal Act and Section
108(3) of the Amending Act it must, therefore, be held that
the question of status of defendant no.2 under the Amending
Act 35 of 1969 could have been decided only by the Civil
Court in the pending suit and not by the Land Tribunal
under the Amending Act. Consequently the direct approach
made by him to the Land Tribunal under the Amending Act must
be held to be premature and incompetent and it must also be
further held that consequently the orders obtained by him
from the Land Tribunal were rendered by a tribunal which had
no jurisdiction to pass such orders and they were nullities.
Hence, no question of res judicata would arise in connection
with such orders of an incompetent authority. Learned senior
counsel for the appellant was right when he contended that
the Kerala Land Reforms Act, as amended, is a complete code
in itself and it is only the Land Tribunal which can issue
purchase certificate under Section 72K and the Civil Court
cannot give such a purchase certificate. That may be so.
However, such certificate cannot be granted to all and
sundry. The claimant must prove that he is a cultivating
tenant under the Act. The would be a condition precedent to
be established by the claimant before he could get such
purchase certificate. The fulfilment of such a condition
precedent would require decision on the basis question
whether he is a cultivating tenant under the Amending Act or
not. If the suit was not pending before the Civil Court and
if defendant no.2 being an otti-holder had gone to the Land
Tribunal after the Amending Act came into force, he would
have been justified in involving the jurisdiction of the
Land Tribunal and if the Tribunal after hearing the parties
had granted such a purchase certificate it would have
remained conclusive and binding between the parties, but
such is not the fact situation in the present case. In the
present case, as seen above, the suit was already pending
between he parties. Not only that, defendant no.2 had
suffered the preliminary decree for redemption of suit
mortgage by the time Amending Act came into force.
Consequently, proviso to Section 125(1) squarely got
attracted and did not prevent the Civil Court from deciding
such a contention as canvassed by defendant no.2 regarding
his alleged rights flowing from the Amending Act as a
protected tenant entitled to purchase the land. Hence, the
emphasis put by the learned senior counsel for the
appellants on the alleged conclusiveness of the purchase
certificate issued to defendant no.2 by the Land Tribunal
under Section 72K, on the facts of the present case, is
found to be totally devoid of any efficacy. Point No.1,
therefore, must be answered in the negative against the
appellants and in favour of the contesting respondents.
Point No. 2
In the light of the decision on the first point it is
obvious that when in a pending suit the defendant raises the
contention about his tenancy rights under the amended
provisions of the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment) Act, such
a contention would validly attract the provisions of Section
108(3) of the amended Act. As seen earlier, once that
happens and once it is held that Civil Court had
jurisdiction to entertain such a contention and such
jurisdiction is not barred, Application No. 1307 of 1994
moved by defendant no.2 can legitimately be treated as one
moved under Section 108 sub-section (3) of the Amending Act
read with proviso to Section 125(1) of the parent Act.
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Consequently, before deciding to pass final decree in the
redemption suit the Civil Court would be required to
adjudicate on merits of this contention after hearing the
contesting parties. It will be for the Civil Court to find
out whether defendant no.2 was entitled to be treated as
tenant under the Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment) Act and
whether he could validly invoke provisions of Section 72B to
be a cultivating tenant within the sweep of Kerala Land
Reforms Act as amended by Act 35 of 1969 and whether
accordingly he was entitled to get further benefit of
fixation of purchase price and issuance of purchaser
certificate under the said provisions of the Amending Act.
All these consequential statutory benefits claimed by
defendant no.2 would depend upon the moot and the basis
question whether he was a cultivating tenant within the
sweep of the Amending Act or not. Consequently, the
wholesale rejection of defendant no.2’s application I.A. No.
1307 of 1994 by the Trial Court and as confirmed by the High
Court in the impugned judgment in C.R.P. No. 1271 of 1995,
must be held to be uncalled for and unsustainable on this
ground alone. point No. 2 is, therefore, answered in the
affirmative in favour of the appellants and against the
contesting respondents.
