Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
MOSAMMAT BIBI SAYEEDA & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE STATE OF BIHAR & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/04/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BHARUCHA S.P. (J)
PARIPOORNAN, K.S.(J)
CITATION:
1996 AIR 1936 JT 1996 (4) 637
1996 SCALE (4)232
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 5046 OF 1984 & 332 OF 1985
AND
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 7547 OF 1996
(Arising out of SPECIAL LEAVE PETITION (C).7495 OF 1985)
J U D G M E N T
K. RAMASWAMY,J.
Leave granted in SLP (C) No.7495/85.
These appeals by certificate granted by Patna. High
Court under Articles 133(1) and 134-A of the Constitution
arise from judgment and order of the Full Bench made on
November 16, 1984 in CWJC No.45 of 1968 and batch. They
raise common substantial question of law as to the meaning
of the word "Bazar", namely, Tilak Babu Hatia " in
Bhagalpur, "Hasan Bazar" in Piro, Gudari Katra Bazar" in
Arrah and "Patna Market" in Patna, within the meaning of
Section 4(a) of the Bihar Land Reforms Act 30 of 195 or
short the ’Act’. The facts in Civil appeal No.5046 of 1984
are sufficient for decision. ’Hence’ They are stated as
under:
Municipal plot Nos . 51 etc . with construction
standing thereon along with Zamindari interest held therein,
were transferred to S. Sayed Haider Imam father of Sayed
Abid Imam by his predecessor Zamindar. Sayed Hassan Imam had
constructed several shops in 4 plots of the land and let
them out to diverse tenants on monthly rentals. there are as
many as 132 shops known as Patna Market in Patna, The estate
has been given Touzi no. I-21 by the Collector at Patna.
Notifications under sections, 3, 3A and 3B of the Act were
published on January 1, 1956. The Deputy Collector, Lend
reforms, after following the procedure under the Act by
order dated August 10, 1968 dismissed the appeal. The
appellant, Sayed Hasan Imam filed a writ petition in the
High Court which was dismissed by the Full Bench pending
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appeal, he died and his legal representatives have been
brought on record.
The appellants claimed in the writ petition that the
shops are "homestead" within the meaning of Section 2( j) of
the Act. They do not vest in the State and, therefore,
they remain to be the property of the appellants. Similar
are the facts in all other cases. Therefore, it is not
necessary to narrate the facts of all the cases separately.
The Full Bench has held that by operation of the
notifications under Section 3, 3A and 3B of the Act the
bazars stand vested in the State . It has held that the
constitutionally of the provisions of the Act has not been
challenged. It was disputed that hats and bazars are not
vested in the State under Section 3, as the buildings let
out. to several tenants are not bazars. They were homesteads
at one point of time i.e., prior to the abolition of the
Zamindari and remained to be so as on the date of the
issuance of the notification. They must therefore, be deemed
to have been settled with the appellants under Section 5.
The High Court repelling the contention held that on a
conjoint reading Section 3 to 7-A and 7-B of the Act hats
or bazars stand vested in the State. Prima facie, melas and
hats are distinguished from bazar; a hat generally is a
congregation of buyers and sellers on specified days of a
week and mela is held on special festive occasions in a
year, associated with religious festivals, for example,
Monday Mela in the month of Shravan (July) and on the
occasion of Urs. Bazar is a daily feature and is held day
after day. There are rows and rows of shops in the markets
and they are nothing but markets. Bazars are complex of
shops. In Hasan Bazar, there are as many as 132 shops; some
of them brick built and some are Kachha (temporary) or mud-
made. In Patna Market, huge complex of shops are existing.
All of them are famous as bazar or market consisting of
whole complex of shops in rows. Buying and selling
operations are the main commercial activities. Daily, weekly
or monthly rents are collected from the occupants.
Realization of toll is not a pre-condition to conclude that
they are bazars. The essential feature is regular conduct of
buying and selling as a permanent feature which is the
primary condition. These markets satisfy the above
conditions. Therefore, they are nothing but markets and they
are bazars within the meaning of Section 4(a) of the Act.
S/Shri Shanti Bhushan, A.K. Sen and Soli Sorabjee,
learned senior counsel for the appellants, contended that
the view of the High Court is wholly unsustainable. The Act
is an agrarian reform intending to acquire the estate
covered under Act and confers permanent tenancy right to the
Raiyats. Hats, bazars or melas held by intermediaries,
though stand vested in the State after the notification
under Section 3 of the Act is published, Section 4(a)
envisages vesting only of any building or a part of a
building comprised in such an estate or tenure used
primarily as office or cutchery for the collection of
revenue of such an estate or tenure and his interests
therein stand vested in the State. Shops are used for
commercial purpose in urban areas, in contra distinction to
those in rural area. The legislature was aware of this
distinction between the English language used for market and
that used towards bazar in Hindi language employed in
Section 4(a), i.e., hats, bazars and melas commonly known in
rural India as part of the State. It would indicate that the
Intermediary conducts hats, bazars and melas not as a
regular business or avocation but as periodical bazars and
collects tolls from the occupants in the hats or bazars, be
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it for a day in a week or bi-weekly bazars. Bazars mean
rural bazars but not commercial shops in urban towns
governed by the Rent Control Act. The homestead includes any
building let out on rent. lt is not necessary that such
buildings should be in persona] occupation for residence of
the intermediary/tenure-holders. The Act does not intend to
divest right, title and interest in such hats or bazars held
by intermediary nor vests the same in the State. Only those
bazars, run in rural villages as incidental to the main
agrarian reform envisaged under the Act, are intended to
vest in the State. The commercial complexes in the urban
areas owned by intermediaries are, thereby, not intended to
be abolished as part of agrarian reform. The Act does not
intend to enrich the coffers of the State by abolishing the
commercial complexes of intermediaries situated in urban
areas. Though the Act receives protective umbrella of Ninth
Schedule, Article 3 must be understood in the context of the
purposes envisaged under Article 31-A. If the commercial
complexes are held to be within the sweep of the Act, the
Act is ultra vires Articles 14, 19 and 300A. They are not
saved by reason of its inclusion in the Ninth Schedule. In
support thereof, the learned senior counsel placed strong
reliance on the majority judgment in State of Bihar vs.
