Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE CUSTODIAN OF EVACUEE PROPERTY,BANGALORE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KHAN SAHEB ABDUL SHUKOOR, ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
20/02/1961
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B.
SARKAR, A.K.
SUBBARAO, K.
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
CITATION:
1961 AIR 1087 1961 SCR (3) 855
CITATOR INFO :
R 1962 SC 922 (11)
ACT:
Evacuee Property-Order Passed by Custodian-State law pro-
viding for appeal to the High Court-Later State Act and
Central Act repealing it and Providing for appeal and Power
of revision to Custodian-General- Proceedings taken under
the earlier State Act Custodian-General setting aside the
Custodian’s Order under revision-Validity-Appeal to High
Court-Maintainability-The Mysore Administration of Evacuee
Property (Emergency) Act, 1949 (XLVII of 1949), ss. 5, 6, 8,
30-Evacuee Property (Second) (Emergency) Act 1949 (LXXIV Of
1949), ss. 22, 23, 25-Administration of Evacuee Property
Act, 1950 (XXXI Of 1950), S. 27-Constitution of India, Art.
226.
HEADNOTE:
On July 7, 1949, the then State of Mysore passed the Mysore
Administration of Evacuee Property (Emergency) Act, 1949,
providing, inter alia, for the appointment of a Custodian of
Evacuee Property for the State of Mysore for the purpose of
administering evacuee property in the State. By s. 6 all
evacuee property vested in the Custodian under s. 5 had to
be notified by him in the Mysore Gazette, while s. 8
provided that any person claiming any right to any property
notified under s. 6 might prefer a claim to the Custodian on
the ground that the property was not evacuee property.
Section 30 provided for an appeal to the High Court where
the original order under s. 8 had been passed by the
Custodian, an Additional Custodian or an Authorised Deputy
Custodian. This Act was replaced by the Mysore
Administration of Evacuee Property (Second) (Emergency) Act,
1949, which came into force on November 29, 1949. Section
53(2) of that Act provided that anything done or any action
taken in the exercise of any power conferred by the earlier
Act shall be deemed to have been done or taken in the
exercise of the powers conferred by the later Act. Under
the second Act, instead of the High Court an appeal from the
order of the Custodian lay to the Custodian-General,
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appointed by the Government of India under the provisions of
the Administration of Evacuee property Ordinance, 1949,
which had come into force on October 18, 1949 ; and in
addition, S. 25 Of that Act provided for revision by the
Custodian-General of orders passed by the Custodian. The
Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950, which was
passed by Parliament and which came into force on April 17,
1950, provided substantially for all matters contained in
the second
856
Mysore Act. Section 27 gave the Custodian-General powers of
revision against the orders of the Custodian, and s. 58 as
amended and given retrospective operation, provided that "
if, immediately before the commencement of this Act, there
was in force in any State to which this Act extended any law
which corresponded to this Act and which was not
repealed......... that corresponding law shall stand
repealed."
On September 21, 1949, the Custodian issued a notification
declaring the properties of the respondents as evacuee
properties, and claims filed by them under s. 8 of the
earlier Mysore Act were investigated by the Deputy
Custodian who dismissed the same on April 17, 1950. Appeals
were filed against the said order before the Custodian and
were allowed on August 22, 1950. on the ground that there
was not sufficient evidence to prove the respondents as
evacuees and consequently the properties in question could
not be treated as evacuee properties. On October 3, 1950,
the Custodian-General gave notice to the respondents under
S. 27 of the Administration of Evacuee Property Act, 1950,
in respect of the order of the Custodian dated August 22,
1950, and asked them to show cause why the said order be not
revised. On February II, 1952, the Custodian-General set
aside the order and directed the Custodian to dispose of the
cases afresh. On December 2, 1952, the Custodian passed an
order by which he held that the respondents were evacuees
and that their properties were evacuee properties. Against
this order the respondents filed two appeals to the High
Court, and also two writ petitions under Art. 226 of the
Constitution as they had doubts whether any appeal lay to
the High Court. The High Court took the view that the
Custodian-General bad no power under S. 27 of the Act to
revise the order of the Custodian and that as the
proceedings in these cases began under s. 8 of the first
Mysore Act and as there was nothing corresponding to that
section either in the second Mysore Act or in the Act of
1950, the High Court was entitled to hear the appeal from
the order of December 2, 1952, as that order must be held to
have been passed in proceedings under the first Mysore Act.
The High Court then went into the matter as an appellate
court and came to the conclusion that the order of the
Custodian dated December 2, 1952, ’Was erroneous.
