Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KATIKARA CHINTAMANI DORA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GUNTREDDI ANNAMNAIDU & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT11/12/1973
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
PALEKAR, D.G.
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1069 1974 SCR (2) 655
1974 SCC (1) 567
CITATOR INFO :
R 1976 SC 656 (10)
ACT:
Madras Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act
1948-s. 9(1)-Jurisdiction of the Settlement Officer and
Civil Court-Whether finding of Settlement Officer could be
questioned in a Civil Court-Effect of Amending Act on
pending actions.
HEADNOTE:
The Settlement Officer under the Madras Estates (Abolition
and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948 suo motu made an
inquiry as to whether a particular village notified by the
State Government was an estate or not within the
contemplation of s. 9(2) of the Act and held that it was not
an "inam estate" within the meaning of s. 2(7) of the
Abolition Act but that the village became an estate by
virtue of Madras Estates Land (3rd Amendment) Act, 1936.
Ther appellants unsuccessfully appealed to the Estate
Abolition Tribunal. The appellant then instituted a suit
(O.S. 47 of 1953) against the State Government for a
declaration that the village was not an "estate" under s.
3(2)(d) of them Madras Estates Land Act, 1908 and
consequently Madras Estate (Reduction of Rent) Act, 1947 and
the Abolition Act were not applicable to it. The trial
court decreed the suit. The State Preferred an appeal.
During the pendency of the appeal the appellant filed a suit
(O.S. No. 101 of 1954) against the respondents for recovery
of certain amount as rent or damages in respect of lands
cultivated by them in the village in dispute. The
respondents contended that the village was an estate within
the meaning of the Act and that it had been so held by the
Settlement Officer. Ultimately both the parties filed a
joint memo on 26th March, 1958 that they would abide by the
decision of the High Court or the Supreme Court in the
appeal or revision arising out of the suit (O.S. 47/53) on
the question whether the village was or was not an "estate"
under, s. 3(2)(d) of the Madras Estates Land Act. The High
Court (in A.S. No. 668 of 1954 which was an appeal arising
out of O.S. 47 of 1953) confirmed the decree of the trial
court that the village in dispute was not an ’estate’. The
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State did not appeal, with the result that the High Court’s
decision became final and the decree dated 28th March, 1958
became, effective.
Against the decree of 28th March, 1958 the appellants
preferred an appeal (A.S. 239 of 1961) to the High Court.
The appeal related only to the extent of the land in the
possession of the respondents and the quantum of rent or
damages. The appellants’ claim was that the entire land was
under cultivation of the respondents and so the lower court
was wrong in not decreeing the appellants’ claim for rent or
damages in toto. The respondents raised a preliminary
objection at the time of hearing of the appeal that the suit
itself was incompetent as the Civil Court had no
jurisdiction to decide whether the suit village was an
estate or not and, therefore, any (decision given by the
High Court would not bind the parties and the decree in O.S.
101 of 1954 would be without Jurisdiction rendering it null
and void and that the Settlement Officer was the competent
authority to decide the tenure of the village and his deci-
sion had become final in view of the introduction of s. 9A
by Act 20 of 1960. The High Court upheld the preliminary
objection of the respondents and rejected the contentions of
the appellants that since s. 9A was inserted by an amendment
which came into force on 23rd June, 1960, it could not
affect the compromise decree of the court passed on March
28, 1958 or the decree of the High Court by which both the
parties agreed to abide by the decision of the High Court or
the Supreme Court in appeal or revision arising out of O.S.
47 of 1953. The High Court held that the Civil Court was
not the forum for the suit as framed by the appellants and
the questions raised in the suit L748SuP CI/74
656
including the claim for arrears of rent or damages, were
outside the jurisdiction of the Civil Court, and so
dismissed the appeal.
Allowing the appeal,
HELD:1 (a) There is no doubt that the question was within
the competence of the Civil Court. Under the Abolition
Act, as it stood at the material date, the inquiry of the
Settlement Officer could legitimately be confined to the
ascertainment of only two disputes of fact, viz., (i) Was
the village an "inam village"? (ii) If so, was it an ’Inam
Estate’ as defined in s. 2(7) of the Abolition Act ? Once
issue (ii) was determined, the inquiry would be complete and
the limits of his exclusive jurisdiction circumscribed by s.
9(1) reached; if he went beyond those limits to investigate
and determine something which is unnecessary or merely
incidental or remotely related to issue No. (ii), ’then such
incidental or unnecessary determination could be questioned
in a Civil Court. [668FG]
(b) Any finding recorded by the Settlement Officer
regarding the property in question being an ’inam village’
or not,’ is not final or conclusive it being a finding of a
jurisdictional fact only, the Preexistence of which is a
sine qua non to the exercise of his exclusive jurisdiction
by the Settlement Officer. [668H]
(c) The legislature must have visualised that under the
cloak of an erroneous finding as to the existence or
nonexistence of this prerequisite, the Settlement Officer
may illegally clutch at jurisdiction not conferred on him or
refuse to exercise jurisdiction vesting in him. Perhaps
that is why the statute does not leave the final
determination of this preliminary fact to the Settlement
Officer/Tribunal and his erroneous finding on that fact is
liable to be questioned in a Civil Court. Once it is held
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that determination of this fact is not a matter of the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Settlement Officer, the
appellants cannot be debarred on the basis of any doctrine
of res judicata from getting the matter fully and finally
adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction. [669B-C;
E]
Addanki Tiruvenkata Tata Desika Charyulu v. State of Andhra
Pradesh A.I.R. 1964 S.C. 807 followed.
District Board, Tanjore v. Noor Mohammed, (1952) 2 MJ. 586
(S.C.) referred to.
(2) It is well settled that ordinarily when the substantive
law is altered during the pendency of an action, rights of
the parties are decided according to law, as it existed when
the action was taken unless the new statute shows a clear
intention to vary such rights. A plain reading of the
impugned Act would show that there was nothing of this kind
which expressly or by necessary intendment affects pending
actions. [67OC-D]
(b) There is no non-obstante clause in the amending Acts 17
and 18 of 1957 with reference to pending or closed civil
actions. These amending Acts’ were published in the
government gazette of December 23, 1957 and will therefore
be deemed to have come into force from that date only. They
could therefore be construed as having prospective operation
only. [67OG-H]
(c) In the Amending Act 20 of 1960 also no back date for
its commencement has been mentioned. It will, therefore, be
deemed to have commenced on June 23, 1960 which is the date
on which it was published in the Government gazette. [674E]
Section 9A takes in its retrospective sweep only those
decisions of the Settlement Officer or the Tribunal which at
the commencement of ’the Amending Act 20 of 1960 were
subsisting and had not been totally vacated or rendered non-
est by a decree of a competent court. [675-F]
In the instant case the decision of the Settlement Officer
dated September 2, 1950 was not such a decision. It had
ceased to exist as a’ result of the inter-linked decree in
O.S. 47 of 1953 and O.-S. 101 of 1954 passed before the
enactment of the Amending Act. The Amending Act of 1960,
therefore, does not in any way affect the finality or the
binding effect of those decrees. [675G]
657
(d) Order 23 rule 3 C.P.C. not only permits a partial
compromise and adjustment of a suit by a lawful agreement,
but further gives a mandate to the court to record it and
pass a decree in terms of such compromise or adjustment in
so far as it relates to the suit. If the compromise
agreement was lawful the decree to the extent it was a
consent decree was not appealable because of the express bar
in s. 96(3) of the Code. [672E]
Raja Sri Sailendra Narayan Bhanja Deo v. State of Orissa
[1956] S.C.R. 72, Shri Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Broach
Borough Municipality [1970] 1 S.C.R. 388 and Reid v. Reid
[1886] 31 Ch.D. 403 at 408, followed.
