Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
R.E.M.S. ABDUL HAMEED
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVINDARAJU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 01/08/1999
BENCH:
A.P.Misra
JUDGMENT:
MISRA, J.
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These two appeals raise a common question hence are
being disposed of by means of this common judgment. The
question raised is, whether Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai,
consisting of two distinct areas, viz., Mela Thattimal
Padugai and Kizha Thattimal Padugai was known at the
relevant time, is a minor inam coming within the purview of
The Tamil Nadu Minor Inams (Abolition and Conversion into
Ryotwari) Act, 1963, (hereinafter referred to as the Act 30
of 1963) or it would fall under the Madras Inam Estates
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act XXVI of 1963,
(hereinafter referred to as the Act No. 26 of 1963). The
State Government initially issued notification treating it
to be under Act No. 26 of 1963, later withdrew and notified
it under Act No. 30 of 1963. The appellants contention is
that the State Government rightly issued it to be under Act
No. 30 of 1963 and it is held to be valid also by the
Settlement Officer, S.R. II, Thanjavur.
The short facts are that the respondents filed a
petition under Section 5 of the Madras Inams (Supplementary)
Act (XXXI of 1963) (hereinafter referred to as Act No. 31
of 1963) for a declaration that the said two distinct areas
of lands in Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai Village, of
Papanasam Taluk form a new inam estate falling under Act No.
26 of 1963. The notification issued by the Government of
India under Act No. 30 of 1963 is illegal, liable to be
quashed as the original grant of the disputed areas was not
made in terms of acreages or cawnies hence would only
constitute to be a part of inam estate in view of Section 2
(11) of the Act No. 26 of 1963. The Settlement Officer
after hearing parties, including the State, held that the
Madras High Court in Karumbavira Vanniar & Ors. Vs.
Govindaswami Vanniar & Ors., 1977 Madras Law Weekly, 741,
held that Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai is not estate
within the meaning of Section 3 (2)(d) of the Madras Estates
Land Act, 1908. It further recorded that evidence shows
that in 1829 there were two areas, namely, Mela Thattimal
Padugai (hereinafter referred to as Mela) and Kizha
Thattimal Padugai (hereinafter referred to as Kizha). The
former formed part of Rajagiri village and the latter formed
part of Papanasa village. It is the area of this land in
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Mela and Kizha which is the subject matter under
consideration. The Settlement Officer held it neither to be
whole village nor part village, and even not covered under
Explanation 1 (a) of Section 2 (11) of the Act No. 26 of
1963 as the grant is not of any fraction or specified number
of shares of a part of village. It concluded that the grant
was of specified extents of lands, hence, is covered by
Explanation 1 (b) of Section 2 (11), thus a minor inam and
so the suit land in Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai is only a
minor inam falling under Act No. 30 of 1963, thus upheld
the impugned notification. The petition of the respondents
was accordingly dismissed. The respondents then preferred
an appeal before the Minor Inam Estates Abolition Tribunal
(Subordinate Judge) of Thanjavur, hereinafter referred to as
the Tribunal). The appeal was allowed. The Tribunal held
with reference to the Karumbavira Vanniar (Supra) that the
undisputed facts which emerges are that in 1862, which is
the year of grant, there were two areas, namely Mela and
Kizha falling under villages Rajagiri and Papanasam,
respectively. In the list of 193 villages in the grant of
1862, one of the entries is Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai.
It further records, it is conceded by the learned counsel
for the respondents (appellants here) that the extent of the
padugai or the boundaries of the lands in question are not
given. It is these two portions, namely, Mela and Kizha,
subsequently, were merged together and formed into the
present revenue Village No. 5 as Arayapuram Thattimal
Padugai in 1919. The Tribunal further accepted submission
on behalf of the appellants (respondents here) that the said
two distinct portions granted in inam can be easily
identified without its extents and boundaries being given.
Thus, it construed it to be a part village inam estate.
The Tribunal also accepted that Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai
which mentioned among 193 items covering the grant of 1862,
consisted of the aforesaid two portions, namely Mela and
Kizha, respectively. So what have been granted are defined
portions in two different villages. But extents of the two
padugais are not given. It is also relevant to quote the
following observations made in Karumbavira Vanniar (Supra),
as the said observations have also been referred and relied
by the Tribunal. This was because both the parties relied
it for gathering facts, in the absence of proper evidence in
the present case. This reliance was, as it also pertains to
the same estate of Raja of Thanjavur with reference to this
land itself which is in dispute though was not between the
same party with a different question raised. The
observations are:
It is in evidence that as early as the year 1829
there were two areas, Mela Thattimal Padugai and Kizha
Thattimal Padugai, the former formed part of Rajagiri
Village and the latter of papanasam Village. Evidently,
both these portions, although there was no geographical
contiguity, were designated as Aryapuram Thattimal Padugai
at the time when the East India Co., took over the village
and later granted it to the heirs of the last of Rajahs of
Tanjore.It will be plain from what we have stated above,
that both before and immediately after the grant of the year
1862, the two parts of the present Aryapuram Thattimal
Padugai were attached to different taraf villages and could
have only formed part of those villages.This will show that
there was no such distinct village of that name, though
there were two areas designed as Mela Thattimal Padugai and
Kizha Thattimal Padugai, which perhaps for convenience was
referred to as Aryapuram Thattimal at the time of the
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grant.We, therefore, agree with the conclusion reached by
the learned Subordinate Judge as well as by the Tribunal
that the grant was of two separate bits of land lying in two
different Taraf villages and that it was now the year 1919
that they were amalgamated to form what is now known as No.
