Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GRAM PANCHAYAT OF VILLAGE, JAMALPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MALWINDER SINGH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/07/1985
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
VARADARAJAN, A. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1394 1985 SCR Supl. (2) 28
1985 SCC (3) 661 1985 SCALE (2)35
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950, Articles 31, 31A, 254
Seventh Schedule List II Entry No. 18 and List III Entry No.
41.
Assent of President to law sought for specific purpose
- Efficacy of assent - Limited to that purpose and cannot be
extended beyond it.
Law made by Parliament - Law made by State Legislature
Inconsistency - Which law to prevail.
State Legislature whether competent to make law
relating to agrarian reform in respect of property which by
process of law vested in Central Government or Custodian.
Administration of Evacuee Property Act 1950, Section 8
(2) & Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act 1953.
Section 3 Central Act and State Act - Conflict - Whether
exists - Evacuee property - Vesting of - Shamlat-deh lands
nature of - Explained.
HEADNOTE:
Prior to the partition of India, the Shamlat-deh lands
in Punjab were owned by the proprietors of the other lands
in the village, "Hasab Rasad Khewat" in the same proportion
in which they owned the other lands. A person who did not
own any other land in the village could therefore have no
proprietary right or interest in Shamlat-deh lands. There
were some villages in Punjab which were mostly inhabited by
Muslims, with the result that almost all the lands in those
villages were owned by Muslim proprietors who, as a result
of their proprietary interest in those Lands had a
proportionate undivided’ share in the Shamlat-deh lands.
They had only an ’undivided’ share in the Shamlat-deh lands
because such lands were not liable to be partitioned they
could not be alienated and they were intended to be used and
were in fact used, without exception, as undivided’ property
of the proprietors of the other lands. Some of the villages
in Punjab and many in Haryana were inhabited partly by
Muslims and partly by non-Muslims.
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After the partition as a result of the unprecedented
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movement of population, most of the Muslims proprietors
migrated to Pakistan whereas the non-Muslims continued to
live in their villages. Multidimensional interlinked
problems of administration of the properties of those who
had left the country and rehabilitation of those that had
poured into the country arose.
The question as to the management and the preservation
of the property left by Muslim evacuees led to the passing
of the East Punjab Evacuees (Administration of Property)
Act, 14 of 1947. Section 4 thereof provided that all
interests in the property whether movable or immovable of
the evacuees vested in the Custodian appointed by the State
Government. This Act of the State Legislature, was repealed
and replaced by an Act passed by the Parliament, the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950. That Act into
force on April 17, 1950. As a result of this provision the
interest of all evacuees which had vested in the Custodian
appointed under the Punjab Act 14 of 1947, came to be vested
in the Custodian appointed under the Central Act of 1950. In
the villages which were wholly inhabited by Muslims and from
which almost the entire population migrated to Pakistan, all
the Shamlat-deh lands together with the other proprietary
lands were declared evacuee property and came to be vested
in the Custodian. In the villages which were inhabited both
by Muslims and non-Muslims, the proprietary holdings of the
Muslim evacuees vested in the Custodian and along with that
the interest of the proprietors in the Shamlat-deh lands,
such as it was also vested in the Custodian.
In the writ petitions filed in the High Court the
controversy was between the right of the Gram Panchayats to
the Shamlat-deh lands situated in those villages which fell
within their jurisdiction and, on the other hand, the right
of Rehabilitation Department of the Central Government to
allot lands of that description, to the extent of the
evacuee interest therein, to persons who migrated from
Pakistan to India after the partition of the Country.
The contention of the Central Government and, of
persons to whom its Rehabilitation Department has allotted
the Shamlat-deh lands on their migration to India, is that
the interest in such lands, of the Muslims who migrated to
Pakistan is evacuee property which the Central Government
has the right to allot under the provisions of the Displaced
Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act of 1954. The
contention of the Government of
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Punjab and of the Gram Panchayats in Punjab and Haryana is
that, by reason of the provisions of the Punjab Village
Common Lands (Regulation) Act of 1953, the interest of all
persons whether Hindus, Sikhs or Muslims, in the Shamlat-deh
lands stood extinguished and those lands were placed by the
said Act under the control and power of the respective Gram
Panchayats.
The High Court held that there was repugnancy between
the provisions of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act
of 1950 and those of the Punjab Village Common Lands
(Regulation) Act of 1953.
Allowing the appeal to this Court,
^
HELD:(By the Court) 1. There is a direct conflict
between section 8(2) of the Administration of Evacuee
Property Act 1950, and Section 3 of the Punjab Village
Common Lands (Regulation) Act, 1953 on the question of
vesting of evacuee property. [38 A]
2. The Punjab Act was reserved for the assent of the
President though for the specific and limited purpose of
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Articles 31 and 31-A of the Constitution. That assent can
not avail the State Government for the purpose of according
precedence to the law made by the Legislature namely the
Punjab Act of 1953 over the law made by the Parliament
namely the Central Act of 1950 even within the jurisdiction
of the State. [41 F,42 F]
Rahman v. Sai ILR 9 Lahore 501 & Ranjit Singh v. State
of Punjab [1965] 1 SCR 82 referred to.
Rattingan’s Digest of Customary Law in the Punjab -
Chapter X referred to.
(Per Chandrachud C.J., S. Murtaza Fazal Ali, V.D.
Tulzapurkar and A. Varadarajan, JJ.)
1. (i) A mere reading of the two sections, Section 3 of
the Punjab Act of 1953 and section 8(2) of the Central Act
of 1950 would show that there is a direct conflict between
the two provisions. Under s.4 of the East Punjab Evacuees
(Administration of Property) Act 14 of 1947 which came into
force on December 13, 1947 all interest in the property,
movable or immovable, of the evacuees vested in the
Custodian appointed by the State Government. The Central Act
of 1950 repealed by the East Punjab Act 14 of 1947. Under s.
