Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
ROOP CHAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF PUNJAB
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
10/10/1962
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
DAS, S.K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1963 AIR 1503 1963 SCR Supl. (1) 539
CITATOR INFO :
D 1967 SC 295 (56)
D 1977 SC2313 (20)
D 1991 SC2137 (5)
ACT:
Consolidation of Holdings-Appeal to State Government-Power
to hear appeal delegated to officer-Decision of such
officer-Revision of decision by State Government-Legality
of-Fundamental rights-If infringed by illegal order of State
Government-East Punjab Holdings (Consolidation and
Prevention of Fragmentation) Act, 1948 (Punj. 50 of 1948),
ss. 21 (4), 41 (1),42-Constitution of India, Art. 32.
HEADNOTE:
Under the E. P. Holdings Consolidation and Prevention of
Fragmentation) Act, 1948, a scheme, for consolidation of
holdings was framed for the petitioner’s village and a
repartition of the lands was proposed. The petitioner
objected to the repartition and contended that under the
scheme he was entitled to retain his plots Nos. 635 and 636
and to get some more land adjacent to them in exchange for
other lands belonging to him. This contention was rejected
by the Consolidation Officer The petitioner filed an appeal
before the Settlement Officer
540
but the appeal also failed. Against this the petitioner
filed an appeal before the State Government under s. 21 (4)
of the Act, which was heard by Shri Brar, Assistant
DIrector, Consolidation, to whom the power to hear such
appeals had been delegated under s. 41 (1). Shri Brar
allowed the appeal and the petitioner became entitled to
retain plots Nos. 635 and 636. Respondent No. 2 to whom
these plots had been given on repartition moved the State
Government under s. 42 to revise the order made by Shri
Brar, and the State Government set aside the order of Shri
Brar and restored that of the Consolidation Officer. The
petitioner filed a writ petition in the Supreme Court
challenging the order of the State Government contending
that under S. 42 it could not interfere with an order made
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by itself or by an officer exercising powers of the
Government delegated to him under s. 41 (1).
Held (per Das, Sarkar and Dayal, JJ.) that s. 42 did not
empower the State Government to interfere with an order
passed by an officer to whom the power to hear appeals filed
under s. 21 (4) had been delegated by it under s. 41 (1).
The words II any order passed .... by an officer under this
Act, in s. 42 did not include an order passed by an officer
in exercise of powers delegated to him by the Government
under s. 41 (1). Section 21 (4) gives the power to the
Government to hear appeals, and an order made in the
exercise of that power, whether by the Government itself or
by its delegate, would be an order of the Government.
Section 42 was applicable to an order made by a subordinate
officer exercising independent powers under the Act.
Lakha Singh v. Director, Consolidation of Holdings, Punjab,
A. 1. R. (1959) Punj. 157, disapproved.
The. impugned order infringed the fundamental rights of the
petitioner and he was entitled to a writ or direction from
the Supreme Court. If the order was allowed to stand the
petitioner would be deprived of plots Nos. 635 and 636 which
were his property.
Per Kapur and Hidayatullah, JJ.-The State Government had
jurisdiction to revise the order made by Shri Brar. Under
s. 42 the Government had over-all control at all stages of
the Consolidation proceedings. An officer to whom powers
were delegated under s. 41, though exercising the powers of
the Government was still an officer of the State Government
and his order was subject to the power of revision under s.
42. The order made by Shri Brar under s. 21 (4) was an
order of repartition and was liable to be revised under s.
42.
541
Lakha Singh v. Director, Consolidation of Holdings, Punjab,
A. I. R. (1959) Punj. 157, approved.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petition No. 77 of 1957.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of India for the
enforcement of Fundamental Rights.
Pritam Singh Safeer, for the petitioner.
S. M. Sikri, Advocate-General for the State of Punjab, N.
S. Bindra and P. D. Menon, for the respondent No. 1.
N. S. Bindra and Govind Saran Singh, for respondent No. 2.
1962. October 10. The Judgment of Das, Sarkar and Dayal,
JJ. was delivered by Sarkar, J. The judgment of Kapur and
Hidayatullah, JJ. was delivered by Kapur, J.
SARKAR, J.-This petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution
asks for a writ quashing an order purported to have been
made under s. 42 of the East Punjab Holdings (Consolidation
and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act, 1948. It is said that
the order was entirely without jurisdiction and if allowed
to stand, it would deprive the petitioner of certain lands
and so wrongfully affect his fundamental rights under Part
III of the Constitution.