5, Aryapuram Thattimal Padugai village.
Hence, the Tribunal held that what were granted in
1862 were two distinct portions of land in two different
taraf villages. It set aside the finding of the Settlement
Officer by holding:
The learned Settlement Officer is not quite correct
when he says that the evidence available indicates that the
grant was of a specified extent of lands only. Admittedly
the extents are not mentioned in the grant
The said earlier decision records that the survey
numbers of Kizha are 1 to 56 and of Mela are 57 to 68 though
are separated by a mile but they formed one block. The
grant thus is of two parts of two villages. Thus, the
Tribunal allowed the appeal, set aside the judgment of the
Settlement Officer and also the notification under Act No.
30 of 1963 and held that the said two parts were
compendiously known then as Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai and
is a part village inam estate. Aggrieved by this, the
present appellants filed revision before the High Court.
Appellants submitted before the High Court, in the
absence of original grants, on the residuary evidence
specially on the fact as recorded in Karumbavira Vanniar
(supra) to which both parties relies, expresses the grant to
be only in terms of acreages or cawnies and, therefore, it
cannot be deemed to be a part village inam estate. The
submission, in fact, was in terms of the language of
Explanation 1 (b) of Section 2 (11) of Act No. 26 of 1963.
On the other hand, submission for the respondents was that
it is established by the evidence that the grant was of a
part of the village and was not expressed in acreage or
cawnies and thus would be covered by Explanation 1 (a) of
Section 2 (11). In order to substantiate that the area of
the aforesaid two Mela and Kizha was described in an acreage
etc. reliance was placed for the appellant on the following
observations in Karumbavira Vanniar (Supra);
This position is made clear from the paimash accounts
and the subsequent surveys. Mala Thattimal, which till 1919
formed part of Rajagiri village, covered as we said an
extent of 26-21 acres. In the Paimash accounts of the year
1829 the area was designated by Nos. 1272 to 1302. In the
survey of the year 1886 the area was represented by S.No.
11 of Rajagiri. In the land register of the year 1919, the
area was given Nos. 45 to 49 in the newly formed No. 5,
Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai
Now, coming to Kizha Thattimal, which covered on area
of 267-44 acres they were represented Nos. 335 to 614 in
the Paimash account of the Taraf Village of Papanasam. In
the survey of 1886 the corresponding numbers were S.Nos. 1
to 10 in No. 2, Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai . The
position continued to be the same in the survey of 1921.
But in the Record of Rights Register, they have been given
S.Nos. 1 to 56 in No. 5, Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai.
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The reference of the acreage therein was relied. The
High Court rejected this submission holding that this
collateral references of paimash account and subsequent
survey were compiled after the grant, hence it could not be
concluded it was so described in the grant itself. It
further records that the grant was only of two distinct
portions in two different villages wherein there is no
specific mention of its extent, hence it would not fall
under (b) of Explanation 1 of Section 2(11) and so the
notification by the Government under the Act No. 30 of 1963
cannot be sustained. The High Court finally concluded,
having regard to the definition of minor inam in Section 2
(9) of the Act No. 30 of 1963 read with the definition of a
part village named estate in Section 2 (11) of the Act No.
26 of 1963, the Tribunal was right in setting aside the
order of the Settlement Officer and the notification of the
Government under Act No. 30 of 1963. It is this judgment
which is the subject matter of the present appeals. It is
significant that the State Government has not filed any
appeal against it. Though it is one of the respondents but
has not made any submission either way. It is also not in
dispute, the original grant has not been filed and is not on
the record.
The central question in issue is, the interpretation
of sub-clause (b), Explanation 1 to Section 2 (11) of the
Act No. 26 of 1963. Learned counsels, for the aforesaid
respective appellants, Mr. Tripurari Ray and Mr. A.T.M.
