Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF BOMBAY
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
FAKIR UMAR DHANSE.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1961
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
BENCH:
KAPUR, J.L.
SHAH, J.C.
CITATION:
1961 AIR 722 1961 SCR (3) 747
ACT:
Unalienable agricultural land--Occupant--If could alter the
user to non-agricultural purposes--Unauthorised
structures--Nature of right of Revenue Authorities to
evict--Words " eviction " and " Vacation"’ meaning of--The
Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879 (V of 1879), s. 66.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent who was the occupant of an unalienated land
had erected several structures on it without obtaining the
prior permission of the Collector and became liable to be
evicted. The Collector served a notice of eviction on the
respondent under s. 66 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code and
called upon him to remove the unauthorised structures. On
the respondent not having complied with the notice, he was
evicted from the land and some of the buildings were
demolished.
The High Court held that the order directing the removal of
the structures was ultra vires of s. 66 of the Bombay Land
Revenue Code and though the order of eviction was legal and
intra vires but in spite of the eviction, the land or the
buildings did not vest in the Government and the occupant
continued to be the owner of the building and the land and
the only consequence of eviction was physical removal of the
occupant from the land.
The question was whether the occupier who had been evicted
as required to remove the building and in default could the
collector demolish the building and was liable to damage for
such demolition.
Held, that on a true construction of ss. 65 and 66 of the
Bombay Land Revenue Code an occupant was only entitled to
the use and occupation of unalienated land for the purpose
of agriculture, and could not alter the user to non-
agricultural purposes except with the permission of the
Revenue Authorities, and any such altered user entitled the
Revenue Authorities to summarily evict the occupant from the
land and once evicted the right of user and occupation could
not be exercised by him.
The words " eviction " and " vacation " did not mean mere
physical removal of the occupant, they meant that his rights
came to an end. For the purpose of " vacation " it was
necessary that any unauthorised construction put up must
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also be removed, and no specific powers were necessary for
such removal, the ,power to remove them was incidental and
ancillary to the powers to evict and to get the land
vacated.
The true effect of eviction was physical removal of the
occupant from the land with all the consequences, i.e.
demolitione of all unauthorised superstructure,
96
748
The word " eviction " as used in s. 66 of the Code meant
that on eviction, land had to be restored to the original
position so as to be used for the purpose for which it was
’given to the occupant.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION :Civil Appeal No. 377 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated September 24,
1954, of the Bombay High Court in First Appeal No. 355 of
1950.
R. Ganapathy Iyer, K. L. Hathi and D. Gupta, for the
appellant.
B. D. Sharma, for the respondent.
1961. February 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
KAPUR, J.-This is an appeal against the judgment and decree
of the High Court of Judicature at Bombay. The appellant
was the defendant in a suit brought by the respondent who
was the plaintiff and the facts giving rise to the appeal
are these:
The respondent was the occupant of unalienated land, Survey
No. 145, Hissa No. 2 of Mahad in the district of Colaba. He
applied on November 1, 1941, to the Collector for permission
to construct a temporary shed for one year on the above
mentioned land and permission was granted on January 9,
1942. The respondent made another application for extension
of the period of the permission by two years. On enquiry it
was found that the respondent had constructed permanent
structures without leaving an open space of 20 feet between
the road and the building and when asked to leave this space
open he refused to do so and therefore the application dated
September9,1942,was dismissed. On March28,1943, the
respondent made another application stating that, he was
prepared to remove the building which was within 20 feet of
the road. The Collector accepted this request and asked the
respondent to remove that portion of the building which was
within 20 feet from the road. While the correspondence was
going on between the respondent and the Collector, the
respondent put up several structures which, for some reason
749
or another, the Collector knew nothing about and it was in
March, 1947, that the Collector asked the 5 respondent to
stop further building. On April 21, 1947, the respondent
made another application to the Collector stating that he
had begun to construct another building and asked for
permission to complete it. It was then that the Collector
made an inquiry and found that several buildings had been
constructed deliberately without any permission. The
Collector then asked the permission of the Government to
take further action and on September 23, 1947, the
Government accorded sanction in pursuance of which the,
Collector directed the Mamlatdar to evict the respondent.