8(2) of the Central Act of 1950 the evacuee
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property which was vested in the Custodian appointed by the
State Government under the repealed Act, was to be deemed to
be evacuee property declared as such under the Central Act
and became vested in the Custodian appointed under the
Central Act. [38 A-B]
(ii) As a result of s. 3 of the Punjab Act of 1953 the
Custodian appointed under the Central Act of 1950 was
divested of the Shamlat-deh lands, to the extent of the
interest therein of the Muslim proprietors who had migrated
to Pakistan. [38 D]
(iii) If the Punjab Legislature had not passed the Act
of 1953, the Custodian appointed or deemed to be appointed
under the Central Act of 1950 could have dealt with the
interest of the Muslim evacuees in the Shamlat-deh lands as
evacuee property, though consistently with the limitations
which operated upon that interest. He forfeited that power
because, the Punjab Act of 1953 extinguished the interest of
all persons, whether Hindus, Sikhs or Muslims, in the
Shamlat-deh lands and vested all rights, title and interest
in such lands in the respective panchayats having
jurisdiction over the village. [38 F]
2. Article 254 of the Constitution deals with situations
where there is inconsistency between the laws made by the
Parliament and the laws made by the Legislature of a State.
Since the law made by the Legislature of the State of Punjab
namely, s. 3 of the Punjab Act of 1953 is repugnant to the
law made by the Parliament which the Parliament was
competent to enact namely s. 8(2) of the Central Act of
1950, the law made by the Parliament must prevail and the
law made by the Punjab Legislature has to be held to be void
to the extent of the repugnancy. The repugnancy is to the
extent that whereas under the Central Act the interest of
the evacuees in all properties including the Shamlat-deh
lands vests in the Custodian appointed or deemed to be
appointed under that Act, the Shamlat-deh lands vest in the
Panchayats under the provisions of the State Act. [39 B-F]
3. The Punjab Act of 1953 was reserved for consideration
of the President and received his assent on December 26,
1953. Prima facie by reason of the assent of the President,
the Punjab Act would prevail in the State of Punjab over the
Act of the Parliament and the Panchayats would be at liberty
to deal with the Shamlat-deh lands according to the relevant
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Rules or Bye-laws governing the matter, including the
evacuee interest therein. The Punjab Act was reserved for
assent of the President though for the specific and limited
purpose of Articles 31 and
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31-A of the Constitution. Since the Punjab Act of 1953
extinguished all private interest in Shamlat-deh lands and
vested those lands in the Village Panchayats and since the
Act was a measure of agrarian reforms it was reserved for
the consideration of the President. [41 E-F, H-42 A]
In the instant case, the assent of the President is
sought to the law for a specific purpose, the efficacy of
the assent would be limited to that purpose and cannot be
extended beyond it. Not only was the President not appraised
in the instant case that his assent was sought because of
the repugnancy between the State Act and the pre-existing
Central Act on the vesting of evacuee properties but his
assent was sought for a different specific purpose all
together. [42 D-E]
4. Though the law made by the Parliament prevails over the
law made by the State Legislature the interest of the
evacuees in the Shamlat-deh lands cannot be dealt with
effectively by the Custodian under the Central Act because
of the peculiar incidents characteristics of such lands. The
unfortunate result is that the vesting in the Custodian of
the evacuee interest in the Shamlat-deh lands is more or
less an empty formality. It does not help the Custodian to
implement the provisions of the Central law but it excludes
the benign operation of the State Law. [42 H-43 A]
5. Parliament has passed a law which falls under entry No.
41 of the Concurrent List, while the State Legislature has
passed a law which falls under Entry No. 18 of the State
List. The law passed by the State Legislature being a
measure of agrarian reform is conductive to the welfare of
the community and there is no reason why that law should not
have effect in its full amplitude. By this process, the
village panchayats will be able to meet the needs of the
village community and secure its welfare. [43 F]
6. The Punjab Act of 1953 would prevail in the State of
Punjab over the Central Act of 1950 even in so far as
Shamlat-deh lands are concerned. [43 G]
7. Under the Central Act of 1950, the Custodian is
entitled to preserve and manage the interest of the evacuees
in all evacuee properties, which would include the Shamlat-
deh lands. Under the Punjab Act of 1953, the Shamlat-deh
lands vest in the Panchayat which carries the right of
preservation and management of such lands. By reason of the
State Act, the Custodian appointed under the Central Act of
1950 is divested of his Control over the
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evacuee interest in the Shamlat-deh lands. The impact of
this divestment, is that the Rehabilitation Department of
the Central Government loses its power to allot such lands,
to the extent of the evacuee interest therein, to displaced
Persons in order to satisfy their claims under the Displaced
Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act, 1954. Such
properties therefore, cannot from part of the Compensation
pool. Nor can these properties, to the extent of the surplus
remaining after allotment to displaced persons, be
transferred by the Central Government to the State
Government, under the ’Package Deal’ of 1961. What vests in
the Custodian is the interest of the evacuee as such
together with all the interests to which it is subject. That
interest cannot be freed from its incidents merely because
it comes to be vested in the Custodian as evacuee property.