Sampath senior counsel, submit on the facts of this case,
the disputed land cannot be construed to be part village
inam estate to fall within Act No. 26 of 1963 but is a
minor Inam to fall under Act No. 30 of 1963. Before taking
up this issue of part village inam estate, it is necessary
to look back to the history of inam lands, how it emerged,
recognised, canalised and dealt with through various
enactments till it reached into the legislative umbrella of
both Act Nos. 26 and 30 of 1963. The law relating to the
land holdings, agrarian reform, in the Presidency town of
Madras, with reference to the landlords and ryots started
from the previous century and it is interesting to note few
of the essential features of this agrarian development. The
origin of inam tenure is traced back to its grant made by
Hindu rulers for the support of temples and charitable
institutions, for the maintenance of holy and learned men
rendering public service, etc. This practice was followed
by the Muhammadan rulers and by British administrators until
about a century ago. According to the ancient Hindu Law,
there were two beneficial interests in land, namely, (1)
that of the sovereign or his representative, and (2) that of
the cultivator holding the land. The sovereigns right to
collect a share of the produce of the cultivated land was
known by the name melvaram, the share of the ryot or
cultivator was known by the name kudivaram. The ryots
right arose from occupation of the land. Thus, the grant of
an inam did not touch, and could not have touched, the
cultivators right in the land, namely, the kudivaram,
except in rare cases where the grantor was also holding the
cultivators interest at the time of the grant.
It is also relevant to refer to Madras Inams Act, 1869
(Madras Act VIII of 1869). This Act declares that the
enfranchisement of an inam and the grant of a title deed to
the inamdar should not be deemed to define, limit, infringe
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the right of any description of holder or occupier of the
land from which the inam was derived. Thus, the right of an
inamdar does not ordinarily extend to the full
proprietorship of the land, especially in the case where the
inam consisted of an entire village. Thus, inam villages
were treated as estates on exactly the same footing as
zamindaris in the Madras Regulations of 1802 and 1822, the
Madras Rent Recovery Act, 1865, the Madras Proprietary
Estates Village Service Act, 1894 (Madras Act II of 1894)
and Madras Hereditary Village Officers Act, 1895 (Madras Act
III of 1895) and it ultimately resulted into Madras Estates
Land Act, 1908.
The Madras Estates Land Act (Act No. I of 1908),
(hereinafter referred to the 1908 Act) came into force which
is the first major enactment in the Presidency of Madras
controlling and defining the rights of the landholders and
ryots. Prior to that both zamindars and ryots were
subjected to and treated under the Madras Regulations of
1802 and Regulation No. IV of 1822. The 1908 Act repealed
the Madras Rent Recovery Act (VIII of 1865). This Act not
only safeguarded the interest of the cultivators but also of
the landlords including collection of rents. It is
interesting to record here the concern expressed by Honble
Mr. Forbes on this subject while introducing the Original
Estates Land Bill in the Council, which is quoted hereunder:
The ancient zamindars are being displaced by new men
who have no traditional connection with the soil, and whose
action will be guided solely by commercial or selfish
motives, and who will strain the laws to its utmost limits.
A Law is a bad Law which gives opportunities for diverting
its power to oppress the poor and weak. Moreover, unless
rights are firmly fixed and declared the slow process of
erosion imperceptibly wears them away. The zamindar is the
flood stream; the ryot, the river bank. Not only justice
to a weak class, who are specially in need of the protection
of the strong arm, but on every ground political and
economic the Government could not sit by impassive.
The Government have to hold the scales evenly,
distributing the benefits of the Act both to the landlord
and tenant, remembering that the value of a thing to a
person does not depend on its intrinsic cost. On the side
of the zamindar, he is given a charge over the ryots
holding - a first charge indefeasible by any encumbrance;
he has been given the right to enhance rent with reference
to rise in prices;
On the other side, the ryot has been confirmed in his
rights; he is secured in the occupancy of his holding from
which he cannot be ejected so long as he pays his shist;
nor can his shist be enhanced except by suit before the
Collector; and he is given the right to have the irrigation
of his fields secured;
Looking at both sides it must be admitted that the
Government has, as far as it lay in its power, discharged
with equal justice its obligations to safeguard the
established rights of both zamindars and ryots, in the sense
of the old Regulation IV of 1822.
The intervention of the Government is thus as much to
the benefit of the landholders as of the ryot. All that is
done for the ryot is to protect him against the horrors or
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arbitrary eviction, against the oppression of rackrents and
to secure to him his right to enjoy his established share of
the produce, conditions which are essential to the stability
of an agricultural community and the undoubted and ancient
right of the Madras ryot.
