Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3066 of 2000
PETITIONER:
Vemareddy Kumaraswamy Reddy & Anr
RESPONDENT:
State of A.P.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 13/02/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT & R.V. RAVEENDRAN
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(With C.A. Nos. 3068, 3069, 3070, 3072, 3073 and 3110 of 2000)
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
These appeals involve identical issues and are, therefore,
disposed of by this common judgment. Challenge in these
appeals is to the order passed by a Division Bench of the
Andhra Pradesh High Court. Factual background is almost
undisputed and the controversy relates to the scope and ambit
of Rule 11 of the Andhra Pradesh Land Reforms (Ceiling on
Agricultural Holdings) Rules, 1974 (in short the ’Ceiling
Rules’). The appellants were holding land in excess of the limit
prescribed under the Andhra Pradesh Land Reforms (Ceiling
on Agricultural Holdings) Act, 1973 (in short ’the Act’). The
surplus land was surrendered by them which had cashew nut
tree plantation. On the surrendered land the trees were fruit
bearing trees. The dispute relates to the amount payable in
respect of fruit bearing trees standing on the land which were
surrendered by the appellant. The number of trees is also not
in dispute. The amount payable for the land vested in the
Government the amounts were duly paid. With regard to the
amount payable for fruit bearing trees a Commissioner was
appointed, who submitted a report regarding number of fruit
bearing trees and other trees standing on the land so
surrendered. The Commissioner of Land Reforms Urban
Ceiling, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh directed the District
Collector to issue necessary instructions not to fix the
compensation payable in respect of the trees under the Rules
until further orders. According to the authorities the payment
was to be made for one year only and not for thirty years as
was claimed by the appellants.
Writ petitions were filed before the High Court which
came to be dismissed by the impugned orders.
Mr. M.N. Rao, learned senior counsel for the appellants
submitted that the High Court is not correct in its view that
the appellants are not entitled to get the amount for 30 years
and in accepting the stand of the Government that it was
payable only for one year.
Learned counsel for the respondent-State on the other
submitted the view of the High Court is clearly
unexceptionable. The purpose and object of the Statute under
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which the lands were surrendered cannot be lost sight of. The
appellants have been rightly held to be entitled for amounts
payable for one year.
In order to appreciate the rival submissions a few
provisions needs to be noted:
A. Section 15 of the Act.
"15. Amount payable for lands vested in the
Government:
The amount payable for any land vested
in the Government under this Act, shall be a
sum calculated at the rates specified in the
Second Schedule and it shall be paid at the
option of the Government, either in cash or in
bonds or partly in cash and partly in bonds.
The bonds shall be issued on such terms and
carry such rate of interest as may be
prescribed."
B. Schedule II to the Act
Clause (3) of the Second Schedule to the Act provides as
follows:
"Where the land contains any fruit bearing
trees or permanent structures, the amount
payable therefore shall be calculated in such
manner as may be prescribed."
C. Rule 11 of the Rules.
"11. Fixation on value for fruit bearing trees
and structures etc. 91) The amount payable for
fruit bearing trees shall be at the seignorage
rates notified by the District Forest Officer as
applicable to the district from time to time and
for the Tribunal may require the District Forest
Officer in whose jurisdiction the land is
situated to furnish an estimate of the amount
payable for such trees.
(2) The amount payable for the structures of
permanent nature shall be equivalent to the
depreciated value of the structure as on the
specified date and for this purpose the
Tribunal may require the Executive Engineer,
Roads and Buildings Division, in the district to
furnish an estimate of the depreciated value of
such structure."
At this juncture it is important to take note of the
notifications published in the Nellore District Gazettes dated
21.3.1982 and 23.4.1982. There is no dispute that the
amounts payable for fruit bearing trees shall be at the
"seignorage rates" notified by the District Forest Officer from
time to time.
Notification dated 21.3.1982 reads as follows:-
"R.C.D. 4 3209/82
NELLORE DISTRICT GAZETTE
EXTRA ODRINARY
PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY
NELLORE SUNDAY MARCH 21ST 1982
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NOTIFICATION
In exercise of the powers conferred under
Rule 5 of the Rules to regulate the seignorage
fees to be levied for the removal of timber and
other procedure, issued U/s 26 of the A.P.
Forest Act, 1882, the Collector hereby fixes the
seignorage rates in respect of Cashew Trees
(Fruit bearing) in Nellore District as specified
in the ’Annexure’. These rates shall come into
force with immediate effect.
Sd/-
H.K. Babu,
District Collector, Nellore,
Item No.64/82."
