Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRI KISHAN SINGH AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF RAJASTHAN AND OTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
27/09/1955
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
BENCH:
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
AIYAR, N. CHANDRASEKHARA
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
BHAGWATI, NATWARLAL H.
IMAM, SYED JAFFER
CITATION:
1955 AIR 795 1955 SCR (2) 531
ACT:
Fundamental Rights, Infringement of-Act settling fair and
equitable rent restricted to a part of the State-Settlement
of rent of different localities on different dates on
decennial average-Possibility of variation in rates of rent-
If amount to denial of equality before law-Deprivation of
landlord’s right to realise rents freely and without
hindrance, if invasion of right to property-Retrospective
enforcement of rates of rent, if amounts to violation of
right to property and acquisition without compensation-Such
power conferred on Settlement Officer, if arbitrary-
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 19(1)(f), 31(2)-Marwar Land
Revenue Act (XL of 1949), ss. 81, 82, 83, 84, 85, 86.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioners, who are jagirdars of Marwar, sought to
impugn the constitutional validity of ss. 81 to 86 of the
Marwar Land Revenue Act which embody a scheme for fixing
fair and equitable rents payable by cultivating tenants on
the ground that they infringed their fundamental rights
under Arts. 14, 19(1)(f) and 31(2) of the Constitution.
Their contentions were that after the merger of Marwar in
the State of Rajasthan the Act had become discriminatory as
it applied only to the jagirdars of Marwar and not to the
entire body of jagirdars of the State of Rajasthan, that
settlement of rents made with reference to different areas
on different dates on the basis of previous ten years’
average of collections might result in different rates of
rent and lead to inequality such as is prohibited by Art.
14, that the Act deprived the landlords of their right to
realise rents from the tenants freely and without hindrance
and invaded their right to hold property guaranteed by Art.
19(1)(f) of the Constitution, that the power conferred on
the Settlement Officer by s. 86 of the Act to enforce the
rates of rent retrospectively is an invasion of their right
to hold property and amounts to acquisition of property
without compensation and that it confers absolute and
uncontrolled discretion on the Settlement Officer and is an
encroachment on the right to hold property.
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Held, repelling these contentions, that Art. 14 only
prohibits unequal treatment of persons similarly situated
and a classification might properly be made on territorial
basis, if that was germane to the purposes of the enactment
and no tenancy legislation can be held to contravene the
article solely on the ground that it does not apply to the
entire State. Before the petitioners could succeed it was
532
incumbent on them to show that conditions obtaining in other
parts of the State were similar to those in Marwar and this
they had failed to do.
Bowman v. Lewis [1879] 101 U.S. 22: 25 Law. Ed. 989,
referred to.
That the provision in the Act for assessment of rents with
reference to a portion of the area to which the Act applies
is not a contravention of Art. 14. To hold otherwise would
be to make it impossible for any State to carry on its
settlement operation.
Biswambhar Singh v. The State of Orissa and others, [1964]
S.C.R. 842, and Thakur Amar Singhji v. State of Rajasthan,
[1955] 2 S.C.R. 303, applied.
That the fundamental right to hold property in the case of
a, landlord in respect of his tenanted lands is no more than
the right to receive reasonable rents and no legislation
which has for its object the settlement of fair and
equitable rents can contravene Art. 19 (1)(f) of the
Constitution even though it may give such rents retros-
pective operation.
That the provision in s. 86 of the Act empowering the
Settlement Officer to give retrospective operation to the
rates of rent does not contravene Art. 19(1)(f) and,
therefore, no question as to whether such a provision is not
of a regulatory character and as such prohibited by Art.
19(5) can at all arise.
That it is well settled that a law which regulates the
relation of a landlord with his tenant is not one which
takes property within the meaning of Art. 31(2) even though
it has the effect of reducing his rights. Consequently,
there is no contravention of Art. 31(2) of the Constitution.
Thakur Jagannath Baksh Singh v. United Provinces, [1943] 6
F.L.J. 55: A.I.R. 1943 F.C. 29 and Thakur Jagannath Buksh v.
United Provinces, L.R. 73 I.A. 123, relied on.
That s. 86 of the Act does not confer an absolute and uncon-
trolled discretion on the Settlement Officer and such power
as it gives does not constitute an encroachment on the right
to hold property within the meaning of Art. 19(1)(f) of the
Constitution.
Thakur Baghubir Singh v. Court of Wards, Ajmer and another,
[1953] S.C.R. 1049, explained and distinguished.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Petitions Nos. 621, 655 and 678 of
1955.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution for the en-
forcement of fundamental rights.
N.C. Chatterjee (S. K. Kapur and Ganpat Rai, with him) for
the petitioners.
