Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 7
PETITIONER:
KAVIRAJ BASUDEVANAND
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MAHANT HARIHAR GIR (DEAD) & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/08/1974
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
BENCH:
ALAGIRISWAMI, A.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN
BEG, M. HAMEEDULLAH
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1991 1975 SCR (1) 590
1974 SCC (2) 514
ACT:
Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, ss. 9, 10 and 12--Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s predecessor, who was one of the
intermediaries of certain villages filed a suit for
partition and a preliminary decree was passed therein. In
1950, the Bihar Land Reforms Act came into force and all
these villages vested in the State. The parties entered
into a compromise but the State was not a party to it. A
final decree was passed by the trial court in terms of the
compromise. In appeal, the High Court set aside the final
decree on the ground that the suit had become infructuous as
the plaintiff had no right in law to the properties,
including the mines, which were the subject matter of the
suit, as they had all vested in the State; and that, from
the date of vesting, the original title of the proprietor
completely vanished and a new title had come into existence.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : (1) The judgment of the High Court should be modified
to the extent that there will be a final decree in favour of
the appellant in respect of bakhast and zirat lands subject
to laws regarding ceiling on lands in force in the State.
[596 A-D]
Bhubaneshwar v. Sideshwar [1971] 3 S. C. R. 639, followed.
(2)The High Court was in error in holding that the benefit
of s. 9 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act is not available to
persons jointly interested in the mines before the date of
vesting and that it is restricted only to the intermediary
directly working the mines. Even though under s. 9 all
mines which were in operation at the commencement of the Act
and were being worked directly by the intermediary shall be
deemed to have been leased by the State to the intermediary,
the appellant, as a co-sharer, would be entitled to a share
in such mines on the principle of Bhubaneshwar’s case. It
would not, however, be possible to give effect to the
consent decree passed by the trial court in respect of the
mines. Nor would it be possible to pass a final decree in
respect of bakhast and zirat lands in favour of the
plaintiff and then leave the preliminary decree in respect
of mines untouched leaving the plaintiff to put in a fresh
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 7
application for final decree in respect of mines, as the
subject is too complicated to be dealt with in the final
decree proceedings. Hence, though the High Court was in
error in holding that the appellant was not entitled to any
share in the mines unless he was himself directly working
them, the appellant will have to work out the remedies in
respect of Mines by It separate suit. [594 C-595H]
(a)The appellant would be entitled to take possession of a
share in such mines only as a lessee from the State
Government. But the terms and conditions of the lease would
have to be agreed upon between the State Government and the
intermediary or have to be settled by the Mines Tribunal.
[595 A-B]
(b)Further, if an intermediary had opened mines in a
corner of a large area and was working it on the date of
vesting it would not mean that he would be entitled to a
mining lease in respect of the entire area. Therefore, the
area to be covered by the lease will have to be decided
under s. 12 in the light of the provisions of the Mines and
Minerals (Regulation and Development) Act, 1957. [595 B-C]
(c)Moreover, under s. 10 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act,
where there is a subsisting lease of mines and minerals
comprised in the estate the whole or that part of the estate
comprised in such lease, shall be deemed to have been leased
by the State Government to the holder of the subsisting
lease for the remainder of the term of that lease,, and the
appellant would not have any, right in such mines. [595 C-E]
(d)But there is no material on record as to what mines
were in operation who among the co-sharers of the appellant
were working the mines, and if so to what extent, on the
date of the vesting in the State. [595 E]
591
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1709 of
1967.
From the judgment and decree dated October 11, 1963 of the
Patna High Court at Patna in Civil Revision Nos. 891,
1080/1081 of 1956. and F. A. 926 of 1956, 303 & 378 of 1959
and F.A. 13 & 14 of 1960 arising out of the Judgment and
Decree dated the 4th day of June 1959 of the Court of the
Sub-ordinate Judge of Hazaribagh in Partition. Suit No. 25
of 1937.
P. K. Chatterjee and Rathin Das, for the appellant.
Bishan Narain, K. K. Sinha and S. K. Sinha, for respondent
No. 1.
I,. N. Sinha, Solicitor General of India and R. C. Prasad
for respondent No. 4.
