Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 8
PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
PATEL RAGHAV NATHA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
21/04/1969
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BENCH:
SIKRI, S.M.
BACHAWAT, R.S.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 1297 1970 SCR (1) 335
1969 SCC (2) 187
CITATOR INFO :
F 1970 SC1302 (6)
R 1971 SC 862 (10)
R 1983 SC1239 (12)
ACT:
Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, ss. 65 and 211-Collector’s
order granting permission to convert agricultural land to
non-agricultural use as building site-Commissioner setting
aside order a year later-Validity-Commissioner’s power to go
into question of title-Duty to give reasons for decision.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent, who was an occupant of agricultural land
applied to the Collector, under s. 65 of the Bombay Land
Revenue Code, 1879, for permission to convert the land to
non-agricultural use. The Collector gave the permission in
July 1960 on condition that the land shall be used
exclusively for constructing residential houses. The
Municipal Committee, which had objected to the grant of
permission before the Collector, moved the Commissioner for
exercising his powers under s. 211 of the Code. The
Commissioner, in October, 1961, passed an order in which,
after reciting the objections of the Municipality and the
arguments of counsel he boldly stated his conclusion that
the land did not belong to the respondent and set aside the
Collector’s order without giving any reasons. The Com-
missioner’s order was quashed by the High Court on the
ground that the Commissioner had no authority to pass the
order under s. 211 of the Code.
In appeal to this Court,
HELD : The Commissioner’s order was rightly quashed.
(a) Under s. 65 of the Code, if the Collector does not
inform an applicant of his decision on the application,
within a period of 3 months, the permission applied for
shall be deemed to have been granted Though no such period
is prescribed by s. 211, reading the two sections together
it must be held that the Commissioner also must exercise his
revisional powers within a reasonable time of the
Collector’s order. What is reasonable would depend on the
facts of the case. In the case when the permission is for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 8
building purposes, the Commissioner should exercise his
power within a few months of the Collector’s order, because,
after the grant of the permission the occupant is likely to
spend money on building operations within a few months of
the date of permission. Since the order of the Commissioner
in the present case was passed more than a year after the
Collector’s order, the order should be set aside. [343 E-H]
(b) The order should also be quashed on the ground that the
Commissioner had not given any reasons for his conclusions.
[343 H]
(c) The Commissioner also erred in going into the question
of title, because, when there was a serious dispute
regarding title, he should have referred the parties to a
competent court and not decide it himself. [344 D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals No. 723
of 1966.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment -and order dated
July 25, 26, 1964. of the Gujarat High Court in Special
Civil Application No. 31 of 1962.
336
R. H. Dhebar, Urmila Kapoor and S. P. Nayar, for the
appellant.
Purshottam Trikamdas and I. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 1.
N. S. Bindra and K. L. Hathi, for respondent No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Sikri, J. This appeal by special leave is directed against.
the judgment of the High Court of Gujarat (Vakil, J.)
allowing the application filed by Patel Raghav Natha,
respondent before us and hereinafter referred to as the
petitioner, and quashing the order dated October 12, 1961,
passed by the Commissioner, Rajkot Division. The
Commissioner by this order had set aside the order of the
Collector, dated July 2, 1960, granting permission to the
petitioner to use some land in Survey No. 417 for non-
agricultural purposes.
In order to appreciate the contentions raised before us it
is necessary to set out a few facts. The petitioner was a
resident of the State of Rajkot and at an auction effected
by the State, he acquired on or about September 22, 1938,
agricultural land bearing survey No. 417 which in all
measured about 12 acres and 12 ganthas. After some
acquisitions by the State out of this survey number he was
left with 2 acres and 10 ganthas of agricultural land. On
October 20, 1958, the petitioner applied to the Collector
for permission to convert this land to non-agricultural use,
under s. 65 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879,
hereinafter referred to as the Code. This petition was
first rejected by the Collector, but the Divisional
Commissioner remanded the matter to the Collector. On
remand, the then Collector of Rajkot, after holding an
enquiry, granted permission to the petitioner to use the
land for non-agricultural use by his order dated July 2,
1960. Pursuant to this order a sanad was issued by the
Collector to the petitioner on July 27, 1960. It appears
that the sanad was amended on November 3, 1960 and December
1, 1960. The sanad was in form MI and a number of
conditions were appended to the sanad. Condition 6 of the
main sanad provided that "save as herein provided, the grant
shall be subject to the provisions of the said code." The
special conditions originally included a condition that the
land shall be used exclusively for constructing residential
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 8
houses (condition 5) but this condition was altered in
November 1960.