On October 19, 1947, the Mamlatdar served a notice upon the
respondent for evicting him. The respondent thereupon
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appealed to the Bombay Revenue Tribunal and his appeal was
dismissed on April 2, 1941. Another notice was served on
the respondent calling upon him to remove the unauthorised
structures. As he did not comply with the notice, he was
evicted from the land and some of the buildings were
demolished.
The respondent in August, 1948, filed a petition in the High
Court and obtained an order of stay of the order of the
Government and in execution of that order obtained
possession of the land and then did not prosecute his
petition. Thus in spite of his having flouted the orders
made by the Revenue authorities, the respondent managed to
get the possession of the land from which he had been
evicted. On November 23, 1948, the respondent filed a suit
for declaration that the order passed by the Government
directing his eviction was illegal and void and for
injunction restraining the Government from taking any action
pursuant to that order and for recovery of Rs. 7,000 as
damages for the portion of the building demolished by the
Revenue authorities. The Civil Judge held that the
buildings erected were unauthorised as the respondent had
not obtained the permission of the Collector but he held
that the Collector had no power under s. 66 of the Bombay
Land Revenue Code (hereinafter termed the Code) to demolish
the building. He
750
decreed the suit in regard to the eviction holding the order
of the Government and by the Collector as ultra wires and
inoperative and issued an injunction against the appellant
and also decreed the suit for Rs. 7,000 as damages for
demolition of the structures. The appellant then took an
appeal to the High Court and it was there held that the
orders directing removal of structures was ultra vires of s.
66 of the Code and the injunction was therefore confirmed as
also the decree as to the award of damages. The High Court
further held that the order of eviction was legal and intra
vires but in spite of the eviction, the land or the
buildings did not vest in the Government and the occupant
continued to be the owner of the buildings and the land and
the only consequence of eviction was the physical removal of
the occupant from the land. To put it in the language’of
the High Court it was held:-
", The legal consequences of eviction
therefore will be to deprive the occupant of
his possession of the land but not of his
ownership or proprietary rights, which will
continue to vest in him. As a corollary it
must follow that the building erected by the
occupant on the land will also continue to
belong to him. We are also of the opinion
that the power given to the Collector to evict
the occupant does not include the power to
remove a building erected by him."
It is against this judgment and decree that
the appellant has come in appeal to this Court
on a certificate of fitness by the High Court.
There is no dispute in this appeal as to the order of
eviction. The question which was debated was the
consequences of this eviction. Was the respondent required
to remove the building and in default can the appellant
demolish the building and (2) is the appellant liable to
damages for the demolition of the portion which it had
already demolished ? This would depend upon the
interpretation to be put on some of the provisions of the
Code. The Collector, after getting the permission of the
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Government directed, by his order dated October 10, 1947,
the removal of
751
the structures unauthorisedly erected by the respondent and
the action purported to have been taken under a. 66 of the
Code. Section 45 of the Code provides that all land whether
used for purposes of agriculture or other purposes and
wherever situated is liable to payment of land revenue to
Government and under s. 56 failure to pay land revenue makes
the occupancy liable to forfeiture. Sections 65 and 66 of
the Code provide:
S.....65. " An occupant of land assessed or
held for the purpose of agriculture is
entitled by himself, his servants, tenants,
agents or other legal representatives to erect
farm buildings, construct wells or tanks or
make any other improvements thereon for the
better cultivation of the land or its more
convenient use for the purpose aforesaid.
But if any occupant wishes to use his holding
or any part thereof for any other purpose, the
Collector’s permission shall in the first
place be applied for by the
occupant.........................................
S.....66. " If any such land be so used
without the permission of the Collector being
first obtained or before the expiration of the
period prescribed by section 65 the occupant
and any tenant or other person holding under
or through him shall be liable to be summarily
evicted by the Collector from the land so used
and from the entire field or survey number of
which it may form a part and the occupant
shall also be liable to pay, in addition to
the new assessment which may be leviable under
the provisions of section 48 for the period
during which the said land has been so used
such fine as the Collector may subject to the
general orders of the State Government direct.
Any tenant or any occupant or any other person
holding under or through an occupant who shall
without the occupant’s consent use any such
land for any such purpose and thereby render
the said occupant liable to the penalties
aforesaid, shall be responsible to the said
occupant in damages."