Maharajadhiraja Sir Kameshwar Singh of Darbhanga & Ors.
[(1952) SCR 889], Malankara Rubber and Produce Co. & Ors
etc. etc. vs. State of Kerala & Ors. etc.etc. [(1973) 1 SCR
399], Brij Kishor Prasad Singh & Ors. vs. Jaleshwar Prasad
Singh & Ors. [(1973) 3 SCR 562], Balmadies Plantations Ltd,
& Anr. vs. State of Tamil Nadu [(1973) 1 SCR 258] and
Gulabhai Vallabhbhai Desai etc. vs. Union of India &
Ors.[(1967) 1 SCR 602].
Shri Sanyal, learned senior counsel for the State, has
contended that though the primary object of the Act is land
reform for transference of the entire rights, titles and
interests in the estate of zamindar or tenure holder
irrespective of the land-or buildings, hats, bazars, melas
etc. whether situated in rural or urban area and vested in
the State Free from all encumbrances except to the extent
saved by the Act, the vesting of estate is completes under
Section 4(a) of the Act. There is no question of only
partial vesting of agricultural lands. rights in or the land
tenures including interests of the intermediaries or
tenureholders. The case of the appellants, as manifested
from their pleadings in the High Court, is that the bazars
are homestead land saved by Section 5 claiming that the
intermediaries have title to the bazars subject to
settlement on them by the State. It is not their case that
the shops in urban land is not vested in the State. Bazars
are nothing but markets in which commercial activity is
carried on in a regular course. Though the Act makes a
distinction between hats, mela and bazar, bazar used in
Section 4(a) must be construed in its etymological sense The
Act does not intend to have partial vesting of Touzi
situated in rural area while excluding urban area. Under
the Act, the concept of rural or urban estate was neither
intended nor contemplated. On publication of the
notification under Section 3, the totality of the right,
title and interest held by an intermediary in touzi stands
abolished. by operation of Section 4(a), it stands vested in
the State. Homestead is distinguished from bazar. The shops
are not used for the purpose of dwelling, though it is not
necessary that intermediary should use the shops personally
for dwelling. If it is held that the bazars are markets. it
is enough that Section 4(a) of the Act stands attracted.
Holding of the bazar connotes having possession, but not
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conducting business like hats or melas. The legislature has
used the three expressions with the intention to cover all
the three activities, namely, conducting malas at periodical
festive occasions or weekly hats, be it in rural or Urban
areas or "bazars"; the expression bazars" used as a
systematic and organized commercial activity which would
come within the sweep of Section 4(a) of the Act. Collection
of the toll is understood in its conducting hats or melas.
Even if rents are collected on daily weekly or monthly
basis. it amounts lo collection of the amount for
consideration of letting shop; the premises are used for the
merchandise. Shops or buildings may be permanently built or
sheds or kaccha (temporary) structure. Transaction of buying
and selling is a condition which is being done as a
permanent feature.
Intermediary need not necessarily hold hat and bazar on
land, though business transactions are conducted in any
building in a touzi, be it in rural or urban areas. In
Bihar, landlords hold hats or bazars in urban areas. Without
shops, there would be no bazar. Realization of the rent for
shops let out to the tenants in the form of toll or rent is
consideration for use and occupation. Even if Independent
shops are constructed and bazar is run, they are incidental
to the enjoyment of the estate. Therefore they stand vested
in the State. They are saved by Article 31-B of the
Constitution . Shri Shanti Bhushan raised a further
contention that Section 4(a) and Section 4(h) made a
distinction between the buildings held for office or
cutchery purposes and other buildings. If the same are sold
by intermediary prior to January 1, 1946, they are excluded
from vesting in the State, though at one time they were
used for official purpose by zamindars or tenure holder. If
the Collector, after enquiring under sections 5, 7, 7A and
7B, holds that it was sold after January 1, 1946, such sale
does not bind the State and the same stands vested. In other
words, the legislature made a distinction between building
used exclusively for official purpose by the intermediary
and any other building and the latter would be governed by
Section 5 to 7 of the Act.
The diverse contentions give rise to the questions
whether the bazars governed by the provisions of the Act
stand vested in the State under Section 4(a) of the Act? At
the outset, we would state that the High Court in the
judgment has specifically pointed out that constitutionality
of the provisions of the Act has not been challenged. That
is not disputed before us. It would, therefore, be
unnecessary for us to go into the constitutionality of the
provisions of the Act.