Point No. 3
So far as this point is concerned it is obvious that if
ultimately the Civil Court in the proceedings to be remanded
pursuant to our present offer decides I.A. No. 1307 of 1994
in favour of the appellants and it is held, after hearing
the contesting parties and after permitting them to lead
whatever evidence they want to lead on this point that
defendant no.2 was a cultivating tenant entitled to the
benefit of the provisions of the Amending Act 35 of 1969 and
if it is finally held in the hierarchy of these proceedings
that the appellants, as his heirs, are entitled to purchase
the land in question being armed with such a final order of
the Court which would bind inter parties as res judicata to
submit before the Land Tribunal for fixation of appropriate
price of the land as required by the procedural provisions
of Section 72D and other succeeding relevant provisions of
the Act in connection with the fixation of the purchase
price and after that gamut is gone through by the competent
tribunal ultimately a situation would be reached where a
certificate of purchase under Section 72K can be issued to
the appellants. But all these stages from 72B to 72K would
only arise after a final decision s rendered by the Civil
Court in the remanded proceedings in I.A. No. 1307 of 1994
that original defendant no.2 was a cultivating tenant
entitled to the protection the Kerala Land Reforms
(Amendment) Act, 1969 and not before. Learned senior counsel
for the appellants was right when he contended that the
Civil Court cannot issue any purchase certificate. He was
also right when he contended that the time for applying for
purchase certificate under the Kerala Land Reforms Act has
already expired. But this difficulty voiced by learned
senior counsel for the appellants on the peculiar facts of
this case can obviously not come in his way for the simple
reason that defendant no.2 had already earlier applied to
the competent authority under the Amending Act 35 of 1969 as
early as on 24th December 1973 under Section 72B being O.A.
599 of 1973. Even though we have found that the said
proceedings as filed were premature and were filed before
incompetent authority at that stage with the result that the
consequential orders are found to be without jurisdiction
still it cannot b e gainsaid that defendant no.2 had tried
to invoke within time the provisions of Section 72B of the
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Kerala Land Reforms (Amendment) Act. Thus the said
application, on the peculiar facts of this case, can be
deemed to be pending before the competent authority awaiting
the final decision of the Civil Court in the hierarchy of
the proceedings pursuant to our present order. Even
otherwise on the facts of the present case it would be
equally open to the competent authority in the light of the
final decision if at all rendered by the Civil Court in
hierarchy of proceedings in favour of original defendant
no.2 to the effect that he was entitled to the protection of
the Amending Act as a cultivating tenant, to exercise suo
motu powers for passing appropriate orders in the light of
the final decision of the Civil Court in the hierarchy of
proceedings by resorting to t he machinery provisions of
Section 72B onwards culminating into the issuance of
appropriate purchase certificate under Section 72K. Point
No.3, therefore, is answered in the affirmative on the
supposition and assumption that the appellants ultimately
succeed in convincing the Civil Court and also the higher
authorities in the hierarchy of proceedings that defendant
no.2 was a cultivating tenant entitled to the protection of
the Amending Act 35 of 1969. We should not be treated to
have decided one way or the other whether the appellants are
in fact entitled to such a benefit of the Amending Act. That
question is kept open for decision in the remanded
proceedings by the Civil Court on relevant evidence to be
led by the parties. The said decision shall be rendered by
the Civil Court while deciding the remanded I.A. No. 1307 of
1994 without in any way being influenced by the abortive
exercise earlier undertaken by defendant no.2 before the
Land Tribunal and the orders passed therein including the
purchase certificate issued in his favour by the said
authority on 25th July 1975. In short as all these earlier
proceedings are treated to be null and void, the Civil Court
will have to decide the entire question de novo afresh on
its own merits.