(e) In any suit the parties, in order to avoid unnecessary
expenses and botheration, could legitimately make an
agreement to abide by a determination on the same point in
issue in another pending action in an advanced stage There
was nothing unlawful and improper in such an arrangement
particularly when the interests,of the respondents were
sufficiently safeguarded by the State. By no stretch of
reasoning it could be said that the agreement was collusive
or was an attempt, to contract out of the statute. In the
instant case as soon as the parties made the agreement to
abide by the determination in the appeal (A. S. 668) and
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induced the court to pass a decree in terms of that
agreement the principle of estoppel underlying s. 96(3)
C.P.C. became operative and the decree to the extent it was
in terms of that agreement became final and binding between
the parties. It was as effective in creating an estoppel
between the Parties as a judgment on contest. [672F-C &
673C]
In the instant case that part of the decree in suit No. 101
of 1954 and the appeal from that decree could not be said to
be a continuation of that part of the claim which had been
settled by agreement. The combined effect of the two
integrated decrees was to completely vacate and render non-
est decision dated September 2, 1950 of the Settlement
Officer. [673F]
Raja Sri Sailendra Narayan Bhanja Deo v. State of Orissa
[1956] S.C.R. 72 applied.
Per Krishna Iyer, J. concurring
Courts have to be anchored to well-known canons of statu
tory construction and if they are out of tune With the
law maker’s meaning and purpose the legitimate means of
setting things right is to enact a new Interpretation Act.
[678B]
The Indian Constitution, adopting the fighting faith of
equal I protection of the laws to all citizens, necessarily
contemplates a new jurisprudence where vested rights may be,
and often-times are, extensively interfered. with for
achieving the founding fathers’ social goals. Legislative
exercises directed towards distributive justice as in the
present case, cannot be considered- in the light of dated
value system, though sanctified by bygone decisions of
Courts. [677H]
In the present case the Act in question is clear about its
intent and its application gives little difficulty.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1936 of 1967
From the Judgment and Decree dated the 14th October, 1966 of
Andhra Pradesh High Court in Appeal No. 239 of 1961 and Memo
of Cross Objections therein arising out of the judgment and
decree dated 28th March 1958 of the Subordinate Judge,
Srikakulam in Original Suit No. 101 of 1954.
M. Natesan, K. Jayaram and R. Chandrasekhar, for the
appellant,
P. Parmeshwara Rao and T. Satyanarayana, for the respondent.
The Judgment of D. G. PALEKAR, and R. S. SARKARIA JJ. was
delivered by SARKARIA, J. V. R. KRISHNA IYER, J. gave a
separate Opinion.
658
SARKARIA J.-This appeal by certificate, involves an
examination of the, limits, of the respective. jurisdictions
of the Settlement Officer/Tribunal and the Civil Court in
relation to an inquiry under s. 9(1) of the Madras Estates
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948 (for
short, Abolition Act) and the effect of the Amending
Acts .17 and 18 of 1957 and Act 20 of 1960 on cases
regarding such an inquiry pending in or decided by the,
Civil Courts. It arises out of the following facts :
The lands in dispute are situated in village Kadakalla,
Taluk Palakonda. On June 13, 1950, the then State
Government issued and published a notification under the,
Madras Estates (Reduction of Rent) Act, 1947 (for short,
Rent Reduction Act) in respect of this village.
Subsequently, the Settlement Officer of Srikakulam suo motu
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made an enquiry as to whether this village was an "estate"
or not within the contemplation of s. 9(2) of the Madras
Estates (Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari) Act, 1948
(for short, called Abolition Act) and by an order, dated
September 2, 1950, held that it was not an ’inam estate’
within the meaning of s. 2(7) of the Abolition Act. The
Settlement Officer further recorded a finding that village
Kadakalla became an estate by virtue of the Madras Estates
Land (3rd Amendment) Act, 1936. Against that order of the
Settlement Officer, the appellants herein carried an appeal
to the Estates Abolition Tribunal, Vizianagaram. The
’Tribunal by its order, dated September 16, 1952 dismissed
the appeal in limine, with the observation that the decision
of the Settlement Officer being in their favour the
appellants had no right of appeal,
The appellants then instituted O.S. 47 of 1953 in the Court
of the Subordinate Judge, Srikakulam against the State
Government for a declaration that Kadakalla village was not
an ’estate’ under s. 3 (2) (d) of 1908 Act, and
consequently,_the Rent Reduction Act and the Abolition Act
were not applicable to it. The trial court decreed the
suit. Aggrieved by the decree, the State preferred an
appeal (A.S. 668 of 1954) to the High court of Andhra
Pradesh.
During the pendency of the said appeal, the appellants
instituted Original Suit No. 101 of 1954 (out of which the
present appeal has arisen) in the Court of Subordinate Judge
Srikakulam, against the respondents herein and others for
the recovery of Rs. 15,681/19 as rent or damages for the
year 1953 in respect of the lands cultivated by them in the
area of village Kadakalla.
The suit was resisted by the respondents inter alia on the
ground that the suit village was an ’estate’ as defined in
s. 3(2) (d) of the 1908 Act, and that it had been so held by
the Settlement Officer as per his Order dated September 2,
1950. It was further averred that the defendants not being
parties to O.S. 47 of 1953, were not bound by the decision
in that case. It was added that the question as to whether
this village was an estate or not, was pending in the High
’Court of Andhra Pradesh in appeal from the decision in O.S.
47 of 1953, and as such, was sub judice. The jurisdiction
of the Subordinate
659
Judge to try the suit (O.S. 101 of 1954) was also
questioned. The claim for rent or damages was also
resisted.