The aforesaid observations by Hon. Mr. Forbes gives
clear indication of the objects and reasons for introducing
the 1908 Act. It is interesting to see how even at that
time the exploitations by the haves for commercial and
selfish ends down right were condemned and provisions made
to protect the oppressed, poor and weak. Subsequently, by
Madras Amending Act No. IV of 1909 the definition of rent
as given under the 1908 Act was changed with an object that
the land holder should not employ the machinery of the Act
for the recovery of quit rents from intermediate landholders
but seek his remedy only through civil courts. Next Madras
Act VII of 1934 brought various changes for the benefit the
ryots. This was followed by Madras Act I of 1936 amending
1908 Act to bring in inam villages in which the inamdar had
the kudivaram interest within the purview of 1908 Act. It
is interesting after this was passed, His Excellency the
Governor General withheld his assent to the provisions in
the Madras Estates Land Amendment Act of 1934 under which
occupancy rights were to be conferred on tenants in inam
villages even though kudivaram interest may have been
granted to the inamdars. This led to the appointment of a
Select Committee which drafted another bill giving effect to
the suggestion made by His Excellency the Governor General
which made into Madras Estates Land (Third Amendment) Act
XVIII of 1936. By this definition of estate in Section 3
(2)(d) of the 1908 Act was amended to bring within its scope
any inam village of which the grant has been made, confirmed
or recognised by the British Government. By virtue of new
Section 23 a presumption was laid down that an inam village
was an estate even before the commencement of the aforesaid
1936 Act. There were some other amendments also but are not
relevant for this case. Then came the two Acts, namely, Act
No. 26 of 1963 and Act No. 30 of 1963. Prior to these two
enactments there were two forms of inam (i) the full inam,
where whole village comprised of inam and (ii) part inam or
minor inam, where part of village was given in inam.
We now herewith give some of the decisions as how they
have understood and interpreted the said relevant provisions
including the provisions to which we are concerned.
In Act No. 26 of 1963 it is necessary to refer to
some of the definitions to appreciate this case and some of
the decisions given by courts. Sub-section (4) of Section 2
defines existing inam estate means an inam village which
became an estate by virtue of the Madras Estates Land (Third
Amendment) Act, 1936 (Madras Act XVIII of 1936).
Sub-section (7) defines inam estate means an existing inam
estate or a new inam estate. Sub-section (9) defines new
inam estate means a part village inam estate or a
Pudukkottai inam estate. Sub-section (11) of Section 2
defines part village inam estate, which is quoted
hereunder;
(11) part village inam estate means a part of a
village (including a part of a village in the merged
territory of Pudukkotiai) the grant of which part has been
made, confirmed or recognised by the Government,
notwithstanding that subsequent to the grant, such part has
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been partitioned among the grantees or the
successors-in-title of the grantee or grantees.
Explanation 1. - (a) Where the grant of a part of a
village as an inam is expressed to be a specified fraction
of, or a specified number of shares in, a village, such part
shall be deemed to be a part village inam estate
notwithstanding that such grant refers also to the extent of
such part in terms of acreage or cawnies, or of other local
equivalent.
(b) Where a grant as in inam is expressed to be only
in terms of acreage or cawnies, or of other local
equivalent, the area which forms the subject- matter of the
grant shall not be deemed to be a part village inam estate.
Explanation II. - A part of a village granted in inam
shall be deemed to be a part village inam estate
notwithstanding that different parts of such part village
were granted, confirmed or recognised on different dates or
by different title-deeds or in favour of different persons;
The minor inam defined under sub-section (9) of
Section 2 of Act No. 30 of 1963. The relevant portion is
quoted hereunder:
(9) Minor inam means - (i) any inam which is not -
(a) an estate within the meaning of sub-clause (d) of clause
(2) of section 3 of the (Tamil Nadu) Estate Land Act, 1908
(Tamil Nadu Act I of 1908); or (b) a new inam estate as
defined in clause (9) of section 2 of the Inam Estates
Abolition Act; or (c) an estate within the meaning of
sub-clause (d) of clause (2) of section 3 of the (Tamil
Nadu) Estate land Act, 1908 (Tamil Nadu Act I of 1908), as
in force in the territories specified in the Second Schedule
to the Andhra Pradesh and (Tamil Nadu) (Alteration of
boundaries) Act, 1959 (Central Act LVI of 1959);
In Secretary of State Vs. Velivelapalli Mallayya &
Ors., AIR 1932 PC 238, (From Madras) recognised the two
forms of inams. It records:
It is usual to divide inams into two classes, namely,
(1) major and (2) minor. Technically a major inam is a
whole village or more than one village, and a minor inam is
something less than a village.