The question raised by this petition depends on a
construction of certain provisions of the Act which we shall
later quote. A general idea of some of the purposes and
provisions of the Act will however be useful for deciding
that question and may be given now.
Shortly put, one of the objects of the Act appears to be to
pool together the entire lands held
542
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by different persons in a village and redistribute the same
among them on a more utilitarian basis in accordance with a
scheme framed for the purpose. The final result that the
Act achieves is that instead of his original holding a
person is given some other holding. Section 14 gives the
State Government the power to declare by notification its
intention to frame a scheme for the consolidation of
holdings in any area and thereupon to appoint a
Consolidation Officer who is to prepare the scheme. Section
19 provides for the publication of the draft scheme prepared
by the Consolidation Officer and for objections thereto
being made by the persons likely to be affected. It also
provides that the Consolidation Officer will submit the
scheme with the objections and his suggestions with regard
to them to the Settlement Officer and for republication of
the scheme with such amendments as may have been made.
Section 20 empowers the State Government to appoint
Settlement Officers (Consolidation), in this judgment
referred to as Settlement Officers. It further provides
that if no objections are received to the draft scheme when
first published or to the amended scheme when republished,
the Settlement Officer shall confirm the scheme and if gay
objections are received, he may after considering the
objections, confirm the scheme with or without modification.
It lastly provides that upon confirmation the scheme shall
be published again. Sub-section (1) of s. 21 provides that
the Consolidation Officer shall carry out a re-partition in
accordance with the scheme as confirmed under s. 20. Sub-
section (2) provides that any person aggrieved by the
repartition may file an objection before the Consolidation-
Officer. Sub-section (3) gives to the person aggrieved by
the order of the Consolidation Officer made under subset.
(2), a right to file an appeal before the Settlement
Officer. Sub-section (4) provides that "any person
aggrieved by the order of the Settlement Officer
(Consolidation) under subsection (3) may within
543
sixty days of that order, appeal to the State Government."
Section 22 requires the Consolidation Officer to prepare a
new record of rights giving effect to the repartition as
finally sanctioned under s. 21.
A scheme under the Act had been framed for village
Palrikalan where the petitioner held some lands, The
petitioner had no objection to the scheme as such but he had
taken objection to the re-partition made under it by the
Consolidation Officer on the ground that the repartition was
not in accordance with the scheme. The petitioner contended
that under the scheme he was entitled to retain plots Nos.
635 and 636 which originally belonged to him and to get some
more land adjacent to them in exchange for other lands held
by him in the village while under the repartition made by
the Consolidation Officer he was being deprived of those
plots and was being given lands elsewhere. With the merits
of this and the rival contention we are not concerned in
this petition.
The petitioner’s contention was rejected by the
Consolidation Officer and he filed an appeal under s. 21(3)
before the Settlement Officer but that appeal also failed.
The petitioner thereafter went up in appeal under s. 21(4)
against the order of the Settlement Officer.
Now, s. 21(4) provided for an appeal to the State Government
but the petitioner’s appeal was heard by Shri Brar,
Assistant Director, Consolidation of Holdings, Ambala to
whom the Government’s powers and functions concerning the
appeal had been delegated under s. 41 (1) which is in these
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terms :
S. 4-1(1) : "The State Government may for
the administration of this Act, appoint such
persons as it thinks fit, and may by
notification delegate any of its powers or
functions under this Act to
544
any of its officers either by name or desig-
nation."
Shri Brar allowed the petitioner’s appeal. As a result of
his decision the petitioner became entitled to retain plots
Nos. 635 and 636 which he originally owned and Hari Singh,
respondent No. 2, to this petition who had on the
repartition been given by the Consolidation Officer those
plots along with some more adjacent lands, was to be
deprived of them. Hari Singh being dissatisfied with the
order of Shri Brar moved the Government under s. 42 of the
Act and the impugned order was thereupon made. That order
set aside the order of Shri Brar and restored that of the
Consolidation Officer. As a result of this order,
therefore, the petitioner was to be deprived of plots Nos.
635 and 636.
It is now necessary to set out s. 42 on the interpretation
of which this petition depends. That section was amended by
Act 27 of 1960 with retrospective effect and it is the
amended section that has to be considered by us. The
amended section is in these terms
S. 42. "’The State Government may at any
time for the purpose of satisfying itself as
to the legality or propriety of any order
passed, scheme prepared or confirmed or
repartition made by any officer under this Act
call for and examine the records of any case
pending before or disposed of by such officer
and may pass such order in reference thereto
as it thinks fit."
