Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 5
PETITIONER:
BACHHARAM DATTA PATIL AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VISHWANATH PUNDALIK PATIL ANDOTHERS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/09/1956
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
BENCH:
SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
AIYYAR, T.L. VENKATARAMA
DAS, S.K.
CITATION:
1957 AIR 34 1956 SCR 675
ACT:
Watan lands-Resumption by Government-Dispensing with the
services and levying of full assessment-Lands subsequently
described as Japti Sanadi Inam lands-Whether retain
character of Watan lands.
HEADNOTE:
Certain lands which were originally Watan lands were resumed
by the Government after dispensing with the services that
were being rendered and full assessment was levied thereon.
Thelands were subsequently described as "Japti Sanadi Inam"
lands.
Held, that the lands had lost their character as Watan lands
and had become ryotwari lands of the holder.
Ramijyabi Muktum Saheb v. Gudusaheb, (54 Bom. L.R. 405),
approved.
The very description of the lands as Japti Sanadi Inam lands
means that the lands were once the subject matter of an Inam
grant by virtue of a Sanad and have been resumed or
confiscated by the
Government and have been left in the hands of the holder as
ryotwari holding.
The Government may commute the services to be rendered and
it will then depend on the terms of the agreement between
the holder of the Watan lands and the Government entered
into at the time of the commutation whether the lands are to
retain their character as Watan lands or not.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 249 of 1953.
On appeal from the judgment and decree dated the 1st day of
September, 1949, of the Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 23
of 1947 from original decree arising out of the decree dated
the 28th September 1946 of the Civil Judge, Session Division
at Belgawn in Suit No. 360 of 1945.
K.R. Beneri, J. B. Dadachanji -and Sri Narain Andley for A.
C. Dave for the appellants.
H.B. Datar and Naunit Lal for respondent No. 1.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 5
676
1956. September 20. The Judgment of the Court was
delivered by
SINHA J.-This is an appeal -by leave of the High Court of
Judicature at Bombay from the decision of a Division Bench
of that Court reversing that of the trial court in respect
of items 3, 4 and 6 in the list of the properties attached
to the plaint as the subject-matter of the dispute. In
respect of the other items of property in dispute the courts
below have given concurrent decisions and that part of their
judgments is no more in controversy at this stage. The
three items aforesaid of the property along with the others
in dispute had been decreed in favour ’of the original
plaintiffs 2 and 3 as Watan property. But on appeal by the
third defendant, the High Court reversed the decision of the
trial court only in respect of those three items and
confirmed the decision of the trial court in respect of the
rest of the plaint properties.
The propositus was one Shreemant who died on the 23rd
November, 1941 leaving him surviving his wife Radhabai.
Radhabai died on the 9th May 1945 and on her death the
dispute arose between the reversioners on the one hand
including the plaintiffs 2 and 3, appellants in this Court,
and the defendants on the other who claimed by virtue of
alleged adoptions said to have been made by Radhabai
aforesaid. The first plaintiff is out of the picture now on
the concurrent finding by the courts below that he had no
right to the state left by the propositus by virtue of the
adoption found in his favour, inasmuch as before he was
adopted the estate had already vested in the actual
reversioners, plaintiffs-2 and 3, the agnatic relations of
Shreemant. The estate of Shreemant, so far as it related to
Watan lands, vested in plaintiffs 2 and 3 aforesaid under
the provisions of Bombay Act v of 1886. If either defendant
2 or defendant 3 bad proved-his alleged adoption by Radhabai
aforesaid, he would have been entitled to the estate as the
adopted son of the propositus, thus excluding the agnatic
relations, namely, plaintiffs 2 and 3. But both the courts
below- have concurrently found that
677
neither of the two defendants 2 and 3 had succeeded
in proving the adoption respectively pleaded by them. The
trial court had substantially decreed the suit in respect of
all the items of property in dispute including the three
items which, as indicated above, are the only properties now
in controversy in this Court, on the finding that these also
were Watan properties which like the rest of the plaint
properties were inherited by the reversioners aforesaid,
namely, plaintiffs 2 and 3., The High Court on appeal held
that the three items of property now in dispute, though
originally Watan properties, had lost their character as
such by reason of the fact that they had been resumed by
Government after dispensing with the service and after
levying full assessment on those lands. Those lands
have been called "Japti Sanadi Inam lands" in the
records of the courts below and it is by that name that
we. shall refer to the disputed lands in the course of
this judgment.
