Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BRIGADIER SUKHJIT SINGH
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/06/1993
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
AGRAWAL, S.C. (J)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (3) 944 1993 SCC (3) 459
JT 1993 (3) 748 1993 SCALE (3)25
ACT:
%
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 13- Farman issued by a Ruler of an erstwhile Indian
State--Sovereign will could be expressed in any manner and
it becomes binding as law.
Transfer of Property Act,
Title to property-Merger of States- Erstwhile Ruler of
Indian State-Not enlisting particular property while
declaring his private properties-But issuing a Farman that
the property would vest with each succeeding heir apparent-
Effect of Title-Whether could be claimed by State.
Easements Act, 1882:
Sections 52, 60, 61 & 62-Licence-Payment of licence fee not
essential for subsistence of-Revocation of licence-Occupier
State to vacate-Orders of lower courts-confirmed.
Limitation Act, 1963:
Article 65-Adverse possession-Licensee continuing as such
for long--Permissive possession-Whether becomes hostile by
long lapse of time so as to claim adverse possession.
Specific Relief Act, 1963:
S. 39-Suit for eviction-Property, occupied by State and
claiming title thereof-Plaintiff descendent of erstwhile
Ruler who issued Farman-Property neither personal nor of
State-To be succeeded by heir apparent-Mandatory Injunction
issued by Courts below- Confirmed-State to vacate the
premises.
HEADNOTE:
The building in dispute viz. a double storeyed building has
been in the
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occupation of the State Public Works Department. The
plaintiff-respondent filed a suit claiming that he was the
owner of the building and that the possession by the State
was permissive in character and in the nature of a licence,
and even after he had terminated the same, the State had not
vacated the building. He therefore sought mandatory
injunction requiring the State to vacate the premises and to
keep its hands off from the other properties in the complex
known as Jallowkhana Complex owned and possessed by him.
The State disputed the claim on the ground that since the
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erstwhile Ruler of Kapurthala State, the ancestor of
plaintiff, did not enlist the Jallowkhana Complex as part of
his private properties at the time of merger of States, the
entire complex was owned by the State.
The trial court partially decreed the suit holding that
except the double storeyed budding in occupation of the
State, the remnants in the Jallowkhana complex was owned and
possessed by the plaintiff-respondent. It took the view
that the State had become the owner of the said double
storeyed building by lapse of time; that there was no
licence since admittedly no licence fee had ever been paid.
In respect of the other portions of the property, the trial
court found that the State had the right of easement.
Cross appeals came to be filed before the District Court.
The appeal of the State was dismissed and that of the
plaintiff-respondent was allowed resulting in the, suit
being decreed in entirety. The second appeals filed by the
State were dismissed by the High Court. Hence these appeals
by the State.
Dismissing the appeals, this court
HELD: 1. Jallowkhana complex is one integrated property.
Whatever is composed thereof is Jallowkhana. There cannot
be two owners to such property. The property must remain
with the heir-apparent. The State cannot partially be an
heir-apparent. On the other hand when the plaintiff
respondent terms the State as a licensee, it cannot be
negatived on the mere plea that no licence fee was agreed to
be paid. Payment of licence fee is not an essential
attribute for the subsistence of a licence. The mere fact
that the licence is of long duration dating back to the year
1925, as suggested by some of the plaintiffs witnesses, or
of 1947 as said by the witnesses of the State, is of no
consequence. (952-H, 953-A,B)
2. Permissive possession, however long, cannot by itself
be said to have become hostile by a "long lapse of time",
more so, on property, the nature and
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character of which is unique and singular, having attributes
of being impersonal. Such status of the property rules out
the objection regarding adverse possession for which even an
issue was not claimed in the Courts below keeping apart the
pleadings. (953-B-C)
3.1. It is beyond doubt that the ruler of an Indian state
was in the position of a sovereign, and his command was the
law. His Farman had the strength and potency of a law made
by an elected legislature and his acts, administrative or
executive, were sovereign in character. The Farman has
necessarily to be imported with those attributes. (951-G-H,
952-A)
3.2. Creating such kind of a special estate undeniably was
within the competence of the ruler. His creative dimension
and imaginative skill need not have conformed to any set
standards or patterns known to jurisprudence or law. His
sovereign will could have been expressed in various
innovations. And this is an instance in which he put his
sentiment, attached to the complex, at a pedestal at which
it was neither to be treated as State property nor personal
property either for him or in the hands of the succeeding