Seignorage rates of Cashew Trees (Fruit
Bearing) in Nellore District.
_______________________________________________________________________
S.No. Tree Age Approximate Rate Seignorage
Year Girth yield per kg. rates
Rs. P.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
_______________________________________________________________________
1. Cashew 5th 78(g) 0.75 10 7.50
6th 79.50 11.50 10 5.00
7th 80.00 3.00 10 30.00
8th 80.50 4.50 10 45.00
9h 81.00 6.00 10 60.00
10th 81.00 7.50 10 75.00
11th 82.00 8.00 10 80.00
12th 82.00 8.50 10 85.00
13th 83.00 9.00 10 90.00
14th 9.50 10 95.00
15th 10.00 10 100.00
16th 84.00 10.00 10 100.00
17th 85.00 10.00 10 100.00
18th 85.00 10.00 10 100.00
19th 80.00 10.00 10 100.00
20th 86.00 10.00 10 100.00
21th 87.00 10.00 10 100.00
2nd 87.50 10.00 10 100.00
23rd 88.00 10.00 10 100.00
24th 88.00 10.00 10 100.00
25th 89.00 10.00 10 100.00
26th 89.00 9.00 10 90.00
27th 90.00 8.00 10 80.00
28th 90.00 7.00 10 70.00
29th 90.00 6.00 10 60.00
30th 90.00 6.00 10 60.00
________________________________________________________________________
(Sd)H.K. Babu,
Nellore. Dist. Collector.
Dated 21.03.82"
The notification dated 23.4.82 which is crucial for this
case reads as follows:
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"R.C.D. 4 3209/82
NELLORE DISTRICT GAZETTE
EXTRA ODRINARY
PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY
NELLORE APRIL 23 - 1982
NOTIFICATION
The following sentence may be added to
the Notification published Nellore District
Gazette (Extra-ordinary) dated 31.03.1982.
The seignorage rate in the column No.7
are the rate of trees per year and the tree will
yield for 30 years. The seignorage rate per tree
is to be calculated for 30 years.
Sd/-
H.K. Babu,
District Collector, Nellore.
Dt. 23.04.1982
U.M. No.97/82"
A bare reading thereof makes the position clear that the
amounts are to be calculated from 5th to 30th years.
That being so, the stand of the State Government as
accepted by the High Court that the seignorage rate is for one
year and accordingly fixing it for the 12 year is clearly
unsustainable. It is to be noted that the trees were 12 years
old and stood on the surrendered land. It is further clear that
up to 5 years cashew trees are held to be not fruit bearing
trees.
The emphasis for the State was that the object of the
concerned statue was not to confer any benefit beyond the
statutory entitlements and for that purpose according to
learned counsel for the State the object of the statute was
vital. According to him for the purpose of construction of the
notifications of the District Collector, the same has to be read
in a manner which would give true effect to the intention of
the statute.
We shall deal with this plea in some detail.
It is said that a statute is an edict of the legislature. The
elementary principle of interpreting or construing a statute is
to gather the mens or sententia legis of the legislature. It is
well settled principle in law that the Court cannot read
anything into a statutory provision which is plain and
unambiguous.
Interpretation postulates the search for the true meaning
of the words used in the statute as a medium of expression to
communicate a particular thought. The task is not easy as the
"language" is often misunderstood even in ordinary
conversation or correspondence. The tragedy is that although
in the matter of correspondence or conversation the person
who has spoken the words or used the language can be
approached for clarification, the legislature cannot be
approached as the legislature, after enacting a law or Act,
becomes functus officio so far as that particular Act is
concerned and it cannot itself interpret it. No doubt, the
legislature retains the power to amend or repeal the law so
made and can also declare its meaning, but that can be done
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only by making another law or statute after undertaking the
whole process of law-making.
Statute being an edict of the legislature, it is necessary
that it is expressed in clear and unambiguous language. In
spite of Courts saying so, the draftsmen have paid little
attention and they still boast of the old British jingle "I am the
parliamentary draftsman. I compose the country’s laws. And of
half of the litigation, I am undoubtedly the cause", which was
referred to by this Court in Palace Admn. Board v. Rama
Varma Bharathan Thampuran (AIR 1980 SC 1187 at. P.1195).
In Kirby v. Leather (1965 (2) All ER 441) the draftsmen were
severely criticized in regard to Section 22(2)(b) of the (UK)
Limitation Act, 1939, as it was said that the section was so
obscure that the draftsmen must have been of unsound mind.