It appears that the Municipal Committee of Rajkot had ob-
jected to the grant of permission before the Collector when
a sketch of the land was sent to the Municipality. The
objections as they appear from the order of the Collector
granting the sanad were directed against the accuracy of the
sketch, showing the
337
northern and tile western comers of the Ramkrishna Ashram,
and regarding the boundaries and situation of the roads in
survey Nos. 417 and 418. The Collector had overruled these
objections.
The Municipal Committee approached the Commissioner to
exercise powers under s. 211 of the Code. The Commissioner
noted the objections of the Municipality and after reciting
the objections and the arguments of the learned counsel for
the petitioner and after inspecting the site, observed :
"From this inspection the contentions of the
Municipality as to the existence of the
various roads as well as the nature of the
Kharaba land has been proved beyond doubt.
In light of the above arguments as well as the
site inspection and the papers of the case, I
set aside the order of the Collector granting
N.A. Permission. I consider, on weighing all
evidence cited above, that the land does not
belong to Shri Raghav Natha."
It is this order which has been quashed by the
High Court.
The following grounds were urged before the
learned Judge
(1) The Commissioner or the State Government
had no authority under Section 211 of the Code
to revise the order of the Collector so as to
affect the agreement or sanad granted to him.
(2) The Commissioner’s order is not a
speaking order as no reasons are given by him
for setting aside the Collector’s order and,
therefore, it should be quashed.
(3) The question of title to the land was
not in controversy at all before the Collector
and, therefore, it was not open to the
Commissioner to permit the Municipality to
agitate that question and the Commission had
no jurisdiction to decide that question.
(4) In case the above points are not
accepted, the order of the Commissioner is bad
even on merits as the Commissioner had erred
in law in allowing the question to be agitated
before him which were not agitated before the
Collector and which involved considerations
which were completely foreign to those which
were actually before the Collector.
While dealing with ground No. 1 the learned Judge held that
the Commissioner had no jurisdiction to pass an order which
would nullify the sanad, and that the sanad was binding on
both the parties till it was set aside in due course of law.
On the second
338
ground he held that there was some force in the submission.
But he observed :
"But at the same time if I had to decide this
case on this contention raised, I may not have
interfered only on this ground, with the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 8
decision of the Commissioner".
On the third ground he found that it was true that the
question of title was agitated by the Municipal Committee
for the first time before the Commissioner, though it was
primarily for the petitioner to show that he was an occupant
within the meaning of s. 65 of the Code. But then the
learned Judge decided not to enter into the merits of the
case as he had come to the clear conclusion that the
Commissioner had no authority to pass the order that he did
under s. 211 of the Code.
The learned counsel for the State of Gujarat, Mr. Dhebar,
challenges the decision of the High Court that the
Commissioner had no jurisdiction to pass the order dated
October 12, 1961. The relevant provisions of the Code and
the Land Revenue Rules, 1921, hereinafter referred to as the
Rules, are as follows
"The Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879
48. (1) The land revenue leviable on any
land under the provisions of this Act shall be
assessed, or shall be deemed to have been
assessed, as the case may be, with reference
to the use of the land-
(a) for the purpose of agriculture,
(b) for the purpose of building, and
(c) for a purpose other than agriculture or
building.
(2) Where land assessed for use for any
purpose is used for any other purpose, the
assessment fixed under the provisions of this
Act upon such land shall, notwithstanding that
the term for which such assessment may have
been fixed has not expired, be liable to be
altered and fixed at a different rate by such
authority and subject to such rules as the
State Government may prescribe in this behalf.
(3) Where land held free of assessment on
condition of being used for any purpose is
used at any time for any other purpose, it
shall be liable to assessment.
(4) The Collector or a survey officer may,
subject to any rules made in this behalf under
section 214, prohibit the use for certain
purposes of any unalienated
339
land liable to the payment of land revenue,
and may summarily evict any holder who uses or
attempts to use the same for any such
prohibited purpose.
65. An occupant of land assessed or held for
the purpose
of agriculture is entitled by himself, his
servants, tenants, agents, or other legal
representatives, to erect farm-buildings,
construct wells or tanks, or make any other
improvements thereon for the better
cultivation of the land, or its more
convenient use for the purpose aforesaid.
But, if any occupant wishes to use his holding
or any part thereof for any other purpose the
Collector’s permission shall in the first
place be applied for by the occupant.
The Collector, on receipt of such application,
(a) shall send to the applicant a written
acknowledgment of its receipt, and
(b) may, after due inquiry, either grant or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 8
refuse the permission applied for :
Provided that, where the Collector fails to
inform the applicant of his decision on the
application within a period of three months,
the permission applied for shall be deemed to
have been granted; such period shall, if the
Collector sends a written acknowledgment with-
in seven days from the date of receipt of the
application, be reckoned from the date of the
acknowledgment, but in any other case it shall
be reckoned from the date of receipt of the
application.