Held, that the High Court erred in holding that the order of
the Custodian-General dated February II, 1952, was without
jurisdiction. Considering the purpose for which the
Administra tion of Evacuee Property Act, 195o, was passed
and the successive saving clauses in the second Mysore Act
and in the Act, the Custodian-General bad the power under S’
27 to call for the record of the proceeding in which the
order of August 22, 1950, was passed and consider its
legality or propriety.
Held, further, that the High Court was also in error in
holding that appeals to it lay from the order of December 2,
1952.
857
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An order made in a proceeding commenced under s. 8 of the.
first Mysore Act must be deemed to be an order made under s.
5(1) of the second Mysore Act or under s. 7(1) of the Act,
in view of s. 53(2) of the second Mysore Act and s. 58(3) of
the Act. Consequently, by necessary intendment, the
legislature must have intended that the provision as to
appeals provided by subsequent legislation should supersede
the provision as to appeals under the first Mysore Act.
Garikapatti Vecraya v. N. Subbiah Choudhury [1957] S.C.R.,
488, referred to.
Since the main question for decision in these cases was whe-
ther the respondents were evacuees, and as such a question
was one of fact, the High Court was not justified in looking
into the order of December 2, 1952, as an appellate court in
dealing with applications for a writ of certiorari under
Art. 226 of the, Constitution.
Hari Vishnu Kamath v. Syed Ahmad Ishaque and Others, [1955]
1 S.C.R. 1104, applied.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals-. Nos. 101 to
104 of 1957.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated February 4, 1954,
of the Mysore High Court in Regular, Second Appeals Nos. 5
and 6 of 1953 and Writ Petitions Nos. 67 and 68 of 1953
respectively.
H. N. Sanyal, Additional Solicitor-General of India,
R.Ganapathy Iyer and D. Gupta for the appellant.
A. V. Visv)anatha Sastri, M. S. K. Sastri and’ T. R. V.
Sastri for A. G. Ratnaparkhi, for the respondents.
1961. February 20. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO, J.-These are four appeals on certificates granted
by the Mysore High Court. They will be disposed of together
as the. points raised in them are common. The facts of
these cases are complicated and may be mentioned in some
detail. On July 7, 1949, the then State ’of Mysore passed
The Mysore Administration of Evacuee Property (Emergency)
Act, No. XLVII of 1949 (hereinafter called the. first Mysore
Act). It provided for the appointment of a Custodian of
Evacuee Property for the State of Mysore and other officers
subordinate to him for the purpose of administering evacuee
property in that
858
State. Section 2(c) defined an " evacuee " and s. 2(d)
evacuee property ". Section 5 laid down that all evacuee
property situate in Mysore would vest in-the custodian..
Section 6 provided for a notification by the Custodian in
the Mysore Gazette of evacuee property vested in him.
Section 8 provided that any person claiming any right to or
interest in any property notified under s. 6 as evacuee
property or in respect of which a demand requiring a
surrender of possession had been made by the Custodian might
arefer a claim to the Custodian on the ground that he
property was not evacuee property or his interest in the
property had not been affected by the provisions of that
Act. It was further provided that the Custodian was, to
hold a summary inquiry in the prescribed manner into such
claims and after taking such evidence as might be produced,
pass an order stating the reasons there for) either
rejecting the claim :or allowing it wholly or in part.
Finally, s. 30 provided for an appeal to the High Court
where the original order under s. 8 had been passed by the
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Custodian, an Additional Custodian or an Authorised Deputy
Custodian. This Act remained in force till it was replaced
by the Mysore Administration of Evacuee Property (Second)
(Emergency) Act, No. LXXIV of 1949 (hereinafter called the
second Mysore Act), which came into force on November 29,
1949.
On September 21, 1949, the Custodian issued a notification
by which he declared the properties. of the two respondents
as evacuee properties which had vested in him, as the,
respondents had become evacuees. Thereupon two claims were
filed under s. 8 of the first Mysore Act separately by the
two respondents. These claims were investigated by the
Deputy Custodian who dismissed the same on April 17, 1950,
declaring that the, properties were evacuee properties., It
may be mentioned that in the meantime, the second Mysore Act
had come into force by which the first Mysore Act was
repealed. But s. 53(2) of the second Mysore Act provided,
that anything done or any action taken. in the exercise of
any power conferred by the first Mysore Act shall be deemed
to have been done
859
or taken in the exercise of the powers conferred by the
second Mysore Act. It was also provided that any penalty
incurred or proceeding commenced under the first Mysore Act
shall be deemed to be a penalty incurred or proceeding
commenced under the second Mysore Act as if the latter Act
were in force on the day on which such thing was done,
action taken, penalty incurred or proceeding commenced.
There was how. ever one difference in the two Mysore Acts.