On January 22, 1958, the respondents herein made an
application for permission to file an additional written
statement for adding the plea that the suit village is an
’inam estate. On March 17, 1958, the trial court dismissed
this application holding that the question %ought to be
raised, was already covered by Issue No. 1.
The trial court framed as many as eleven issues, out of
which Issues 1, 6 and 8 were as follows :
(1) Whether the suit village is an estate
within the meaning of Section 3 (2) (d) of the
Madras Estates Land Act ?
(6) Whether the plaintiffs are barred and
estopped to claim rents in view of prior
pattas and rent decrees that were previously
obtained ?
(8) Whether this Court has no jurisdiction
to try the suit?
On March 26, 1958, the Advocates for the parties filed a
joint memo to the effect that "both parties agree to abide
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by the final decision whether in the High Court or in the
Supreme Court, as the case may be, in the appeal or
revision, arising out of O.S. No. 47 of 1953 on the file of
this Court on the question whether the, suit village
Kadakalla is not an estate under s. 3(2)(d) of the Madras
Estates Land Act, as amended upto date". As a result of
this compromise, it was held that the decision of Issues 1,
6 and 8 would follow the final decision in O.S. 47 of 1953.
The remaining Issues were tried and decided on merits. On
March 28, 1958, the trial court keeping in view the joint
memo filed by the parties and its findings on the other
Issues, passed a decree in these terms :
"In case it is ultimately decided by the High
Court or the Supreme Court, as the case may
be, in the appeal or revision arising out of
O.S. No. 47 of 1953 on the file of this Court
that the suit village Kadakalla is not an
estate within the meaning of s. 3 (2) (d) of
the Estates Land Act, the defendants to pay to
the plaintiffs the sum of Rs. 3,000/- with in-
terest at 5-1/2 per cent per annum from 26-3-
1958 with interest thereon and for costs, and
that otherwise suit should stand dismissed
with costs and that the decree should take
effect from the date of the final decision of
O.S. No. 47 of 1953 referred to above."
The appeal (A.S. 668 of 1954) arising out of O.S. 47 of 1953
was decided by the High Court on February 12, 1959 whereby
the decree of the, trial court declaring that village
Kadakalla was not an estate, was confirmed. The application
of the State for issuance of a certificate of fitness for
appeal to the Supreme Court was dismissed by the High Court.
The State did not prefer any Special Leave Peti-
660
tion in this Court, with the result, that the High Court’s
decision in that case became final and the decree, dated
March 28, 1958, of the Subordinate Judge in O.S. 101 of 1954
also became effective. After the disposal of its appeal
(A.S. 668 of 1954), the Government issued G.O.R.T. No. 619-
Rev. dated June 30, 1966, canceling the earlier
notifications in respect of this village notwithstanding the
fact that prior to such renotification, section 9-A had been
inserted in the Abolition Act by the Amending Act 20 of
1960.
Appellants preferred an appeal (A.S. 239 of 1961) against
the said decree, dated March 28, 1958, of the Subordinate
Judge, to the High Court. Though in the Memorandum of
Appeal, it was said. as usual, in general terms, that the
"decision of the lower court is against law, weight of
evidence and probabilities of the case", and that its decree
was "worthless and did not conform to the requirements of
section 2(2) of the Civil Procedure Code, yet, in substance,
the appeal related only to the extent of the land in the
possession of the respondents and the quantum of rent or
damages. The appellants’ claim was that the entire suit
land, as alleged in the plaint, was under the cultivation-of
the respondents, and consequently. the lower court was wrong
in not decreeing the appellants’ claim for Rs. 15,681/19 as
rent or damages, in toto.
On April 6. 1962. the respondents filed cross-objections
contending that the question as to whether Kadakalla village
is or is not an ’estate’ as defined in s. 3(2)(d) of the
1908 Act, should have been gone into by the trial court and
that the rent should have been decreed only in the sum of
Rs. 551/29.
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The High Court posted the appeal and the cross-objections
for hearing in July, 1965., At that stage, on July 19, 1965.
an application was made by the respondents praying that
Exhts. B-196 and B-197, being copies of the order, dated
September 2, 1950, of the Settlement Officer and the order
dated September 16, 1952, of the Estate Abolition Tribunal,
respectively, be read as additional evidence. It was
contended that the Amending Act 20 of 1960 had added s. 9A
to the Abolition Act, as a result of which, the order of the
Settlement Officer had acquired ’statutory validity’; and
since the appellants did not file an appeal within two
months from the commencement of the Amendment Act, the
decision of the Settlement Officer became final and binding
on all the parties including the appellants. In spite of
opposition by the, appellants, the High Court by its order,
dated August 23, 1956, allowed this additional evidence and
the setting up of the new plea.
The appeal and the cross-objections were heard together in
August. 1966. The respondents raised a preliminary
objection that the suit itself was incompetent as the Civil
Court had no jurisdiction to decide whether the suit village
is an estate, or not and, therefore, any decision given by
the High Court in appeal (A.S. 668 of 1954) would not bind
the parties and the decree in the present suit (O.S. 101 of
1954) on the, basis of the judgment and decree in A.S. 668
661
of 1954. would be without jurisdiction rendering it null and
void, .that the Settlement Officer was the competent
authority to decide the tenure of the village and his
decision had become final in view of the introduction of
Section 9A by Act 20 of 1960.
The preliminary objection of the respondents was upheld, The
contention of the appellants, that since s. 9A was inserted
by an amendment which came into force on June 23, 1960, it
could not affect the compromise decree of the Court passed
earlier on March 28. 1958 or the decree of the High Court
whereby both the parties agreed to abide, by the decision of
the High Court or the Supreme Court in appeal or revision
arising out of O.S. 47 of 1953, was rejected in these terms
"We see no force in this contention as Section
9A is designed to meet such of the decisions where
it has been held that the village is
not an inam estate as it stood after the 1936
Act and certainly the respondents can take
advantage of change. in statute,, if it is to
their benefit and there could be no estoppel
against a statute and the rights accrued under
a statute. It cannot reasonably be contended
that the suit filed by the appellants and the
decree obtained have reached any finality as
an appeal is only the continuation of the
proceedings instituted by the plaintiffs."
In the result. it dismissed the appeal holding that the
Civil Court was not the forum for the suit as framed by the
appellants and the questions raised in the suit including
the claim’ for arrears of rent or damages. were outside the
Jurisdiction of the Civil Court.
Before dealing with the contentions canvassed, it will be
useful to have a clear idea of the relevant statutory
provisions, including the expressions "inam village", "inam
estate" and "estate" as defined therein.