The petitioner’s contention is that an order which can be
interfered with under s. 42 is an order passed under the Act
by any officer in his own right and not an order made by the
Government itself or by an officer exercising powers of the
Government upon delegation under s. 41 (1).
545
The question really is as to the meaning of the words "’any
order passed...... by any officer under this Act" in s. 42.
Do these words include an order passed by an officer in
exercise of powers delegated to him by the Government under
s. 41 (1) ? We do not think, they do.
Now, there cannot be much doubt that s. 42 makes a
distinction between the Government and an officer, because
under it the Government is given power to interfere with an
order passed by an officer and, therefore, it does not
authorise the Government to interfere with an order made by
itself. As we understood the learned Advocate-General of
Punjab, who appeared for the respondent State of Punjab, he
conceded that position. He said that the Government could
no doubt have itself heard an appeal preferred under s. 21
(4) instead of getting it heard by an officer/ to whom it
delegated its power, and if it did so, then it could not
under s. 42 interfere with the order which it itself passed
in the appeal. We think that this is the correct position,
and we wish to make it clear that we are not basing
ourselves on the concession made by the learned Advocate-
General. We feel no doubt that an order passed by an
officer of the Government cannot be an order passed by the
Government itself.
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The question then arises, when the Government delegates its
power, for example, to entertain and decide an appeal under
s. 21 (4) to an officer and the officer pursuant to such
delegation hears the appeal and makes an order, is the order
an order of the officer or of the Government ? We think it
must be the order of the Government. The order is made
under a statutory power. It is the statute which creates
that power. The power can, therefore, be exercised only in
terms of the statute and not otherwise. In this case the
power is created by s. 21 (4). That section gives the power
to the Government. it
546
would follow that an order made in exercise of that power
will be the order of the Government for no one else has the
right under the statute to exercise the power. No doubt the
Act enables the Government to delegate its power but such a
power when delegated remain,; the power of the Government,
for the Government can only delegate the power given to it
by the statute and cannot create an independent power in the
officer. When the delegate exercises the power, he does so
for the Government. It is of interest to observe here that
Wills, J., said in Huth v. Clarke (1) that "’the word
delegate means little more than an agent". An agent of
course exercises no powers of his own but only the powers
of his principal. Therefore, an order passed by an officer
on delegation to him under s. 41 (1) of the power of the
Government under s. 21 (4), is for the purposes of the Act
an order of the Government. If it were not so and it were
to be held that the order had been made by the officer
himself and was not an order of the Government-and of course
it had to be one or the other-then we would have an order
made by a person on whom the Act did not confer any power to
make it. That would be an impossible situation. There can
be no order except as authorised by the Act. What is true
of s. 21 (4) would be true of all other provisions in the
Act conferring powers on the Government which can be
delegated to an officer under s. 41 (1). If we are wrong in
the view that we have taken, then in the case of an order
made by an officer as delegate of the Government’s power
under s. 21 (4) we would have an appeal entertained to and
decided by one who had no power himself under the Act to do
either. Plainly, none of these things could be done.
Again, if an order passed by an officer to whom a power had
been ’delegated by the Government under s. 41(1) was an
order passed by the officer then an order made by an officer
to whom power under s. 42 had been delegated would be an
order
(1) L. R. (1890) 25 Q. B. D. 391.
547
by an officer within the meaning of s. 42. That order would
then be liable to be interfered with by the Government under
s. 42 and if such interference is again not by the
Government itself but by another officer as its delegate,
then in that way the process of interference might be
repeated for ever. Obviously an interpretation leading to
such, a; result cannot be correct. It is of some interest
to point out here that in the present case the order tinder
s. 42, that is, the impugned order had not been made by the
Government itself but by the Director, Consolidation of Hol-
dings, to whom the Government’s power under that section had
been delegated.
It was however said by the learned Advocate General that
this absurd result would not follow because power under s.
42 can be exercised only once in respect of the same order.
We will assume that power can be exercised in respect of the
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same order only once. But even so it seems to us that if
the order by a delegate officer is an order within s. 42,
then the power under that section can be exercised
repeatedly. This will appear clearly if we take an
illustration. Suppose delegate officer A makes an order
under s. 21 (4). This order can be interfered with by the
Government under s. 42. Now suppose the Government
delegates its power under s. 42 to officer B and officer B
then makes an order under s. 42 as delegate of Government.