The controversy is no longer res integra. In Kameshwar
Singh’s case [supra], per majority, this Court had held that
the Act is not a law in respect of a matter mentioned in
Entry 18 of List II. Mahajan, J. with whom Mukherjee and
Chandrasekhara Aiyar, JJ. had concurred, held that the
dominant purpose of the Act is the transference to the State
of the interest of proprietors and tenure holders in land
and of the mortgages and lessees of such interests including
the interests in trees, forests, fisheries, jalkars,
ferries, hats, bazars. mines and minerals. The law relates
to several items in the legislative list, that is, rights in
or over lend and also property. The pith and substance of
the legislation is the transference to the State of the
interest of the proprietor and tenure Holders and
acquisition of estate within Entry 36 of List II, as it
stood then There is no scheme of land reform within the
framework of the statute except as a pious hope expressed
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that commission may produce it. The Bihar Legislature was
competent to make the law on the subject of transference of
estate and such transfer under the Act is constitutionally
valid. It was also further held that the concentration of
big blocks of land in the hands of a few individuals is
contrary to the principle on which the Constitution of India
is based. The purpose of the statute is to bring out the
objectives of Article 38 and 39 of the Constitution. The
purpose of the Act is acquisition of the estate for a
public purpose. Patanjali Sastri, C.J. assumed, without
discussion, that the Act is an agrarian reform and upheld
the Act. S.R. Das, J. had held that the Act is an agrarian
reform. The majority had held that Sections 4(b) and 23(f)
acquiring arrears of rent payable to the intermediaries
without compensation and deduction of 50% of the recoveries
as administrative charges was held to be unconstitutional.
In State of Bihar v. Rameshwar Pratap Narain Singh &
ors. [(1962) 2 SCR 382], Section 7A to 7C were impugned as
unconstitutional and the right of ex-proprietors to hold
melas after abolition of proprietary tenures and acquisition
of mela was without public purpose. At page 392, it was
contended that the right to hold melas is not a right in the
land and, therefore, cannot be acquired as a right in an
estate. Another Constitution Bench had held that holding a
hat or bazar or mela is only a mode of user by the owner of
his land. Just as he can enjoy the land belonging to him in
other ways, he can use it for the purpose of having a
concourse of people - buyers and sellers and others for a
hat, or bazar or mela ˜ subject, as in the case of other
user, to the requirement of other use. The right to hold
mela has always been considered in this country to be an
interest in land, an interest which the owner of the land
can transfer to another along with the land or without the
land. There can be no doubt, therefore, that the right of
the proprietor of an estate to hold a mela on his own land
is a right in the ’estate’ being appurtenant to his
ownership of land; so also the right of a tenure-holder,
who, it has to be remembered, is the owner of the land
subject only to the payment of the rend to the proprietor,
to hold a mela on land forming part of the tenure. The
validity of Sections 7A to 7C read with Sections 4 and 6 of
the Act was upheld.
Section 3(1) of the Act empowered the State Government
to declare by notification that the estates or tenures of a
proprietor or tenure-holder, specified in the notification,
have passed to and become vested in the State. Such vesting
took place as on January 1, 1956. Section 4 of the Act
mentions the consequences which flow from the publication of
the notification under Section 3(1) of the Act. Section 4(a)
envisages vesting of such an estate or tenure including the
interest of the proprietor or tenure-holder as under:
"Such estate or tenure including
the interests of the proprietor or
tenure-holder in any building or
part of building comprised in such
estate or tenure and used primarily
as office or cutchery for the
collection of rent of such estate
or tenure, and his interests in
trees, forests, fisheries, jelkars,
hats, bazars, mela and ferries and
all other sairati interests, as
also his interest in all sub-soil
including any rights in mines and
minerals, whether discovered or
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undiscovered, or whether been
worked or not, inclusive of such
rights of a lessee of mines and
minerals comprised in such estate
or tenure (other then the interests
of raiyats or raiyats) shall, with
effect from the date of vesting,
vest absolutely in the State free
from all incumbrances and such
proprietor or tenure-holder shall
cease to have any interests in such
state or other than the interests
expressly saved by or under the
provisions of this Act."
It would thus be seen that the pre-existing right,
title or interest of the intermediary in the estate or
tenure including intermediary interests in various subjects
mentioned therein, namely, trees, forests, fisheries,
jelkars, hats, bazars mela and ferries and all other sairati
interests, as also his interest in all sub-soil including
any rights in mines and minerals, whether discovered or
undiscovered, or whether been worked or not, inclusive of
such rights of a lessee of mines and minerals, comprised in
such estate or tenure other than the interests of raiyats or
under-raiyats shall, with effect from the date of vesting,
vest absolutely in the State free from all incumbrances and
such proprietor or tenure-holder shall cease to have any
interest in such estate other than the interests expressly
saved by or under the provisions of the Act. It would,
therefore, be clear that such of the interests expressly
saved by or under the respective provisions of the Act alone
remain with the intermediary, proprietor or tenure-holder. A
building or a part of building comprised in such an estate
or tenure and used primarily as office or cutchery for
collection of rent of such estate also became vested in the
state.
Section 5 gives an exception to the interest held by
proprietor or tenure-holder in respect of homesteads and
allows the intermediaries to retain them as tenants.
