Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SUNDER SINGH AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NARAIN SINGH AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/03/1966
BENCH:
ACT:
Patiala and East Punjab States Union Holdings (Consolidation
and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act 5 of 2007 BK, ss. 24
and 25-Land sought to be pre-empted exchanged for other land
in consolidation proceedings-pre-emptor’s right to follow
the land to which his right attaches.
HEADNOTE:
The appellants purchased certain lands in the State of
Punjab and the respondents filed a suit claiming a right of
preemption thereon. Under a scheme of consolidation,
however, the appellants had before the filing of the suit,
been allotted some other lands in lieu of the lands
purchased by them, and they contended that the right of pre-
emption claimed by the respondents did not extend to these
lands. The trial court and the High Court decreed the
respondents’ suit holding on the oasis of s. 24 of the
Patiala and East Punjab States Union Holdings (Consolidation
and Prevention of Fragmentation) Act 5 of 2007 BK that it
was open to pre-emptor to follow the land which had been
given to the vendees in consolidation proceedings in lieu of
the land which was the subject matter of the sale-deed. The
appellants came to this Court by special leave.
HELD : Section 24 when it says that the landowner or
the tenant at will shall have the same right in the land
allotted to him as he bad in his original holding or tenancy
clearly preserves the obligation that may be on the land in
the nature of a disability. The consequence therefore is
that the ordinary law of pre-emption under which the pre-
emptor his the right to follow the land which is the
subject-matter of the sale-deed becomes expanded and the
land allotted to the landlord and tenant at will in lieu of
the land which may have been subject to pre-emption also
becomes subject to pre-emption in the same way as the
original holding or the tenancy. This inference is not
negatived by the special provisions of s. 25 in respect of
leases and mortgages or other encumbrances. [866 G; 867 D-E]
Shri Audh Behari Singh v. Gajadhar Jaipuria, [1955] 1 S.C.R.
70, Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh, [1959] S.C.R. 878 relied
on.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 822 of 1963
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree
dated April, 7, 1961 of the Punjab High Court in Regular
First Appeal No. 32 of 1957.
Bishan Narain and B. P. Maheshwari, for the appellants Nos.
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1-3 and 5-10.
M. V. Goswami, for appellant No. 4.
Bhawani Lal, E C. Agarwala, Ganpat Rai and P.C. Agarwala,
for respondent Nos. 1(i)-1(vi).
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
WANCHOO, J.-This is an appeal by special leave from the
decree of the Punjab High Court in a suit brought by the
plaintiffs-respondents for pre-emption. The appellants are
vendees to the sale which was preempted. The facts found by
the courts below are these. The property in suit consisted
of agricultural land as well as some baras in village
Jalalpur. Punnu Singh and Mansha Singh who were also
parties to the suit as defendants sold the property in suit
on January 15,1955 to the appellants. Thereafter
consolidation proceedings took place in this village and
came to an end before the present suit was filed on January
14, 1956. Of the vendees, six had no share in the village
from before while four already had some share in the
village. As a result of the consolidation proceedings, six
of the vendees who had no share in the village from before
were allotted other land in place of the land which they had
purchased under the sale-deed. The other four vendees who
had some share in the village from before were allotted land
in two blocks in lieu of the land they had in the village
from before as well as the land which they had purchased by
the sale deed in question. The plaintiffs-respondents
instituted the suit on the basis of their being collaterals
and co-sharers and wanted that they should be given out of
the land allotted to the vendees in consolidation
proceedings such land as they would be entitled to after
pre-emption of the sale in question.
The suit was resisted by the appellants on a number of
grounds. The main ground of defence with which we are
concerned in the present appeal was whether the suit was
maintainable with respect to the land which had been
obtained by the vendees during consolidation proceedings in
lieu of the land which was the subject matter of the sale
deed. The trial court held in favour of the plaintiffs-
respondents and granted a decree for pre-emption. On
,appeal to the High Court by the vendees, the High Court
held on the basis of S. 24 of the Patiala and East Punjab
States Union Holdings (Consolidation and Prevention of
Fragmentation) Act, No. 5 of 2007 Bk. (hereinafter referred
to as the Act), that it was open to the pre-emptor to follow
the land which had been given to the vendees in
consolidation proceedings in lieu of the land which was the
subject matter of the sale deed. Further in the High Court
another point was raised on behalf of four of the appellants
who had land from before in the village and it was urged
that in their case it was not possible to distinguish which
land had been allotted to them in place of the land sold and
therefore no pre-emption decree should be granted. This
argument was also rejected by the High Court, and the appeal
was dismissed. The High Court having refused the
certificate, the appellants applied and obtained ,special
leave from this Court; and that is how the matter has come
before us.
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The main question that has been argued before us is that the
suit is not maintainable as it is not open to the pre-emptor
to follow the land which might have been obtained by the
vendees in lieu of the land actually sold to them. The
answer to this question depends upon the interpretation of
s. 24 of the Act in the background of the law of pre-
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emption. In Shri Audh Behari Singh v. Gajadhar
Jaipuria,(1) this Court held that-
"The correct legal position seems to be that
the law of preemption imposes a limitation or
disability upon the ownership of a property to
the "extent that it restricts the owner’s
unfettered right of sale and compels him to
sell the property to his co-sharer or
neighbour as the case may be The crux of the
whole thing is that the benefit as well as the
burden of the right of preemption run with the
land and can be enforced by or against the
owner of the land for the time being although
the right of the preemptor does not amount to
an interest in the land itself The right of
preemption is an incident of property and
attaches to the land
itself......................."