That would be an order made by a delegate officer and
capable-of being interfered with under s. 42. This exercise
of power would be in respect of an order of officer B and
therefore not in respect of the same order in respect of
which power under s. 42 had been once exercised, namely, the
order by officer A. Now assume this time delegate officer C
exercises Government’s power under s. 42. Again the order
made by him would be interfered with under s. 42. Repeated
exercise of power would be in respect of successive orders
and never in respect of the same order. In this way
finality in the matter
548
can never be reached. We must reject an interpretation
which prevents finality being reached. On the
interpretation that we have suggested the matter would be
finally decided; the power under s. 42 cannot be exercised
more than once in respect of the same matter.
We think there are other reasons leading to the view that
the order contemplated by s. 42 is an order made by an
officer in his own right. The words "’The State Government
may...... call for and examine the record of any case
pending before or disposed of by such officer" in the
section clearly indicate that the records are not in the
possession of the Government but are in the possession of
somebody else in his own right and therefore it is that the
Government is given power to "’call for" those records. It
would not be necessary to give the Government expressly the
power to call for records if the records were with the
Government’s delegate, for such delegate would be even
without such express power, within the control of the
Government. The records with the delegate would really be
records in the possession of the Government. Furthermore,
the expression "’call for" the records is one familiar to
courts of law. It occurs in s. 115 of the Code of Civil
Procedure where a superior court which therefore, is a
different court, is given the power to call for the records
of a subordinate court. It may reasonably be presumed that
by using the familiar words " call for" the records, the
legislature indicated that the officer whose order was to be
interfered with under s. 42 was an officer exercising
independent powers and therefore a subordinate officer and
not an officer exercising powers delegated by the
Government.
We do not think that Lakha Singh v. Director, consolidation
of Holdings, Punjab(1) to which we were referred was
correctly decided. There Falshaw, J.,
(1) A.I.R. (1959) Punj. 157.
549
with whom Dua, J., agreed, approved of an earlier decision
by Bishan Narain, J., where the latter said that "’under s.
40 (1) the Government can delegate its Viewers or functions
only to one of its officers. It, therefore, follows that
the Government’s delegate under s. 20 (4) is an Officer and
as he is appointed under this Act and has to perform duties
relating to administration of this Act, he must be held to
be an Officer under this Act." Falshaw, J., as also Bishan
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Narain., J., were dealing with the Pepsu Holdings (Consoli-
dation and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act. This Act
however contained the same provisions as the Act now before
us though the sections were numbered differently.
Apparently, the learned judges were of the view that the
words "under this Act" in s. 41 of the Act before them which
corresponds to s. 42 of our Act, referred to the word
"’Officer" and not to the word "order". But we do not think
that that view solves the problem. The question is not
whether the officer is one under the Act. which perhaps
means mentioned in or appointed under the Act, but whether
the order is by him in his own right as such officer? We
may point out that the Act does not expressly say that an
officer to whom Government may delegate its power under s.
40 (1) has to be an officer "under the Act". Falshaw, J.,
thought that the words "any order passed by any officer
under this Act" in s. 41 of the Act before him should be
read as "any order passed under any provision of the Act by
any officer having power to pass any order under the Act".
If they are so read, we think they would mean that the
officer had power under the Act to Pass the order in his own
right and not as delegate of he Government.
The learned Advocate-General said that when power is
delegated to an officer under s. 40(1), he does not cease to
be an officer and therefore an order passed by him is an
order passed by an officer within s. 42. It seems to us
that this is not at all
550
determinative. If the officer does not cease to be an
officer because Government had delegated power to him,
neither does he cease to be a delegate of the Government
because he is an officer. The real question is different.
It is whether the order made by the officer was made as a
delegate of the Government or in his own right.
Then it was pointed out that the order in this case was the
order of an officer and not of the Government at all, for if
it had been the order of the Government it would have been
made in the name of the Governor as required by the rules of
the executive business framed under Art. 166 of the
Constitution. But it seems to us that the form in which the
order was made is immaterial. The order was not in fact
made by the Government but by somebody else in exercise of
the power which lay vested in the Government alone. We are
not aware that such an order has to be in the name of the
Governor. The question is, in whose right has an order to
be made so that it may be interfered with under s. 42 ? It
is of no help in answering that question to consider the
form in which the order was made.
The learned Advocate-General then said that the words "under
the Act" in the section referred to the word "order" only
and not to the word "officer" and therefore the order
contemplated by it may be one made by an officer to whom
power was delegated by the Government for that would be an
order contemplated by the Act and therefore an order "under
the Act". We think that this is a pointless contention.