Issuance of notification under Section 3 divests their right
and title therein. The sequential operation of Section J. is
vesting of right, title and interest of all enumerated items
absolutely in the State free form all encumbrances expect to
the extent of interests of the intermediary saved by the
provisions of the Act. Section 5 saved only interest in
enjoyment of homesteads held by the intermediaries treating
him as a tenant under the State from the date of vesting.
"Homestead" defined under Section 2(j) of the Act means a
dwelling house either used by the proprietor or tenure-
holder for the purpose of his own residence or for the
purpose of letting out on rent together with any courtyard,
compound, attached garden, orchard and out-buildings and
includes any outbuildings used for purposes connected with
agriculture or horticulture and any tank, library and place
of worship appertaining to such dwelling house were treated
as a homestead. Explanation to Section 2(j) implies dwelling
house or out-house should include any land on which there
stood such dwelling house or out-building at any time before
the date of vesting was explained to be a dwelling house. It
would be clear that dwelling house encompassed under Section
5, is one compact block enjoyed partly for non-residential
add partly for non-residential and other allied purposes
mentioned therein. Its occupation, use and enjoyment alone
was saved from vesting so that the intermediary should
retain the interest of the homestead and remain in
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possession or enjoyment as a tenant. The statute conferred
it as a new right. The determination of the rent has been
envisaged under the rules. It also envisages that the rights
under Section 5 are subject to the rights of the State under
Sections 7A and 7B. Therefore, it would be clear that
subject to the operation of Sections 7A and 7B, the
homestead shall be deemed to be settled on the
intermediary/tenure-holder and the intermediary would retain
possession of the land and buildings and other interests
comprised in such homestead and he would hold it as a tenant
under the State. If a part of it is let out to the tenant,
the right of the intermediary/tenure-holder to negotiate the
rent payable in respect of the portion let out is divested
and the rent payable by the tenant would be determined by
the District Collector under the rules in the manner
prescribed therein. It is not necessary to elaborate the
procedure prescribed in the rules and forms for
determination of rent in that behalf.
Similarly Section 6 envisages that on and from the date
of vesting of lands used for agriculture or horticulture
purposes which were in khas possession of the intermediaries
as on the date of vesting as enumerated thereunder, subject
to Sections 7A & 7B, the rights of the raiyat or under
raiyat, shall be deemed to be settled by the State with such
intermediary who would hold them as a raiyat under the State
having occupancy right in respect of such land subject to
the payment of such fair and equitable rent as may be
determined by the Collector in the prescribed manner. To the
extent of the land in possession of the raiyat or under
raiyat, they would be regulated directly under relationship
with the State. Section 7 also excludes the interest held by
the intermediary in buildings or structures together with
the lands on which they stand, other than any buildings used
primarily as offices or cutcheries referred to in Section
4(3), as were in the possession of an intermediary at the
commencement of the Act. Other buildings used as golas,
factories or mills, for the purpose of trade, manufacture or
commerce or used for storing grains, keeping cattle or
implements for the purpose of agriculture and constructed or
established and used for the aforesaid purposes before the
first day of January, 1946, shall, subject to the provisions
of Sections 7A and 7B, be deemed to be settled by the State
with such intermediary and he shall be entitled together
with the lands on which they stand as a tenant under the
State with a corresponding obligation on the intermediary to
pay fair and equitable rent determined by the Collector in
the prescribed manner. Section 7A takes out from the purview
of Sections 5 to 7 the conferring of any right on the
intermediary end states that nothing in those sections shall
be deemed to confer any right in the intermediary in respect
of any land on which at any time within one year prior to
the date of vesting of the estate or tenure, the
intermediary was holding any hat or bazar. In other words,
though the hat or bazar is situated in any land or a
building held by the intermediary prior to one year from the
date of vesting, such hat or bazar together with the land
standing thereon would stand vested in the State free from
all encumbrances. Similarly, Section 7B excludes the
operation of Sections 5, 6, and 7 in respect of melas which
were being held by the intermediary at any time within 3
years of the date of vesting and states that the right to
hold such melas on such land shall with effect from the date
of vesting, vest in the State though the intermediary who
was conducting such melas prior to the aforesaid time. In
Rameshwar Patil Narain Singh’s case the constitutionality of
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vesting and consequence of vesting of melas was upheld.
A conjoint operation of these provisions in
unmistakable terms would establish that on and from the date
of publication of the notification under Section 3, the
totality of the right, title and interest held by an
intermediary or tenure-holder in hats and bazars stands
extinguished and vested in the State free from all
encumbrances. The consequence of the abolition of the estate
is transference of the entire estate from the intermediary
to the State subject to the exceptions and new interests
created under the relevant provisions of the Act. All the
intermediary rights and other saraiti interests and also the
interests of the intermediary/tenure-holder in sub-soil
rights in mines, minerals, etc. including rights in hats and
bazars, leasehold rights comprised in such an estate or
tenure, shall stand vested in the State absolutely free from
all encumbrances. Such proprietor or tenure-holders ceases
to have all existing rights or any interest in such bazars
or hats except those expressly saved by or under the
provisions of the Act. The structures or buildings -
permanent or katcha - hats or bazars held by the
intermediary/proprietor/tenure-holder together with the land
on which they stand also stand vested in the State free from
all encumbrances except the homestead saved by Section 5 of
the Act.