The first Mysore Act had provided by s. 5 for the vesting of
all evacuee property situate in Mysore ipso facto in the
Custodian; s. 6 then provided for notification by the
Custodian and s. 8 for preferring claims. The second Mysore
Act however made a departure from this and s. 5 thereof
provided that-
" a where the Custodian is of opinion that any
property is evacuee property within the
meaning of this Act he may, after causing
notice thereof to be given in such manner as
may be prescribed to the persons interested,
and after holding such inquiry into the matter
as the circumstances of the case permit, pass
an order declaring any such property to be
evacuee property."
Section 6 then provided for vesting of any property declared
to be evacuee property in the Custodian. Thus while under
the first Mysore Act the evacuee property vested in the
Custodian and the person who claimed that it was not evacuee
property had to make an application under s. 8 and to get it
declared that it was not evacuee property, under the second
Mysore Act there was no vesting in the Custodian and the
Custodian had to give a notice in the manner prescribed (if
he thought any property to be evacuee property) and after
hearing the persons interested to declare the property to be
evacuee property; and it was only thereafter that the
property vested in him as evacuee property. Further, the
second Mysore Act also defined the " Custodian-General " as
the Custodian-General of Evacuee Property in India appointed
by the Government of India under s. 5 of the Administration
of Evacuee Property Ordinance (Central Ordinance No, XXVII
of 1049), which had come
860
into force on October 18, 1949. Further there was a change
in the forum of appeals and instead of the High Court the
appeal lay to the Custodian-General from an order passed
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under s. 5 of the second -Mysore Act where the original
order had been passed by the ’Custodian, Additional
Custodian or Authorised Deputy Custodian and in some cases
to the District Judge designated in this behalf by the
Government under ss. 22 and 23 of the second Mysore Act. In
addition, provision was made by s. 25 of the second Mysore
Act for revision by the Custodian-General of orders passed
by the District Judge or the Custodian on appeal.
It may be mentioned that the Administration of Evacuee
Property Act, No. XXXI of 1950 (hereinafter called the Act),
came into force on the day the Deputy Custodian passed the
order dated April 17, 1950. It may also be mentioned that
in the meantime the Constitution of India had come into
force on January 26, 1950, and the former State of Mysore
had become the new Part B State of Mysore under the
Constitution. The Act was to apply to the whole of India
except the States of Assam, West Bengal, Tripura, Manipur
and Jammu and Kashmir. Thus the Act applied to the Part B
State of Mysore on April 17, 1950, and though there was no
specific provision then in the Act repealing the second
Mysore Act it is not seriously disputed that the Act by
necessary implication repealed the second Mysore Act, as the
Act substantially enacted all that was contained in the
second Mysore Act. However that may be, appeals were filed
against the order of April 17, 1950, before the Custodian.
These appeals were allowed on August 22, 1950. The
Custodian held that there was not sufficient evidence to
prove the respondents as evacuees and consequently the
properties in question could not be treated as evacuee
properties. On October 3,1950, the Custodian General gave
notices to the respondents under s. 27 of the Act in respect
of the order of the: Custodian dated August 22, 1950, and
asked them to show cause why’; the said order of the
Custodian be not revised, On December 7, 1950, the
Administration of Evacuee
861
Property (Amendment) Act, No. LXVI of 1950, was passed by
which inter alia s. 58 of the Act was amended and it was
provided that if immediately before the. commencement of the
Act there was in force in any State to which the Act
extended any law which corresponded to the Act and which was
not repealed by, sub-s. (1) it shall stand repealed. This
was made retrospective from the date from which the Act came
into force (namely, April 17, 1950) and so the repeal of
evacuee property laws which were in force in those States to
which the Act applied which was implicit in it was made
explicit from December 7, 1950, so that frum April 17, 1950,
only the Act held the field.
On February 11, 1952, the Custodian-General set aside the
order of the Custodian dated August 22, 1950, and ordered
that further proceedings in these cases should be taken
before the Custodian as an original matter and be was
directed to dispose of the cases afresh in the light of the
evidence already recorded and such other evidence as might
be produced before him by the two respondents. When the
matter thus came back to the Custodian he ordered the Deputy
Custodian on April 7, 1952, to record the evidence and then
submit the record to him for final disposal. Eventually,
the matter came before the Custodian for final disposal on
December 2, 1952. He held that the two respondents were
evacuees and their properties were evacuee properties. This
was followed by two appeals to the High Court on January 2,
1953. As, however, the respondents felt some doubt whether
any appeal lay to the High Court two writ petitions were
also filed on September 7, 1953, against the order of the
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Custodian. The two appeals as well as the two writ
petitions were disposed of by the High Court by a common
judgment on February 4, 1954. The High Court held that the
appeals before it were competent. It further seems to have
’held that the CustodianGeneral had no power under s. 27 of
the Act to revise the order passed by the Custodian on
August 22,1950. Finally, as the High Court held that the
appeals were competent it went into the matter as an
appellate court and came to the conclusion that the order of
the
862
Custodian dated December 2, 1952, was erroneous. It,
therefore, allowed the appeals as well as the writ petitions
and set aside the order of the Custodian dated December 2,
1952, and restored the earlier order of the Custodian dated
August 22, 1950. Thereupon "followed applications by the
Custodian of Evacuee Property, Mysore, for certificates to
file appeals to this Court on which the High Court-granted
the certificates, and that is how the four appeals have come
up before us.