When the Act permits an order to be made, it must at the
same time indicate, as the present Act does, who is to make
the order. Obviously, a man in the street cannot make an
order under the Act. Therefore the question that has,
arisen in the present case cannot be answered simply by
551
saying that the words "under the Act" refer to the word
"order" alone. It cannot be that an order under the Act can
be made by any officer whatsoever. If the contention of the
learned Advocate-General was right, then even an order made
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by the Government itself under s. 21(4) would be liable to
interference under s. 42, but as already stated he concedes
that this cannot be done. Quite clearly s. 42 does not
contemplate all orders whatsoever made under the Act.
The learned Advocate-General further said that when the
legislature amended s. 42 by Act 27 of 1960 it had before it
the decision in Lakha Singh’s case (1) and as it did
not expressly provide to the contrary, it must be deemed to
have approved of the interpretation put upon the section r
to s. 42 by that case. He referred us to a passage in
Ramnandan Prasad Narayan Singh v. Mahanath Kapildeo Ram (1)
in support of this contention. In that case a somewhat
obscure text in a Bihar. Statute had been interpreted by
the High Court of Patna consistently from the beginning,
that is, from a time soon after its enactment, in a certain
way and this Court held in view of the obscurity in the text
and the inaction of the legislature over a number of years
that it could be legitimately inferred that the High Court
had correctly interpreted the intention of the legislature.
Without being understood as saying that such all inference
must always be made, we would like to.point out that the
present is all entirely different case. Here there is no
unanimity of opinion as regards the interpretation of the,
statute- concerned. At least one judge. namely Grover, J.,
was unable to accept the view that was adopted in Lakha
Singh’s case (1). That learned judge said, "The use of the
expression "officer" by necessary implication means that the
officer should have exercised power as, such and not by
virtue of the., delegation made by the State Government.":
see
(1) A.I.R. (1959) Punj. 157.
(2) [1951] S.C.R. 138, 144,
552
Lakha Singh’s case.(1) p. 159. With this view we entirely
agree. Furthermore, the present petition was pending in
this Court when the Act was amended and the legislature
might have thought that it was unnecessary to amend the
statute to indicate that the view in Lakha Singh’s case(1)
was wrong for this Court would correct that error.
It was lastly said that it may so happen that an order under
s. 21(4) might give rise to a chain of reactions which can
only be coped with by an order made under s. 42. The
precise contention is not very clear to us. This contention
appears to have been accepted by Bishan Narain, J., in the
judgment on which Lakha Singh’s case(1) is based where he
said "The changes in allotments in consolidation proceedings
often produce a claim (sic) of reactions and affect a number
of persons and the rights of parties cannot always be
satisfactorily adjusted in an appeal under s. 20(4). In
such cases s. 41 is the only provision which can be utilised
to achieve this object." Section 41 referred to by the
learned judge corresponds as we have earlier said to s. 42
of our Act. Suppose the position is that in view of the
chain reactions started the order made under s. 21(4) was
better recalled. Now suppose the order under s. 21(4) is
made by the Government itself, then admittedly nothing can
be done about it under s. 42 to give effect to any chain
reactions. There is no reason to think that if that order
happens to be made by an officer to whom Government’s powers
under s. 21(4) are delegated that should make any
difference. The harm, it any in each case would be the
same, and there is no reason why the legislature should have
provided for a remedy in one case and not in the other. It
might however be reasonably thought that when an appeal is
being heard under s. 21(4) either by the Government or by an
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officer, the authority concerned will before making the
order in the appeal consider the chain reactions that the
order might cause and then decide not to
(1) A.I.R. (1959) Punj.157.
553
make the order at all or to make the order and give effect
to the chain reactions by interfering under s. 42 with other
orders. Even on the interpretation that we suggest all
necessary chain reactions might be given effect to. This
reasoning does not assist the respondents at all.
We therefore think that the order impugned in this case
which was made on July 21, 1956 under s. 42 was entirely
without jurisdiction and must be treated as a nullity. No
effect can be given to it and the petitioner is entitled to
an order quashing it.
Then it is said that even so, no writ can be issued quashing
the order as it cannot be said to affect the petitioner’s
right to property. The contention in short is that the
order affects no fundamental right and therefore no petition
under Art. 32 is maintainable. This objection to the
petition is also without foundation. From what we have
earlier said about the provisions of the Act it would appear
that the object of the scheme is to give to a person
affected by it right in the lands allotted to him under the
repartition made pursuant to the scheme in the place of his
right in lands which were pooled and which he previously
held. Now under ss. 23, 24 and 25 taken together, the
original right to lands come to an end and a right to the
substituted lands spring up upon possession being delivered
of the new allotments as mentioned in these sections. It is
not necessary to refer to the provisions of these sections
in detail for this, it is agreed, is the substance of them.