Section 7(1) lends assistance in the interpretation of
bazar in contra-distinction to buildings or structures. Sub-
Section (1) thereof indicates that such buildings or
structures together with land on which they stand, other
than any building used primarily as offices or cutcheries
referred in Section 4(a), as were in the possession of an
intermediary at the commencement of the Act and used as
golas, factories or mills for the purpose of trade,
manufacture or commerce, used for storing grains or keeping
cattle or implements for the purpose of agriculture and
constructed or established and used for the aforesaid
purpose before January 1, 1946, shall be deemed to be
settled by the State with the intermediary and he shall be
entitled to retain Possession of such buildings or
structures as tenants. In other words, the buildings or
structures together with the land over which hat, bazar or
mela is held, by operation of Sections 7A to 7C, stand
excluded from homestead under Section 5. Equally the
building and the land used primarily as office or cutcherry
are vested in the State. Land used as gola, factory for the
purpose of trade, manufacture or commerce and constructed or
established and used for the aforesaid purposes prior to
January 1, 1946 shall vest in the State. Other buildings or
structures together with the land are regulated under
Section 5 read with Sections 6 & 7 subject to Sections 7A to
7C. In Kanpur Sugar Works Ltd. v. State of Bihar & Ors.
[(1970) 3 SCR 703] strongly relied on by the appellants
provides the clue for interpretation in this behalf.
Therein, under the Act, the intermediary used part of the
area in his possession for manufacture of sugar with an
inner enclosure used for residential quarters, garages,
kitchens, clubs, dispensaries, rest houses, out houses,
office buildings, tubewell and water tank, godown, cattle
shed, weightage house etc. The question therein was: whether
71 bighas and odd land on which residential bungalow etc.
stood was homestead? The High Court and the Tribunals held
that the aforesaid land was used for factory. They stood
vested in the State and, therefore, they are not liable to
fixation of reasonable rent under Section 7(1) of the Act.
This Court pointed out the distinction between "used as" and
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"used for" and had held that since the land over which the
building stood was used as quarters etc. they stood excluded
from Section 4(a) and required determination of fair rent
under Section 7. In that behalf, it was held that sub-
section (1) of Section 7 applies only to such buildings or
structures together with the land on which they stand which
are used for golas, factories or mills for the purpose of
trade, manufacture or commerce or used for storing grains,
keeping cattle or implements for the purpose of agriculture.
The expression employed by the legislature is "used for
golas, factories or mills". The expression "lands on which
they stand" may include the land which is necessary for the
efficient user of the building for the purpose for which it
is intended to be used. Far from helping the appellants, the
above ratio clearly demarcates the rights of the State vis-
a-vis the intermediary and the land over which the buildings
are situated and used for bazar, stands vested in the State.
The word ’vested" is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary
[6th Edn.] at page 1563 as "Vested. Fixed; accrued; settled;
absolute; complete. Having the character or given the rights
of absolute ownership; not contingent; not subject to be
defeated by a condition precedent" Rights are "vested" when
right to enjoyment, present or prospective, has become
property of some particular person or persons as present
interest; mere expectancy of future benefits, or contingent
interest in property founded on anticipated continuance of
existing law, does not constitute vested rights. In
Webster’s Comprehensive Dictionary, [International Edn.]
at Page 1397 ’vested" is defined as "[L]aw held by a tenure
subject to no contingency; complete; established by law as a
permanent right; vested interests". In State of West Bengal
& Ors. v. Suburban bar Agriculture & Fisheries Pvt. Ltd. &
Anr. [(1994) Supp. 3 SCC 674 ] the question was whether
after the abolition of the estate under the West Bengal
Estates Acquisition Act 1953 the fishery right of the
intermediary was saved by that Act? A Bench of three Judges
had held in paragraphs 9 and 11 that the pre-existing rights
of the intermediary in the estate to which the declaration
applied shall stand vested in the State free from all
encumbrances. Section 6 does not have the effect of
divesting the State of the vested right, title and interest
of the intermediary. One of the rights is the right to take
possession of the land held by the intermediary, The Section
excluded the operation of Section 4 to 5, the interest of
viz., the respondent to retain khas possession was saved
subject to his making the application in the prescribed
form. It was held that the fishery rights stood vested in
the State.
In Brighu Nath Sahay Singh & Ors v. Md. Khallur Rehman
& Ors. [91995) 5 SCC 687], the appellants were proprietors
of certain lands in Tauzi [new] No.8655 in Saraunja village
in District Begusarai in Bihar which were sought to be
declared as private lands in a civil suit. The courts
granted the decree but the High Court reversed the decree.
On appeal, this Court had held that on publication of the
notification under Section 3, the lands stood vested in the
State. The pre-existing right, title and interest held by
the appellants stood ceased. They cannot, therefore, claim
khas position of the lands in occupation of the tenants.
In Smt. Labanya Bala Devi v. State of Bihar Patna
Secretariat, Patna & Anr. [(1994) Supp. 3 SCC 725 ] the
tank and tankail settled by the intermediary were held to
have been vested in the State after the Act had come into
force. Therefore, the pre-existing rights of the tenure-
holder in the tank, stood ceased since they were not saved
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under Section 6 [1] [b] of the Act.
It would thus be clear that on and with effect from the
date of the publication of the notification under Section 3,
the totality of the right, title and interest held by an
intermediary stands abolished. The consequences thereof, as
enumerated in Section 4 (a), is extinguishment of the pre-
existing right, title and interest over the entire estate
including the enumerated items in Section 4(a) which include
hats and bazars in the State and the pre-existing right,
title and interest held by the intermediary/tenure-holder
stood divested.
