Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
TAIBAI (DEAD) BY LRS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
ANNASAHEB GOUDAPPA PATIL
DATE OF JUDGMENT16/11/1995
BENCH:
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
BENCH:
MANOHAR SUJATA V. (J)
PUNCHHI, M.M.
CITATION:
1996 SCC (1) 585
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Mrs.Sujata V.Manohar, J.
The appellants in this appeal are the heirs of the
original plaintiff. The suit land being Survey No.133
admeasuring 20 acres 37 guntas is situated in Amtur Village
in Bailahongal Taluk in the State of Karnataka. It is Vatan
Land. On the coming into force of the Karnataka Village
Offices Abolition Act, 1961 on 1st of February, 1963 the
said land was resumed by the State on abolition of all
village offices. Section 5(1) of the said Act provides for
re-grant of land resumed under Section 4(3) to the holder of
the village office. Accordingly, the land was re-granted to
the original plaintiff on 7.4.1978.
Prior, however, to the re-grant of the land in favour
of the plaintiff, the plaintiff had entered into an
agreement dated 5.8.77 with the defendant i.e. the present
respondent under which she had agreed to sell this land to
the defendant for a sum of Rs.60,000/-. The agreement
recited that an amount of Rs.40,000/- was paid by the
defendant to the plaintiff as earnest money. Possession of
the land was also given to the defendant. Accordingly the
defendant was in possession of the land since 5.8.1977. The
present suit was filed by the plaintiff for possession of
the suit land on the ground that the agreement of sale
entered into by her was null and void in view of the
provisions of the Karnataka Village Offices Abolition Act,
1961 and the Karnataka Act 13 of 1978 substantially amending
the said Act which came into effect on 7.8.1978.
Under the Karnataka Village Offices Abolition Act, 1961
Section 5(1) Provides for a land resumed under Section 4(3)
being granted to the person who was the holder of the
village office immediately prior to the appointed date on
payment of the occupancy price as specified therein.
Under Section 5(3), as it is stood before its amendment
on 7.8.78, the occupancy or the ryotwari patta of the land,
as the case may be, re-granted under sub-section (1) shall
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not be transferable otherwise than by partition among
members of the Hindu Joint Family, without the previous
sanction of the Deputy Commissioner; and such sanction will
be granted only on a payment of an amount equal to 15 times
the amount of full assessment of the land. By the amending
Act, sub-section 5(3) was substantially amended. The amended
Section 5(3) provides that occupancy or the ryotwari patta
of the land, as the case may be, re-granted under sub-
section (1) shall not be transferable otherwise than by
partition among members of the Hindu Joint Family for a
period of fifteen years from the date of commencement of
Section 1 of the Karnataka Village Offices Abolition
(Amendment) Act, 1978. In other words, all transfers of re-
granted land are prohibited for a period of fifteen years
after 7.8.78 which is the date of commencement of Section 1
of the amending Act.
In the present case Section 5(3) is not attracted
because case there is no transfer of the occupancy or the
ryotwari patta of the land re-granted under sub-section (1).
In the present case there is only an agreement of sale which
was entered into prior to the re-grant.
Under Section 5(6) which was introduced with effect
from 7.8.78 by virtue of the amending Act, it is provided as
follows:-
"Notwithstanding anything contained
in any law for the time being in force
any agreement for transfer of land
resumed under clause (3) of Section 4,
entered into prior to re-grant thereof
under sub-section (1), shall be null and
void and any person in possession
thereof in furtherance of such agreement
shall be summarily evicted therefrom by
the Deputy Commissioner."
There is, therefore, a clear bar on any agreement for
transfer of land being made by the prospective Patta holder
prior to re-grant. Section 5(6) provides that if any such
agreement is entered into, it shall be null and void and any
person in possession in pursuance of such an agreement is
liable to be summarily evicted as provided therein. The
agreement of sale, therefore, which was entered into at the
time when the seller did not have any title to the land,
will have no legal effect nor the provisions of Section 53A
of the Transfer of Property Act be attracted in such a case.
In the case of Lakshmana Gowda v. State of Karnataka &
Ors. (1981 [1] K.L.J. 1) the Karnataka High Court had
considered some of the provisions of the Principal Act
before its amendment, particularly Section 5(3) and some
provisions of the Amending Act of 1978. It has not dealt
with the amended Section 5(6). Since this decision is relied
upon by the Division Bench we would like to refer to the
relevant observations made in the said judgment in so far as
they pertain to an agreement to sell entered into prior to
re-grant. The Court considered, inter alia, the case of an
agreement for sale entered into by the holder of the service
Inam prior to the coming into force of the Principal Act.
Since the lands granted under a service Inam were
inalienable, the court has observed at page 14 (paragraph
68) that an agreement to alienate Service Inam Land entered
into prior to the coming into force of the Principal Act,
was wholly void and not merely voidable. "Even if the
proposed alienee under such an agreement was put in
possession of such land in pursuance of such agreement, he
could not derive the benefit of the doctrine of part
performance embodied in Section 53A of the Transfer of
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Property Act. As stated in Mulla’s Commentary on the
Transfer of Property Act (6th Edn.) at page 295, Section 53A
is applicable to a case where a transfer had not been
completed in the manner required by law and not to a case
where an agreement to so transfer was void under the law.
Therefore, neither that section nor the doctrine of equity
on which it is founded, would validate that which the law
said was invalid." In dealing with transfers made after
coming into force of the Principal Act, but before its
amendment, the Court said that since Section 5(3) before its
amendment permitted transfers of re-granted land with the
sanction of the Deputy Commissioner, the transfer made prior
to the re-grant which was imperfect as the seller had no
right over the land, would be perfected on the seller
acquiring such a right on re-grant. This reasoning cannot
apply to a case where the transaction prior to re-grant is
wholly null and void; nor can it apply to a case where
transfer after re-grant is prohibited, as under the amended
Section 5(3).
Section 5(6) of the said Act which is introduced under
the Amending Act 1978, clearly provides that an agreement to
transfer which is entered into prior to re-grant is null and
void. Nor can a transfer be effected pursuant to such an
agreement after 7.8.78. In view thereof the respondent i.e.
defendant, has no right, title or interest in the suit land
under the agreement which is null and void. Nor can he get a
transfer of land pursuant to such an agreement in his favour
after re-grant since such transfers are prohibited for 15
years from 7.8.78 under the amended Section 5(3). The
defendant has, therefore, no right, title or interest in the
suit land. Since the land has been re-granted to the
plaintiff, she is entitled to succeed in the suit.
In the premisses, we allow the appeal and set aside the
judgment and order of the Division Bench of the Karnataka
High Court and restore the judgment and decree of the trial
court. The respondent shall pay to the appellants costs of
the appeal.