Where, however, the words were clear, there is no
obscurity, there is no ambiguity and the intention of the
legislature is clearly conveyed, there is no scope for the court
to innovate or take upon itself the task of amending or altering
the statutory provisions. In that situation the Judges should
not proclaim that they are playing the role of a law-maker
merely for an exhibition of judicial valour. They have to
remember that there is a line, though thin, which separates
adjudication from legislation. That line should not be crossed
or erased. This can be vouchsafed by "an alert recognition of
the necessity not to cross it and instinctive, as well as trained
reluctance to do so". (See: Frankfurter, Some Reflections on
the Reading of Statutes in "Essays on Jurisprudence",
Columbia Law Review, P.51.)
Words and phrases are symbols that stimulate mental
references to referents. The object of interpreting a statute is
to ascertain the intention of the Legislature enacting it. (See
Institute of Chartered Accountants of India v. M/s Price
Waterhouse and Anr. (AIR 1998 SC 74)) The intention of the
Legislature is primarily to be gathered from the language used,
which means that attention should be paid to what has been
said as also to what has not been said. As a consequence, a
construction which requires for its support, addition or
substitution of words or which results in rejection of words as
meaningless has to be avoided. As observed in Crawford v.
Spooner (1846 (6) Moore PC 1), Courts, cannot aid the
Legislatures’ defective phrasing of an Act, we cannot add or
mend, and by construction make up deficiencies which are left
there. (See The State of Gujarat and Ors. v. Dilipbhai
Nathjibhai Patel and Anr. (JT 1998 (2) SC 253)). It is contrary
to all rules of construction to read words into an Act unless it
is absolutely necessary to do so. (See Stock v. Frank Jones
(Tiptan) Ltd. (1978 1 All ER 948 (HL). Rules of interpretation
do not permit Courts to do so, unless the provision as it
stands is meaningless or of doubtful meaning. Courts are not
entitled to read words into an Act of Parliament unless clear
reason for it is to be found within the four corners of the Act
itself. (Per Lord Loreburn L.C. in Vickers Sons and Maxim Ltd.
v. Evans (1910) AC 445 (HL), quoted in Jamma Masjid,
Mercara v. Kodimaniandra Deviah and Ors.(AIR 1962 SC 847).
The question is not what may be supposed and has been
intended but what has been said. "Statutes should be
construed not as theorems of Euclid". Judge Learned Hand
said, "but words must be construed with some imagination of
the purposes which lie behind them". (See Lenigh Valley Coal
Co. v. Yensavage 218 FR 547). The view was re-iterated in
Union of India and Ors. v. Filip Tiago De Gama of Vedem
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Vasco De Gama (AIR 1990 SC 981).
In Dr. R. Venkatchalam and Ors. etc. v. Dy. Transport
Commissioner and Ors. etc. (AIR 1977 SC 842), it was
observed that Courts must avoid the danger of a priori
determination of the meaning of a provision based on their
own pre-conceived notions of ideological structure or scheme
into which the provision to be interpreted is somewhat fitted.
They are not entitled to usurp legislative function under the
disguise of interpretation.
While interpreting a provision the Court only interprets
the law and cannot legislate it. If a provision of law is misused
and subjected to the abuse of process of law, it is for the
legislature to amend, modify or repeal it, if deemed necessary.
(See Commissioner of Sales Tax, M.P. v. Popular Trading
Company, Ujjain (2000 (5) SCC 515). The legislative casus
omissus cannot be supplied by judicial interpretative process.
(See Maulavi Hussein Haji Abraham Umarji v. State of Gujarat
and Anr. (2004(6) SCC 672) and State of Jharkhand and Anr.
V. Govind Singh (2005 (10) SCC 437)
The residual question is the number of years for which
the Seignorage rates are to be computed.
We do not find any substance in the plea of learned
counsel for the appellants that the entitlement of the
appellants is for 30 years. Admittedly the trees were 12 years
old at the time the land were surrendered and, therefore, for
the balance 18 years only the appellants will be entitled to at
the relevant seignorage rates. Therefore, the amount payable
for each 12 year old cashew tree at the seignorage rates, as per
the Notification dated 21.3.1982 (as amended by Notification
dated 23.4.1982) will be ’the seignorage rate for 12 year tree’
multiplied by the ’remaining age of the tree’ that is Rs.85x 18
= Rs.1530. The amount shall be paid within 3 months, along
with other statutory entitlements, if any.
The appeals are accordingly allowed to the aforesaid
extent. No costs.