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The Custodian gets what the evacuee had, quantitatively and
qualitatively. If the evacuee interest in Shamlat was
incapable of alienation and if Shamlat-deh lands were
regarded as reserved for the common use, the Custodian would
have no right to allot them for the separate or exclusive
use of displaced persons who migrated to India after the
partition of the Country. If no allotment could be made
under the Displaced Persons (Compensation and
Rehabilitation) Act, 1954 there would be no question of any
surplus and, consequently, no occasion to transfer ’surplus’
land to the State Government. The peculiar incidents of co-
share’s interest in the Shamlat-deh lands, and the severe
limitations operating upon that interest renders the
provisions of the Central Act of 1950, virtually innocuous
and inoperative. The Custodian under that Act would have the
husk of the title to the evacuees’ interest in the Shamlat-
deh lands as a result of the vesting of that interesting
him, but beyond such vesting he would be powerless, in
practice, to distribute those lands to the displaced
persons. [39 G-40 F]
8. The hall-mark of the Shamlat-deh lands is their
indivisibility and inalienability. [40 G]
(Per Chinnappa Reddy, J. concurring)
1. The question in the present case is not whether there
was any conflict between the Central and State Legislations
but whether the legislature of the State could make a law
relating to agrarian reform in respect of property which
included property which by a process of law has become
vested in the Central Government or the Custodian. [49 H-50
B]
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2. When the Parliament and the State Legislature, each of
them legislate in their own field with respect to different
subjects-in this case Evacuee Property and the Shamlat-deh,
no reason is found to conclude that there was necessarily a
conflict between the two legislations. [49 H]
3. There is no reason to why the State Legislature should
be considered incompetent to make a law relating to agrarian
reform. The Punjab Act of 1953 is indeed a law relating to
agrarian reforms even though it affects lands vested in the
Central Government or the Custodian. [50 B]
4. The effect of the Administration of Evacuee Property
Act was not to take away the Character of Shamlat-deh as
Shamilat-deh but only to vest in the Custodian such interest
as the evacuee possessed in the Shamilat-deh. The interest
which the erstwhile evacuees possessed was neither enlarged
nor abridged. The land continued to be Shamilat-deh and it
could be the subject of competent State Legislation as
Shamilat-deh. If for the purpose of agrarian reform the
legislature of the State enacted a law as it was competent
to do and consent was accorded by the President under
Article 31-A of the Constitution, there is no justification
for the argument that there was any conflict between the
Punjab Act and the Central Act. [49 D-E]
5. It would be wholly wrong to suggest that the zamindari
becoming vested in the Custodian on account of the Muslim
zamindari (intermediary) migrating to Pakistan, raiyati land
in the village changed its character and the occupancy
rights of the raiyats ceased in the lands, merely because
the Zamindar migrated to Pakistan and the Zamindar became
vested in the Custodian. Similarly lands in an erstwhile
Zamindari set apart for pasture, as grazing grounds etc. did
not lose their character as such on the migration of the
Zamindar to Pakistan. [49 F-G]
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1401(N)
of 1973.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.5.1973 of the
Punjab and Haryana High Court in Civil Writ No. 2657 of
1970.
S.L. Aneja and K.L.Taneja for Appellant No. 1.
Hardev Singh and R.S.Sodhi for Appellant No. 2.
35
N.C.Talukdar, C.V. Subba Rao, R.N. Poddar and Miss A.
Subhashini for the Respondent No. 2.
S.Ram Singh Bindra and Harbans Singh for the Respondent
No. 1.
The following Judgments were delivered
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. Eight writ petitions were filed in
the High Court of Punjab and Haryana, involving a common
question of law as to the alleged repugnancy between the
Administration of Evacuee Property Act of 1950 and, the
Punjab Village Common Lands (Regulation) Act of 1953
(referred to herein as ’the Punjab Act of 1953’). Four, out
of the eight writ petitions, relate to lands situated in the
State of Haryana, while the remaining four relate to lands
situated in the State of Punjab.
The controversy in the writ petitions is between the
right of the Gram Panchayats to the Shamlat-deh lands
situated in those villages which fall within their
jurisdiction and, on the other hand, the right of the
Rehabilitation Department of the Central Government to allot
lands of that description, to the extent of the evacuee
interest therein, to persons who migrated from Pakistan to
India after the partition of the country. The contention of
the Central Government and, of persons to whom its
Rehabilitation Department has allotted the Shamlat-deh lands
on their migration to India, is that the interest, in such
lands, of the Muslims who migrated to Pakistan is evacuee
property which the Central Government has the right to allot
under the provisions of the Displaced Persons (Compensation
and Rehabilitation) Act of 1954. On the other hand, the
contention of the Government of Punjab and of the Gram
Panchayats in Punjab and Haryana is that, by reason of the
provisions of the Punjab Act of 1953, the interest of all
persons, whether Hindus, Sikhs or Muslims, in the Shamlat-
deh lands stood extinguished and those lands were placed by
the said Act under the control and power of the respective
Gram Panchayat.
Prior to the partition of India on August 15, 1947 the
Shamlat-deh lands in Punjab were owned by the proprietors of
the other lands in the Village, "Hasab Rasad Khewat", that
is to say, in the same proportion in which they owned the
other lands. Therefore, a person who did not own any other
land in the village could have no proprietary right or
interest in the Shamlat-deh lands, But, though the interest
of the proprietors of the other lands, in Shamlat-deh lands,
was incidental to their proprietary
36
interest in those other lands, such interest in the Shamilat
was not a mere appendage to their interest in the other
lands. Our learned Brother Chinnappa Reddy, has referred in
his judgment to a leading decision of the Lahore High Court,
Rehman v. Sai ILR 9 Lahore 501 in which it was held that, if
a proprietor alienated his land, the alienee would not
acquire any interest in the Shamilat by mere virtue of the
alienation. That was but consequential to the well-
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established legal position in Punjab that the Shamlat-deh
lands were intended for the common use of all sharers.
There were some villages in Punjab which were mostly
inhabited by Muslims, with the result that almost all the
lands in those villages were owned by Muslim proprietors
who, as a result of their proprietary interest in those
lands, had a proportionate undivided share in the Shamlat-
deh lands. They had only an ’undivided’ share in the
Shamlat-deh lands because such lands were not liable to be
partitioned, they could not be alienated and, they were
intended to be used and were in fact used, without
exception, as undivided property of the proprietors of the
other lands. Indeed, our learned Brother has cited a passage
from Rattigan’s ’Digest of the Customary Law in the Punjab’,
which shows that Shamlat-deh lands were treated as reserved
for common village purposes. Some of the villages in Punjab
and many in Haryana, were inhabited partly by Muslims and
partly by non-Muslims. Most of the Muslim proprietors
migrated to Pakistan whereas, the non-Muslims continued to
live in their villages.