S. 3(2)(d) of the Madras Estates Land Act. 1908, as it
originally stood, defined "estate" as "any village of which
the land revenue alone (i.e. melwaram alone) has been
granted in inam to a person not owing the kudiwaram (rights
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in soil) thereof, provided the grant has been made,
confirmed or recognised by the British Government or as
separated part of such village." In this definition, it was
not clear whether the inamdar had the melwaram alone or both
melwaram and kudiwaram. To remove this obscurity, the
Madras Estates Land (Third Amendment) Act, (18 of 1936),
substituted for the original sub-clause (d) in s. 3(2), this
new clause
"(d) any inam village of which the grant has
been made, confirmed or recognised by the
Government ’notwithstanding that subsequent to
the grant, the village has been partitioned
among the grantees or the successors-in-title
of the grantee or grantees."’
Section 3(2)(d) was further amended by Madras Estates Land
Amendment Act II of 1945 with retrospective effect from the
date
662
on which the Third Amendment Act 18 of 1936 came into force.
It inserted (among others) Explanation 1, to this clause,
which reads
"Where a grant as an inam is expressed to be
of a named village. the area which forms the
subject-matter of the grant shall be deemed to
be an estate notwithstanding that it did not
include certain lands in the village of that
name would have already been granted on
service or other tenure or been reserved for
communal purposes."
Explanation I makes it clear that (apart from being made,
confirmed, or recognised by the Government), an inam grant
in order to come within the purview of "estate" under s.
3(2) (d) has to be a grant expressly made of a named village
or whole Village, and not only of a part of the village or
of some defined area in a village. However, it remains and
is ’deemed to be a grant of a whole village notwithstanding
the exclusion of certain lands already granted on service
,or other tenure or reserved for communal purposes; nor does
it cease to be a grant of an entire village merely because
the village has been subsequently’ partitioned amongst the
grantees or their successors.
The interpretation of "estate" has behind it the authority
of a bedroll of decisions, including that of this Court in
District Board, Tanjore, v. Noor Mohammed(1)
Next, in chronological order, is the Madras Estates
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari). Act, (XXVI of
1948). Section 1(3) thereof provided that "it applies to
all estates as defined in section 3, clause (2) of the
Madras Estates Land Act. 1908 (except inam villages which
became estates by virtue of the Madras Estates Land (Third
Amendment) Act, 1936. The material part of s. 2 of this Act
says
(3) "Estate" means a zamindari or an under-
tenure or an under tenure of an inam estate.
(7) "Inam Estate" means an estate within the
meaning of section 3. clause (2) (d), of the
Estates Land Act, but does not include an inam
village which became an estate by virtue of
the Madras Estates Land (Third Amendment) Act,
1936".
Thus, to begin with, this Act did not take in its fold post-
1936 inam estates. Its operation remained confined to pre-
1936 inam estates till the commencement of Act 18 of 1957,
which we shall presently notice.
Section 9 of the Abolition Act indicates the authorities
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empowered to determine Inam estate. It says
"(1) As soon as may be after the passing of
this Act, the Settlement Officer may suo motu
and shall, on application enquire and
determine whether an inam village in his
jurisdiction is an inam estate or not.
(1) (1952) 2 M. J 586 (S. C.)
663
(2) Before holding the inquiry, the
Settlement Officer shall cause to be published
in the village in the prescribed manner, a
notice requiring all persons claiming an in-
terest in any land in the village to file
before, him statements bearing on the question
whether the village is an inam estate or not.
(3) The Settlement Officer shall then hear
the parties and afford to them a reasonable
opportunity of adducing all such evidence
either oral or documentary as they may desire
to examine all such documents as he has reason
to believe are in the possession of the
Government and have a bearing on the question
before him and give him decision in writing.
(4) (a) Any person deeming himself aggrieved
by a decision of the Settlement Officer under
sub-section (3) may within two months from the
date of the decision or such further time as
the Tribunal may in its discretion allow,
appeal to the Tribunal.
(b) Where any such appeal is preferred, the
Tribunal shall cause to. be Publisher in the
village in the prescribed manner a notice
requiring all persons who have applied to the
Settlement Officer under sub-section (1) or
filed before him before it, and after giving
them a reasonable opportunity of being
heard, give its decision.
(c) The decision of the Tribunal under this
sub-section shall be final and not be liable
to be questioned in any court of law.
(5) No decision of the Settlement Officer
under sub-section (3) or of the Tribunal under
sub-section (4) shall be invalid by reason of
any defect in the form of the notice referred
to in sub-section (2) or sub-section (4) as
the case may be, or the manner of its
publication.
(6) Every decision of the Tribunal and
subject to such decision, every decision of
the Settlement Officer under this section
shall be binding on all persons claiming an
interest in any law in the village.
notwithstanding that any such person has not
preferred any application or filed any
statement or adduced any evidence or appeared
or participated in the proceedings before the
Settlement Officer or the Tribunal as the case
may be.
(7) In the absence of evidence to the
contrary the Settlement Officer and the
Tribunal may Presume that an inam village is
an inam estate".
Madras Amendment Act 17 of 1951, introduced s.
64-A, which runs thus:
"64-A.(1) The decision of a Tribunal or
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Special Tribunal in any proceeding under this
Act, or- of a Judge of the
664
High Court hearing a case under Section 51
(2), on any matter falling within its or his
Jurisdiction shall be binding on the parties
thereto,’ and persons claiming under them, in
any suit of. proceeding in a Civil Court in so
far as such matter is in issue between the
parties or persons aforesaid in such suit or
proceeding.
(2) The decision of a Civil Court (not being
;he Court of Small Causes) on any matter
within its jurisdiction shall be binding on
the parties thereto and persons claiming under
them in any proceeding under this Act before a
Tribunal or Special Tribunal, or a Judge of
the High Court under section 5 1 (2) in so far
as such matter is in issue between the parties
or persons aforesaid in such proceeding."
In 1957, two Amending Acts both of which came into force on
December 23, 1957, were passed. One was Andhra Pradesh Act
17 of 1957, which substituted the following clause for
clause (a) in subsection (4) of s. 9 of the Abolition Act,
1948 :
(a) (i) Against a decision of the Settlement
Officer under subsection (3), the Government
may, within one year from the date of the
decision or if such decision was given before
the commencement of the Madras Estates
(Abolition and Conversion into Ryotwari)
(Andhra Pradesh Amendment) Act, 1957, within
one year from such commencement and any
persons aggrieved by such decision may within
two months from the date of the decision or
such further time as the Tribunal may in its
discretion allow, appeal to the Tribunal.
(ii) If,, before the commencement of the
Madras Estates (Abolition and Conversion into
Ryotwari) (Andhra Pradesh Amendment) Act,
1957, any order has been passed by the
Government against a decision of the
Settlement Officer on the ground that the
Government were not competent to file an
appeal under this clause or that such appeal
was time-barred, the Tribunal shall on an
application filed by the Government within one
year from the commencement of the Amendment
Act aforesaid, vacate the order already passed
by it and pass a fresh order on merits."