This Court had occasion to consider the matter again in
Bishan Singh v. Khazan Singh(2) and pointed out that the
right of preemption is not a right to the thing sold but a
right to the offer of a thing about to be sold, this being
the primary or inherent right, and that the preemptor has a
secondary right or a remedial right to follow the thing
sold. Reliance is placed on behalf of the appellants on
this later decision and it is stressed that the preemptor’s
remedial right is merely to follow the thing sold, namely,
the very property which is the subject-matter of the sale-
deed under preemption.
The later decision on which reliance is placed does not in
any manner affect the earlier decision where it was held
that the right of preemption is an incident of property and
attaches to the land. It is true, as held in the later
decision, that ordinarily the right of the preemptor is to
follow the property which is the subject-matter of the sale
deed. The question which, however arises in the present
case is whether s.24 of the Act makes any difference to this
ordinary position of the law of preemption. That section
reads as follows:-
"A land-owner or a tenant at will shall have
the same right in the land allotted to him in
pursuance of the scheme of consolidati
on as he
had in his original holding or tenancy as the
case may be."
Clearly the effect of this provision is to give to the land-
owner or a tenant at will the same right in the land which
he acquires under the scheme of consolidation in lieu of
that land which he had before the consolidation proceedings.
He cannot get more
(1) [1955]1 S.C.R 70,
(2) [1959] S.C.R. 878.
866
rights than he had before nor can be get any less rights.
It is urged that section only preserves the rights and has
nothing to do with obligations to which the land may be
subject. We are of opinion that this is not so. When the
section lays down that the land-owner or a tenant at will
shall have the same right in the land allotted to him in
pursuance of the scheme of consolidation as he had in his
original holding or tenancy, it clearly implies that
obligations would also remain the same. If that were not so
and if his obligations were to disappear he would acquire
more right in the land allotted to him than he had in the
original holding or tenancy. For example, if the land-owner
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had only a life interest in the original holding he would
get the same life interest in the land allotted to him and
could not claim to be absolute owner of the land allotted in
consolidation proceedings. Thus the obligation which
attached to his ownership of his original holding (namely,
that it was subject to all the disabilities of a limited
owner) would also apply to the land allotted to him in
consolidation proceedings. Therefore when S. 24 speaks of
the landowner or the tanant at will having the same right in
the land allotted as he had in the original holding or
tenancy, it brings in all the rights and obligations which
were attached to his ownership or tenancy of the land
originally held.
It is in this background that the nature of the right of
preemption as held in Audh Behari Singh’s case (1) assumes
importance. In that case it was held that the law of pre-
emption imposes a limitation or disability upon the
ownership of a property and that the benefit as well as the
burden of the right of preemption run with the land.
Therefore if the original holding of the landowner was
subject to the disability of preemption the land allotted in
lieu thereof will be equally subject to the same disability.
This will however always be subject to the law of pre-
emption itself, and to the well-settled principle of pre-
emption, namely, that the preemptor must have a right of
preemption at the date of the sale, at the date of the suit
and finally at the date of the decree. Section 24 when it
says that the landowner or the tenant at will shall have the
same right in the land allotted to-him as he a in his
original holding or tenancy, clearly preserves the
obligation that may be on the land in the nature of a
disability. The consequence therefore is that the ordinary
law of preemption under which the preemptor has the right to
follow the land which is the subject-matter of the sale deed
becomes expanded and the land allotted to the land-owner or
tenant at will in lieu of the land which may have been
subject to preemption also becomes subject to preemption in
the same way as the original holding or tenancy. So it
follows that if the land allotted in lieu of the original
holding or tenancy is preemptible under the law of pre-
emption and the right of preemption still exists on the
three dates to which we have
(1)[1955] 1 S. C.R, 70.
867
already referred, the pre-emptor would by virtue of s.24 be
able to enforce his rights against land which may have been
allotted to the vendee in lieu of the land which was
actually the subject-matter of sale. We are therefore of
the opinion that the construction of s. 24 by the High Court
is correct and the plaintiffs-respondents have a right by
virtue of s. 24 of the Act to preempt the land which was
allotted to the appellants in lieu of the land which was the
subject-matter of the sale-deed.
It is however urged that s. 25 of the Act specifically
provides for rights with respect to a lease, mortgage or
other encumbrance to attach to the land allotted in place of
the original holdings, and that shows that no other rights
were intended to survive. We are of opinion that there is
no force in this argument. It was necessary to enact s. 25
when dealing with leases, mortgages and encumbrances for
without such a specific provision, a lease, mortgage or
encumbrance which was on one piece of land could not in law
attach to another piece of land. This however is very
different from an incident of ownership of land e.g.
liability to preemption which attaches to the land itself
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and continues to attach to the land allotted in lieu of the
original holding or tenancy by s. 24. The special
provisions, therefore in s. 25 do not negative the inference
that obligations which attach to the right of ownership of
the original holding or tenancy would continue to attach to
the land allotted in lieu thereof in consolidation
proceedings.
This brings us to the subsidiary contention which was raised
in the High Court, namely, that four of the vendees were
allotted land in lieu both of what they owned from before
and what they got under the sale deed in question. The High
Court has held and we think rightly-that there should be no
difficulty in finding out how much of the land allotted
pertains to the land which was the subject-matter of the
sale-deed. Land is always valued for purposes of allotment
during consolidation proceedings and it would not therefore
be difficult to find out how much land was allotted Io these
four vendees in place of the land which they got by the sale
deed.
Lastly it is urged that the form of the decree is incorrect.
This submission is made on the basis of the following
sentences in the judgment of the trial court:
"It does not mean that the land is not distinguishable. It
can be considered during execution at the time of delivering
the possession of the land."
We have not permitted learned counsel to raise this point
for the first time before us, as it was not raised in the
High Court. We therefore reject this contention.
The appeal fails and is hereby dismissed. Costs as per
order dated 8-9-65.
Appeal dismissed.
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