It would thus appear that the controversy has narrowed down
to the question whether the Japti Sanadi Inam lands still
retain their character as Watan lands as held by the trial
court, or have lost their character as such in view of the
events that had happened as decided by the High Court. It
is not disputed that in the former case the plaintiff-
appellants will be entitled to them also even as they gave
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 5
been adjudged to be entitled to the rest of the properties
in dispute which were admittedly Watan lands. It is equally
undisputed that, if the Japti Sanadi Inam lands are no more
Watan lands, this appeal must fail. On this question both
the courts below have been rather cryptic in their remarks.
The trial court held them to be Watan lands, with the
following observations:-
"The lands at serial Nos. 3, 4 and 6 are Japti Sanadi lands.
They still retain the character of Sanadi lands inspite of
the fact that services have been temporarily dispensed with
and full assessment levied. Sanadi lands have been held to
be Watan lands governed by the Watan Act".
The trial court has made no attempt to support its
conclusions with reference to any statutory rules or
678
precedents. The lower appellate court has disposed of this
question in these words:-
"Now it is conceded before us that there is no evidence to
support the observation made by the learned trial Judge,
that the services were temporarily dispensed with by the
government. If therefore,the Record of Rights show that the
full assessment is being levied in respect of these lands,
and that services are not required to be performed and they
are described as Japti Sanadi Inam lands, meaning thereby
that they were once Sanadi lands, but in respect of which
there has been resumption by the Government, the conclusion
must inevitably follow that these lands have ceased to be
lands held on Sanadi tenure and are held in ordinary
occupancy rights".
The learned counsel for the appellants has vehemently argued
that the High Court was in error in concluding that the
lands in question had ceased to be Watan lands simply
because the service attaching to them had been dispensed
with and full assessment levied by Government. This
argument was based on the provisions of the Bombay
Hereditary Offices Act (Bombay Act III), 1874. Apart from
authority, therefore, we have to examine the relevant
provisions of that Act in order to determine whether those
provisions support the conclusions of the High Court. In
section 4, "Watan property", "Hereditary office" and "Watan"
have been defined as follows:-
"Watan Property means movable or immovable property held,
acquired or assigned for providing remuneration for the
performance of the duty appertaining to an hereditary
office. It includes a right to levy customary fees or
perquisites, in money or in kind, whether at fixed times or
otherwise. It includes cash payments in addition to the
original watan property made voluntarily by Government and
subject periodically to modification or withdrawal.
’Hereditary office’-means every office held hereditarily for
the performance of duties connected with the administration
or collection of the public revenue, or with the village
police, or with the settlement of boundaries, or other
matters of civil administration,
679
The expression includes such office even where the services
originally appertaining to it have ceased to be demanded.
The watan-property, if any, and the hereditary office and
the rights and privileges attached to them together
constitute the watan".