The question as to the management and preservation of
the property left by Muslim evacuees led to the passing of
the East Punjab Evacuees (Administration of Property) Act,
14 of 1947. That was an Act of the Punjab Legislature,
section 4 of which provided that all interests in the
property whether movable or immovable, of the evacuees
vested in the Custodian appointed by the State Government.
That Act, like similar Acts passed by the other State
Legislatures, was repealed and replaced by an Act passed by
the Parliament, viz; the Administration of Evacuee Property
Act, 1950, to which we will refer as the ’Central Act of
1950’. That Act came into force on April 17, 1950. Section
8(2) thereof provided that, if any property in the State had
vested immediately before the commencement of the Act as
evacuee property in any Custodian under any law repealed by
the Act, that property shall, on the commencement of the
Act, be deemed to be evacuee property and shall vest in the
Custodian appointed for
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the State under the Act. As a result of this provision, the
interest of all evacuees which had vested in the Custodian
under the Punjab Act 14 of 1947, came to be vested in the
Custodian appointed under the Central Act of 1950. In the
villages which were wholly inhabited by Muslims and from
which almost the entire population migrated to Pakistan, all
the Shamlat-deh lands together with the other proprietary
lands were declared evacuee property and came to be vested
in the Custodian. In the villages which were inhabited both
by Muslims and non-Muslims the proprietary holdings of the
Muslim evacuees vested in the Custodian and, along with
that, the interest of the proprietors in the Shamlat-deh
lands, such as it was, also vested in the Custodian.
The point which arises for our consideration and which
has been answered in the affirmative by the High Court of
Punjab and Haryana is whether, there is any repugnancy
between the provisions of the Central Act of 1950 and those
of the Punjab Act of 1953. (The latter Act has been referred
to by the High Court as the Act of 1954 because, though
passed in 1953, it was numbered as Act 1 of 1954). Section 3
of the Punjab Act, which is said to be the focal point of
the repugnancy, reads thus, in so far as relevant
"3. Vesting of rights in Panchayats end in
non-proprietors:
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
in any other law for the time being in
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force.........all rights, title and interest
whatsoever in the land-
(a) which is included in Shamlat-deh of any
village, shall, on the appointed date, vest in a
Panchayat having jurisdiction over the village".
Section 8(2) of the Central Act of 1950 reads thus :
"Where, immediately before the commencement of
this Act, any property in a State had vested as
evacuee property in any person exercising the
powers of Custodian under any law repealed hereby,
the property shall, on the commencement of this
Act, be deemed to be evacuee property declared as
such within the meaning of this Act, and shall be
deemed to have vested in the Custodian appointed
or deemed to have been appointed for the State
under this Act and shall continue to so vest."
38
A mere reading of the two sections, namely, section 3
of the Punjab Act of 1953 and section 8(2) of the Central
Act of 1950, would show that there is a direct conflict
between the two provisions. Under section 4 of the East
Punjab Evacuees (Administration of Property) Act 14 of 1947,
which came into force on December 13, 1947 all interest in
the property, movable or immovable, of the evacuees vested
in the Custodian appointed by the State Government. The
Central Act of 1950 repealed the East Punjab Act 14 of 1947.
Under section 8 (2) of the Central Act of 1950, the evacuee
property which was vested in the Custodian appointed by the
State Government under the repealed Act, was to be deemed to
be evacuee property declared as such under the Central Act
and became vested in the Custodian appointed under the
Central Act. Thereafter came the Punjab Act of 1953 under
which, "Notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
in any other law for the time being in force", all rights,
title and interest whatsoever in the Shamlat-deh lands of
any village, came to be vested in the Panchayat having
jurisdiction over the particular village. It is quite clear
that as a result of this provision, the Custodian appointed
under the Central Act of 1950 was divested of the Shamlat-
deh lands, to the extent of the interest therein of the
Muslim proprietors who had migrated to Pakistan. If the
Punjab Legislature had not passed the Act of 1953, the
Custodian appointed or deemed to be appointed under the
Central Act of 1950 could have dealt with the interest of
the Muslim evacuees in the Shamlat-deh lands as evacuee
property, though consistently with the limitations which
operated upon that interest. He forfeited that power
because, the Punjab Act of 1953 extinguished the interests
of all persons, whether Hindus, Sikhs or Muslims, in the
Shamlat-deh lands and vested all rights, title and interest
in such lands in the respective Panchayats having
jurisdiction over the village. It may be mentioned that the
Punjab Act of 1953 was repealed and replaced by an Act of
1961, bearing a similar title. That Act defines the Shamlat-
deh lands in a slightly different manner but, that
difference is inconsequential for resolving the controversy
which arise before us.
Having seen that there is a direct conflict between
section 8(2) of the Central Act of 1950 and section 3 of the
Punjab Act of 1953 on the question of vesting of evacuee
property, the question which arises is as to which of these
two Acts would prevail. That question has to be answered in
the light of the provisions of the Constitution. Entry No.
41 in List III (Concurrent List) of the Seventh Schedule to
the Constitution, reads thus :
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"Custody, management and disposal of property
(including agricultural land) declared by law to
be evacuee property".
Since the interest of the evacuees in the Shamlat-deh lands
was deemed to be declared as evacuee property, both the
State Legislature and the Central Legislature had the power
to deal with that interest by virtue of Entry No. 41.