It may be that possession has not yet been delivered in
terms of the Act and, therefore, in a manner of speaking,
the petitioner’s original right to land has not yet come to
an end nor has his new right come into existence. But it is
obvious that if the impugned order is allowed to stand, then
it is the intention of the respondent State and the
respondent Hari Singh to carry it into effect. If the
impugned order stands, Hari Singh
554
would be entitled to ask for delivery of possession of the
lands given to him under that order and the respondent State
would be bound to give him such possession. The petitioner
would have no means of opposing possession being so given.
Immediately upon such delivery of possession the petitioners
original right to his lands would disappear. Therefore it
seems to us/that the inevitable result of the order is to
affect the petitioner’s right to property illegally. It may
be that just now the right has not been affected and there
is only a threat that it will be affected. But we think
that the threat is sufficiently serious and the petitioner
is not bound to wait till his right has actually been
affected more particularly as it is not disputed that it
would inevitably be affected.
in the result we would allow the petition and issue a writ
quashing the order purported to be made by the Director,
Consolidation of Holdings, Punjab on July 21, 1956, under s.
42 of the Act. The petitioner will be entitled to the costs
of this petition.
KAPUR, J.-The decision of this case depends upon the
construction of two provisions of the East Punjab Holdings
(Consolidation and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act, 1948,
(Punj. 50 of 1948), hereinafter termed "the Act"; those
provisions are ss. 21(4) and 42. The former section confers
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on the State Government appellate powers and the latter the
power to call for ’-proceedings" for the purpose of
satisfying itself as to the legality and propriety of any
order passed tinder the Act by any officer acting under the
Act. The respective submissions of the parties before us
are these: according to the petitioner once the power of
appeal in regard to an order of the Settlement Officer is
exercised under s. 21(4) by the State Government or its
delegate to whom power is delegated under s. 41 the State
Government cannot exercise the power of control contained in
s. 42 of calling for the record and correcting the errors of
its
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officers. According to the respondents’ submission the two
powers of appeal and control are separate and distinct
powers and if they are delegated to two different officers
as they were in the present case then the exercise of one
power (under s. 21(4)) does not exhaust the Government’s
power or that of its delegate under s. 42 of the Act. In
order to resolve the controversy it is necessary to refer to
some of the provisions and the objects of the Act.
As the long title of the Act shows the underlying object of
the Act is the consolidation of holdings and prevention of
fragmentation and thus to improve agriculture in the State.
By a series of partitions since the founding of the various
villages in the State the holdings had become fragmented and
uneconomic for the purpose of efficient cultivation. The
Act provides the remedy for this by means of consolidation
of holdings. In order to effectuate that object, the Act
has created a machinery which provides for putting all the
holdings in a village in hotch-potch evaluating each holding
and then repartitioning in accordance with that evaluation
with a provision for compensation to equalise the values.
Chapter III deals with consolidation of holdings. Under
that Chapter first the State Government declares its
intention to make a scheme for consolidation of holdings and
then a scheme is prepared by the Consolidation Officer after
obtaining the advice of the landowners of the state. Under
s. 15 the scheme has to provide for compensation. After the
scheme is prepared it can be objected to by any landowner
and is liable to be amended by the Consolidation Officer and
the Settlement Officer who is a higher official. The scheme
as finally drafted has to be confirmed by the Settlement
Officer. After the scheme is prepared and confined and
published, the land is put in hotch-potch and repartitioned
in accordance with the scheme of consolidation and, with the
advice of the landowners.
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Here comes the hierarchy of officers who are empowered to
look into the grievances of any aggrieved person in regard
to repartition and that is provided in s. 21 of the Act. An
objection can be lodged in the first instance by any person
aggrieved by the repartition before the Consolidation
Officer and any person aggrieved by the order of the
Consolidation Officer can appeal to the Settlement Officer
(Consolidation) and if any person is aggrieved by his order
he can take the appeal Within the time specified to the
State Government and there the machinery for appeals stops
and subject to that appellate order the order of the
Settlement Officer is final.
After repartition has been finally sanctioned under the
provisions of the Act and has been effected a new record of
rights has to be prepared and then if all the land-owners
agree to enter into possession in accordance with the scheme
of repartition the possession is given to the land owners
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and if they do not agree to enter into possession then
possession is to be taken by the landowners at the
commencement of the agricultural year following the date of
the publication of the final scheme and they have to be put
into physical possession of the holdings and would be
entitled to the standing crop on payment of such
compensation as may be determined. Under s. 24 as soon as
possession is taken in accordance with the provisions of the
Act the scheme shall be deemed to have come into force.