The main contention of the learned Additional Solicitor-
General on behalf of the appellant is two. fold. He urges
firstly that the High Court was in error when it held that
the Custodian-General had no power to set aside the order of
August 22, 1950, under s. 27 of the Act. In the second
place, his contention is that the High Court was in error in
holding that an appeal lay to it from the order of the
Custodian dated December 2, 1952. Therefore, the High Court
could not deal with the matter before it as if it were
hearing an appeal; it could only consider the writ petitions
before it and in doing so it would not be justified in
issuing a writ of certiorari against the order of December
2, 1952, because that order was not passed without
jurisdiction and there was no error of law apparent on the
face of the record to call for interference with it. Mr.
Sastri for the respondents In reply submits that as the
proceedings in these oases began under a. 8 of the first
Mysore Act and as there was nothing corresponding to that
section either in the second Mysore Act or in the Act, which
replaced successively the first Mysore Act, the High -Court
was entitled to hear an appeal from the order of Decem- ber
2, 1952, as that order must be held to have be On passed in
a proceeding under the first Mysore Act, even if it be that
the Custodian-General had the jurisdiction to set aside the
order of August 22, 1960 under s. 27 of the Act. Further,
Mr. Sastri contends that the Custodian-General had no
jurisdiction to set aside the order of August 22, 1960,
under s. 27 of the Act.
863
The first point therefore which falls for consideration is
whether the Custodian-General had jurisdiction to set aside
the order of August 22,1950, under s. 27; for if he had no
such jurisdiction the High Court may be entitled after
holding that the Custodian-General’s order of February 11,
1952, was without jurisdiction, to set aside all subsequent
proceedings, leaving:the order of August 22, 1950, operative
and in full force (assuming for this purpose that the High.
Court had jurisdiction in writ proceedings to set aside the
order of the Custodian-General whose headquarters were in
New Delhi).
Now the first Mysore Act had no provision relating to the
Custodian-General. It was the second Mysore Act which for
the first time brought in the CustodianGeneral and gave him
powers of revision under s. 25 with respect to orders passed
by the Custodian or the District Judge in. appeal. Then
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came the Act on April 17, 1950, by which the Custodian-
General was given the power to call for the record of any
procee in which any District Judge or Custodian had passed
an order for the purpose of satisfying himself as to the
legality or propriety of any such order and to pass such
order in relation thereto as he thought fit. This provision
is wider than the provision in the second Mysore Act and is
not confined to orders passed by a District Judge or a
Custodian in appeal and would apply even to original orders
passed by the Custodian, which term, according to the
definition in s. 2(c) includes any Additional, Deputy or
Assistant Custodian of evacuee property. We have already
pointed out that the Act provides substantially for all
,matters contained in the second Mysore Act and therefore
must be- held to have repealed the second Mysore Act by
implication. but in any case the question whether the second
Mysore Act was repealed by the Act when it came into force
on April 17, 1950, I" been set at rest by the later Central
Act, LXVI of 1950. That Act was passed on December 7, 1950,
and 2 thereof began thus:
"For section 58 of the, Administration of
Evacuee Property Act, 1950, the following
section shall be
864
substituted. and shall be deemed always to
have been substituted."
This clearly shows that Central Act LXVI was amending s. 58
retrospectively from the date on which it came into force
(namely, April 17, 1950). The new s. 58 which was thus
substituted in the Act from April 17, 1950, contained sub-s.
(2) which is as follows:-
" If, immediately before the commencement of
this Act, there is in force in any State to
which this Act extends any law which
corresponds to this Act and which is not
repealed by sub-section (1), that
corresponding law shall stand repealed."
It is clear therefore that the second Mysore Act was
expressly repealed as from April 17, 1950, by the Act in
view of this substituted s. 58 put into it retrospectively
by Act LXVI, for the second Mysore Act was undoubtedly a law
corresponding to the Act. The High Court seems to have
overlooked the fact that Act LXVI gave retrospective
operation to the new s. 58(2) which was inserted in the Act.
It seems to think that the second Mysore Act was repealed on
December 7, 1950, when Act LXVI came into force. The High
Court was further in error in holding that the amended sub-
s. (3) of s. 58 which was put into the Act also came into
force from December 7, 1950, while as matter of fact it came
into force from April 17, 1950, when the Act itself first
came into force.