From these definitions it is clear that in order that there
may be a Watan it is necessary that there should be a
hereditary office and Watan property which is assigned to
the "Watandar" by way of remuneration for the performance of
the duty appertaining to his office. But it has been argued
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 5
on behalf of the appellants that it is common ground, that
the Sanadi Inam lands were once Watan property and that once
the property is impressed with the character of inam lands,
they continue to bear that character, because the Government
have not been authorised by any law to change their
character. No precedent or statutory provisions directly
supporting this wide proposition have been brought to our
notice. But our attention was called to the provisions of
section 15 which make it permissible for the Collector to
commute the service and- relieve the bolder of the Watan and
his heirs and successors in perpetuity of their liability to
perform the service on such conditions as may be agreed
upon. If we have been able correctly to appreciate the
argument based upon section 15, it was sought to be made out
that the service in respect of the Watan lands in question
may have been commuted, but even -after the commutation of
the service the Watan remained and the lands continued to
retain the character of Watan lands. This argument assumes
that even upon the service being entirely dispensed with in
perpetuity, the Watan character of the land continued. That
is begging the question. Furthermore, clause (1) of section
15 contemplates commutation "upon such conditions, whether
consistent with the provisions of this Act or not, as may be
agreed upon by the Collector and such bolder". Thus the
conditions to be agreed upon between the holder of land
which was once part of a Watan and the Government at the
time of the commutation may be of
680
so many varieties that in some cases the Watan character of
the land may be maintained, whereas in others the conditions
agreed between the parties may themselves contemplate the
cessation of that character. In the present case, apart
from the entries in the Record of Rights, we have no other
evidence to indicate as to on what terms the service bad
been completely dispensed with in perpetuity and the full
assessment levied upon those lands. , It is not therefore
clear upon the findings of the courts below that there were
any such conditions attaching to the holding of the lands in
question which could be consistent with the continuance of
the original Watan tenure. It is possible to conceive of a
case where the conditions agreed upon provide for the
continuance of the Watan tenure in spite of the fact that
the holders have been excused the performance of the
customary service. On the other hand, it may be that there
were no conditions agreed between the parties continuing the
Watan character of the land after dispensing with the
service.
On the findings of the courts below there was no hereditary
office any more and therefore the question of remunerating
any service with the usufruct of Watan property or otherwise
did not arise. On the other hand, the provisions of section
22 of the Act clearly predicate that a Watan may lapse in
part or in whole or may be confiscated or otherwise lawfully
resumed by Government and that in such cases it is lawful
for Government to attach such land to a newly created Watan
in favour of such persons as may be appointed by Government.
That being so, it is impossible to contend that Government
have not the power to destroy the Watan character of a Watan
land. Such an argument completely ignores the legal
position that an authority which has the power to create an
office and to provide for its remuneration in cash or in
kind has also the power to revoke the grant, and upon such
revocation, if any land has been assigned for remunerating
the office so abolished it must revert to the source from
which it came; that is to say, ryotwari land subject to land
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 5
revenue assess-
681
ment. That is what appears to have happened in the present
case. The very description of the land as Japti Sanadi Inam
land would mean that which was once the subject matter of an
inam grant by virtue of a sanad has been resumed or
confiscated by Government and the land left in possession of
the holder as ryotwari holding. As pointed out by the
courts below, there is no evidence as to the original
character of the grant or as to how and when the grant was
resumed and the land thus became subject to ordinary
occupancy rights. But they have proceeded on the basis that
it was the subject matter of a Watan by sanad which has been
subsequently resumed by Government as service was no more
required and the necessity for the grant was no more there.
They have only differed on the legal result of the
resumption.
A similar question arose for decision in the Bombay High
Court in the case of Ramijyabi Muktum Saheb v. Gudusaheb(1)
after the present case had been decided by that Court. In
that case property which was originally Watan was continued
with the holder thereof but without the obligation to render
any service and with the full levy of assessment in respect
of the land. The question arose whether such land continued
to be Watan land with its special incidents as regards
alienation, etc., or whether it was ordinary occupancy
holding. A single Judge of that Court who heard the appeal
in the first instance came to the conclusion that the land
continued to be Watan land. On Letters Patent Appeal, the
Division Bench after a very elaborate examination of the
relevant-rules and precedents came to the contrary
conclusion and held that the land had ceased to have the
character of Watan and was subject to the ordinary law of
-land tenures in that State. We are in agreement with the
conclusion reached by the Letters Patent Bench in that case,
the facts of which were similar to those of the present
case. Hence it must be held that there is neither authority
nor principle in favour of the contention raised on behalf
of the appellants.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs.
(1) 54 Bom. L R. 405.
682