In clause (b) of s.9(4) of the Abolition Act, after the
words where such appeal is preferred", the words "by an
aggrieved person, the Tribunal shall give notice to the
Government and in the case of all appeals whether by the
;Government or by an aggrieved person" were inserted.
The second Amending Act was Andhra Pradesh Act 18 of 1957,
section 2 of which substituted the following section for
sub-section (3) of s. 1 of the Abolition Act
665
"It applies to all estates as defined in
section 3, clause (2), of the Madras Estates
Land Act, 1908, (Madras Act 1 of 1908)."
This Act further substituted the
following clause for clause (7) of s.2 of the
principal Act:
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"In an estate" means an estate within the
meaning of section 3, clause (2) (d) of the
Madras Estates Land Act, 1908 (Madras Act 1 of
1908)".
In s.9 of the principal Act, after the words "Inam village"
or "the village", wherever they occurred the words "or
hamlet or khandriga granted as inam" were inserted.
It will be seen that Act 18 of 1957, made the Abolition Act
applicable even to villages that became estates under the
1936 Amendment of the 1908 Act. For the purpose of the
Abolition Act that distinction between pre-1936 and post-
1936 inam grants disappeared, and this Act became applicable
to all estates falling under the definition ill section 3
(2) of the 1908 Act.
Andhra Pradesh Act No. 20 of 1960, which came into force on
the 23rd of June, 1960 inserted in the Abolition Act, s.9-A,
which, provides :
" Inquiry under section 9 not necessary in
certain cases If before the commencement of
the Madras Estates (Abolition and Conversion
into Ryotwari) (Andhra Pradesh Second
Amendment) Act, 1957 (Andhra Pradesh Act XVIII
of 1957) (any decision was given under section
9 in respect of any village that it was not an
inam estate as it stood defined before such
commencement, and that decision was based on
the finding that the inam village became an
estate by virtue of the Madras Estates Land
(’third Amendment) Act, 1936 (Madras Act XVIII
of 1936) then:
(a) if the decision based on the finding
aforesaid was given by the Tribunal under sub-
section(4) of section 9, no fresh inquiry
under that section shall be necessary for
taking any, proceedings tinder this Act on the
basis of that finding; and
(b) if the decision based on the finding
aforesaid was given by the Settlement Officer,
and no appeal was filed to the Tribunal, the
Government or any person aggrieved, may appeal
to the Tribunal against the decision and
finding within two months from the com-
mencement of the Madras Estates (Abolition and
ment). Act, 1960 and if no such appeal is
filed, the finding of the Settlement Officer
shall be final and no fresh inquiry shall be
necessary for taking any proceedings under
this Act on the basis of that finding."
666
The same Act 20 of 1960 introduced this
section in the present Act :
"12(1) No notification issued under sub-
section (4) of section 1 of the principal Act
during the period between the 23rd December,
1957, and the commencement of this Act, on the
basis of finding recorded in any decision
given before the said date by the Settlement
Officer, or the Tribunal under section 9 of
the principal Act (such finding being to the
effect that the inam village become an estate
by virtue of the Madras Estates Land (Third
Amendment) Act, 1936 (Madras Act XVIII of
1936), shall be deemed to be invalid or
ever .to have been invalid merely on the
ground
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(a) that before issuing the notification no
fresh inquiry was made by the Settlement
Officer under the said section 9 after the
said date; or
(b) that the landholder or other person
aggrieved had no. occasion to appeal to the
Tribunal against the decision and finding of
the Settlement Officer; and all such
notifications issued and actions taken in
pursuance thereof during the period aforesaid
shall be deemed always to have been validly
issued and taken in accordance with law.
(2) No suit or other proceeding challenging
the validity of any such notification or
action or for any relief on the ground that
such notification or action was not validly
issued or taken shall be maintained or conti-
nued in any court, and no court shall enforce
any decree or other holding any such
notification or action to be invalid or grant
any relief to any person."
The first question that falls for decision is : To what
extent and in what circumstances the Civil Court is
competent in a suit to go into the question whether a
particular village is an "estate"?
By virtue of s. 9 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the Civil
Courts ’have jurisdiction to decide all suits of a civil
nature excepting those of which their cognizance,, is either
expressly or impliedly barred. The exclusion of the civil
court’s jurisdiction, therefore, is not to be readily
assumed unless the relevant statute expressly or by
inevitable implication does so. The question thus further
resolves itself into the :issue : How far s.9(1) of the
Abolition Act confers exclusive jurisdiction on the
Settlement Officer to determine inam estates?
This matter is not res Integra. In Addenki Tiruvenkata
Thata Desika Charyulu v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (1) this
Court held that there is an express bar to the jurisdiction
of the civil court to adjudicate upon the question, whether
"any inam village" is an "inam
1. A.I.R. 1964 S. C. 807
667
estate" or not, and that ,to the extent of the question
stated in s. 9(1), the jurisdiction of the Settlement
Officer and of the Tribunal are exclusive ". It was
pertinently added that this exclusion of the jurisdiction of
the civil court would be subject to two limitations. First,
the civil courts have jurisdiction to examine into cases
where the provisions of the Act have not been complied with
or the statutory tribunal has not acted in conformity with
the fundamental principles of judicial procedure. The
second is as regards the exact extent to which, the, powers
of statutory tribunals are exclusive. The question as to
whether any particular case falls under the first or the
second of the above categories would depend on the purpose
of the statute. and its general scheme, taken in conjunction
with the scope of the enquiry entrusted to the tribunal set
up and other relevant factors.
Applying the above principles, the Court clarified the
limits of the respective jurisdictions of the Settlement
Officer/Tribunal and the civil. court, thus :
the object of the Act is to abolish only
"inam estates". This determination involves
two distinct matters in view of the
circumstances that every "inam village" is not
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necessarily "an inam estate" viz., (1) whether
a particular property is or is not an "inam
village" and (2) whether such a village is "an
inam estate" within the definition of s.
2(7). The first of these questions whether the
grant is of an "inam village" is referred to
in s. 9(1) itself as some extrinsic fact which
must preexist before the Settlement Officer
can embark on the enquiry contemplated by that
provision and the Abolition Act as it stood at
the date relevant to this-appeal, makes no
provision for this being the subject of
enquiry by the Settlement Officer ...