If further defined and held:
A Khandrika means a small hamlet. It is a large
block of land granted as inam, less than a village, but much
larger than an ordinary inam
In H.R. Sathyanarayana Rao Vs. The State of Tamil
Nadu, 1977 (1) Madras Law Journal 305, reliance is placed on
the following passage:
This is also clear from the fact that Explanation 1
(b) excludes where the grant is of an extent of land. If
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the grant was of a specified fraction of a village or a
specified number of shares in a village, the inam would not
be covered by the definition of inam estate under section
2(7) of the Madras Act XXVI OF 1948 and it would also not be
an existing inam under section 2(4). It is those inams that
were sought to be covered under section 2(11) of the Madras
Act XXVI of 1963. If, part inam village is understood as
literally meaning any part of a village then that will
directly come under Explanation 1(b) to section 2(11). All
those inams which related to a part of a village of with
reference to specified extent of land, in my opinion, would
be covered by the definition of minor inam in Madras ACT XXX
of 1963 and it would not be a part village inam estate under
section 2(11) I am therefore of the opinion that Marasandram
village is also not a part village inam estate. The
result of it is the notification of the village under Madras
Act XXVI of 1963 was not valid and is liable to be set aside
and it is accordingly set aside.
This case records in order to come within the
definition of an inam estate three essential conditions have
to be satisfied, namely, (i) the grant should be of both the
warams or of melwaram to a person already owning the
Kudivaram thereof; (ii) it should be of the whole village
or named village and (iii) the grant should be made,
confirmed or recognised by the British Government. There
the question was whether Marasandram village could be said
to be a confirmation of grant of a whole village? The Court
records:
Where the grants of two minor inams and portion or
the village remaining thereafter were confirmed by the Inams
Commissioner separately and three separate title deeds were
issued, and the Inam Commissioner had recognised by
confirmation of the part of the village the title of the
grantee derived from the original grant, it could not be
said to be a confirmation of a whole village. Marasandram
village was not an existing inam estate within the meaning
of section 2(9) of the Madras Act XXVI of 1963.
In Sri Akkaloi Ammani Chatram Vs. State of Tamil
Nadu, 1980 Madras Law Journal, 67 (Full Bench), the Court
considered both the Acts, namely, Act No. 26 of 1963 and
Act No. 30 of 1963. This is also a case with reference to
the estate of Raja Thanjavur, as is the case under
consideration by us also. The question in issue in this
case is similar to the question in issue before us. There
also the Settlement Officer under Section 5 of the Tamil
Nadu Act XXXI of 1963 was to decide whether a non- ryotwari
area is an existing inam estate or a part village inam
estate or a minor inam or a whole inam village in
Pudukkottai. There also as in the present case it was
nobody case that the property in issue was of whole inam
village. The relevant portion of the decision is quoted
hereunder:
33. Let us assume for the sake of argument that in
view of the earlier decision of the Division Bench of this
Court in A.S. Nos. 223 and 292 of 1956, it is no longer
open to any of the parties to contend that the inam in
question will come within the scope of the existing inam
estate. Still the case can certainly come within the scope
of new inam estate because the definition of the term
inam estate in section 2 (7) of the Tamil Nadu Act XXVI of
1963 takes in both an existing inam estate and a new inam
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estate.
34. We have already referred to the definition of the
new inam estate in section 2(9) of the Tamil Nadu Act XXVI
of 1963 and that means a part village inam estate. We
have again referred to the definition of the term, part
village inam estate in section 2(11) of the Tamil Nadu Act
XXVI of 1963 and in the present case both the Settlement
Officer and the Tribunal have held that the inam in question
is a part village inam estate and therefore a new inam
estate and consequently an inam estate under the Tamil Nadu
Act XXVI of 1963.
The Full Bench further considered the meaning of the
word part as referred in the main part of the definition
of part village inam estate in sub-section (11) of Section
2 of Act No. 26 of 1963 with reference to various
dictionaries. It recorded that the word part is not a
word of art or a technical term conveying a special meaning.
It records:
There is nothing in the scheme of the Tamil Nadu ACT
XXVI of 1963 or in the context of the definition of the term
part village inam estate justifying giving to the
expression part occurring therein a meaning other than the
dictionary meaning referred to above.
There is nothing in the scheme of the Act No. 26 of
1963 or in the context of definition of the term part
village inam estate justifying to the expression part
occurring therein meaning other than the dictionary meaning
referred to above. Significantly, the Full Bench with
reference to Explanation 1 (b) of the aforesaid Section
recorded the findings as:
The very deeming provision will make it clear that
but for this explanation, the grant would fall within the
scope of the definition itself. Therefore, if Explanation 1
(b) had not been there, even where the grant, as an inam, is
expressed to be only in terms of acreage or cawnies or of
other local equivalent, it will still mean a part village
inam estate, as defined in section 2(11) of the Tamil Nadu
Act XXVI of 1963 and be creating afiction, in Explanation
1(b), the said grant is taken out of the definition of a
part village inam estate. Similarly Explanation II also
will support our conclusion that the word part should be
given its ordinary meaning.
39. The next aspect to be considered in this case is,
whether Explanation (b) can come into operation at all. The
said Explanation refers to acreage or cawnies or other local
equivalent. The expression other local equivalent must
necessarily mean equivalents to acreage or cawnies.