It has been found that the respondent erected several
structures without obtaining the prior permission of
752
the Collector and he was liable to be evicted, and therefore
the order passed by the Collector directing the eviction of
the respondent was legal and intra vires. ,Under s. 65 an
occupant of land held for the purpose of agriculture may
erect farm buildings construct wells or tanks or make other
improvements for the better cultivation of the land or for
its more convenient use for the purpose of agriculture but
he cannot alter the user to non-agricultural purposes except
with the permission of the Revenue authorities. This shows
that any user unconnected with agriculture is unlawful and
under s. 66 therefore any such altered user entities the
Revenue authorities to summarily evict the occupant from the
land and certain other consequences follow. Therefore on a
true construction of ss. 65 and 66 an occupant is only
entitled to the use and occupation of unalienated land
subject to the limitation above mentioned and if he is once
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evicted under the provisions of s. 66 of the Code the right
of user and occupation cannot be exercised by him.
Section 202 of the Code lays down the procedure for evicting
any person unlawfully in possession of the land and provides
as follows:
S.....202. " Whenever it is provided by this,
or by any other Act for the time being in
force, that the Collector may or shall evict
any person wrongfully in possession of land,
such eviction shall be made in the following
manner, VIZ.
by serving a notice on the person or persons
in possession requiring them within such time
as may appear reasonable after receipt of the
said notice to vacate the land,
...........................
This section therefore shows that eviction requires vacation
of the land and vacation does not mean that anything done
upon the land which was unauthorised is to be allowed to
remain and only the person responsible for doing the
unlawful act is to be removed from the land. That the words
" eviction " and " vacation " do not mean mere physical
removal of the occupant is clear from the very nature of the
right which the respondent in the present case had his right
was
753
confined to the use and occupation of the land for the
purpose for which he held it from Government, i.e., for
agricultural purposes and when he is evicted and is asked to
vacate the land, it must mean that his rights come to an
end. For the purpose of vacation it is necessary that any
unauthorised construction put up must also be removed
otherwise there cannot be any vacation of the land nor can
the land be put to effective use for the purpose for which
agricultural lands are normally accepted to be used. It is
not necessary to hold in this case as to whether on eviction
the occupant also loses his right to the materials of the
superstructure but it would be a in is interpretation of the
words " eviction " and " vacation " of the land if it were
held that although the occupant is evicted the structures
erected by him cannot be removed and if the Government tries
to restore the land to the original purpose for which it was
granted then it will do so only on the pain of being mulcted
in damages. It is, in our opinion, not necessary to have
any specific power to have the land vacated of all
unauthorised superstructures; the power to remove them is
incidental and ancillary to the power to evict and to get
the land vacated. It appears to us that the nature of the
right of occupancy and the limitation placed upon it by the
provisions of the Code contained in ss. 40 and 41 by which
the right to certain trees on unalienated land is reserved
to the State; in ss. 65 and 66 which have been quoted above
and ss. 68 and 69 which provide that an occupant is entitled
to the use and occupation of the land for the period to
which his tenure is limited shows that the true effect of
eviction is the physical removal of the occupant from the
land with all the consequences, i.e., demolition of all
unauthorised superstructures. The High Court relied upon
the difference in the language used in ss. 61 and 66 of the
Code and to the amendment made in the former section in 1919
by which the words " or to summary removal " were added in
s. 61 and the relevant portion of the section now reads as
under;-
754
S.....61. " The person unauthorisedly
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occupying any such land may be summarily
evicted by the Collector, and any crop raised
in the land shall be liable to forfeiture, and
any building, or other construction erected
thereon shall also, if not removed by him
after such written notice as the Collector may
deem reasonable, be liable to forfeiture or to
summary removal."
From the addition of these words it was sought to be argued
that these words were added to authorise the Collector to
remove any building or other construction put up on that
land by a person in unauthorised occupation and it was
argued that those words were specifically added for the
purpose. It is wholly unnecessary for us to go into the
question as to why that particular power was given to the
Collector. In this case we are concerned with the meaning
of the word " eviction " as used in s. 66 and in our opinion
the meaning of those words is that on eviction land has to
be restored to the original position so as to be used for
the purpose for which it was given to the occupant.
For the reasons given above this appeal is allowed and the
decree of the High Court affirming that of the trial court
is set aside. The appellant will have its costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.