533
M. C. Setalvad, Attorney-General for India (Kan
Singh and P. G. Gokhale, with him) for respondent No. 1.
K.R. Chowdhury, for Goma, Ghisa and Rama, respondents in
Petition No. 655 and Dhira, respondent in petition No.678.
1955. September 27. The judgment of the Court was delivered
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by
VENKATARAMA AYYAR J.-These are applications under article 32
of the Constitution by certain jagir dars of Marwar,
challenging the constitutionality of sections 81 to 86 of
the Marwar Land Revenue Act No. XL of 1949 (hereinafter
referred to as the Act) on the ground that they infringe the
fundamental rights of the petitioners under article 14,
article 19(1) (f) and article 31(2) of the Constitution.
These sections provide for fixing fair and equitable rent
payable by the tenants and prescribe the procedure to be
followed therefor. Section 81 of the Act provides that when
any local area has been brought under settlement operations
by a notification under section 64, the Settlement Officer
or an Assistant Settlement Officer shall inspect every
village in the local area, divide it into soil-classes and
assessment circles, select rentrates for the area and
publish them in such manner as may be prescribed. If
objections to these proposals are received, he has to
consider them, and submit his report to the Board of
Revenue. The Board has the power to sanction the proposals
with or without any modifications, and it has also the power
to direct further enquiry into the matters. With a view to
arriving at fair and equitable rates, the Settlement Officer
is required under section 82 to have regard to the
collection of rent and cesses in the nature of rent during
the ten years preceding the settlement excluding such years
as the Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, declare to be abnormal the average of the prices of
agricultural produce during the same period, the nature of
the crops grown and the quantity of the produce and their
value. Section 82(2) provides that the rent rates shall not
534
exceed one-third of, the value of the produce of unirrigated
lands and one-fourth of the value of the produce of
irrigated lands. Under section 84, the Settlement Officer
shall determine rents whether by way of abatement,
enhancement or commutation payable for all holdings in the
occupation of tenants on the basis of the rates sanctioned
by the Board of Revenue. Section 86 enacts that any rent
fixed by order of the Settlement Officer shall be payable
from the first day of July next following the date of such
order, "unless the Settlement Officer thinks fit for any
reasons to direct that it shall be payable from some earlier
date".
Acting under section 81 of the Act, the Settlement Officer
formulated certain proposals with reference to the rent
rates in the villages comprised in the jagirs of the
petitioners, and they were published in the Gazette on 12th
December 1953. Objections to those rates were filed by the
petitioners on the 12th January, 1954. On 13th October 1954
the Additional Settlement Commissioner submitted his final
proposals to the Settlement Officer, who forwarded the same
to the Board of Revenue for sanction. After making further
enquiry, the Board passed an order on 4-12-1954 determining
the rent rates payable. Subsequent to this, an order was
also passed under section 86 of the Act bringing the
sanctioned rate into operation from 1-7-1954. This order is
not itself the subject of attack in these proceedings, and
it cannot be, seeing that Petition No. 621 of 1954 was filed
on 24th November 1954 before that order was passed, and
Petitions Nos. 655 and 678 of 1954 merely repeat verbatim
the allegations in Petition No. 621 of 1954. Before us, the
petitioners conceded that they were not impugning the
correctness of the order passed under section 86 in so far
as it gave operation to the rates of rent from 1st July, on
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its merits, but that they were attacking the section as bad
only as a step in establishing that the scheme of the Act,
of which section 86 is an integral part is, taken as a
whole, an infringement of their fundamental rights under
articles 14, 19 and 31(2). We have now to consider
535
whether sections 81 to 86 of the -Act are bad as infringing
the above provisions of the Constitution.
The contention that sections 81 to 86 of the Act are void
as being repugnant to article 14 is sought to be made out on
two grounds. It is stated firstly that the Act applies’
only to what was prior to its merger the State of Marwar,
that the present State of Rajasthan comprises Marwar and 17
other States which have merged in it, and that as the Act,
as it stands, is directed against the jagirdars in one area
of the State and not the whole of it, it has become
discriminatory and void. This contention is clearly
untenable. What article 14 prohibits is the unequal
treatment of persons similarly situated, and therefore
before the petitioners can claim the protection of that
article, it is incumbent on them to establish that the
conditions which prevail in other areas in the State of
Rajasthan are similar to those which obtain in Marwar. But
of this, there has been neither allegation nor proof. On
the contrary, it is stated by the respondents in para 10 of
their statement that the tenants in the jagirs of Marwar
were paying much more by way of rent and cesses than those
in the Khalsa area of the State, that with a view to remove
the inequality between the two classes of tenants within the
State, a law was passed in 1943 providing for settlement of
rent, and that again on 10-1-1947 another law was passed
abolishing all cesses (lags) and fixing the maximum share of
rent payable in kind. These special features, it is argued,
form sufficient justification for a separate legislation for
this area, It is also stated that the other States had their
own rent laws suited to their conditions. There are no
materials on which we could hold that the impugned Act is
discriminatory in character, and we cannot strike it down
merely on the ground that it does not apply to the whole of
the State of Rajasthan.