Provision is then made in regard to encumbrances of the
landowners and tenants. Provision is also made for
apportionment of compensation.
Now we shall deal with 1 Chapter V which is headed
"General". For the administration of the Act s. 41 empowers
the State Government to appoint such persons as it thinks
fit and it may by notification delegate any of its powers
under the Act to any of its officers either by name or
designation. Section 42
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confers power on the State Government to call for the
proceedings i. c. any order passed, scheme, prepared or
confirmed or repartition made under the Act by any officer
acting, under the Act to satisfy itself as to the legality
and propriety of orders passed by its officers and to pass
such orders as it thinks fit. Section 43 provides that
except as provided in the Act no appeal or revision shall
lie from any order passed under the Act and under s. 44 no
civil suit is entertainable in respect of any matter which
the State Government or any other officer is empowered to
determine, decide or dispose of under, tile Act and under s.
45 no suit is maintainable in respect of the exercise of any
power or discretion conferred by the, Act or against any
public servant or person (duly appointed or authorised under
the Act in respect of’ anything done in good faith or
purporting to be done under the Act and s. 46 is the rule
making power. This, in short, is the scheme of the Act.
It is to be noticed that the Act provides under s. 42 an
over-all control of the State Government it all stages of
consolidation proceedings. It is the State Government which
has to specify the estate for the purposes of the Act and it
has the power to determine and revise at any time the
standard areas under s. 5 of the Act. The scheme for
consolidation of holdings has to be finally sanctioned by
the State Government or by its delegate and after the scheme
is sanctioned repartition is to take place so as to allot
lands to the people in accordance with the value of their
original holdings with such compensation as may be necessary
and if any person is dissatisfied with the repartition lie
can appeal first to the Consolidation Officer, then to the
Settlement Officer and thereafter to the State Government
but the appeals are not confined to the person aggrieved by
the repartition scheme; any person who may be aggrieved by
the order of Consolidation Officer may, under s. 21(2) of
the Act appeal to the Settlement Officer under s. 21 (3)
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and any person who is aggrieved by that order, who may not
necessarily be the per-son who, started the proceedings
before the Consolidation Officer can appeal to the State
Government. Section 21 reads as follows :
"S. 21 (1) The Consolidation Officer shall
after obtaining the advice of the landowners
of the estate or estates concerned, carry out
repartition in accordance with the scheme of
consolidation confirmed under section 20, and
the boundaries of the holdings as demarcated
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shall be shown on the shajra which shall be
published in the prescribed manner in the
estate or estates concerned.
(2) Any person aggrieved by the repartition
may file a written objection within fifteen
days of the publication before the
Consolidation Officer who shall after hearing
the objector pass such orders as he considers
proper confirming or modifying the scheme.
(3) Any person aggrieved by the order ,of
the Consolidation Officer under sub-section
(2) may within one month of that order file an
appeal before the Settlement Officer (Con-
solidation) who shall after hearing the
appellant pass such order as he considers
proper."
The effect of this section is to give a right to every
person who is aggrieved by any order passed either at the
time of the repartition or by the order of the Consolidation
Officer or by the order of the Settlement Officer to object
and get relief, The reason for this
559
is that the order passed by the Consolidation Officer in
favour of a person who applies under s. 21(2) may start a
chain reaction which may affect the rights of others, like
any other ordinary partition proceedings may do, and
therefore any person aggrieved has been given the right to
take objection under the various provisions of s. 21. When
the appellate power of the State Government is exercised by
an officer to whom powers are delegated under s. 41 which
provides :-
S. 41 (1) "The State Government may for the
administration of this Act, appoint such
persons as it thinks fit, and may by
notification delegate any of its powers or
functions under this Act to any of its
officers either by name or designation.
2) A Consolidation Officer or a Settlement
Officer (Consolidation) may, with the sanction
of the State Government, delegate any of its
powers or functions under this Act to any
person in the service of the State
Government."
The officer though exercising such powers as the State
Government itself possesses is still an officer of the State
Government and has all the protection which is given by s.
45 of the Act and his order is final as provided in s. 43.
Any order passed by him as an appellate authority is an
order in regard to repartition which has to be taken into
consideration for the purposes of bringing the scheme into
effect under s. 24 of the Act. Thus he does not cease to be
an officer of the State Government even though in disposing
of appeals lie is exercising delegated powers.