Point Ni. 4
So far as this point is concerned as we will presently
point out in fact there is no conflict between the decisions
of two Judge Benches of this Court in the case of Mathevan
Padmanabhan (supra) and in the case of Chettiam Veettil
(supra). In the case of Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra) a Bench
of two learned Judges presided over by K. Ramaswamy, J., had
to consider the question whether in a suit filed after the
coming into operation of the Kerala Land Reforms Act as
amended by Act 35 of 1969, if question of tenancy of the
claimant was not finally decided in the hierarchy of
proceedings an application under Section 72B of the Amending
Act could have been finally decided by the competent
authority under the Act. Answering this question in the
negative the following observations were made in paragraph 5
of the Report ;
"The first question is whether the
High Court was justified in holding
that the Land Tribunal would have
kept the application filed under
Section 72-B pending til the
dispute of the tenancy is finally
determined. On a comspectus of the
relevant provisions, the scheme of
the Act and on the facts and
circumstance of the case, we
consider that the High Court is
right in its approach. The very
dispute whether the appellant is a
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tenant and is entitled to purchase
the property by virtue of that
capacity, hinges upon the
determination of the question
whether he is a tenant. When that
dispute is pending adjudication,
the Tribunal was not right in
directing the appellant to purchase
the property. Ultimately, it the
High Court on appeal, finds that
the appellant is not a tenant, his
entitlement to purchase the
property also is lost. Under those
circumstances, the appropriate
course for the Tribunal would have
been to keep the application filed
under Section 72-B pending till the
dispute is resolved in the Court.
Therefore, the High Court is right
in recording a finding in this
behalf."
In our view on the facts of the case before that Bench no
other conclusion was legally possible. Before an application
under Section 72B of the Amending Act could be granted the
condition precedent whether the claimant was a cultivating
tenant or not had to be decided. It is after the decision on
the said question that further question about the fixation
of price etc. would arise. On the facts of the case before
the Bench the question of alleged tenancy of the claimant
was not finally decided in the hierarchy of proceedings.
Obviously, therefore, application under Section 72B could
not have been finally decided and was required to be kept
pending. Learned senior counsel for the appellants submitted
that the Tribunal is a competent authority under the Act to
deal with such questions and merely because a civil suit is
pending the statutory obligation of the authority could not
be bypassed. As a general proposition the said contention
cannot be gainsaid. However, that would pre-suppose a
situation where the Land Tribunal is approached on a clean
slate meaning thereby no other proceedings are pending in
any other court and the Tribunal has to decide the
jurisdictional question whether the claimant is a
cultivating tenant entitled to the benefit of Section 72B or
not. In such a situation it is the Tribunal which h as to
decide both the condition precedent for applicability of
Section 72B and the consequential orders which are to be
passed therein. But when in a pending suit issue of tenancy
is referred to the Tribunal under Section 125(3) and once
the finding of tenancy is returned to the Civil Court and
when such a finding becomes that of the Civil Court as per
Section 125(6), then it if is pending for further scrutiny
by the Appellate Court it has to be held that the status of
cultivating tenant has not become final and so long as that
has not become final there is no occasion of the Land
Tribunal to pass final orders under Section 72B. We have
also to keep in view that in the case before the Bench
presided over by K. Ramaswamy,J., the proviso to Section
125(1) was out of picture as the suit in which the
controversy arose was filed subsequent to the coming into
force of the Amending Act 35 of 1969. Therefore, when
Section 125(3) read with Section 125(6) of the Kerala Land
Reforms Act applied, a reference had to be made to the Land
Reforms authorities for deciding the status of such a tenant
and once such finding was returned to the Civil Court it
became a finding of the Civil Court itself which could be
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challenged and was challenged higher up in the hierarchy and
that finding had not become final. Therefore, as rightly
held in that case, there remained no occasion for the Land
Reforms authorities to proceed under Section 72B onwards and
to pass final orders till that finding became final inter
parties. Therefore, on the peculiar facts of the case before
the Bench in the above case, the conclusion to which that
Bench reached as found in paragraph 5 of the Report cannot
be said to be in any way uncalled for or erroneous as tried
to be submitted by learned senior counsel for the
appellants. So far as the facts of the present case are
concerned, as we have seen earlier, the suit for redemption
was already pending and is still pending and in the meantime
the Amending Act 35 of 1969 came into force from 01st
January 1070. Consequently, strictly speaking, the decision
of this Court in Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra) does not get
attracted for resolving the controversy posed before us.