The position when the Custodian-General gave notice in
October, 1950, under s. 27 of the Act therefore was that the
first Mysore Act had already been re. ’pealed by the second
Mysore Act and the second Mysore Act had been repealed by
the Act as from April 17, 1950, and therefore in October,
1960, only the Act held the field. The question then arises
whether it was open to the Custodian-General to revise the
order dated August 22, 1950, under s. 27 of the Act in
February, 1952. Now s. 27 is very wide in terms and gives
power to the Custodian-General at any. time either on his
own motion or on application made to him in this behalf., to
call for the record of any proceeding in which any District
Judge or Custodian
865
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has passed an order for the purpose of satisfying himself as
to the legality or propriety of any order and to pass such
order in relation thereto as he thinks fit. Prima facie,
therefore, these wide words give power to the Custodian-
General to revise any order passed by the Custodian. It is
urged on behalf of then respondents that the Custodian-
General could; not revise the order dated August 22, 1950.
We are not impressed by this argument. Now the Act was
passed in 1950 to set up a central organisation for the
custody, management and control, etc., of property declared
by law to be evacuee property with the Custodian-General at
the head. It is also clear that all similar laws existing
in various States on the date the Act came into force
(namely, April 17, 1950) were repealed by it. The intention
of the Legislature obviously was to provide for the custody
and management etc. of evacuee property in the manner
provided in the Act with the Custodian-General as the head
of the organisation. Further, action taken with respect to
evacuee property under the first Mysore Act was deemed under
s. 53 (2) of the second Mysore Act to have been taken
thereunder and finally any action taken in the exercise of
the power conferred by the second Mysore Act was deemed to
have been taken in the exercise of the powers conferred by
the Act. Therefore, any action taken with respect to
evacuee property and any order passed by any Custodian in
any proceeding with respect to such property would be
subject to the revisory jurisdiction of the CustodianGeneral
under s. 27 in view of the wide language thereof and the
fact that proceedings started under the first Mysore Act.
would not, in our opinion, make any difference to the power
of the Custodian-General under s. 27. Obviously the order
of August 22, 1950 was passed when the Act was in force in a
proceeding relating to evacuee property by the Custodian and
the Custodian-General would be competentunder s. 27 to call
for the record of that proceeding and satisfy himself as to
the legality or propriety of any such order and thereafter
pass, such order in relation thereto so he thought fit, We
are, therefore, of opinion that’
866
considering the purpose for which the Act was passed and the
successive saving clauaes in the second Mysore Act and in
the Act,,the Custodian General had the power under s. 27 to
call for the record of the proceed. ing in which the order
of August’ 22, 1950, was passed &ad consider its legality or
propriety and Pass such order in relation thereto as he
thought fit. Even if the notice of October, 1950, may be
open to question as it was issued before Act LXVI of 1950
was passed, there can be no doubt that the order of
February,, 1952, under a. 27 was passed after hearing the
parties and would be valid and within the jurisdiction of
the Custodian-General when it was passed. Therefore, the
order of the Custodian-General dated February II,, 1952,
being within his jurisdiction would not be liable to be set
aside on a writ of certiorari as if the Custodian-General
had acted without jurisdiction. The subsequent proceedings,
therefore, which took place after the order of the
Custodian-General would also be with jurisdiction and would
not be liable to be set aside on a writ of certiorari on the
ground that they were without jurisdiction. The High Court,
thereforewas in error in holding that the order of the
Custodian, General dated February 11, 1952,was without
juries diction and therefore all subsequent proceedings
taken in pursuance thereof were also without jurisdiction,
with the result that the order of August 22, 1950 stood
fully operative.
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This brings us to the next question whether any appeal lay
to the High Court against the order of December 2, 1952.
There is no,doubt that the proceedings in the present case
commenced under the first, Mysore Act with a notification
under - is. 6 and claim applications under s. 8. If the
original proceeding had finished when the first Mysore Act
was in force and the order of December 2, 1952, had been
passed during its operation there would undoubtedly have
been as appeal to the High Court under s. 30 thereof. But
the, first Mysore Act, was repealed by the second Mysore Act
in. November, 1949, and the second Mysore Act was in its
turn repealed by the Act #,a from April 1950. The,
questions therefore, that arises for consideration
867
is ’Whether after the repeal of the first Mysore Act an
appeal would still lie to the High Court from the order of
December 2, 1952. The main contention of Mr. Sastri in this
behalf is that if the second Mysore Act or the Act contained
provisions which were similar to the provisions contained in
s. 8 of the first Mysore Act, it may have been possible to
say that the remedy provided by the first Mysore Act under
s. 30 had been superseded by the remedy provided in the Act,
that remedy being an appeal to the Custodian-General under
s. 24 of the Act. The argument further proceeds that
neither the second Mysore Act nor the Act provides anything
similar to what was provided by s. 8 of the first Mysore
Act. Therefore, even though the first Mysore Act was
repealed by the second Mysore Act the proceedings in the
present case must be deemed to be still under the first
Mysore Act which must be deemed to be existing for this
purpose and, therefore, the right of appeal being a vested
one and &rising when the proceedings commenced, there would
still be a right of appeal under s. 30 of the first Mysore
Act in spite of its being repealed. When the matter came
before the Custodian in 19,52 it was contended before -him
that the proceedings should be taken to be under the first
Mysore Act. He accepted this contention, though he added
that it was immaterial for the purposes of the present cases
as the definition of " evacuee " in S. 2(c) of the first
Mysore Act was practically the same as in s. 2(d) of the
Act. It is urged that in view of the manner in which the
Custodian, dealt with the case when he passed the order.