From the aforesaid decisions and enactments, their
amendments it is revealed, the word estate as defined in
Section 3 (2)(d) of 1908 Act was different than this word
after its amendment by Tamil Nadu Act XVIII of 1936.
Similarly, the word estate as defined in Tamil Nadu Act
XXVI of 1963 is different then what is defined under the
1908 Act as it originally stood but is the same after its
amendment by the Tamil Nadu Act XVIII of 1936. So
definition under Act No. 26 of 1963 of estate is what is
defined through amending Tamil Nadu Act XVIII of 1936 only
it is further clarified through the definition clauses. It
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is significant that the definition in 1908 Act prior to its
amendment by Act XVIII of 1936 dealt with the grant of the
land revenue of any village to a person not owning the
kudiwaram thereof. While definition after the said
amendment dealt with cases where any inam village has been
granted. By virtue of Section 3 of Act No. 26 of 1963,
with effect from the date of notification, all other
enactments applicable to inam estate, is deemed to have been
repealed, in respect of its application to the inam estate
and the entire such inam estate stands transferred and
vested in the State and all rights and interests created in
such inam estate before the notified date stands ceased and
determined. Thus, the significance of interpretation of
Explanation 1 (b) of Section 2 (11) of the Act gains
importance. We have seen gradually how inam estate were
brought in within the definition of estate through various
enactments. Initially it was divided into two, namely, (i)
for the whole village or more than one village and (ii) for
the part of the village. In spite of this some of the inams
contested not to fall under either of the two, for which
disputes were raised in courts in large numbers which lead
to bringing in the said two enactments in 1963 by giving it
more precise meaning. This is sought to be achieved through
definitions in Section 2 of Act No. 26 of 1963 of existing
inam estate, i.e., inam estate and new inam estate and
part village inam estate to make the law and the subject
clear. The existing inam estate are inam villages which
are estate as recognised through the aforesaid Third
Amendment Act XVIII of 1936. It is what is said to be not
covered under it is brought in under the said 1963 Act
within its definition new inam estate to mean part village
inam estate. Thus inam estate under this Act included both
the existing inam estate and new inam estate. As new inam
estate referred to mean a part village inam estate or a
Pudukkottai inam estate, the part village inam estate
itself is defined under sub-clause (11) of Section 2, which
is subject to scrutiny in the present case. This Act brings
all forms of inam villages under its broad definition to
include all preceding inams and also such inams which is
said to have been excluded but yet excluded a small fraction
out of the part village inam estate by virtue of
sub-clause (b) of Explanation I of Section 2 (11). So the
net conclusion is that now all inam estate are covered under
this Act, and all preceding enactments in respect of the
inam estate is repealed except to the extent of sub-clause
(b) of Explanation I. This residual inam is carried to be
read as minor inam under the aforesaid Act No. 30 of
1963. So what is excluded under sub-clause (b) of
Explanation 1 would be what would be covered under the
definition minor inam under sub-clause (9) of Section 2 of
Act No. 30 of 1963. So if appellants could be said to have
been excluded from sub-clause (b) of Explanation I they
would be out of Act No. 26 of 1963 and to be in Act No. 30
of 1963.
Returning to the present case, to be out of Act No.26,
the area of grant to the appellants should not constitute to
be a part village estate and for this the appellants have
to prove that its grant was expressed only in terms of
acreage or cawnies etc. Unless this is shown exclusion
from the Act cannot be gained. Looking back to the history
of legislation of inam estates, the intention of legislature
to encompass all inam estates within its folds and if small
exclusion is made, the exclusion has to be read keeping with
the intention of legislation. The exclusion cannot be read
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by ipsi dipsi but only through clear and unimpeachable
evidence. Legislature further makes it clear through
sub-Section (9) of Section 2 of Act no. 30 of 1963 that it
is only such area of grant which is not included within the
purview of Act No. 26 of 1963 will constitute to be minor
inam under Act No. 30 of 1963.
In the present case, the grant itself is not on the
record which would have been the primary evidence to test
appellant case through the provision of sub-clause (11) of
Section 2. The parties reenclined to the collateral
evidence and that too what is recorded in the case of
Karunbavira Vanniar (supra) which is also of Thanjavur
estate which also refers to the aforesaid two distinct sets
of areas, namely, Mela and Kizha. The only question, as we
have said, which arises is, whether either on the evidence
led and the collateral evidence gathered from the aforesaid
decision, could be it said, on the facts of this case that
the grant as an inam of the disputed area was expressed only
in terms of acreages or cawnies or other local equivalent.