Unless the Collector shall in particular
instances otherwise direct, no such
application shall be recognized except it be
made by the occupant.
When any such land is thus permitted to be
used for any purpose unconnected with
agriculture it shall be lawful for the
Collector, subject to the general order of the
State Government, to require the payment of a
fine in addition to any new assessment which
may be leviable under the provisions of
section 48.
66. If any such land be so used without the
permission of the Collector being first
obtained, or before the expiry of the period
prescribed by section 65, the occupant and any
tenant, or other person holding under or
through him, shall be liable to be summarily
evicted by the Collector from the land so used
and from the entire
340
field or survey number of which it may form a
part, and the occupant shall also be liable to
pay, in addition to the new assessment which
may be leviable under the provisions of
section 48 for the period during which the
said land has been so used, such fine as the
Collector may, subject to the general orders
of the Provincial Government, direct.
Any tenant of any occupant or any other person
holding under or through an occupant, who
shall without the occupant’s consent use any
such land for any such purpose, and thereby
render the said occupant liaable to the
penalties aforesaid, shall be responsible to
the said occupant in damages.
67. Nothing in the last two preceding
sections shall prevent the granting of the
permission aforesaid on such terms or
conditions as may be prescribed by the
Collector, subject to any rules -Made in this
behalf by the Provincial Government."
"Land Revenue Rules, 1921
87. (a) Revision of non-agricultural
assessment-
(b) When land is used for non-agricultural
purposes is assessed under the provisions of
rules 81 to 85, a sanad shall be granted in
the Form M if the land is used for building
purposes, in Form NI if the land is used
temporarily for N-A purposes other than
building in Form N in all other cases.
Provided that if the land to be used for
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 8
building purposes is situated within the
limits of a municipal corporation constituted
under the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act or
the Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporation
Act, 1949 the Sanad shall be granted in Form
M-1;..........
The relevant extracts from the agreement
(sanad) are given below :
Whereas application has been made to the
Collector (hereinafter referred to as ’the
Collector’ which expression shall include any
officer whom the Collector shall appoint to
exercise and perform his powers and duties
under this grant) under section 65 of the Bom-
bay Land Revenue Code 1879 (hereinafter
referred to as ’the said Code’ which
expression shall where the context so admits
include the rules and orders thereunder) by
inhabitant of Madhya Saurashtra being the
registered occupant of survey No. 417 in the
village of
341
in the Taluka (hereinafter referred to as ’the applicant’
which expression shall where the context so admits include
his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns) for
permission to use for building purposes the plot of land
(hereinafter referred to as the ’said plot’), described in
the first schedule hereto and indicated by the letters......
on the site plan annexed hereto, forming part of survey No.
417 and measuring acres 2 gunthas 17, be the same a little
more or less.
When used under rule 51 for land already occupied for
agricultural purposes within certain surveyed cities the
period for which the assessment is leviable will be ordered
to coincide with the expiry of 99 years’ period running in
that city.
Now this is to certify that permission to use for building
purposes, the said plot is hereby granted subject to the
provisions of the said code, and on the following
conditions, namely :-
(1) Assessment......
(6) Code provisions applicable ’:-Save except as herein
provided, the grant shall be subject to the provisions of
this code
In witness whereof the Collector of has set his hand and the
seal of his office on behalf of the Governor of Bombay,
and the applicant has also here-unto set his hand, this day
the of 19 .
Signature of Applicant Signature and designations
of witnesses
Signature of Collector Signature and designations
of witnesses
We declare that who has signed this notice is, to our
personal knowledge, the person he represents himself to be,
and that he has affixed his signature hereunto in our
presence."
It will be noticed that application is made under s. 65 of
the Code and it is under s. 65 that the Collector either
grants or refuses the permission applied for. It will be
further noticed that if the Collector fails to inform the
applicant of his decision on the application within a period
of three months the permission applied for shall be deemed
to have been granted, but if the Collector sends a written
acknowledgment within seven days from the date of receipt of
the application then the three months period is reckoned
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 8
from the date of acknowledgment, and in other cases this
period is reckoned from the date of receipt of the
supCI/69-8
342
application. The Collector having given permission under s.
65 he can prescribe conditions under s. 67 of the Code.
Under s. 48(2) where the land assessed for use, say for
agricultural purposes, is used for industrial purposes, the
assessment is liable to be altered and fixed at a different
rate by such authority and subject to such rules as the
State Government may prescribe in this behalf. The rates
for non-agricultural assessment are fixed under rr. 81, 82,
82A, 82AA, 84 and 85 of the Rules. Rule 87(b) provides that
where land is assessed under the provisions of rr. 81 to 85,
a sanad shall be granted. Under the proviso to r. 87
(b) it is obligatory for the sanad to be granted in form MI.