The question then is what is the meaning of the word
"holding" under Section 7A? The word "hold" has been defined
in Black’s Law Dictionary at page 730 as: (1) "To possess in
virtue of a lawful title, as in the expression, common in
grants, ’to have and to hold’, or in that applied to notes,
the owner and the holder’; (2) To be the grantee or tenant
of another; to take or have an estate from another.
Properly, to have an estate on condition of paying rent, or
performing service... (8) To possess; to occupy; to be in
possession and administration of; as to hold office; (9) To
keep; to retain; to maintain possession of or authority
over. In "The Law Lexicon" by P. Ramanatha Aiyar [Reprint
Edition 1987] it is stated thus:
"Holder of the village," The
expression "holder of the village"
in the concluding para of S.216 of
Act V of 1876, Bombay Land Revenue
Code must be read as meaning the
holder of the assessment or any of
thereof of an alienated village,"
18 B. 525.
"Hold" are ’holding" shall be
applicable to any vested estate,
whether for life or of a greater or
less description, in possession
futurity or expectancy in any
immovable property. Act XXVII of
1866 (Trustees, S.2."
"Holding" means a share or portion
of an estate held by one landowner
or jointly by two or more
landowners. Punj. Act XVII of l887
(Land Revenue) S.3 c1.3.
"Holding" means land held under one
title or agreement and surrounded
by one set of boundaries. Provided
that where two or more adjoining
holdings form part and parcel of
the site or premises of a dwelling
house, manufactory, wdrehouse or
place of trade or business, such
hnldings stall be deemed to be one
holding. Ben.Act III of 1884
(Municipal) S.6, c1.3.
The term ’holding" in the
Bengal Municipal Act S.6,c1.(3)
medns land held by an occupier
under one title or agreement and
surrounded by one set of
boundaries. 15 I.C.548 (549)."
It would, therefore, be clear that the word "hold" used
in Section 7A would mean that the intermediary must hold, as
owner under a title and in occupation of the land or the
building in which the hats are conducted or bazars are
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situated in his own right as owner or by virtue of the
authority or settlement. It is not conducting hats, bazars
or melas as contended for the appellants. In the light of
the conjoint operation of Sections 3 and 4(a) and in contra-
distinction of the remainder rights of the
intermediary/tenure-holder preserved under Sections 5 to 7,
the conclusion becomes inevitable that the hats or bazars
held by the intermediary vested under Section 3 in the State
and the intermediary/tenure-holder stood divested of them
and the pre-existing right, title and interest therein
ceased. Even if we were to find that the word "hold" used in
Section 7A means "conduct", it would make no difference. If
the intermediary has conducted a hat or bazar upon land
which vests in the Stats within the stated period, the right
to conduct the hat or bazar also vests in the State.
The real question then is: whether hats or bazars, are
synonymous of market commonly understood in common language
or is a hat or bazar as understood in oriental language of
conducting daily or bi-weekly or weekly bazar etc? The
thrust and emphasis by the learned counsel for the
appellants is founded on: (1) the distinction between hats
and bazars held in rural India and urban areas; (2) the
bazars, as understood in the common parlance, in the rural
areas. Having given our very deep and anxious considerations
to the very forceful contentions raised by all the learned
senior counsel we find that it is difficult to give
acceptance to their contention. It is an admitted position
that all the estates bear touzi numbers and that they were
collecting rent. Touzi has been defined in Glossary of
Judicial Revenue Terms of British India by H.H. Wilson as
adjustment of accounts; "assessment; a revenue account,
showing under the name of each payer of revenue etc...". It
is usually a village account, and is kept by the village
accountant; also a register of the estates of a Collectorate
kept in the Collector’s office, Act 1 of 1845. Rent-roll of
the Collector with a separate revenue of an estate assessed
upon each of them. Tauzih-mahal - an estate that pays an
assessed revenue. In Ramesh Bejoy Sharma & Ors. v. Pasupati
Rai & Ors. [(1980) 1 SCR 6 AT 11 ], this Court had held
that Section 4 provides four consequences of vesting of the
tenure or an estate; one such consequence being that on
issue of a notification under Section 3 the estate or tenure
including the interest of the proprietor or tenure-holder
not only in land but in building or part of a building used
for various purposes set out therein, shall vest absolutely
in the State free from all encumbrances and such proprietor
or tenure-holder shall cease to have any interest in such
estate or tenure, other than the interests expressly saved
by or under the provisions of the Act. At page 17, it is
further held that a tenant at will is not holding possession
on behalf of landlord but he has a vestige of title to it
and holds on his own behalf and can set up his possession
against the landlord till formality prescribed by law is
undertaken by the landlord and he is evicted by due process
of law. The word "khas possession’ on which the intermediary
placed reliance is interpreted at page 20 to mean a statute
for ushering agrarian reforms. The purpose and object
behind the legislation must inform the interpretative
process and it was held that though the word ’khas
possession’ with reference to the intermediary was
used, he was not holding possession as on the date of
the notification and that, therefore, he ceased to have
the right to have the tenant at will ejected from the
lands vested in the State under Section 3.