Where therefore persons appearing in
opposition to the proceedings initiated before
the Settlement Officer under s. 9 question the
character of the property as not falling
within the description of an "inam village",
he has of necessity to decide the Issue, for
until he holds that this condition is
satisfied he cannot enter on the further
enquiry which is the one which by s. 9(1) of
the Act he is directed to conduct. On the
terms of s. 9 (1), the property in question
being an "inam village" is assumed as a fact
on the existence of which the competency of
the Settlement Officer to determine the matter
within his jurisdiction rests and as there are
no words in the statute empowering him to
decide finally the former be cannot confer
jurisdiction on himself by a wrong decision on
this preliminary condition to his
jurisdiction. Any determination by him of this
question, therefore, is (subject to the result
of an appeal to the Tribunal) binding on the
parties only for the purposes of the
proceedings under the Act, but no further. The
correctness of that finding may be questioned
in any subsequent legal proceeding in the
ordinary courts of the land where the question
might arise for decision."
668
Now let us approach the problem in hand in the light of the
principles enunciated in Desika Charyulu’s case (supra).
Mr. Natesan, learned Counsel for the appellants, contends
that in the instant case, the decision, dated September 2,
1950, of the Settlement Officer fell within the second
category of cases pointed out in Desika Charyulu’s case
(supra) which could be challenged in the civil court,
because, firstly, Kadakalla village was not an "inam
village" as the, ,grant was not of the whole village, and
the Settlement Officer had grievously erred in assuming it
to be so; secondly, as soon as the Settlement Officer
reached the finding that the village was not an "inam
estate" within the then extant definition in s. 2(7) of the
Abolition Act, he became functus officio and had no further
jurisdiction under s. 9(1) to proceed with the enquiry and
hold that it was an estate" under s. 3(2)(d) of the Estates
Land Act, 1908.
In reply, Mr. P. Rameshwara Rao, learned Counsel for the
respondents, maintains that under s. 9(1), the Settlement
Officer had the jurisdiction to determine all the three
facts, namely : (1) whether Kadakalla was an ’inam village’;
(2) if so, whether it was a pre-1936 ’inam estate’ falling
under the definition in s. 2(7) of the Abolition Act, or (3)
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a post-1936 ’inam estate’ under s. 3(2)(d), of the 1908 Act.
The decision of the Settlement Officer, according to the
learned Counsel, as to fact No. (1) was conclusive and
operated as res judicata under s. 64-A, of the Abolition
Act, between the parties, be,cause before the Settlement
Officer, it was no-body’s case that Kadakalla was not an
"inam village". In these circumstances, the decision of the
Settlement Officer not being in excess of his jurisdiction,
could not be questioned in a civil court. The argument,
though seemingly attractive, does not stand a close
examination and we are unable to accept it. On the other
hand, we find force in what has been contended from the
appellants’ side.
Under the Abolition Act, as it stood at the material date,
the enquiry by the Settlement Officer could legitimately be
confined to the ascertainment of only two issues of fact,
viz.(1) Was Kadakalla an "inam village" ? (2) if so, was it
an ’inam estate’ as defined in s. 2 (7) of the Abolition
Act? Once issue (2) was determined, the enquiry would be
complete and the limits of his exclusive jurisdiction
,circumscribed by s. 9(1) reached; and, if he went beyond
those limits to investigate and determine further something
which was unnecessary or merely incidental or remotely
related to issue (2), then such incidental or unnecessary
determination, could be questioned in the civil court.
Again, any finding recorded by the Settlement Officer
regarding the property in question being an ’inam village’
or not, is not final or conclusive it being a finding of a
jurisdictional fact, only, the preexistence of which is a
sine qua non to the exercise of his exclusive jurisdiction
by the Settlement Officer. Investigation as to the
existence or otherwise of this preliminary fact is done by
the Settlement Officer to ascertain whether or not he has
jurisdiction to determine that the particular property is an
’inam estate’. If upon such investigation, he
669
finds that the property is ’an ’inam village’, the
foundation for the exercise of his exclusive jurisdiction is
laid, and he can then, and then only, embark upon the
enquiry envisaged by the statute. If such investigation
reveals that the property is not an ’inam village’, the con-
dition precedent to the exercise of such jurisdiction by
him, would be lacking.
The Legislature must have visualised that under the cloak of
an erroneous finding as to the existence or nonexistence of
this prerequisite, the Settlement Officer may illegally
clutch at jurisdiction not conferred on him, or, refuse to
exercise jurisdiction vesting in him. Perhaps, that is why
the statute does not leave the final determination of this
preliminary fact to the Settlement Officer/Tribunal and his
erroneous finding on that fact is liable to be question in
civil court.
The contention of Mr. Rao that before the Settlement Officer
the fact of Kadakalla village being an "inam village" was
not disputed, does not appear to be home out by the record.
A perusal of the. Settlement Officer’s order dated
September 2, 1950, would show that it was contended before
him on behalf of the Inamdars "that there was no village at
all at the time of grant" and "that there were more than one
grant as Inam in the village".
Assuming for the sake of argument that the appellants had
failed to contest or adduce proof before the Settlement
Officer that Kadakalla was not an ’inam village’, then also,
we fail to appreciate how, on Principle that would make the
case any different so as to preclude the appellants from
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reagitating that matter in the civil court. Once it is held
that determination of this fact is not a matter of the
exclusive jurisdiction of the Settlement Officer, the
appellants cannot be debarred on the basis of any doctrine,
of res-judicata from getting the matter fully and finally
adjudicated by a court of competent jurisdiction.
In view of the above discussion, it is clear that under the
law in force at the material time, a suit for a declaration
that the decision of the Settlement Officer/Tribunal holding
certain properties to be an ’estate’ under s. 3 (2) (a) of
the, 1908 Act was void, was maintainable on the ground that
the suit property was not an ’inam village’.
There can be no dispute that Suit No. 47 of 1953 is of that
category and falls well nigh within the ratio of Gosukonda
Venkata. Narasayya v. State of Madras,(1) which was approved
by this Court in Desika Charyulu’s case (supra). The main
contention of the appellants in this suit was that the
village Kadakalla was not in ’inam village’ as the grant did
not comprise the whole village and consequently, it is not
an ’estate’ within the definition in s.3 (2) (d) of the 1908
Act. The trial court accepted this contention and decreed
the suit. The High Court confirmed that decision, holding
that when the grant was made (in 1774), it was neither of
the whole village nor of a named village within the meaning
of Explanation 1 to s.3 (2) (d) of the 1908 Act. In
Original Suit 101 of 1954, also, the relief of rent or
damages
(1) A. I. R.
670
is conditional and dependent upon and linked up (by an
agreement between the parties) with the determination of the
main question involved in the former suit.
We have, therefore, no hesitation in coming to the
conclusion that the common question in both these suits
regarding Kadakalla being an estate or not, on the ground
that it was not an inam village, was within the competence
of the civil court.