dated December 2, 1952, the proceedings before him must be
taken to be under the first Mysore Act and if so an appeal
would lie to the High Court under ,S. 30.,of the first
Mysore Act. This view has been accepted by the High Court
also and that is why it hold; that the appeals before it
were competent; and it is,, the correctness of this view
which has been challenged before us.
Now there is no doubt that the right of appeal is a
substantive right and arises when A proceeding is commenced
and cannot be taken away by subsequent
868
legislation, except by express provision or necessary
intendment. There is no express provision in the present
case taking away the right of appeal conferred by the first
Mysore Act. We have therefore to see whether it can be said
that the right of appeal conferred by the first Mysore Act
has been taken away by necessary intendment by the
subsequent legislation ; and if so whether it has been
completely taken away or has been replaced by another right
of appeal, though not to the High Court. Under the first
Mysore Act, as we have already pointed out, evacuee property
ipso facto vested in the Custodian under s. 5. There. after
the Custodian was expected to notify such property under s.
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6. On such notification or where the Custodian demanded
surrender of possession a person claiming any right to the
property was entitled to make an application preferring a
claim before the Custodian. That application was dealt by
the Custodian in a summary manner and he had ’the power
either to reject the application or allow it in whole or in
part. An order passed by the Deputy or the Assistant
Custodian under s. 8 was appealable to the Custodian and an
order passed by the Custodian or Additional Custodian or an
authorized Deputy Custodian was appealable to the High
Court. The contention on behalf of the respondents is that
when the first Mysore Act was replaced by the second Mysore
Act, there was a vital change in the procedure and therefore
cases in which proceedings had commenced under s. 8 could
only be dealt with under the first Mysore Act and for that
purpose the first Mysore Act would be deemed to be alive
under a. 6 (e) of the Mysore General Clauses Act, No. III of
1899, which corresponds to s. 6 (e) of the General Clauses
Act, No. X of 1897. Now there is no doubt that the
proceedings in these cases commenced under the first Mysore
Act though they terminated when that Act was no longer in
force. What we have to see is whether there is anything in
the -repealing legislation which by necessary intendment
took away the right of appeal provided by the first Mysore
Act and substituted in its place another right of appeal
provided by the repealing Act,
869
The argument of Mr. Sastri is that there is nothing in the
second Mysore Act which repealed the first Mysore Act
corresponding to s. 8 of the first Mysore Act and therefore
in spite of the repeal of the first Mysore Act proceedings
commenced under a. 8 of that Act would continue to be
governed thereby, including the right of appeal. In this
connection he urges that the scheme of the second Mysore Act
with respect to evacuee property is vitally different from
the scheme which is to be found in the first Mysore Act. In
the second Mysore Act there is no provision corresponding to
s. 5 of the first Mysore Act by which any property becomes
ipso far to evacuee property and vests in the Custodian.
Under the second Mysore Act the Custodian has first to form
a tentative opinion whether the property is evacuee property
and after he has formed such opinion he gives notice thereof
to the persons interested; after such notice is given he
holds inquiry into the matter and thereafter passes an order
declaring the property to be evacuee property. Thus under
the first Mysore Act the property became evacuee property
ipso facto and the person claiming any interest in it had to
proceed under s. 8 and make a claim which had to be
investigated and thereafter the Custodian finally declared
whether the property, which he had notified under s. 6 was
evacuee property or not. Under the second Mysore Act there
being no vesting ipso facto, the proceeding commences; with
a notice by the Custodian to the person interested followed
by an inquiry after which the Custodian decides to declare
the property evacuee if he finds it to be so under the law.