The High Court has examined the meaning, scope and
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purport of the word "bazar" prevalent in the State of Bihar.
We presume, on the premise that it is a local enactment,
that the learned Judges are better informed of the
connotation meaning and purport of the Hindi words "hat" or
’bazar’ used in the Act in contra-distinction to the English
words. The Full Bench unanimously is of the view that the
word "bazar" is no other then the "market" in English
language. The entire thrust of the arrangement addressed in
the High Court was that the bazars are homesteads under
Section 5 and they remain to be in possession of the
intermediary subject to the fixation of the reasonable rent
under Section 7 of the Act. The High Court has pointed out
that "all the bazars’ all of them are famous as bazars or
markets". In all of them "the whole complex is rows of
shops". There may be tenement or two which may have an
office but that does not alter the essential character of
the complex. ’Buying and selling is the main rather only
operation." It is thus obvious that the complexes which the
appellants are claiming as homesteads are nothing but
bazars". It is not the case or the petitions that buying and
selling activity does not take place at the places described
as bazar. I have therefore, no hesitation in holding that
the petitioners were owners of a market which must be held
to be equivalent to a Bazar." Repelling the contention that
no toll is realized by the persons holding the Bazar, the
High Court pointed out that "that right may be granted on
payment of toll, or in the form of rent". The "rent may be
per day, per week or per month. I am, therefore, unable to
hold that just because toll is not realized, the complexes
are not bazars. In order to constitute bazar all that is
necessary is a place where buyers and sellers congregate to
sell and buy. It will be difficult to accept that the
complexes are not Bazars within the meaning of Section 4(a)
of the Bihar Land Reforms Act. They, being bazars of a
proprietor or ex-intermediary, must be held to have vested
consequent upon issuance of the notifications under Section
3 of the Act". Referring to Patna market, the learned Judges
pointed out that "there are rows and rows of shops and
nothing but shops. There can, therefore, be no difficulty in
holding that Patna market is Bazar. In fact, it is the most
important marketing center in this town of Patna."
Similarly, in respect of "complex of shops at Bhagalpur
market", it was stated that it is famous as ’Tilak Babu
Hatia’. A Hatia is nothing but a Bazar. It is another matter
that there is a restaurant too in that row of shops, but
that does not and cannot conceal the essential character of
the complex. Regarding Hassan Bazar in Piro village, it was
pointed out that the "entire complex consists of 180 shops,
some of which are brick-built and some are kacha. It is not
the petitioners’ case that the buildings are Golas."
Similarly, in respect of shops in Arrah, it is pointed out
that it "is famous as Gudari Katra Bazar". The names in each
case are rather suggestive of their essential character.
Thus the learned Judges having had The personal knowledge of
the existing local conditions in the aforesaid bazars
reached the conclusion that "they are markets and known as
bazars" and that therefore, "they are hot homesteads".
As regards Patna market, it is sought to be pointed out
that at one time it was homestead but the High Court has
pointed out that long prior to the vesting, the intermediary
himself demolished the building homestead and constructed
the bazar in 1947. The High Court has pointed out that it is
the most important market in Patna city. It is also pointed
out by the learned counsel for the State and was not
disputed across the bar by the counsel for appellants, that
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the appellants are maintaining the markets at their own
expenses; collecting the fee or rent, as the case may be,
and they are responsible for maintenance of sanitary
conditions therein. In other words, they are regular centers
of buying and selling and regular commercial activities are
going on and that, therefore, they do constitute bazar as
market as understood in English language. It is true that
there is a distinction between urban area and rural area.
The Act, as pointed out earlier, does not make any
distinction between the urban area or the rural area but
intends transference of the entire totality of the right,
title and interest in the estate held by the intermediary or
tenure-holder, be they situate in rural or urban areas or in
both and stand vested in the State on publication of the
notification under Section 3 or Sections 3A and 3B.
It is next contended that the Act did not intend to
enrich the coffers of the State by acquiring the urban
property but primarily intended to regulate land reform
after the State took over the agricultural lands abolishing
intermediary rights and conferment of raiyatwari rights on
tillers of the soil and incidentally the bazars and hats
held by the intermediary in the rural areas were intended to
be taken over but not the hats and Bazars held by them in
urban areas. Though, prima facie, the argument appears to be
attractive, on deeper consideration, for reasons we have
already given, we find it difficult to give acceptance to
the contentions As stated the Act does not make any
dichotomy between the rural property or urban property. It
seeks to extinguish the pre-existing; right, title and
interest in the entire estate of the intermediary or tenure-
holders and stand vested in the State free from all
encumbrances subject to Sections 5 to 7.
In Rameshwar Pratap Narain Singh case [supra] rights to
hold melas were acquired by Section 7C of Bihar Land Reforms
[Amendment] Act, 1959 constitutionality of which had come to
be questioned. This Court by upholding its validity rejected
the similar contentions holding at page 387 that when the
right to hold melas is taken over by the State the only
purpose is the augmentation of revenue. There is scope for
thinking that the legislature believed that melas would be
better run and be more in the interests of the general
public when run by the State than when they are left without
control in the hands of private individuals with whom the
profit motive is likely to be the sole guiding principle.