Article 254 of the Constitution deals with situations where
there is inconsistency between the laws made by the
Parliament and the laws made by the Legislature of a State.
Clause (1) of that Article, to the extent that it is
relevant, reads thus :
"(1) If any provision of a law made by the
legislature of a State is repugnant to any
provision of a law made by Parliament which
parliament is competent to enact, ......., then,
subject to the provisions of clause (2), the law
made by Parliament, whether passed before or after
the law made by the Legislature of such State,
.... shall prevail and the Law made by the
Legislature of the State shall, to the extent of
the repugnancy, be void.’
Since the law made by the Legislature of the State of
Punjab, namely, section 3 of the Punjab Act of 1953, is
repugnant to the law made by the Parliament which the
Parliament was competent to enact, namely, section 8(2) of
the Central Act of 1950, the law made by the Parliament must
prevail and the law made by the Punjab Legislature has to be
held to be void to the extent of the repugnancy. The
repugnancy is to the extent that whereas, under the Central
Act, the interest of the evacuees in all properties,
including the Shamlat-deh lands, vest in the Custodian
appointed or deemed to be appointed under that Act, the
Shamlat-deh lands vest in the Panchayats under the
provisions of the State Act.
The consequences of this repugnancy are self-evident.
Under the Central Act of 1950, the Custodian is entitled to
preserve and manage the interests of evacuees in all evacuee
properties, which would include the Shamlat-deh lands. Under
the Punjab Act of 1953, the Shamlat-deh lands vest in the
Panchayats, which carries with it the right of preservation
and management of such Lands. In brief, by reason of the
State Act, the Custodian appointed under the Central Act of
1950 is divested of his control over the evacuee interest in
the Shamlat-deh lands. The
40
most significant impact of this divestment, though somewhat
of an academic nature, is that the Rehabilitation Department
of the Central Government loses its power to allot such
lands, to the extent of the evacuee interest therein, to
displaced persons in order to satisfy their claims under the
Displaced Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act,
1954. Such properties, therefore, cannot form part of the
Compensation pool. Nor can these properties, to the extent
of the surplus remaining after allotment to displaced
persons, be transferred by the Central Government to the
State Government under the ’Package Deal’ of 1961. We said
that the impact of repugnancy is somewhat of an academic
nature because, what vests in the Custodian is the interest
of the evacuee such as it is, that is to say, together with
all the incidents to which the evacuee interest was subject.
That interest cannot be freed from its incidents merely
because it comes to be vested in the Custodian as evacuee
property. The Custodian gets what the evacuee had,
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quantitatively and qualitatively. If the evacuee’s interest
in Shamlat was incapable of alienation and if Shamlat- deh
lands were regarded as reserved for the common use of the
villagers, the Custodian would have no right to allot them
for the separate or exclusive use of displaced persons who
migrated to India after the partition of the country. If no
allotment could be made by the Custodian under the Displaced
Persons (Compensation and Rehabilitation) Act of 1954, there
would be no question of any surplus land, consequently, no
occasion to transfer ’surplus’ land to the State Government
under the Package Deal of 1961. The peculiar incidents of
the co-sharers’ interest in the Shamlat-deh lands and the
severe limitations operating upon that interest render the
provisions of the Central Act of 1950 virtually innocuous
and inoperative. The Custodian, under that Act, would have
the husk of the title to the evacuees’ interest in the
Shamlat-deh lands as a result of the vesting of that
interest in him but, beyond such vesting, he would be
powerless, in practice, to distribute those lands to the
displaced persons. The hall-mark of the Shamlat-deh lands is
their indivisibility and inalienability, [See Rattigan’s
Digest’, to which our learned Brother, Chinnappa Reddy, has
made a copious reference].
If Article 254(1) stood by itself, there would have
been no difficulty in holding that, for whatever it is
worth, the Central Act of 1950 prevails over the Punjab Act
of 1953 since, the two Acts which are relatable to Entry No.
41 of the Concurrent List, are repugnant to each other in
the matter of vesting of the evacuee interest in Shamlat-deh
lands. But, there is another
41
facet of this question without considering which, the
question of competing priorities between the two Acts cannot
be determined. It shall have been noticed that the provision
contained in clause (1) of Article 254 is "subject to the
provisions of clause(2)" of that Article. Clause (2) reads
thus :
"(2) Where a law made by the Legislature of a
State with respect to one of the matters
enumerated in the Concurrent List contains any
provision repugnant to the provisions of an
earlier law made by Parliament or an existing law
with respect to that matter, then, the law so made
by the Legislature of such State shall, if it has
been reserved for the consideration of the
President and has received his assent, prevail in
that State :
Provided that nothing in this clause shall prevent
Parliament from enacting at any time any law with
respect to the same matter including a law adding
to, amending, varying or repealing the law so made
by the Legislature of the State."
The Punjab Act of 1953 was reserved for consideration
of the President and received his assent on December 26,
1953. Prima facie, by reason of the assent of the President,
the Punjab Act would prevail in the State of Punjab over the
Act of the Parliament and the Panchayats would be at liberty
to deal with the Shamlat-deh lands according to the relevant
Rules or Bye-laws governing the matter, including the
evacuee interest therein. But, there is a complication of
some nicety arising out of the fact that the Punjab Act was
reserved for the assent of the President, though for the
specific and limited purpose of Articles 31 and 31-A of the
Constitution. Article 31, which was deleted by the
Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment) Act, 1978 provided for
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compulsory acquisition of property. Clause (3) of that
Article provided that, no law referred to in clause (2),
made by the Legislature of a State shall have effect unless
such law, having been reserved for the consideration of the
President, has received his assent. Article 31-A confers
protection upon laws falling within clauses (a) to (e) of
that Article, provided that such laws, if made by a State
Legislature, have received the assent of the President.