heirsapparent in the line of primogeniture. Its ownership
and possession in the hands of each succeeding heir-apparent
was devised as purposive, for perpetually keeping its
integrity and the name of the dynasty alive, the jallowkhana
structure symbolising such continuance by its special status
and reverence. (952-E,G)
4. Tide to the double storeyed building in question could
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not be divested from the plaintiff due to the unique and
singular character of the property, it having attributes of
being impersonal, as also by mere lapse of time, or (in
account of non-payment of any licence fee or rent. On an
adverse possession, for which there is no plea as well as
the property in dispute being an integral part of a complex,
to which complex the claim of the State to it--. ownership
has failed, and finally the ruler on merger of his State
need not have claimed this to be his personal property to
maintain the suit and seek relief. Thus the State has no
tide to the disputed property and hence must obey the
mandatory injunction issued by the lower appellate court as
confirmed by the High Court. The mandatory injunction
granted by the lower appellate court is so weakly worded
that it is capable of being evaded totally, and in any event
for a very long time to the point of negating it. In any
case the injunction has to be carried out within a
reasonable time. The mandatory injunction issued by the
lower appellate court should be carried out in its entirety,
latest by the end of three years, if not earlier, and on the
breach of which the law may take its own course. (953-C-G)
947
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 1007-08 of
1992.
From the Judgment and Order dated 15.3.1991 of the Punjab
and Haryana High Court in R.S.A. No. 1719 & 1720 of 1989.
Kapil Sibal, Ranbir Singh Yadav and G.K. Bansal for the
Appellants.
D.D. Thakur. Anil Mittal and Manoj Swarup for the
Respondent.
The Judgement of the Court was delivered by
PUNCHHI, J. These two appeals at the instance of the State
of Punjab, are directed against a common judgment of a
learned Single Judge of the Punjab and Haryana High Court,
passed in Regular Second Appeal Nos. 1719 and 1720 of 1989
and are limited in scope to the determination of title to a
double storeyed building situated in a complex known as
Jallowkhana in the town of Kapurthala. These appeals have
arisen in the following manner.
The respondent herein is Brigadier Sukhjit Singh. He is the
son of Maharaja Paramjit Singh and the grand-son of Maharja
Jagajit Singh in the order of primogeniture succession. The
ancestory of Maharaja Jagajit Singh is traced to Baba Jassa
Singh Ahluwalia, the founder of Kapurthala State and the
Ahluwalia dynasty. It is common ground that there is a
complex known as Jallowkhana at Kapurthala which encompasses
two historic havelis, which in the context mean palaces,
going by the names Haveli Baba Jassa Singh and Nihal Mahal.
Besides these two havelis, there are open spaces and other
structures in the complex and the disputed one is a double
storeyed building presently in the occupation of state of
Punjab through its Public Works Department. The plaintiff-
respondent claiming that since the possession of the State
of Punjab thereon was permissive in character and in the
nature of a licence, and despite his terminating the same
the State of Punjab had not vacated the disputed building,
he sought relief by way of suit for mandatory injunction
requiring the State of Punjab to vacate the premises, and to
keep its hands off from the other properties in the complex
over which the plaintiff-respondent was owner in possession.
The State of Punjab on the other hand disputed the ownership
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of the plaintiff to the Jallowkhana complex and claimed that
the building in dispute belonged to the government and was
being maintained by the Public Works Department at state
expense since 1947. The possession of plaintiff towards any
part of the
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buildings was denied. It was pleaded that when the princely
states in this part of the country merged with the State
known as the Patiala and Fast Punjab State Unions (PEPSU),
the rulers of the merging States were required to declare
their private properties, but the ruler of Kapurthala State.
however, while declaring his private. properties, did not
enlist the Jallowkhana complex as part of his private
properties. On that analysis it was claimed that the entire
jallowkhana complex was owned by the State.
Since there were various pleas on both sides on locus,
jurisdiction. limitation, estoppal and maintainability, a
number of issues were Struck on the pleadings of the
parties, but we are not concerned with them any more for
they stand settled one way Or the other so as to steer the
suit to its conclusion on title to the properties.
The trial court on its part partially decreed the suit
holding that except the double storeyed building, in
occupation of the State of Punjab, the remnants in the
Jallowkhana complex was owned and possessed by the
plaintiff-respondent. It took the view that the State of
Punjab had become the owner of the said double storeyed
building by lapse of time. It viewed that there was no
licence since admittedly no licence fee had ever been paid.