So far as the judgment of the earlier Division Bench of
the two learned Judge of this Court in the case of Chettiam
Veettil (supra) is concerned it proceeds on an entirely
different set of facts. In that case the Land Tribunal had
already decided the question about the right of the
cultivating tenant to be the deemed purchaser of the Land
and had fixed the purchase price and also issued certificate
of purchase. When that was done no civil suit was pending
inter parties filed either prior to the coming into force of
the Amending Act or even subsequently. Hence proceedings
under Section 72B were fully competent and had resulted into
a valid purchase certificate which had remained final,
conclusive and binding. The question was when the
cultivating tenant was a deemed purchaser armed with such
certificate, while deciding his surplus holding of land the
Taluk Land Board functioning under that very Act could go
behind such a certificate. On the scheme of the Act the
conclusion to which this Court reached, speaking through
Shinghal.J., was obvious that the said certificate issued
under section 72K did raise irrebutable presumption as per
sub-section (2) thereto and even after considering the
conclusive eventuality following thereto the Taluk Land
Board had ample jurisdiction under Section 35(5) to pass
appropriate order regarding the surplus holding of the
occupant. We fail to appreciate how the ratio of the
aforesaid decision rendered on the peculiar facts of that
case and deciding entirely a different controversy could
ever be pressed in service in the present case or even for
demonstrating any supposed conclusive between the said
decision of this Court and the decision rendered in Mathevan
Padmanabhan (supra) in the light of a different set of facts
and circumstances, as seen earlier.
Before parting with the discussion on this point we may
take stock of the resultant situation -
1. In civil suits between he disputing parties pending on
or before 01st January 1970 when the Kerala Land Reforms
(Amendment) Act, 1969 came into force, if a contention is
raised by one of the contesting parties requiring
determination of any matter which is by or under the
Amending Act required to be settled, decided or dealt with
by the authorities functioning under the Amending Act the
Civil Court before which such a question arises will not
lose jurisdiction to decide such a question in view of the
proviso to sub-section (1) of Section 125 of the principal
Act read with Section 108(3) of the Amending Act and such a
question can be decided by the Civil Court itself by
applying the relevant provisions of the Amending Act read
with the principal Act so far as the question of the status
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of tenancy of the contesting party is concerned and once
such a question is finally decided in favour of the
contesting party and it is held to be entitled to the
benefit of the Amending Act then appropriate consequential
orders and relief on the basis of the final decision as
aforesaid could be obtained from the competent authorities
functioning under the Amending Act.
2. After coming into operation of the Amending Act 35 of
1969 if a question arises whether a person is a cultivating
tenant entitled to the benefits of the Amending Act and no
civil suit is pending wherein such a person is a party then
appropriate proceedings can be initiated by such a person
before the competent authority under the Amending Act and if
such person is found entitled to the benefits of the Act in
the hierarchy of proceedings under the Amending Act then
appropriate further relief could be obtained by such person
from the authorities under the Act and it purchase
certificate is issued to such a person under Section 72K of
the Amending Act it would be binding and conclusive between
he contesting parties in proceedings before such
authorities.
3. If after coming into operation of the Amending Act 35
of 1969 a civil suit is filed wherein a question arises
regarding the status of a contesting party to be a tenant
and such a question by then is not already decided finally
between the contesting parties by competent authority under
the Amending Act, then the Civil Court will have to follow
the procedure of Section 125(3) read with sub-section (6)
thereof and having made a reference to the competent court
under the Amending Act obtain appropriate finding on the
said question from the said authority and once such finding
is received and which will be treated as a finding by the
Civil Court itself subject to the said finding becoming
final in the hierarchy of proceedings before the appellate
authorities entitled to re-consider t he said finding of the
Civil Court appropriate further orders in favour of such
contesting party which is finally held to be a tenant can be
obtained from the competent authority under the Amending Act
including certificate of purchase under Section 72K of the
Amending Act and such a certificate would be treated as
binding and conclusive between the parties.