Section 42 of the Act provides :
"S. 42 The State Government may at any time
for the purpose of satisfying itself as to
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the legality of propriety of any order passed,
scheme prepared or confirmed or repartition
made by any officer under this Act call for
and examine the record of any case pending
before or disposed of by such officer and may
pass such order in reference thereto as it
thinks fit. Provided that no order, scheme or
repartition shall be varied or reversed
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without giving the parties interested notice
to appear and opportunity to be heard except
in cases where the State Government is
satisfied that the proceedings have been
vitiated by unlawful consideration."
Now this power of the State Government is distinct from the
power s. 21(4) and is in the nature of revision. This gives
an overall control to the State Government to see that the
orders passed by its officers are legal and are proper
because one illegal or improper order may start a chain of
reactions which may disturb the whole scheme of
consolidation and prevent its coming into effect. One order
passed at any stage under s. 21 of the Act by which a land-
owner gets more than his share or is given a different area
to that which is provided in the repartition scheme may lead
to the undoing of the whole scheme and may set at naught the
whole scheme of consolidation. It is for that purpose that
the State Government has been given the power under s. 42
which is further clear from the fact that under the proviso
to s. 42 the Government is expressly given the power to set
aside proceedings ex parte in regard to which it is
satisfied that there has been an element of unlawful
consideration. This would apply equally to an order under
s. 21(4) by a delegate as to any other order improperly
obtained.
The Government has necessarily to act through its officers
and as consolidation has to take place in
561
several villages, where the rights of a large number of
landowners are affected, it cannot always appoint as a final
appellate authority, persons who correspond to a Financial
Commissioner under the Land Revenue Act of the Punjab; and
as the orders of such officers become immune from challenge
in courts and can in certain cases affect the whole scheme
the State Government has been given the power of overall
control over all actions of its officers and at all stages.
In the present case the officer who exercised the appellate
power was Mr. Avtar Singh Brar, Assistant Director, Consoli-
dation of Holdings, Ambala. Naturally the Government had to
appoint an officer of a higher status to see that no
improper or illegal order was passed and for that purpose
its powers under s. 42 were delegated to the Director of
Consolidation of Holdings.
The language of s. 42 shows that an overall control is given
to the State Government over all consolidation proceedings
and at all stages. In that section are mentioned firstly
any order passed by an officer, secondly a scheme prepared
or confirmed, thirdly a partition made by any officer under
the Act. They are all equally subject to the power of the
State Government under’s. 42 The order tinder s. 21 (4) by a
delegate is an order of repartition and would even apart
from the fact that it is an order of an officer be subject
to the revisional powers of the State Government under s.
42. Therefore the statute must be taken to have authorised
the State Government to reconsider the scheme confirmed by
its delegate. If in that case the power is exercisable by
the State Government there does not seem to be any reason
why that power is not exercisable when its delegate passes
an order under s. 21 (4) and thus makes an order in regard
to repartition. So read the extent of the power of the
State Government under s. 42 extends equally to any order
passed by its officers whether of confirmation of a scheme
or of repartition and whether the power is exercised by the
officer
562
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making the order acting under authority expressly given to
him under the Act or it is delegated to him by the State
Government under s. 41 of the Act. If this power were not
to be inferred from s. 42 then no kind of illegality or
impropriety would be liable to correction. This argument
receives further support from the power given to the State
Government where it is satisfied that proceedings have been
vitiated by unlawful consideration. If this power was not
there then any order howsoever obtained would remain immune
from all control of higher officials and would lead to a
great deal of inconvenience if not injustice.
The view of the Punjab High Court in Lakha Singh v.
Director’ Consolidation of Holdings, Punjab(1) which was a
case under a similar provision of the Pepsu State in our
opinion is a correct interpretation of s. 41 of the Pepsu
Act corresponding to s. 42 of the Act. In that case it was
held that the appellate powers are concerned with the
grievances of the appellant and those who are arrayed as
parties In the appeal but s. 42 gives an overriding power to
the Government to consider. any order of its officers under
the Act and to make such orders as would subserve the
objects and purposes of consolidation proceedings. The
change in allotment, as a result of an appeal, may produce a
chain of reactions and affect the rights of a number of
persons which cannot be satisfactorily adjusted in appeal
but under its general powers the Government may make such
orders as would prevent the right of all or a large number
of landowners from being affected. Without such a power, as
we have said above the whole scheme of consolidation may
fail because there would be no remedy in a civil court and
finality being given to the appellate order would produce an
impasse which must necessarily defeat the object of the Act
and the process of consolidation.
In this view of the matter, in our opinion, this
(1) A.I. R. (1959) Punj. 157.
563
petition is without force and is dismissed with costs.
BY COURT :-In view of the majority opinion the Writ Petition
is allowed with costs.