Grounding its conclusion solely on that basis it held that
even though the common entrance to the double storeyed
building as well as to the palaces known as Haveli Baba
Jassa Singh and Nihal Mahal through the deori was owned by
the plaintiff-respondent still the State of Punjab had a
right of passage through it as easement. Similarly it held
that tile open courtyard in front of the double storeyed
building as indicated in the plan. was in the ownership of
the plaintiff but the defendant-State had an easement of
passage over it. The court however did notice the fact that
the State of Punjab had never pleaded alternatively any such
easements and yet had no hesitation in the ,rant thereof.
In the result the State of Punjab succeeded in quelling the
claim of ownership of the plaintiff to the double storeyed
building and it was held to be tile property of the State
"because of lapse of time", and other portions of the
property as aforementioned were found to be subjected to
easements, its spelled out earlier. The remaining part of
the complex including the two havelis were held to be in the
ownership and possession of the plaintiff-respondent.
Two cross appeals were filed before the District Judge,
Kapurthala. The appeal of the State of Punjab was dismissed
but the cross appeal of the plaintiff respondent was
allowed. The plaintiff-respondent succeeded in having the
suit decreed in entirety. The findings of the trial court
on the questioned issues nos. 5 and 8 were reversed and a
mandatory injunction was issued calling, upon the defendant-
State to hand over the possession of the double storeyed
building, in
949
dispute to tile plaintiff, ,is well as affirming,
restraining the State from interfering in the possession of
the plaintiff of properties in other part of the Jallowkhana
complex. Obedience to tile mandatory injunction was
conditioned in terms that since the Government offices were
functioning in the double storeyed building since long the
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same may be vacated by the Government as and when suitable
accommodation is made available for such offices, and till
then the plaintiff and the State Government were suggested
to mutually settle reasonable rent to be paid by the State
Government for use and occupation till the Government
vacated it.
Two separate second appeals were filed by the State of
Punjab in the High Court but those were dismissed by means
of the common judgement under appeal. At the outset notice
in the special leave petitions was issued by this Court
limited to the question of the double storeyed building. In
the mean time parties were permitted to tile additional
documents as existing on the trial court file, which were
filed. Leave was then granted limited to the property
referred to in the notice. During the course of the hearing
of the appeal, it was felt that a report be called for from
the Sub-Judge Kapurthala as to whether the Deorhi, through
which was the common entrance. was in possession of the
State Government and whether it needed repairs. He was also
required to report whether the deori is the main entrance to
the double storeyed building in dispute or whether the main
entrance to the said building was from another route. The
Sub-Judge has reported that the Deorhi in question is in
possession of Brigadier Sukhjit Singh-respondent and it is
beyond repairs. He has further intimated that presently the
Deorhi is not the main entrance to the double storeyed
building, but on site a distinct 16 ft. wide path has been
provided as main entrance to the double storeyed building.
The additional documents in the form of photographs of the
deori and the site plan Ex.R-7 showing its location go to
show that the entrance to the Deorhi is blocked by closing
its gate and knitted by barbed wire, and the main entrance
to the double storeyed building shifted perpendicularly from
across direction. This is the fact situation.
The case in the courts below has proceeded on the footing
that the double storeyed building is part of Jallowkhana
complex. Besides, not only does the afore-depiction
establish, it has also been found otherwise by the courts
below that the double storeyed building was and is part of
the Jallowkhana complex. It is in the Jallowkhana complex
that the two historic havelis, namely Haveli Baba Jassa
Singh and Nihal Mahal are situated and for all these
buildings there was a common entrance through a Deorhi which
has now fell in dis-use and that now a separate passage
stands provided at site to reach the double storeyed
building which is perpendicularly cross to the passage from
the deori. It is also clear that the claim of the plaintiff
that the double storeyed building in occupation of’ the
State of
950
Punjab was part and parcel of the jallowkhana complex stands
established and that the court-., except the trial court,
have held it to be in tile ownership of the plaintiff-
respondent: hut the trial court has field that the
plaintiff-respondent had lost ownership due to the
occupation of the State of Punjab "because of lapse of
time". The title to the Jallowkhana complex comprising of
the two historic havelies and other open places and
structures, excluding the double storeyed building has been
put beyond dispute and the plaintiff-respondent is held to
be the owner thereof and conversely tile State has been held
to he not its owner. This is the effect of the limited
leave granted. Thus the limited question on which this
appeal survives is should the double storeyed building he
retrieved from that complex and held to he owned by the
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State as held by the trial court’?