Further under the second Mysore Act when an order was passed
declaring property to be evacuee property under a. 5 it was
open to the person aggrieved by such order to file an appeal
to the Custodian where the original order had been passed by
the Deputy Custodian or Assistant Custodian and to the
Custodian-General where the original order had been passed
by the Custodian, Additional Custodian or Authorised Deputy
Custodian. There was also in certain cases appeal to the
District Judge; but we are not concerned with that in the
870
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present appeals. The position under the Act was also the
same as under the second Mysore Act and the right of appeal
was also similar.
It is thus true that there has been a change in the
procedure by which evacuee property is finally declared to
be evacuee property. Under the first Mysore Act the
property became evacuee property and the person had to go
and file a claim and establish that it was not. That claim
was investigated and after investigation the Custodian had
to come to a final conclusion whether the property was
evacuee or not. ’If he came to the conclusion that it was
evacuee property, the vesting under s. 5 was confirmed. If
on the other hand he came to the conclusion that the pro-
perty was not evacuee property the legal effect was that
there was no vesting under s. 5 of the first Mysore Act.
Under the second Mysore Act the property did not ipso facto
vest in the Custodian as evacuee property but he formed a
tentative opinion as to whether it was evacuee property and
then gave notices to the persons interested. They appeared
before him and the matter was investigated. He then had to
come to a final conclusion whether the property was evacuee
property or not. If he came to the conclusion that it was
evacuee property he declared it to be such; if on the other
hand he came to the conclusion that it was not evacuee
property the proceedings came to an end. It will be seen
therefore on a comparison of the two procedures that though
there is difference between the two, the difference is not
of a vital or substantial nature. In the one case the’ law
started with the presumption that the property was evacuee
property and the person interested had to go and make a
claim and establish that it was not evacuee property and the
matter had to be investigated and the Custodian finally had
to come to the conclusion one way or the other. In the
other case the law did not start with the presumption but
only a tentative opinion was to be formed by, the Custodian
who gave notice to the person interested and the matter was
then investigated and thereafter the Custodian had to decide
finally one way or the other
871
But in both cases the question whether the property was
evacuee property or not was investigated and it was only
after investigation that it could be finally said whether
the property was evacuee property or, not. Therefore,
though there may be an apparent difference between what is
provided by a. 8 in the, first Mysore Act and by s. 5 in the
second Mysore Act as also by s. 7 in the Act, the difference
is, not material and it is only after investigation, whether
under s. 8 of the first Mysore Act, or under s. 5 of the
second Mysore Act or under s. 7 of the Act that the
Custodian comes to the final conclusion whether the property
is evacuee property or not. Under the circumstances it
would not in our opinion be unreasonable to say that the
investigation provided under a. 8 of the first Mysore Act
and the subsequent remedies following on an order under s. 8
are in substance the same as the investigation provided
under s. 5 of the second Mysore. Act ores. 7 of the Act and
the subsequent remedies following on an order thereon. We
cannot, therefore, agree with the High Court that there is
nothing in the second Mysore. Act to correspond to s. 8 of
the first Mysore Act and therefore these proceedings which
began under the first Mysore Act must continue to be
governed by that Act in spite of its repeal by the second
Mysore Act. As we have pointed out above the proceedings
under s. 8 of the first Mysore Act are in substance equal to
proceedings under s. 5 of the second Mysore Act and
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therefore proceedings commenced under the first Mysore Act
must in view of a. 53(2) of the second Mysore Act, be deemed
to be proceedings under s. 5 of the latter Act. Once that
conclusion is reached and it seems to us that it is
inevitable-it follows that an order made in a proceeding
commenced under s. 8 of the first Mysore Act must be deemed
to be an order made under s. 5(1) of the second Mysore Act
or under s. 7(1) of; the Act. In this connection it is
relevant to point out that; it could not have been the
intention of the legislature to keep the first Mysore Act
alive for certain purposes for all, time the whole object of
passing the subsequent Acts is plainly against such an
assumption.
872
The next question that arises is whether the second Mysore
Act and the Act took away the right of appeal which lay to
the High Court under the first Mysore Act and substituted
for it another right of appeal by necessary intendment. As
we have already Pointed out, there is no express provision
either in the second Mysore Act or in the Act in this
behalf. But once it is held that proceedings which
commenced under s. 8 of the first Mysore Act must, when the
second Mysore Act came into force, be deemed under s. 53(2)
thereof to be proceeding under s. 5(1) or when the Act came
into be deemed under s. 58(3) thereof to be proceeding under
s. 7(1) and must be continued under those provisions, it
follows that the legislature necessarily intended that all
subsequent action following an order under s. 5(1) or s.