U. S. Prasad, for the receiver.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ALAGIRISWAMI, J. This litigation which began in the year
1937 has come up for consideration before us in this appeal
and we are not sure that this is the end. In that year one
Dhirendra Nath Banerjee filed a suit for partition and-
allotment of his 3 annas 3 pies share out of 16 annas in 32
villages and a 4 annas share in another village in the
Hazatibagh district of Bihar. A preliminary decree for
partition was passed in 1939. Appeals against the
preliminary decree were dismissed in 1943 and in 1945 the
present appellant (he is now dead and his heir has been
added as party) purchased Banerjee’s share and he was added
as a co-plaintiff in 1947. In 1950 the Bihar Land Reforms
Act came into force and all these villages vested in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 7
State of Bihar on 8-9-1952 in pursuance of a notification
issued under that Act. In consequence the State of Bihar
was added as a party some time in 1952. A commissioner was
appointed to effect a division of properties and lie
submitted his report in March 1952. In May 1952 a com-
promise was entered into among the various parties in the
suit. To this consent order the State of Bihar, in whom the
properties had vested, was not a arty. A final decree was,
however, passed in terms of the consent between the parties.
There was in these proceedings an application for
appointment of receiver. The order appointing a receiver
led to an appeal being filed before the Patna High Court
wherein that Court observed that "the plaintiff’s suit for
partition must be held infructuous as he had no right in law
now to the properties, including the mines, which were-the
subject matter of the partition suit, which have all vested
in the State". The present appeal is however, against the
judgment of the High Court of Patna in the appeals filed by
the various defendants against the final decrees passed in
the suit.
Along with the appeal, appeals against the orders in certain
other petitions were also disposed of by the High Court. It
is only necessary to refer to Civil Revision Petition No.
891 of 1958 which the plaintiff filed against the order of
the Subordinate Judge rejecting his
592
prayer for amendment of the plaint. In that petition for
amendment he had prayed;
(a) That a separate takhta to the exte it of
the plaintiffs share be prepared with respect
to the lands and minerals in possession of the
parties to the suit as had been shown in
Schedules A, B, C and D of the amendment
petition and also the tenancy rights injirat,
bakhast and horticultural lands which had
remained in possession of the outgoing
proprietors after the vesting of the estate as
had been mentioned in Schedule E.
(b) That a decree for mesne profits from the
date of the suit till the date of realisation
with interest might be allowed; and
(c) That any other relief to which the
plaintiff was entitled might also be granted.
In Schedule A the plaintiff gave a description of all the
mines which, according to him, had been opened and worked by
him up to the date of the report of the Commissioner, Sri
Kalia, i. c., the 6th March, 1952. Schedule B contained a
list of the mines which according to the, plaintiff had been
worked by him after the date of the Commissioner’s report
and before the date of vesting of the estate tinder the Land
Reforms Act, i. e. between March and October, 1952. In
’Schedule C the plaintiff mentioned a list of the mines
which were in possession of the proprietors of one anna
share of the Gaddi Masnodih and who had not compromised with
the plaintiff. In Schedule D he mentioned the mines in
possession of the other co-sharers. In Schedule E he
referred to all zirat, bakhast and horticultural and
homestead lands situated in some villages in touzi No. 32
which, according to him, had not vested in the State of
Bihar and in which new rights under the Land Reforms Act had
been created in favour of the ex-proprietors. The learned
Subordinate Judge after hearing the parties disallowed the
amendment. The High Court rejected that Civil Revision
Petition against that order.
In the main appeal the Court held that the final decree
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 7
passed by the Court below could not be maintained and must
be set aside. The main reason was that the plaintiff’s suit
for partition had become infructuous, that he had no right
in law now to the properties, including the mines, which
were the subject matter of the partition suit, as they have
all vested in the State, that from the date of vesting the
original title of the proprietor completely vanished and new
title had come into existence. The contention of the
plaintiff that the working mines and the bakhast and zirat
lands were not taken over by the State and the suit at least
with respect to such properties must succeed was also
rejected by the Court. As to working mines, it was held
that they also vested in the State, thereby extinguishing
the old title, and the ’intermediary, who had been working
the mines directly at the time of vesting was entitled to
retain possession of those mines as lessee under the State,
and the benefit of section 9 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act
was not available to all persons jointly interested therein
before
593
the date of vesting and it was restricted to fire person,
i.e. the intermediary directly working the mines. The
consequence of that provision was held to be that the co-
sharer- intermediaries who were not concerned in the
operation of the mines will have no interest therein.