4. After the coming into operation of the Amending Act 35
of 1969 and in the absence of any suit by then filed wherein
the contesting parry claims tenancy rights. It such a person
already gets appropriate orders from t he competent
authorities in the hierarchy of proceedings under the Act
and certificate of purchase is obtained under Section 72K of
the Amending Act, and thereafter it a civil suit gets filed
against it by the other contesting party then in such a
civil suit it could be said that the question of
determination of right of the contesting party as a tenant
would not survive as it was already decided by the competent
authority under the Act earlier and the said decision having
become final in the hierarchy of proceedings under the
Amending Act would operate as res judicata between the
parties. Under such circumstances there will be no occasion
for the Civil Court to follow the procedure of Section
125(3) read with Section 125(6) and only on the basis of the
binding decision of competent authority under the Amending
Act between the parties the Civil Court can dispose of such
subsequently filed suit.
Aforesaid are the four categories of situations which
would emerge on account of the interaction of the Amending
Act 35 of 1969 on the one hand and the Civil Court
proceedings on the other between the very same contesting
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parties as and when such occasions arise. It becomes at once
clear that present is a case which falls in the first
category. Decision of the Decision Bench of this Court in
the case of Mathevan Padmanabhan (supra) was concerned with
a case which fell in category no.3, while the earlier
decision of the Division Bench of this Court in the case of
Chettiam Veettil (supra) was concerned with a case which
fell in category no.2. Obviously, therefore, there could
never be any conflict between the ratio of the decisions
rendered in these two cases. Point No. 4 is, therefore,
answered in the negative by holding that there is no
conflict between the ratio of the aforesaid two judgments of
this Court.
Point No. 5
So far as this alternative contention is concerned it
has to be kept in view that the Trial Court by its order
dated 07th April 1982 dismissed the application of
defendant no. 11 on the ground that the application for
final decree was barred by limitation. Defendant no.11 then
filed A.S. 1982 of 1962 against that decision. The Appellate
Court by its judgment dated 10th July 1983 allowed the
appeal holding that the final decree application was not
barred by limitation. Consequently the final decree
application was remanded to the Trial Court for passing
final decree after considering other objections raised by
the second defendant. The 2nd defendant challenged the order
of remand by filing C.M.A. No. 114 of 1984 before the High
Court and the High Court by its order dated 19th August 1989
held that the Appellate Court was right in holding that the
final decree application was competent and was not barred by
limitation. It is of course, true that at that stage
defendant no.2 had no occasion to file an S.L.P. against the
said remand order of the Appellate Court as confirmed by the
High Court. But that does not man that during the remanded
proceedings when his application I.A. 1307 of 1994 got
dismissed, and said dismissal got confirmed by the High
Court by the impugned order, in this S.L.P. against the
impugned order of the High Court pertaining only to I.A.
1307 of 1994, the appellants could raise the contention of
limitation and challenge the remand order in A.S.No.198 of
1982 as confirmed by the High Court on 19th August 1989. The
reason is obvious. As laid down by this Court in Satyadhyan
Ghosal (supra) an interlocutory order which had not been
appealed from either because no appeal lay or even though an
appeal lay an appeal was not taken can be challenged in an
appeal from the final decree or order. A special provision
is made in Section 105(2) Civil Procedure Code as regards
orders of remand. But even under Section 105(2) the
correctness of an order of remand can b e challenged in
appeal from the final decision provided the order of remand
is not appealable. The question whether final decree
proceedings have become barred by limitation or not world
arise for consideration of this Court only if ultimately
final decree gets passed against the appellants pursuant to
the earlier finding reached by lower appellate court and
High Court at interlocutory stage that these proceedings
were not barred by limitation. It is only then that the
appellants can bring in challenge the earlier remand order
which results into the final decision against them and can
urge that the said interlocutory order of remand as
confirmed earlier by the High Court was itself not correct.