Before we proceed to refer to the judgment in
Karumbavira Vanniar (Supra), we herewith give short facts as
recorded in the same judgment in respect of the estate of
Raja of Tanjore. In the year 1799 Raja of Tanjor ceded its
entire raj and reserved for himself the fort of Tanjor and
about 190 villages which formed part of his private
property. The last of the Rajas died in 1855. The East
India Company then took over the aforesaid both the sets of
properties. The heirs of Raja contested the right of the
Company though were successful in the Supreme Court at
Madras, but the Privy Council held that the validity of the
confiscation could not be challenged in the Municipal Court.
Thereafter on account of certain influential persons the
British Government, as an act of grace granting 190 villages
to the Rajas widow and they were compendiously referred to
as Tanjore Palace Estate. Thereafter a full Bench decision
in Sundaram Ayyar Vs. Ramachandra Ayyar, ILR 40 Mad. 389,
held that this grant to the widow was a fresh grant and not
a restoration of what had been taken away from heirs of the
last Raja by the East India Company. The Full Bench also
held the question whether it was an inam of an entire
village or grant was of Melwaram or both melwaram and the
kudiwaram has to be decided on the facts of each case. In
T.R. Bhavani Shankar Joshi, 1962 (2) SCR 421, this Court
while dealing with similar Tanjore Palace estate held that
such a grant was a fresh grant. It held:
the act of State having made no distinction between
the private and public properties of the Rajah the private
properties were lost by that of State leaving no right
outstanding in the existing claimants. The Government order
was thus a fresh grant due to the bounty of the Government
and not because of any antecedent rights in the grantees.
Some submissions were made on behalf of the learned
counsel for the parties, in respect of the onus of proof.
The submission was that the party seeking exclusion from the
field of an Act by virtue of any provision for gain, the
onus lies on such party to prove the same. Reliance was
placed for the respondents in the case of Aluru Kondayya and
Ors. Vs. Singaraju Rama Rao & Ors., AIR 1966 SC 681.
However, this was a case under 1908 Act and was with
reference to suit. The present case falls in terms of Rule
5 of the Tamil Nadu Inam (Supplementary) Rule, 1965, under
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which a proceeding before the Settlement Officer is of a
summary nature and is to be governed as far as possible by
the provisions of CPC. We feel since the proceeding before
the Settlement Officer as far as the present case is
concerned is of summary in nature we would not like to put
much emphasis on the burden of proof though primary burden
still remains on the person seeking an exclusion from the
Act who has to prove it. In the present case the appellants
relied on a portion of finding and evidence as recorded in
the Karumbavira Vanniar (Supra). The relevant portion are
quoted hereunder:
This position is made clear from the Paimash accounts
and the subsequent surveys. Mela Thattimal, which till 1919
formed part of Fajagiri village, covered as we said an
extent of 276-21 acreas. In the Paimash accounts of the
year 1829 the area was designated by Nos. 1272 to 1302. IN
the survey of the year 1886 the area was represented by
S.No. 11 of Rajagiri. - In the Land Register of the year
1919 the area was given Nos. 45 to 49 in the newly formed
No.5 Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai. Under the Record of
Rights Register, the corresponding numbers were S. Nos.57
to 62.
Now coming to Kizha Thattimal, which covered an area
of 267-44 acres, they were represented Nos. 335 to 614 in
the Paimash account of the Taraf village of Papanasam.
We fail to see how this portion helps the appellants.
This portion refers only to Paimash account and subsequent
survey of Mela, it records till 1919 it formed part of
Rajagiri village. It no doubt records its extent to be of
26.21 acres. The question is as to when this area was
measured, that is not recorded in the above passage. The
said judgment does not reveal, whether the Paimash account
and subsequent surveys referred to therein were of 1862 the
year of grant. Unless the reference of the document first
is established to be of the year of grant or refers to a
fact as existed in the year of grant and that documents
refer to the acreages, no inference in favour of the
appellants could be drawn. The reference of paimash account
or the subsequent survey referred does not indicate it to be
of the year in question nor whether it refers to the
acreage. There might have been surveys subsequent to the
grant giving acreage but that would not help the appellants
unless there is some document referred in the judgment of
the year in question which fixes the acreage or a document
which refers, what was acreage of the area is question in
the year of grant, would not help the appellant to exclude
the appellants from the purview of the Act No 26 of 1963.
It cannot be based on possibilities, conjecture or
inferences on this feeble evidence. The reference of the
year 1829, on which great emphasis was made, only refers to
paimash account of the area of Mela Thattimal which is shown
to have been designated by numbers, namely, 1272 to 1302.
The references there are of survey numbers not acreage.