Clause (a) of Article 31-A comprehends laws of agrarian
reform. Since the Punjab Act of 1953 extinguished all
private interests in Shamlat-deh lands and vested those
lands in the Village Panchayats and since, the Act was a
measure of agrarian reform it was reserved for the
consideration of the
42
President. The judgment of the High Court shows that the
hearing of the writ petitions was adjourned to enable the
State Government to place material before the Court showing
the purpose for which the Punjab Act of 1953 was forwarded
to the President for his assent. The record shows, and it
was not disputed either before us or in the High Court, that
the Act was not reserved for the assent of the President on
the ground that it was repugnant to an earlier Act passed by
the Parliament, namely, the Central Act of 1950. In these
circumstances we agree with the High Court that the Punjab
Act of 1953 cannot be said to have been reserved for the
assent of the President within the meaning of clause (2) of
Article 254 of the Constitution insofar as its repugnancy
with the Central Act of 1950 is concerned. The assent of the
President under Article 254(2) of the Constitution is not a
matter of idle formality. The President has, at least, to be
apprised of the reason why his assent is sought if, there is
any special reason for doing so. If the assent is sought and
given in general terms so as to be effective for all
purposes, different considerations may legitimately arise.
But if, as in the instant case, the assent of the President
is sought to the Law for a specific purpose, the efficacy of
the assent would be limited to that purpose and cannot be
extended beyond it. Not only was the President not apprised
in the instant case that his assent was sought because of
the repugnancy between the State Act and the pre-existing
Central Act on the vesting of evacuee properties but, his
assent was sought for a different, specific purpose
altogether. Therefore, that assent cannot avail the State
Government for the purpose of according precedence to the
law made by the State Legislature, namely, the Punjab Act of
1953, over the law made by the Parliament, even within the
jurisdiction of the State.
This situation creates a conundrum. The Central Act of
1950 prevails over the Punjab Act of 1953 by virtue of
Article 254 (1) of the Constitution read with Entry No. 41
of the Concurrent List; and, Article 254(2) cannot afford
assistance to reverse that position since the President’s
assent, which was obtained for a specific purpose, cannot be
utilised for according priority to the Punjab Act. Though
the law made by the Parliament prevails over the law made by
the State Legislature, the interest of the evacuees in the
Shamlat-deh lands cannot be dealt with effectively by the
Custodian under the Central Act, because of the peculiar
incidents and characteristics of such lands. The unfortunate
result is that the vesting in the Custodian of the
43
evacuee interest in the Shamlat-deh lands is, more or less,
an empty formality. It does not help the Custodian to
implement the provisions of the Central law but, it excludes
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the benign operation of the State law.
The line of reasoning of our learned Brother, Chinnappa
Reddy, affords a satisfactory solution to this
constitutional impasse, which we adopt without reservation
of any kind. The pith and substance of the Punjab Act of
1953 is ’Land’ which falls under Entry No. 18 of List II
(State List) of the Seventh Schedule to the Constitution.
That Entry reads thus :
"Entry No. 18 - Land, that is to say, rights in or
over land, land tenures including the relation of
landlord and tenant, and the collection of rents ;
transfer and alienation of agricultural land; land
improvement and agricultural loans; colonization."
Our learned Brother has extracted a passage from a decision
of a Constitution Bench of this Court in Ranjit Singh v.
State of Punjab [1965] 1 S.C.R. 1982, which took the view
that since, the Punjab Act of 1953 is a measure of agrarian
reform it would receive the protection of Article 31-A. It
may be recalled that the Act had received the assent of the
President as required by the first proviso to that Article.
The power of the State Legislature to pass law on matters
enumerated in the State List is exclusive by reason of the
provision contained in Article 246(3). In a nutshell, the
position is that the Parliament has passed a law on a matter
which falls under Entry No. 41 of the Concurrent List, while
the State Legislature has passed a law which falls under
Entry No. 18 of the State List. The law passed by the State
Legislature being a measure of agrarian reform, is conducive
to the welfare of the community and there is no reason why
that law should not have effect in its full amplitude. By
this process, the village panchayats will be able to meet
the needs of the village community and secure its welfare.
Accordingly, the Punjab Act of 1953 would prevail in the
State of Punjab over the Central Act of 1950, even in so far
as Shamlat-deh lands are concerned.
In the result, the judgment of the High Court is set
aside and this appeal is allowed. There will be no order as
to costs.
Civil Appeal Nos. 2044 of 1974 and 1963-65 of 1975
which were heard along with this appeal and which involve
the same points are also allowed, with no order as to costs.
44
Special Leave is granted in Special Leave Petition No.
7984 of 1981. The appeal is allowed, with no order as to
costs.
Civil Appeal Nos. 2125 of 1978, 470 of 1969, 1832 of
1969, 1088 of 1969, 1726 of 1974 and 1728 of 1974 were
delinked from the above group of matters as they involve
questions relating to the ’package deal’ of 1961. Those
matters may be listed for hearing at an early date.
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. I agree with the conclusion of my
lord the Chief Justice and I reiterate the proposition that
the assent accorded by the President for the express purpose
of Article 31-A is not capable of automatic transformation
into assent for the purpose of Article 254(2) of the
Constitution.
In my view the question that really requires
determination is not one of repugnancy between the Punjab
Act and the Central Act but what is the product of the two
Acts, each operating in its own assigned field? What is the
effect of the Punjab Act of 1953 on the Central Act of 1950?
Is it a case of Peter robbing Paul?