The stage is still not reached for the appellants. Hence we
keep this question open at this stage. It is, of course,
true that at the earlier stage when the Appellate Court
remanded the proceedings the question of limitation
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canvassed for consideration was on one aspect, namely,
whether an application for final decree could be filed
after three years of the passing of the preliminary decree.
In the present proceedings the appellants also sought to
raise an additional contention whether the final decree
could ever be passed when the redemption money is not
deposited within six months and for which reliance is placed
on a decision of this Court in the case of Mohd. Abdul
Khader Mohd. Kastim (supra). However, even this contention
is also an additional facet of the plea of limitation
regarding passing of final decree. The question whether
final decree proceedings have got barred by limitation on
the ground that application for the same was initiated after
three years of the preliminary decree or whether they have
become barred on account of non-payment of redemption money
in time, would all the same pertain to the issue of
limitation for passing the final decree. All these
contentions, therefore, for whatever they are worth cannot
now be agitated at this stage by the appellants in support
of the application No. 1307 of 1994 which we are ordering to
be remanded for a fresh decision pursuant to the present
order. In these remanded proceedings the only question to be
examined by the Civil Court will be to the effect whether
the appellants can claim any legal rights flowing for
defendant no.2 from the Amending Act 35 of 1969 as a
cultivating tenant. It is obvious that if this contention
succeeds ultimately and gets confirmed in the hierarchy of
proceedings throughout then there would be no occasion for
the court ultimately to pass any final decree for redemption
against the appellants as they would succeed on merits. Then
there would remain no occasion for them to urge the question
of limitation. If on the other hand the appellants fail all
throughout on the contention about the benefit of Amending
Act 35 of 1969 and suffer a final decree for redemption then
at that stage in any future S.L.P. before this Court only
they can raise the contention of limitation and try to
demonstrate whether the remand order of the Appellate Court
and as confirmed by the High Court on 19th August 1989 would
be able to raise a further ground touching upon the very
question of limitation for passing the final decree, namely,
whether the final decree for redemption could b e passed on
account of non-payment of redemption money within the
requisite period. We, therefore, hold that this contention
is too premature to be raised at this stage. We keep it open
and do not express any opinion one way or the other in this
contention, in our view, therefore, it is equally not open
to the appellant to raise this contention before the Civil
Court in the proceedings to be remanded to it pursuant to
the present order. This point for determination is answered
by holding that it is not necessary to decide this
contention at this stage keeping it open to be decided in
appropriate future proceedings before this Court if at all
such need arises for the appellants, as discussed earlier.
Point No, 6
As a result of the aforesaid discussion on these
points it must be held that the order passed by the Trial
Court below I.A. 1307 of 1994 of 31st May 1995 as well as
the impugned order passed by the High Court in C.R.P. No.
1271 of 1995 decided on 18th October 1995 are not well
sustained and are required to be not aside entirely on
different grounds as shown by us earlier and not on the
grounds which weighed with the Trial Court as well as with
the High Court in dismissing the said I.A. No. 1307 of 1994
filed by original defendant no.2 is restored to the file of
the 1st Additional Sub-Judge, Trivandrum with a direction to
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decide the said application, as indicated hereinabove,
afresh on the question of defendant no.2’s claim to be
entitled to the protection of the Kerala Land Reforms
(Amendment) Act 35 of 1969 as a cultivating tenant. In the
light of the decision rendered on this I.A. by the Civil
Court in the remanded proceedings, it shall proceed further
in accordance with law in connection with the question of
passing appropriate final decree in the suit.
Appeal is allowed accordingly. In the facts and
circumstances of the case there will be no order as to
costs.