7(1) must be taken under the second Mysore Act or under the
Act as the case may be. It could not have been intended by
the legislature when it was expressly providing for appeal
from an order under s. 5(1) of the second Mysore Act or
under s. 7(1) of the Act that a proceeding commenced under
the first Mysore Act (which was equivalent to a proceeding
under s. 5(1) or s. 7(1) should continue to be governed in
the matter of appeal by the first Mysore Act. This is
therefore in our view a case where by necessary intendment
(though not by express provision) the legislature intended
that the provision as to appeals provided by subsequent
legislation should supersede the provision as to appeals
under the first Mysore Act. We may point out that this is
not a case where the right of appeal disappears altogether,,
all that happens is that where the order is passed by the
Custodian the appeal lies to the Custodian-General instead
of to the High Court. The legislature has provided another
forum where the appeal will lie and in the circumstances it
must be held that by necessary intendment the legislature
intended that forum alone to be, the forum where the appeal
will lie and not the forum under the first Mysore Act.
Reference in this connection may be made to Garikapatti
Veeraya v.
873
N. Subbiah Choudhury (1), where this Court held that the
vested right of appeal was a substantive right and was
governed by the law prevailing at the time of th
commencement of the suit and comprised all successive rights
of appeal from court to court which really constituted one
proceeding but added that such right could be taken away
expressly or by necessary intendment. In the present cases
we are of opinion that once proceedings under s. 8(1) of the
first Mysore Act are held to be similar to proceedings under
s. 5(1) of the second Mysore Act or s. 7(1) of the Act, it
must necessarily follow that the legislature intended this
all subsequent proceedings in the nature of appeal after the
first Mysore Act came to an end, must being the forum
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provided by the subsequent legislation We are therefore of
opinion that the High Court was in error in holding that
appeals to it lay from the order of December 2, 1952.
The result of the view we have taken is that the High Court
was not justified in looking into the order of December 2,
1952, as an appellate court,, though I would be justified in
scrutinizing that order as if it was brought before it under
Art. 226 of the Constitutional for issue of a writ of
certiorari. The limit of th jurisdiction of the High Court
in issuing writs of certiorari was considered by this Court
in Hari Vis Kamath v. Syed Ahmed Ishaque and others (2) and
the following four propositions were laid down:
(1) Certiorari will be issued for correcting
errors of jurisdiction ;
(2)Certiorari will also be, issued when the
Court or Tribunal acts illegally in the
exercise of its undoubted jurisdiction, as
when it decides without giving an opportunity
to the parties to be heard, or violates the
principles of natural justice;
(3), The court issuing a writ of critorari
acts in exercise of a supervisory land not
appellate jurisdiction. One consequence of
this is that, the court will not review
findings of fact reached by. the inferior
court or tribunal, even if they be erroneous;
(4)An error in the decision or determination
itself may also be amenable to a writ of
certiorari if
(1) [1957] S.C.R. 488.
(1) [1955] S.C.R. 1104,
874
it is a manifest error apparent on the face of
the proceedings, e.g., when it is based on
clear ignorance or disregard of the provisions
of law. In other words, it is a patent error
which can be corrected by certiorari but not a
mere wrong decision.
In the present case, the Custodian had jurisdiction to
decide the matter once it is held that the, Castodian-
General had jurisdiction to set aside the order of August
22, 1950. The main question for decision in these cases was
whether the respondents were evacuees within the meaning of
a. 2(c) of the first Mysore Act. The questions that fall
for decision under s. 2(o) are questions of fact and as
pointed out in Hari Vishnu Kamath’s case (2) it is not open
on a writ praying for certiorari to review findings of fact
reached by an inferior court or tribunal even though they
may be erroneous. Further, unless there is a patent error
of law there can be no interference by a writ of certiorari.
While dealing with the writ petitions the main argument that
appealed to the High Court was that the Custodian-General,
had no Jurisdiction in revision to reopen the earlier
proceedings and in consequence all subsequent proceedings
were null and void The High Court was further aware of the
fact that, the ordinary remedy of the respondents in these
cases against the order of December 2, 1952, was to appeal
to the Custodian-General tinder s. 24 of the Act; but as it
was of the view that the order of ;the Custodian-General
under a. 27 was without jurisdiction it held that it should
interfere and set aside the order of December 2, 1952, which
was also without jurisdiction and restore that, of August
22,1950. -In the view we have taken, the order of the
Custodian-General was with jurisdiction and therefore there
was in our opinion no-reason for the High Court interfere in
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the exercise of its jurisdiction under Art. 226 of the
Constitution with the order of December 2, 1952, as this is
a case where only a writ of certiorari could issue and that
is not justified in view of the decision in Hari Vishnu
Kamath’s case(1)
(1) [1955] 1 S.C.R. 1104.
875
We therefore allow the appeals, set aside the order of the
High Court and restore that of the Custodian dated December
2, 1952. This of course will not take away the right if any
of the respondents to approach the Custodian-General, for we
have not considered the merits of the order, of December 2,
1952. In the circumstances of this case we pass no order as
to costs.
Appeals allowed.