Before this Court only the first respondent and the State of
Bihar have appeared. In view of a later decision by a Full
Bench of the Patna High Court in Ramrudhar Singh v.
Dileshwar Singh (AIR 1965 Patna 117) and of this Court in
Bhubaneshwar v. Sidheswar (1971 3 SCR 639) the 1st
respondent and the State of Bihar have rightly conceded that
the plaintiff would be entitled to his share in the bakhast
and zirat lands. On behalf of the State of Bihar the
learned Solicitor General has, however, urged that this is
without prejudice to the provisions of any law regarding
ceilings on land which might have been enacted in Bihar.
This submission is undoubtedly well founded. Any decree
which the plaintiff might get in respect of bakhast and
zirat lands in this suit will not enable him to avoid the
provisions of any law regarding ceiling on land in force in
the State of Bihar.
As regards the mines, however, there are certain difficult,.
The Patna High Court was in error in holding that the
benefit of s. 9 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act is not
available to all parsons jointly interested therein before
the date of vesting aid that it is restricted to the
intermediary directly working the mines. In Mahanath
Sukhdeo Das V. Kashi Prasad Tewari and Shrideo Misra v.
Ramsewak- Singlr (ILR 37 Patna 918) the Full Bench of the
Patna High Court held that tile provisions of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act have to be construed it, the light of the
existing law and in the light of the history behind the
legislation, and therefore, a tenure-holder as defined in
section 2(r) does not mean a person who is actually in
possession of the tenure and consequently the expression
"Khas possession of an intermediary" on the date of such
vesting in section 6 of the Act .... does not mean the
possession of the intermediary who was actually in pos-
session on the date of the vesting to the exclusion of the
co-intermediaries. Khas possession of the intermediary
means the possession of the intermediary who was cultivating
land either for his own benefit or in trust for others. If
this be the position of an intermediary tinder the Act, then
obviously the words "khas possession" ccurring in section 6
of the Act do not exclude constructive possession."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 7
Another Full Bench of the Patna High Court in Ralnrudhar
Singh, v. Dileshwar Singh (AIR 1965 Patna 117) took the view
that the decision under appeal in the present case that when
the estate vested in the State of Bihar, a co-sharer, who
was not in possession of lands used for agricultural or
horticultural purposes was not entitled to any interest in
it, was wrong and must be overruled.
The matter has been finally settled by a decision of this
Court in, Bhubaneshwar v. Sidheswar (1971 3 SCR 639) in a
case that had arisen under the Bihar Land Reforms Act
itself. In that case it was observed "even if the
appellants were in actual khas possession within the
594
meaning of s. 2 (k) of the Act, it must be held that the
plaintiff respondent, who was a co-sharer, was in
constructive possession through the appellants, as, under
the law, possession of one co-sharer is pos.session of all
ca-sharers.. . . The deeming provision of s. 6 must,
therefore, enure for the benefit of all, who in the eyes of
law would be regarded as in actual possessions." it was,
therefore, held that the plaintiff had not lost his share in
the bakhast lands and had a right to them though not as a
tenure-holder or proprietor but certainly as a raiyat under
the provisions of the Act. This Court also observed ,that
there was no reason to hold that the observations of this
Court ’that in law possession of one co-sharer is possession
of all the cosharers, as was held in P. L. Reddy v. L. L.
Reddy (1957 SCR 195, 202) ’were not applicable to the case
before this Court. If that is so with regard to bakhast and
zirat lands and a co-sharer is entitled to his share even
though he might be only in constructive possession, there is
no reason why the same principle should not apply to mines
also either on principle or on authority. The definition of
the expression ’khas possession’ in the Bihar Land Reforms
Act, if any thing, is stronger from the point of view of the
person who is actually cultivating the lands than that of a
person who is working directly (the mines) under s. 9 of the
Act. Therefore, the appellant would be entitled to his
share in mines which had been worked directly by any co-
sharer.
Though the view of the Patna High Court on this point is
wrong, there are a number of other difficulties which the
plaintiff has to face. Under section 9 of the Bihar Land
Reforms Act though all mines which were in operation at the
commencement of the Act and were being worked directly by
the intermediary shall be deemed to have been leased by the
State Government to the intermediary and he shall be
entitled to retain possession of those mines as a lessee
thereof, there are a number of conditions which are to be
satisfied. Under sub-s. (2) of that section the terms and
conditions of the said lease by the State Government shall
be such as may be agreed upon between the State Government
and the intermediary or in the absence of agreement, as may
be settled by a Mines Tribunal appointed under section 12.