Mr. Kapil Sibal learned Senior Advocate for the appellant-
State contended that firstly the double storeyed building
was not part of the Jallowkhana complex, secondly even if it
was so. the State of Punjab had become its owner by adverse
possession, and thirdly the same was not the property of the
plaintiff-respondent since it is not included in the list of
personal properties of the Ruler at the time of merger.
Much argument before (lie courts below and particularly
before the High Court was centered around the construction
of a Farman of the ruler of the State made on 28th Magh
Samvat 1981, equivalent approximately to 13th February 1925
A.D. It’s original in Urdu in English Alphabets followed by,
its English translation is given hereafter
URDU VERSION
"Nakal Az Asal mashmoola misal no. 1020 confidential record
Kapurthala State.
Minjanib Jagatjit Singh Maharaj Kapurthala. Apne sab
pisaraan ko apni Oudh (wagia subajat mutahida) ki jaidad
bataur hiba hissa rasadi de chuka hoonuske baad yeh hukam
sadar kiyajaata hai keh mere baad Tikka Sahib Raja Paramjit
Singh bataur haqooq wali ahad meri tamam jaidad bakaya har
kisam ka wahid maalik banega. Aur isi tareh se yeh laazam
hoga keh har aanewala wali ahad ahluwalia khandan ki rawayat
ke madenazar Ahluwalia khaandan ki tawarikhi hawelian waqia
Kapurthala, BabaJassa Singh Haveli aur Nihal Mahal mausooma
bataur Jallowkhana ka bhi maalik wa kaabiz reh kar is imarat
ki tawarikhi haisiyat aur ehtaram ko kaim rakhega jo imarat
wabasta hain, taake Ahluwalia missal ka chirag ta-doam is
imarat mein roshan reheh. Aur is imarat ki malkiat wa
kaubaziyat bhi meri deegar jaidao se ilahida tassawar ki
jakar bahaq har anewala wali ahad ke haq men mansoob hogi.
Lihaza tehrir hiza bataur yaad-daasht ke likh kar rakh
951
di hai ki indul haajit kaam awe. Fakat tehrir 28 Magh
Samvat 1981.
Daskhat Beharoofd Urdu (Jagatjit Singh) Maharaja Kapurthala
Bamai Mohar"
ENGLISH TRANSLATION
"Copy of the original on file no. 1020.Confidential Record
Kapurthala State.
On the part of Maharaja Jagatjit Singh Kapurthala. To all
my sons I have already gifted. in accordance with their
respective shares, my properties in Oudh (situate in United
Provinces), After that it is ordained that after me Tikka
Sahib (heir apparent) Raja Paramjit Singh by his right of
primogeniture would become the sole owner of my entire
remaining properties. In the same manner it would be
obligatory on each succeeding heir apparent, keeping in view
the traditions of the Ahluwalia family, to be also owning
and possessing the historic havelis of Ahluwalia dynasty
situated at Kapurthala, Haveli Baba Jassa Singh and Nihal
Mahal, known as Jallowkhana, maintaining its historic
character and respect which is connected to this structure,
so that the lamp of the Ahluwalia dynesty is kept alight in
this structure perpetually. Further the ownership and
possession of this structure be also treated separate from
my other properties, and this shall vest in favour of each
succeeding heir apparent. Therefore, this writing is made
and kept for record to be put to use whenever necessary.
Date of ordaining 28th Magh Samvat 1981 (13-2-1925 A.D.
approximately)
Signature in Urdu Jagatjit Singh Maharaja Kapurthala and
Seal."
We have done the exercise to translate the Farman ourselves,
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for we found that the translations done by the courts below
at various points, were not happily worded. Urdu, for
decades, was once the official language in that part of the
country and had remained court language, even after the
independence, till State languages took over. We thought it
appropriate to put the matter in the right perspective,
since the Farman had to here adasa whole and then construed,
to meet the challenge of Mr. Sibal.
Now it is beyond doubt that the ruler of an Indian State was
in the position of a sovereign and his command was the law.