A similar question arose for decision in Bowman v.
Lewis(1). There, some of the areas in the State of Missouri
were governed by a judicial procedure diff-
(1) [1879] 101 U.S. 22: 25 Law. Ed 989.
68
536
erent from that which prevailed in others. Repelling the
contention that this differentiation offended the equal
protection clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court
observed:
"Each State has the right to make political subdivisions,
of its territory for municipal purposes, and to regulate
their local government. As respects the administration of
justice, it may establish one system of courts for cities
and another for rural districts; one system for one portion
of its territory and another system for another portion.
Convenience, if not necessity, often requires this to be
done, and it would seriously interfere with the power of a
State to regulate its internal affairs to deny to it this
right
If a Mexican State should be acquired by a treaty and
added to an adjoining State or part of a State in the United
States, and the two should be erected into a new State, it
cannot be doubted that such new State might allow the
Mexican laws and judicature to continue unchanged in the one
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portion and the common law and its corresponding judicature
in the other portion. Such an arrangement would not be
prohibited in any fair construction of the Fourteenth Amend-
ment. It would not be based on any respect of persons or
classes, but on municipal considerations alone and a regard
to the welfare of all classes within the particular
territory or jurisdiction".
This Court has also repeatedly held that classification
might properly be made on territorial basis if that was
germane to the purposes of the enactment. Having regard to
the fact that the conditions of tenants vary from locality
to locality, we have no hesitation in holding that a tenancy
legislation restricted to a portion of a State cannot be
held on this ground alone to contravene article 14.
The second ground urged in support of the contention that
article 14 has been infringed is that discrimination -must
result from the settlement of rent being taken up only with
reference to portions of the
537
area to which the Act applies and not to the whole of it,
because the rent rate is to be fixed on the basis of the
average of the ten years preceding the settlement; and if
the proceedings are started for different areas on different
dates, that might result in different rates being fixed, and
that would make for inequality such as is prohibited by
article 14. We are unable to agree with this,.contention.
Settlement operations can be conducted only by a specialised
staff having technical knowledge and administrative
experience, and it might be beyond the capacity of the State
to undertake them for the whole area at one and the same
time. To accede to the contention of the petitioners would,
in effect, be to prevent the States from carrying on
settlement operations. It was held by this Court in
Biswambhar Singh v. The State of Orissa and other8(1) and in
Thakur Amar Singhji v. State of Rajasthan(2) that a
provision authorising the taking over of estates on
different dates was not repugnant to article 14, and the
principle of those decisions would apply to the present case
as well. The contention that the impugned provisions are in
contravention of article 14 must, therefore, be rejected.
It is then contended that the provisions in question are
repugnant to article 19(1) (f) of the Constitution, because
they deprive landlords of their right to realise rents from
the tenants freely and without hindrance, and are an
encroahment on their right to hold property. The provision
in section 82 that the Settlement Officer should, in
determining the average collection for the previous ten
years,exclude from consideration abnormal years as notified
by the Government was particularly attacked as a..device to
reduce the rent payable to the landlord and an invasion of
his rights to the property. We are unable to agree with
this contention. The fundamental right which a citizen has
to hold and enjoy property imports only a right to recover
reasonable rent when the lands are cultivated by a tenant,
and therefore a legislation whose object is to fix fair and
equitable
(1) [1954] S.C.R. 842, 845.
(2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 303,
538
rent cannot be said to invade that right. The contention
that the provision in section 82(1) (a) that abnormal years
as notified in the Gazette should be excluded in determining
average collections is calculated to reduce the rent, and is
therefore unreasonable is unfounded, because a declaration
that a year is abnormal is made not only when there are
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bumper crops but also when the yield is very low, and the
provision is intended equally for the benefit of the tenant
and of the landlord. A provision of this kind is usual in
all tenancy legislation, and there is nothing unreasonable
or unfair about it.