Similarly is the position for Kizha Thattimal, the acreage
referred there is again not with any paimash account or
survey for the relevant year in question. On this basis no
inference even remotely could be drawn that the grant or
inam of the disputed areas was only in terms of acreage or
cawnies or of other local equivalent. In this case we find
the Tribunal clearly recorded the finding that reference of
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acreage in the said judgment in relation with Mela and Kizha
could only have been from the compilations subsequent to the
period of grant. This is a finding of fact which is
confirmed by the High Court. This apart even we examined
the same and find there is no evidence which merits
interference in favour of the appellants. In T.R. Bhavani
Shankar Joshi Vs. Somasundara Moopanar (Supra) this Court
while dealing with the Tanjor Palace estate to which we are
concerned also was faced with similar situation where
evidence was lacking an inference almost to the same effect
was drawn on the basis of meagre evidence. This Court
recorded:
In view of this evidence, it is quite clear that the
finding concurrently reached in the High Court and the two
Court below is based on evidence. It was contended that
this evidence is of modern times, and what is to be proved
is the existence of an inam village in 1862, when the
private properties of the Rajah were returned to his widows.
There is no doubt that the evidence does not go to that
early date, but the documents take it back to 1873, and
there is nothing to show to the contrary. In this state of
evidence we do not think that the High Court was in error in
holding that this land is a part of an inam village, and has
been so ever since 1862.
It is significant that the case of Karumbavira Vanniar
(Supra) records that in the year 1929 there were two areas,
namely, Mela and Kizha the former formed part of Rajagiri
village later of Papanasam village. The question raised
there and which was considered was, whether Arayapuram
Thattimal Padugai was an inam estate within the meaning of
estate under Section 3 (2)(d) of 1908 Act, further whether
it was of entire village or was it merely of two parts of
two different villages. It is in this context, the Court
finally held the grant was of two separate bits of land
lying in two different Taraft villages and that it was only
in the year 1919 that they were amalgamated to from what is
now known as No. 5 Arayapuram Thattimal Padugai village.
Hence, the two different bits were held not an estate within
the meaning of Section 3 (2)(d) of the 1908 Act. The
finding recorded thus is that the area Mela and Kizha were
parts of the village Rajagiri and Papanasam, respectively
and once they are part of the village it would be covered
within the definition of Section 2 (11) of the Act No. 26
of 1963. The Act No. 30 of 1963 clearly, while defining
the meaning minor inam under sub- Section (9) of Section 2
excludes from its ambit by virtue of sub-clause (b) of this
very Section what is covered by sub-clause (9) of Section 2
of Act No. 26 of 1963, a new inam estate as defined under
clause (9) of Section 2 of Act No. 26 of 1963 is a part
village inam estate. Since the aforesaid two bits of land
is admittedly a part of the village and part village inam
estate is defined under such clause (11) of Section 2, thus
the area in question being part of two villages, it would be
a new inam estate within the meaning of Section 2 (9) of Act
No. 26 of 1963 and thus it cannot be exclused by virtue of
clause (b) Explanation I of Section 2 (11) and thus it
cannot be minor inam under Act No. 30 of 1963.
Lastly reliance for the appellants was placed in the
decision of this Court in the P. Munian & Ors. Vs. State
of Tamil Nadu & Anr., 1994 (1) SCC 643. In this case, the
Court held that the area in question would fall within the
ambit of sub-clause (b) of Explanation 1 to Section 11 of
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the Act No. 26 of 1963. This case will render no help to
the appellants. This case records there is concurrent
finding of fact that the grant was in terms of acreages or
cawnies. Once there is finding of fact that the grant was
in terms of acreages or cawnies then there is no difficulty
to hold such area to fall under clause (b) of Explanation 1
of Section 2 (11).
Hence, we come to an irresistible conclusion that the
area both of Mela and Kizha since formed a part of the
aforesaid two villages at the relevant time it would be a
part village inam estate and on the evidence on the record
it could not be held that its grant was in terms of acreages
or cawnies etc. The learned senior counsel for the
respondents also made alternative submission that even if it
could be said that grant referred to the acreage also even
then the appellants cannot succeed as exclusion from the
provision of the Act by virtue of sub-clause (b) of
Explanation 1 could only if the grant expresses it only in
terms of acreages or cawnies etc. In the present case
admittedly the description is by a definite name of the
area, namely, Mela Thattimal Padugai and Kizha Thattimal
Padugai, also by the survey numbers. Hence it cannot be
said that the grant was only in terms of acreages or
cawnies. We find merit in the said submission also.
For the aforesaid reasons and also in view of the
findings recorded by both the Tribunal and the High Court
concurrently that the grant could not be said to be only in
terms of acreage. Hence the notification issued under Act
No. 30 of 1963 was rightly held to be illegal. On the
other hand the Settlement Officer findings to the contrary
that it was a grant in terms of acreage was without proper
appreciating the evidence and was based on no evidence,
hence, was rightly set aside. We do not find it to be a fit
case to interfere. Accordingly, both the appeals are
dismissed. Costs on the parties.