In Rattigan’s ’Digest of Customary Law in the Punjab’,
in the introduction to Chapter X (Village Common Land) it is
noted that within the territorial limits of every village
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some portion of the uncultivated waste lands are reserved
’for purposes of common pasture, for assemblies of people,
for the tethering of the village cattle, and the possible
extension of the village dwellings’ and that ’Lands so
reserved are jealously guarded as the Common property of the
original body of settlers who founded the village or their
descendants, and occasionally also those who assisted the
settlers in clearing the waste and bringing it under
cultivation are recognized as having a share in these
reserved plots’. It was further noticed "Even in villages
which have adopted separate ownership as to the cultivated
area, some such plots are usually reserved as village
common, and in pattidar villages, it is not unusual to find
certain portions of the waste reserved for the common use of
the proprietors of each patti, and other portions for common
village purposes. The former is designated as Shamilat-patti
and the latter Shamlat-deh". It was said "As a general rule,
only proprietors of the village (malikan-deh) as
distinguished from proprietors of their own holdings
(malikan makbuza khud) are entitled to share in the Shamlat-
deh".
45
While it appears to have been laid down that the right
to share in the Village Common Land is an incident attaching
to the ownership of agricultural land in the village, and
that ordinarily those persons who hold land on which revenue
is assessed and who are cosharers in the Khewat are entitled
to a share in proportion to the revenue paid by them. See
Malik Mohammad Sher Khan v. Ghulam Mohammad I.L.R. (XIII)
Lahore 92 it also appears to be settled law in Punjab that
the rights of a proprietor in the Shamilat’ are not a mere
accessory to the land held by him and therefore ’an
alienation of the latter does not ipso facto confer any
rights in the former to the alienee’ (Vide Rahman v. Sai,
I.L.R. (9) Lahore 501, and the cases noted therein). Further
according to Rattigan’s Digest "In the absence of custom
none of the proprietors can do anything which alters the
condition of the joint property without the consent of all
the co-sharers". (Article 225). "Nor can any individual
proprietor plant or cut trees on the common land, nor sink a
well, nor appropriate houses built for common purposes
except with such consent" (Article 226). "Nor in the absence
of custom can the will of the majority of a village
community prevail against that of the minority when the
question is one as to the disposal of the common property in
such a way as to preclude all use of it by the owners."
(Article 227). Thus it is seen that Shamilat Deh or Village
Common Land has certain distinctive and characteristic
features of its own and even a majority of the co-sharers
cannot destroy its character.
In 1947, at the time of the partition of India under
the British into Independent India and Independent Pakistan,
there was a terrible holocaust and an unprecedented movement
of population, millions of Hindus and Sikhs moving from West
Punjab to East Punjab and millions of Muslims moving from
East Punjab and present Haryana to West Punjab.
Multidimensional, interlinked problems of administration of
the properties of those who had left the country and
rehabilitation of those that had poured into the country
soon arose.
It was noticed by this Court in Indira Sohanlal v.
Custodian of Evacuee Property, [1955] 2 S.C.R. 1117, it was
in order "to meet the unprecedented situation of sudden
migration of vast sections of population on a large scale
from West Punjab to East Punjab and vice versa, leaving
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most of the properties which they had, movable and
immovable, agricultrual and nonagricultural, the concerned
Governments had to take wide legislative powers to deal with
the situation, to set up the necessary
46
administrative machinery, and to evolve and give effect to
their policies in regard thereto from time to time . It was
further noticed, The earliest of these legislative measures
so far as we are concerned, was the East Punjab Evacuees
(Administration of Property) Act, 1947 (East Punjab Act XIV
of 1947), which came into force on the 12th December, 1947.
This Act was amended by the East Punjab Evacuees,
(Administration of Property) (Amendment) Ordinance, 1948
(East Punjab ordinance No. 11 of 1948) and later by East
Punjab Evacuees’ (Administration of Property) (Amendment)
Act, 1948,(East Punjab Act XXVI of 1948). The various steps
and administrative measures taken to settle the displaced
agricultural population who came over from West Punjab, on
the hurriedly abandoned lands of the Evacuees from East
Punjab are to be found described in the Land Resettlement
Manual by Shri Tarlok Singh who was then the Director
General of Relief and Rehabilitation. It was later realised
that the various Provincial Acts enacted by the several
provincial legislatures should be replaced by a Central law
and a Central Administration, So there was first a Central
Ordinance (27 of 1949) and then the Administration of
Evacuee Property Act, 1950 which came into force on 17th
April, 1950. The Act provided for a Centralised Law and
Centralised Administration and the creation of an office of
Custodian General.
Under Section 8(2) of the Administration of Evacuee
Property Act, 1950, all property which had vested in the
Custodians appointed by the State Governments under the
repealed State Acts were to be deemed to be evacuee property
declared as such under Central Act and became vested in the
Custodian appointed under the Central Act. Section 8 (2)
which may be usefully extracted is as follows :
Where, immediately before the commencement of this
Act, any property in a State had vested as evacuee
property in any person exercising the powers of
Custodian under any law repealed hereby, the
property shall, on the commencement of this Act,
be deemed to be evacuee property declared as such
within the mean in of this Act, and shall be
deemed to have vested in the Custodian appointed
or deemed to have been appointed for the State
under this Act and shall continue to so vest."
The effect of the operation of the Provincial and Central
Acts relating to Evacuee Property was that Evacuee Property
became
47
vested in the Custodian but it must be noted that what
became vested in the Custodian was that property left behind
by the evacuee, no more and no less. If the evacuee had left
behind him Khewat land it became vested in the Custodian. If
the evacuee had left behind him the right to a share in
Shamlat-deh lands, that too became vested in the Custodian.
The vesting, however, did not divest Shamilat-deh lands of
their character as Shamlat- deh lands and convert them into
Khewat land. Shamilat-deh lands could only continue and did
continue to be Shamilat-deh even after they became vested in
the Custodian and the Custodian could only deal with them as
a Shamilat-deh lands in the same manner in which the Muslim
proprietors could have dealt with them had they not migrated
to Pakistan. That was the position after the Parliament
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enacted the Administration of Evacuees Property Act, 1950.