It was next contended-and this was the contention most
pressed on us-that section 86 is bad as it confers on the
Settlement Officer a power to bring the rent rates into
operation from a date earlier than’ the succeeding year and
even retrospectively from a date prior to the settlement,
and that such a power was repugnant to both article 19(1)(f)
and article 31(2). The argument with reference to Article
19(1)(f) is that section 86 is an encroachment on the rights
of a person to hold property, and can be valid only if it
falls within article 19(5), that it is only a law of ’a
regulatory character that is protected by article 19 (5),
that there could be regulation only with reference to rights
to be exercised in future,. and that a law giving
retrospective operation is consequently outside article
19(5). This contention rests on an assumption for which
there is no basis. The question whether a law is valid
under. Article 19 (5) can arise only when there is a
violation of the fundamental right declared in article 19
(1) (f), and if the right to hold property imports, as we
have held it does, only a fight to recover reasonable rent
from cultivating tenants, that right cannot be held to have
been invaded by a law fixing reasonable rent, even when it
is retrospective in operation. If the rent fixed is
reasonable with reference to a period subsequent to the
settlement, it must be reasonable for the period prior to it
as well, and if the settlement is not an encroachment on the
rights of the holder as regards the future-and that is
conceded-it cannot be an encroachment as regards
539
the past. A consideration, therefore, of the question
whether a law under article 19(5) should be regulatory’ and
whether a law with retrospective operation could be said to
be regulatory would be wholly irrelevant for the purpose of
the present controversy.
The argument in support of the contention that section 86 is
repugnant to article 31(2) is that to the extent that it
gives retrospective operation, it deprives the landlord of
the right to rent which had accrued prior to the settlement,
and that is taking property without payment of compensation.
But it is well settled that a law which regulates the
relation of landlord with his tenant is not one which takes
property within article 31(2), even though it has the effect
of reducing his rights. In Thakur Jagannath Baksh Singh v.
United Provinces(1), the question arose for decision whether
the provisions -of Act XVII of 1939, United Provinces, under
which the rent payable to a landlord became diminished were
obnoxious to section 299(2) of the Government of India Act,
1935. It was held by the Federal Court that they were not,
and in affirming this decision on appeal, the Privy Council
in Thakur Jagannath Baksh Singh v. United Provinces(2)
observed:
"The appellant relies on certain express provisions of the
Government of India Act. Thus he relies on section 299 of
the Act, which provides that no person, shall be deprived of
his property in British India save by authority of law, and
that neither the Federal nor a Provincial Legislature shall
have power to make any law authorising the compulsory
acquisition of ’land for public purposes save on the basis
of providing for the payment of compensation. But in the
present case there is no question of confiscatory
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legislation. To regulate the relations of landlord and
tenant and thereby diminish rights, hitherto exercised by
the landlord in connection with his land, is different from
compulsory acquisition of the land".
It was finally urged that section 86 in so far as it
(1) [1948] 6 F.L..J. 55; A.I.R. 1948 F.C. 29.
(2) [1946] L.R. 73 I.A. 123.
540
conferred authority on the Settlement Officer to give
retrospective operation to the rent rates was bad, because
the exercise of that authority was left to his arbitrary and
uncontrolled discretion, that the Act laid down no rules and
prescribed no conditions under which the discretion had to
be exercised, and that the power conferred in those terms
must be held to be unconstitutional. The decision in Thakur
Raghubir Singh v. Court of Wards, Ajmer and another(1) was
relied on, in support of this contention. There, the
question was as to the validity of a power conferred on the
Court of Wards to take over the management of an estate "if
a landlord habitually infringes the right of a. tenant".
Under the Act, the decision whether the condition aforesaid
was satisfied depended on the subjective satisfaction of the
Chief Commissioner., and that -was final and not liable to
be questioned in civil courts. It was held that a power
which could be exercised at the absolute discretion of the
authority was an encroachment on the rights of a citizen to
hold property under article 19(1)(f), and that it was not
saved by article 19(5). But, in the present case, section
86 of the Act expressly lays down that if a Settlement
Officer decides to bring rates into operation from a date
earlier than the following 1st of July, it must be for
reasons. There is no force in the contention that section
86 does not lay down under what circumstances such an order
could be passed, because the very nature of the thing
requires that a large discretion should be left to the
authority. Discretion which is wide is not necessarily
arbitrary. It was said that under section 233 of the Act
the civil courts are debarred from enquiring into the
reasonableness of the order; but that is because matters
concerning revenue and settlement are within the exclusive
jurisdiction of revenue courts, and under section 62 of the
Act, the Board of Revenue has revisional jurisdiction over
all orders passed in connection with settlement. We think
that the power conferred on the Settlement Officer to fix an
earlier date for giving operation to the rent rate is
reasonable and valid,
(1) [1953] S.C.R. 1049.
541
and that it invades no fundamental rights of the landlord.
For the reasons given above, we must hold that the scheme
embodied in sections 81 to 86 of the Act does not transgress
any of the Constitutional limitations, and is valid.
In the result, the petitions are dismissed but in the
circumstances, without costs.