Furthermore, all such terms and conditions shall be in
accordance with the provisions of any Central Act for the
time being in force regulating the grant of new mining
leases. Under section 12 (2) in settling the terms and
conditions of a lease by the State Government under section
9, the Mines Tribunal shall have power to determine the
extent of the property deemed to have been leased by the
State and in so doing shall have regard to the reasonable
requirements for the future deve-lopment of the lessee’s
mining concern. In this case there is no averment in the
plaint or anywhere on record as to what mines were in opera-
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 7
tion on the date of vesting of the estate in the State.
Quite obviously, if any of the intermediaries had begun
operating a mine after that date they would not be entitled
to any rights in those mines. Even though the mines shall
be deemed to have been leased by the State Government. to
the intermediary and he shall be entitled to take possession
of those mines as a lessee,it could be only in accordance
with the terms .and conditions of lease by the State
Government and those terms and
595
conditions should be agreed upon between the State
Government and the intermediary or be settled by the Mines
Tribunal. The appellant would be entitled to a share only
in such mines. We have on means of knowing what those mines
are.
There is again the question of the area of the mine. For
instance, in an area of 100 sq. miles a mine might have been
opened by the intermediary in one corner and might be
working on the date of the vesting; but it does not mean
that he would be entitled to a mining lease in respect of
all the 100 sq. miles. The area to be covered by the lease
should be decided under s. 12. The words in the section
regarding mines being in operation should be interpreted in
the light of the provision of Mines and Minerals (Regulation
& Development) Act, 1957. The mining lease will have to
conform to the provisions of s. 6 of the Mines and Minerals
(Regulation & Development) Act regarding the maximum area
for which the mining lease will have effect. Furthermore,
under s. 10 of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, whereimmediately
before the date of vesting of the estate or tenure there is
a subsisting lease of mines or minerals comprised in the
estate or tenure or any part thereof, the whole or that part
of the estate or tenure comprised in such lease shall, with
effect from the date of vesting be deemed to have been
leased by the State Government to the holder of the said
subsisting lease for the remainder of the term of that
lease, and such holder shall be entitled to retain
possession of the lease-hold property. The appellant will
have no right ill such mines.
There is no allegation and no evidence in the plaint or
anywhere else on record as to who among the co-sharers of
the plaintiff were working the mines, and if so to what
extent on the date of the vesting in the State. Even if
they had been so working the normal term of a lease is 20
years and that term Would have come to an end even in 1972.
It would not, therefore, be possible to give effect to the
consent decree passed by the Trial Court in respect of the
mines. Nor is it possible, as contended on behalf of the
appellant to pass a final decree in respect of bakhast and
zirat lands in favour of the plaintiff and then leave the
preliminary decree in respect of the mines untouched leaving
the plaintiff to put in a fresh application for final decree
in respect of the mines. The subject is too complicated to
be dealt with in the final decree proceedings in the suit.
The plaintiff would have to make proper allegations as to
which among his co-sharers were operating the mines in 1952.
If they have been operating any mines it may be that the
appellant would be entitled to a share. But if the term of
the mining lease has come to an end it would be a matter of
accounting between the co-sharers who had, actually worked
the mines and the appellant. The first respondent has
disclaimed all interest in the mines. If all the mines are
being worked by lessees no question of the appellant being
entitled to any rights would arise at all. If there had
been a renewal of the mining leases a further question
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 7
whether the plaintiff would be entitled to a share in them
would arise.
596
The best thing that could be done in the circumstances is,
therefore, to uphold the judgment and decree of the High
Court in respect of the mines leaving it to the plaintiff to
file a suit, if he is so advised for such relief as he may
consider available to Wm. The judgment of the High Court
would be modified to the extent that there will be a final
decree in favour of the appellant in respect of the bakhast
and zirat lands subject to laws regarding ceiling on lands
in force in Bihar State. Though we have held that the High
Court was in error in holding that the plaintiff was not
entitled to any share in the mines unless he was himself
directly working those mines he wilt have to work out his
remedies in respect of the mines by a separate suit. In the
circumstances the parties would bear their own costs.
V.P.S. Decree modified
597