Further point to be considered is : whether the jurisdiction
of the civil courts to proceed with and determine the
aforesaid suits ’was, in any way, affected by the enactment
of Amending Acts 17 and 18 of 1957. For reasons that
follow, the answer to this question, in our opinion, must be
in the negative.
It is well settled that ordinarily, when the substantive law
is altered during the pendency of an action, rights of the
parties are decided according to law, as it existed when the
action was begun unless the new statute shows a clear
intention to vary such rights (Maxwell on Interpretation,
12th Edn. 220). That is to say, in the absence of anything
in the Act, to say that it is to have retrospective
operation, it cannot be so construed as to have the effect
of altering the law applicable to a claim in litigation at
the time when the Act is passed.
Let us, therefore, see whether there is anything in the
Amending Acts 17 and 18 of 1957 which in clear language
gives them a retrospective effect. A plain reading of these
Amending Acts would show that there is nothing of this kind
in them, which, expressly or by necessary intendment,
affects pending actions. The only major change introduced
by Act 17 of 1957 was that it gave to the Government a right
to file an appeal to the Tribunal, if it felt aggrieved
against the decision of Settlement Officer under sub-s. (3)
of s.9 of the Abolition Act, within one year from the date
of the decision, or, if such decision was rendered before
December 23, 1957 i.e. the commencement of Act 17 of 1957,
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within one year from such date. It further entitled the
Government to get its appeal, if any, dismissed, as
incompetent, by the Tribunal restored within one year of the
commencement of the Amending Act. Likewise, the only effect
of the Amending Act 18 of 1957 was that it enlarged the
definition of ’inam estate’ for the purpose of Abolition Act
by taking in post-1936 Inams.
There is no non-obstante clause in. these Amending Acts of
1957 with reference to pending or closed civil actions. Nor
is there anything in the scheme, setting or provisions of
these Amending Acts which fundamentally alters the
conditions on which such actions were founded.. No back date
or dates of their commencement have been specified in the
body of these statutes as was done in Madras Estates Land
Amendment Act 11 of 1945 which was expressly enforced with
effect from the date of the commencement of Act 18 of 1936.
These Amending Acts were published in the Government
Gazette on December 23, 1957, and will therefore be deemed
to have come into force
671
from that date only. The provisions, of these Amending
Statutes are not merely Procedural but affect substantive
rights,, and impose. new obligation’ and disabilities. In
them, the Legislature has not spoken in clear language that
they would unsettle, settled claims or take away or abridge
rights already accrued, or cause abatement of pending
actions. These Amending Acts, ’therefore, can be construed
as having a prospective operation only. They cannot be
interpreted as taking away the rights of the litigants in
Suits O.S. 47 of 1953 and O.S. 101 of 1954 (which were at
the commencement of these Amendments pending at the
appellate or original stage) to have their respective claims
determined in, accordance with the law in force at the time
of the institution of the actions.
Before we come to the Amending Act 20 of 1960, it is
necessary to examine whether the decrees in O.S. 47 of 1953
and O.S. 101 of 1954 had attained finality. And, if so,
when and to what extent ?
So far as the decree of the High Court (in A.S. 668 of 1954
arising out of O.S. 47 of 1953) is concerned, there is no
dispute that it had become final and conclusive between the parti
es to that action, namely, the State Government and
the present appellants on February 12, 1954. Learned
Counsel are, however, not agreed as to whether the decree,
dated March 28, 1958, passed by the civil court in Suit No.
101 of 1954 had also assumed such a character.
Mr. Natesan. vehemently contended that this decree in so far
as it, pursuant to the agreement between the parties,
incorporated in it, the final determination of the High
Court in A.S. 668 of 1954-that Kadakalla was not an estate-
was a consent decree, and as such, was final and non-
appealable in view of s. 96(3) of the Code of Civil Pro-
cedure.
On the respondents’ side Mr. Rao argued that no part of this
decree was final and conclusive between the parties on the
ground of estoppel or otherwise, because-(a) the appellants
had in grounds 1 and 2 of the Memo of Appeal presented in
the High Court, challenged the decree in its entirety; (b)
the joint memo filed by the Advocates, concerned legal
issues, including that of jurisdiction. and as such the
agreement was not lawful that would bind the parties; (c)
the respondents were not a party to the proceedings in A. S.
668 of 1954 and (d) the arrangement arrived at by the
Advocates, being dependent on the happening of a future
event, did not amount to a lawful adjustment of the claim,
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and the decree based on it, was inchoate.
None of the points urged by Mr. Rao appears to hold water.
The allegations in grounds 1 and 2 of the Memo of Appeal
(which have been referred to in a foregoing part of this
judgment) are too vague and general to amount to an
averment. They appear to have been introduced just as a
matter of form and habit by the draftsman. From the Memo of
Appeal, read as a whole, it is clear that, in substance and
truth,, the challenge was directed only against that part of
3-L748SCI/74
672
the decree- which fixed the quantum of rent and damages. In
fact, before the, High Court it was vigorously contended on
behalf of the ,appellants that , part of the decree, which,
in effect, declared that the village is not an estate’ under
s. 3 (2) (d), having been imported with the consent of the
parties, was not appealable under s. 96(3), Code of Civil Proce
dure, and, in reality, had not been appealed against.
In support of this contention, reliance was placed on the,
Division Bench ,decision in Srinivasa v. Tathachariar(1).
The High Court did not discuss or distinguish this decision.
Nor did it say in so many words that the whole of the decree
including the part based on compromise, was under challenge
in the appeal. It rejeited the contention with the remark
that it had already "observed that the appeal is but a
continuation of the, suit and there could be no estoppel
against a statute". Perhaps, it was assumed that in the
Memo of Appeal, every bit of the decree was being challenged
by the appellants. We think, with all respect, that such an
assumption was contrary to the well established principle
that in construing a pleading or a like petition, in this
,country, the court should not look merely to its form, or
pick out from it isolated words or sentences; it must read
the petition as a whole, gather the real intention of the
party and reach at the substance of the matter. Thus
construed, the Memo of Appeal in this, case could not be
said to contain a challenge to that part of the decree which
was in terms of the compromise agreement between the
parties.
Order 23, Rule 3, Code of Civil Procedure, not only permits
a partial compromise and adjustment of a suit by a lawful
agreement, but further gives a mandate to the court to
record it and pass a decree, in terms of such compromise or
adjustment in so far as it relates to the suit. If the
compromise agreement was lawful-and, as we shall presently
discuss, it was so-the decree to the extent it was a consent
decree, was not appealable,because of the express bar in s.
96,(3) of the Code.