Law may provide for Acquisition even though the purpose
behind acquisition is not a public purpose. It was also held
that augmentation of revenue by the State may be incidental
to the acquisition. On that account, it cannot be said that
meals were no intended to be acquired under the Act. Proprio
vigore, the ratio would apply to the facts of the case
Moreover, right to hold bazar is and interest in the land
Section 3 of Transfer of Property Act, 1882 defines "
immovable property" to exclude standing timber, growing
crops and grass. In other words, all other interests in the
land are intergal to immovable property.
In Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh & Ors. v. The
Collector and Deputy Commissioner of Hazaribagh & Ors.
[(1955j 2 SCR 988] when the building standing on the land
comprised in the estate was notified and the validity of
Section 4 [h] of the Act was questioned another Constitution
Bench had held that though the definition of ’estate’ does
not mention the word ’building’, the provisions of Section,
4 d and 7 would indicate that legislature intended to mean
something more than merely the lend of notified estate as
vested in the State. under Section 5 and 7, the building
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mentioned therein are deemed to be settled by the State with
the intermediary and this could only be on the supposition
that the buildings vested in the State. The Collector’s
power under Section 4 [h] was held to be a part of validly
enacted law of acquisition of estate and is an integral part
of machinery by which the acquisition of an estate takes
place. The Act makes no distinction between hats and bazars
held by intermediary or tenure holder in rural or urban
areas. Bazars may be held by intermediary or tenure holders
on land including in Touzi in rural and urban areas.
It would, therefore, be clear that bazars held by
intermediaries/tenure- holders are markets and the lands
over which the buildings or structures-erected or standing -
as bazars are part of the bazars. The bazars held by the
intermediary/tenure holders in Touzi numbers, though
situated in rural or urban areas, stand vasted under Section
4 [a] read with Sections 3 and 7A of the act.
Further contention of Shri Ranjit Kumar that bazars are
homestead under Section 5 and Sections 7A and 4(a) is not
attracted, is without substance. The High Court has rightly
for sound reasons, repelled the contention that bazars are
not homesteads as defined in Section 2 [j] and the same was
not seriously disputed before us. Only in respect of Patna
market the contention is raised in the written arguments of
Shri Ranjit Kumar. In view of the finding recorded by the
High court and not challenged before us across the bar and
in view of the admission in the written arguments that old
residential buildings standing on the land were demolished
in the year 1947 and the rows of shops [the present
buildings] were constructed in 1947 by the intermediary
before vesting, the mere fact that at one time dwelling
house or out-building was existing on that land is of little
assistance. The rows of shops constructed on the land known
as "Patna market" are a bazar and not dwelling house or out-
building. The finding by the Deputy Collector which was set
aside on appeal is of little assistance to them.
We would safely hold that Patna Market is a bazar
constructed in 1947 and as on January 1, 1956 market was
held as bazar. similar are other bazar Section 5, therefore,
is inapplicable and Patna Market or any other market,
therefore, cannot be regarded as homestead Section 5 read
with Section 2 (j) of the act.
It is true that Bihar Rent Control Act appears to have
been applied to the markets held by the intermediaries but
its application to buildings though situated in urban area,
does not have any effect on the interpretation of the
provisions of the Act. The question whether the Bihar
Legislature lacks competence under the Act to acquire urban
property was neither raised in the writ petition nor argued
before us. The decisions of this Court in Balmadies
Plantation Ltd. & Anr. vs. State of Tamil Nadu [(1973) 1 SCR
258 ], Gulabhai Vallabhbhai Desai etc. vs. Union of India &
Ors. [(1967) 1 SCR 620] and Malankara Rubber and produce
Co., & Ors. etc.etc. vs. State of Kerla & Ors. etc. etc.
[(1973) 1 SCR 399] are of little assistance to the
appellants. Each Act contains its own scheme of abolition of
the estate and its agrarian reforms. In those Acts the
purpose was primarily agrarian reform. The Constitution
Benches of this Court had held that the forests would get
exempted from the purview of those Acts. We are, therefore,
of the view that it was not necessary to critically examine
the scope of Article 31B and 31A of the Constitution.
Shri Shanti Bhushan, leaned Senior counsel contended
that if interpretation put up by the High Court receives
acceptance by this Court, all the buildings situated in the
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urban areas of the State would stand vested in the State
which is not purport and intendent of the Act, The
contention is too broad and is not well justified. It is
seen that the land and other interests held by an
intermediary within the operation of Section 4 alone would
stand vested in the State after January 1, 1956 subject to
the operation of Section 5 to 7C . Though other buildings
situated in the estate, other than those vasted under
Section 4 (a) read with Sections 7A, 7B, and 7C with in the
estate held by an intermediary/tenure-holder, stand vested
in the State, are deemed to be settled on the intermediary
either under Section 5 read with Section 7 or Section 6
subject to reasonable rent determine by the Collector under
Section 7, the rules made under the Act and under all other
relevant provisions operating in that behalf. But this
interpretation will not have any effect on the right, title
and interest held by any other individual owner whose
property was not take over under the Act. We hold that the
Full Bench division is not vitiated by any error of law
warranting interference.
Appeals are accordingly dismissed with costs in the
appeals, except last one quantified at Rs.10,000/- in each
appeals, but without costs in the remaining appeal in which
no arguments were addressed. The costs are directed to be
paid over to the Supreme Court Legal Aid Committee. In case
the appellants fail to pay the costs within three months
from the date of receipt of this order, it would be open to
the Supreme Court Legal Aid Committee to have the order
executed as decree as per the law.