Relying on Shri Mithoo Shahani v. Union of India(1) the
learned counsel contends -that there is a distinction
between an order granting permission under s. 65 and the
agreement contained in the sanad which is issued under, r.
87 (b). He urges that even if the sanad may not be
revisable under s. 211 of the Code, the order granting
permission under s. 65 is revisable under s. 21 1, and if
this order is revised the sanad falls along with the order.
We need not give our views on this alleged distinction for
two reasons; first, that this point was not debated before
the High Court in this case or in earlier cases, and
-secondly, because we have come to the conclusion that the
order of the Commissioner must be quashed on other grounds.
Section 211 reads thus
"211. The State Government and any revenue
officer, not inferior in rank to an Assistant
or Deputy Collector or a Superintendent of
Survey, in their respective departments, may
call for and examine the record of any inquiry
or the proceedings of any subordinate revenue
officer, for the purpose of satisfying itself
or himself, as the case may be, as to the
legality or property of any decision or order
passed, and as to the regularity of the
proceedings of such officer.
The following officers may in the same manner
call for and examine the proceedings of any
officer subordinate
(1) [1964] 7 S.C.R. 103
(1) The Government of the Province of Bombay
v. Hormusji Manekji--(1940) Letters Patent
Appeal No. 40 of 1938, decided on August 8,
1940.
(2) The Government of Bombay v. Mathurdas
Laljibhai Gandhi-44 B.L.R. 405.
(3) The State of Bombay v. Chhaganlal
Gangaram Lavar-56 B.L.R. 1084.
(4) Government of Bombay v. Ahmedabad
sarangpur mills Co.-A.I.R. 1944 Bom. 244.
(5) Secretary of State v. Anant Nulkar-36
B.L.R. 242 (P.C.)
(6) Province of Bombay v. Hormusji Manekji-
50 B.L.R. 524 (P.C.).
343
to them in any matter in which neither a formal nor a
summary inquiry has been held, namely,.... a Mam-latdar, a
Mahalkari, an Assistant Superintendent of Survey and an
Assistant Settlement Officer.
If in any case it shall appear to the State Government or to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 8
such officer aforesaid that any decision or order or
proceedings so called for should be modified, annulled or
reversed, it or he may pass such order thereon as it or he
deems fit;
Provided that an Assistant or Deputy Collector shall not
himself pass such order in any matter in which a formal
inquiry has been held, but shall submit the record with his
opinion to the Collector, who shall pass such order thereon
as he may deem fit."
The question arises whether the Commissioner can revise an
order made under s. 65 at any time. It is true that there
is no period of limitation prescribed under s. 211, but it
seems to us plain that this power must be exercised in
reasonable time and the length of the reasonable time must
be determined by the facts of the case and the nature of the
order which is being revised.
It seems to us that s. 65 itself indicates the length of the
reasonable time within which the Commissioner must act
under, s. 21 1. Under s. 65 of the Code if the Collector
does not inform the applicant of his decision on the
application within a period of three months the permission
applied for shall be deemed to have been granted. This
section shows that a period of three months is considered
ample for the Collector to make up his mind and beyond that
the legislature thinks that the matter is so urgent that
permission shall be deemed to have been granted. Reading
ss. 211 and 65 together it seems to us that the Commissioner
must exercise his revisional powers within a few months of
the order of the Collector. This is reasonable time because
after the grant of the permission for building purposes the
occupant is likely to spend money on starting building
operations at least within a few months from the date of the
permission. In this case the Commissioner set aside the
order of the ’Collector on October 12, 1961, i.e. more than
a year after the order, and it seems to us that this order
was passed too late.
We are also of the opinion that the order of the Commis-
sioner should be quashed on the ground that he did not give
any reasons for his conclusions. We have already extracted
the passage above which shows that after reciting the
various contentions he badly stated his conclusions without
disclosing
344
his reasons. In a matter of this kind the Commissioner
should indicate his reasons, however, briefly, so that an
aggrieved party may carry the matter further if so advised.
We are also of the opinion that the Commissioner should not
have gone into the question of title. It seems to us that
when the title of an occupant is disputed by any party
before the Collector or the Commissioner and the dispute is
serious the appropriate course for the Collector or the
Commissioner would be to refer the parties to a competent
court and not to decide the question of title himself
against the occupant.
In the result the appeal is dismissed with costs. V.P.S.
Appeal dismissed.
345