His Farman had the strength and potency of law made by an
elected legislature and his acts, administrative or
executive, were sovereign in character. The Farman above
referred to has
952
necessarily to be imported with those attributes. When read
as a whole it reveals three important factors:
(1)The historic havelis namely, Haveli Baba
jassa Singh and Nihal Mahal, which had
commonly come to be known as Jallowkhana was
not those buildings alone but the entire
structure or complex containing those palaces.
appurtenances, and open spaces as part of its
fortification, otherwise Jallowkhana would not
have been referred to in singular, when the
palaces were referred to in plural.
(2)the complex as an integrated whole was
ordained to be neither State property nor the
personal property of the Ruler. It’s
ownership and possession in the hands of each
succeeding heir apparent by primogeniture was
demised perpetually so as to keep the name of
the Ahluwalia dynasty perpetuated in the
Jallowkhana as such. It is in the singular
sense that it was ordained that its historic
character and respect to the fortification
shall be maintained to keep the family flame
alight, and
(3)the structure known as Jallowkhana was to
have a separate and special proprietary status
in as much as it was thenceforth to remain
neither the separate property of the ruler nor
that of the State but a property settled on a
titleholder for keeping the family name alive
perpetually and vesting it in each succeeding
heir apparent by the rule of primogeniture.
It was in the nature of an impersonal estate
as opposed to private property or private
estate.
Now creating such kind of a special estate undeniably was
within the Competence of the ruler. His creative dimension
and imaginative skill need not have conformed to any set
standards or patterns known to jurisprudence or law. His
sovereign will could have been expressed in various
innovations. And this is an instance in which he put his
sentiment, attached to the complex, at a pedestal at which
it was neither to be treated as State property nor personal
property either for him or in the hands of the succeeding
heirs apparent in the line of primogeniture. It’s ownership
and possession in the hands of each succeeding heir apparent
was devised as purposive, for perpetually keeping its
integrity and the name of the Ahluwalia dynasty alive, the
Jallowkhana structure symbolising such continuance by its
special status and reverence.
Once it is held that Jallowkhana complex is one integrated
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property, the argument of Mr. Sibal to the contrary is of no
substance. Whatever is composed thereof is Jallowk ban a.
There cannot be two owners to such property. The property
must remain with the heir apparent. The State of Punjab
cannot partially be an heir
953
apparent. On the other hand when the plaintiff-respondent
terms the State of Punjab as a licensee, his plea cannot be
negatived on the mere plea that no licence fee was agreed to
be paid. Payment of licence fee is not an essential
attribute for the subsistence of a licence.The mere fact
that the licence is of long duration dating back to the year
1925, as suggested by some of the plaintiff’s witnesses, or
of 1947 as said by the witnesses of the State, is of no
consequence. Permissive possession, however long cannot by
itself be said to have become hostile by a "Iong lapse of
time", more so, on property, the nature and character of
which is unique and singular, having attributes of being
impersonal. Such status of the property rules out the
second objection of Mr. Sibal regarding adverse possession
for which even an issue was not claimed in the courts below
keeping apart the pleadings. Thirdly for the ruler having
not listed Jallowkhana complex as part of his personal
properties at the time of merger, is for the reason that it
was not his personal property. Thus not agreeing with Mr.
Sibal we go on to hold that title to the double storeyed
building in question could not be divested from the
plaintiff due to the unique and singular character of the
property, it having attributes of being impersonal, as also
by mere lapse of time, or on account of non-payment of any
licence fee or rent, or on adverse possession, for which
there is no plea, as well as the property in dispute being
an integral part of a complex, to which complex the claim of
the State to its ownership has failed, and finally hold that
the ruler on merger of his State need not have claimed this
to be his personal property to maintain the instant suit and
seek relief. This determination leads us to hold that the
State of Punjab has no title to the disputed property and
hence must obey the mandatory injunction issued by the lower
appellate court as confirmed by the High Court. We,
however, go on to observe that the mandatory injunction
granted by the lower appellate court is so weakly worded
that it is capable of being evaded totally, and in any event
for a very long time to the point of negating it. In any
case the injunction has to be carried out within a
reasonable time. Thus, in order to do complete justice
between the parties, we have thought it fit to fix a
reasonable time for its obedience. Let the mandatory
injunction issued by the lower appellate court be carried
out in its entirety, latest by the end of three years, if
not earlier, and on the breach of which the law may take its
own course.
With these observations, we dismiss the appeals. In the
circumstances, the parties shall bear their own costs.
G.N. Appeals dismissed.
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