At that stage came the Punjab Village Common Land
Regulation Act of 1953 which has been held by this Court to
be legislation aimed at agrarian reform. It had nothing to
do and it did not purport to have anything to do with the
Administration of evacuee property. All Shamilat-deh lands
whether they belonged to the proprietary body of villagers
consisting only of non-evacuees or whether they belonged to
the proprietary body of villagers the interests of some of
whom had become vested in the Custodian under the various
Evacuee Property laws, were dealt with by the Punjab Act
without distinction. All Shamilat-deh lands, notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any other law for the
time being in force, became vested in the village Panchayat.
As we said earlier the Punjab Act was a law providing for
agrarian reform and it neither purported to be nor was it a
law regulating the administration of Evacuees Property.
In Kanjit Singh v. State of Punjab [1965] I S.C.R. 82,
the very question arose whether a law providing for the
taking away of Shamilat-deh lands from the proprietors and
given over to the village Panchayat for allotment to non-
proprietors was a law relating to agrarian reforms and
whether such a law was protected by Article 31(A). It is
worthwhile to recalling what the Constitution Bench said in
answer to the question posed before them? They explained the
amplitude of rural development and agrarian reforms in the
following words :
The High Court was also right in its view that the
proposed changes in the Shamilat-deh and abadi-deh
were included in the general scheme of planning of
48
rural areas and the productive utilisation of
vacant and waste lands. The scheme of rural
development today envisages not only equitable
distribution of land so that there is no undue
imbalance in society resulting in a landless class
on the one hand and a concentration of land in the
hands of a few on the other, but envisages also
the raising of economic standards and bettering
rural health and social conditions. Provisions for
the assignment of lands to village panchayat for
the use of the general community, or for
hospitals, schools, manure pits, tanning groups
etc. inure for the benefit of rural population
must be considered to be an essential part of the
redistribution of holdings and open lands to which
no objections apparently taken. If agrarian
reforms are to succeed, mere distribution of land
to the landless is not enough. There must be a
proper planning of rural economy and conditions
and a body like the village Panchayat is best
designed to promote rural welfare than individual
owners of small portions of lands. Further, the
village Panchayat is an authority for purposes of
Part III as was conceded before us and it has the
protection of Article 31-A because of this
character even if the taking over of Shamilat-deh
amounts to acquisition. In our opinion, the High
Court was right in deciding as it did on this part
of the case."
"With respect to abadi-deh the same reasoning must
apply. The setting of a body of agricultural
artisans (such as the village carpenter the
village blacksmith, the village tanner, farrier
wheelwright, barber, washer man etc.) is a part of
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rural planning and can be comprehended in a scheme
of agrarian reforms. It is a trite saying that
India lives in villages and a scheme to make
villages self-sufficient cannot but be regard ed
as part of the larger reforms which consolidation
of holding , fixing of ceilings on lands,
distribution of surplus lands and utilising of
vacant and waste lands contemplate. The four Acts,
namely, the Consolidation Act, the Village
Panchayat Act, the Common Lands Regulation Act and
the Security of Tenure Act, are a part of a
general scheme of reforms and any modification of
rights such as the present had the
49
protection of Article 31-A. The High Court was
thus right in its conclusion on this part of the
case also."
We have quoted this passage in extenso in order to emphasise
the meaning to be attached to expressions like ’agrarian
reforms’, ’marketing’, etc. for which various legislations
have been made Occasionally we notice that some courts have
a tendency to contine these expressions to strait-jacket
meanings, instead of giving a meaning of wide implications.
So we have the authoritative pronouncement of a
Constitution Bench of this Court that the Punjab Act which
had been reserved for the assent of the President and which
did have the assent of the President is a law relating to
agrarian reform and therefore immune from challenge, under
Article 31-A, on the ground that the law infringed any of
the Fundamental Rights enumerated in that Article. We have
already noticed that the effect of the Administration of the
Evacuees Property Act was not to take away the character of
Shamilat-deh as Shamilat-deh but only to vest in the
Custodian such interest as the Evacuee possessed in the
Shamilat-deh. The interest which the erstwhile evacuees
possessed in the Shamilat-deh was neither enlarged nor
abridged. The land continued to be Shamilat-deh and it could
be the subject of competent State Legislation as Shamilat-
deh. If for the purposes of agrarian reform the legislature
of the State enacted a law as it was competent to do, and
consent to which was accorded by the President under Article
31-A of the Constitution, we do not see any justification
for the argument that there was any conflict between the
Punjab Act and the Central Act. To illustrate, it would be
wholly wrong to suggest that on a Zamindari becoming vested
in the Custodian on account of the Muslim Zamindar
(intermediary) migrating to Pakistan raiyati land in the
village changed its character and the occupancy rights of
the raiyats ceased in the lands, merely because the Zamindar
migrated to Pakistan and the Zamindari became vested in the
Custodian. Similarly lands in an erstwhile Zamindar set
apart for pasture, as grazing grounds etc. did not lose
their character as such on the migration of the Zamindar to
Pakistan. When the Parliament and the State Legislature,
each of them legislate in their own field with respect to
different subjects in this case Evacuee Property and
Shamilat-deh we do not find any reason to conclude that
there was necessarily a conflict between the two
legislations. The question in the present case is not
whether
50
there was any conflict between the Central and the State
Legislations but whether the legislature of the State could
make a law relating to agrarian reform in respect of
property which included property which by a process of law
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had become vested in the Central Government or the
Custodian. We do not see any reason why the State
Legislature should be considered incompetent to make a law
relating to agrarian reform, if indeed it is a law relating
to agrarian reforms as it has been found to be so, in the
present case, even it affects land vested in the Central
Government or the Custodian. In this view of the matter, I
agree with the order proposed by my lord the Chief Justice.
N.V.K. Appeal allowed.
51