Next point is, whether this agreement was lawful ? We have
already discussed that the Amending Acts of 1957 did not
affect pending actions in which a declaration is sought that
a particular property is not an estate, on the ground that
it is not an ’inam village’. This issue which was
intertwined with that of jurisdiction, was very largely a
question of fact. It follows therefrom that in any such
suit, the parties in order to avoid unnecessary expense and
botheration, could legitimately make an agreement to abide
by a determination on the same point in issue in another
pending action in an advanced -stage. There was nothing
unlawful and improper in such an arrangement particularly
when the interests at the respondents were sufficiently
safeguarded by the State which was hotly controverting the
decree of the trial court regarding Kadakalla being an
estate. By no stretch of reasoning it could be said that
this agreement was collusive or was an attempt to contract
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out of the statute.
There can be no doubt that as soon as the Court accepted the
compromise agreement between the parties, and, acting on it,
passed a
(1) A. I. R. 1918 Mad. 546.
673
decree in terms thereof, the compromise, to the extent of
the matter covered by it, was complete. Nothing further
remained to be done by the parties in pursuance of that
agreement. The decree had become absolute and immediately
executable on February 12, 1959 when the High Court in A.S.
668 of 1954 finally decided that Kadakalla was not an
estate.
Be that as it may,, the bar to an appeal against a consent
decree, in sub-s. (3) of s. 96 of the Code is based on the
broad principle of estoppel. It presupposes that the
parties to an action can, expressly or by implication, waive
or forego their right of appeal by any lawful ,agreement or
compromise, or even by conduct. Therefore, as soon as the
parties made the agreement to abide by the determination in
the ,appeal (A.S. 668) and induced the court to pass a
decree in terms of that agreement, the principle of estoppel
underlying 196(3) became operative and the decree to the
extent it was in terms of that agreement, became final and
binding between the parties. And it was as effective in
creating an estoppel between the parties as a judgment on
,contest. Thus, the determination in A.S. 668-that
Kadakalla was not an ’estate’-became as much binding on the
respondents, as on the parties in that appeal.
In the view we take, we can derive support from the ratio of
this Court’s decision in Raja Sri Sailendra Narayan Bhanja
Deo v. State of Orissa(1). In that case, there was a
compromise decree between the predecessors-in-title of the
appellant therein on the one hand, and the Secretary of
State on the other, that Kanika Raj was an ’estate’ as
defined by Orissa Estates Abolition Act of 1951. This Court
held that the appellant was estopped by the compromise
decree from denying that the Raj was not such an ’estate’.
In the light of the above discussion, we would hold that
part of the decree in Suit No. 101 of 1954 which was in
terms of the compromise agreement had become, final between
the parties, and, the appeal from that decree could not be
said to be a continuation of that part of the claim which
had been settled by agreement. The combined effect of the
two integrated decrees in Suit No. 47 and Suit No. 101, in
so far as they, declared that Kadakalla, not being an. ’inam
village, was not an estate under s. 3(2)(d) of the 1908 Act,
was to completely vacate and render non-est the decision
dated September 2, 1950 of the Settlement Officer.
Against the above background, we have to consider whether
the Amending Act 20 of 1960 operates retrospectively to
nullify final decrees of civil courts which had before its
commencement, declared such decisions of Settlement Officer
totally void and nonexistent ? Does the ’Act expressly or
by necessary intendment bring into life again all such dead
decisions of the Settlement Officer ?
In approaching these questions, two fundamental principles
of interpretation have to be kept in view. The first is,
that if the Legislature,
(1) [1956] S.C.R. 72.
674
acting within its legislative competence, wants to
neutralise or reopen a court’s decision, "it is not
sufficient"-to use the words of Hidaytullah C.J. in Shri
Prithvi Cotton Mills Ltd. v. Broach Borough Municipality(1)-
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"to declare merely that the decision of the Court shall not
bind, for that is tantamount to reversing the decision in
exercise of judicial power which the Legislature does not
possess or exercise. A court’s decision must always bind
unless the conditions on which it is based are so
fundamentally altered that the decision could not have been
given in the altered circumstances." Thus, the first test to
be applied is, whether the Amending Act 20 of 1960 has so
radically altered the conditions on which the said decrees
proceed, that they would not have been passed in the altered
circumstances ? The point is that the law which was the
basis of the decision must be altered and then, the
foundation failing, the binding value of the decision fails
when the non obstante clause is superadded. As shall be
presently seen, by this test, the answer to this question
must be in the negative.
The second principle-to recall the words of Bowen L.J. in
Reid v. Reid(2)-is, that in construing a statute or "a
section in a statute which is to a certain extent
retrospective, we ought nevertheless to bear in mind the
maxim (that is, except in special cases, the new law ought
to be construed so as to interfere as little as possible
with vested-eights as applicable whenever we reach the line
at which the words of the section cease to be plain. That
is a necessary and logical corollary of the, general
proposition that you ought not to give a larger
retrospective power to a section, even in an Act which is to
some extent intended to be retrospective, than you can
plainly see the Legislature meant."
With the above principle in mind, let us now examine the
provisions of the Amending Act 20 of 1960. In this Act,
also no back date for its commencement has been mentioned.
It will, therefore, be deemed to have commenced on June 23,
1960, which is the date on which it was published in the
Govt. Gazette. It does not say (excepting in s. 12
inserted by it which obviously does not apply to the facts
of this case) that the amendment would have effect and would
be deemed always to have had effect from the inception of
the parent Act, nor does it use any equivalent expressions
or similar words which are usually found in Amending Acts
intended to have retrospective operation without any limit.’
Section 9-A inserted by this Amending Act in the parent Act,
does not begin with any non-obstante cause, whatever having
reference to decrees or orders of civil courts. In terms,
it concern,s itself only with a certain category of
decisions given before the commencement of Act 18 of 1957 by
the Settlement Officer/Tribunal, under s. 9 of the Abolition
Act. Such decisions are those which were based on the
finding that a particular Inam village had become estateby
virtue of the. Madras Estates Land (Third Amendment) Act,
1936.
The Order, dated September 2, 1950, of the Settlement
Officer in the instant case, was a decision of this
category, inasmuch as he held that.Kadakalla was not an
’inam estate’ because it was a post-1936
(1) L19701 1 S.C.R. 388.
(2) (1886) 31, Ch. D. 402 at 408.
675
inam, and as such, was not- covered by the definition in s.
2 (7) of the Abolition Act. But, before the commencement of
the Amending Act, 1960, this decision as a result of the
High Court’s decree, stood finally vacated. It is not at
all clear from the language of this Amending Act, that the
intention was to revive even such legally non-existent
decisions of the Settlement Officer. On The contrary,
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definite indications ire available that the section was not
intended to have unlimited retrospective operation. The
first of such indications is available from the marginal
heading of s. 9-A, itself " which is to the effect :
"Inquiry under section 9. not necessary in certain cases",
The heading discloses the purpose as well as the extent of
the new provision. it envisages only such cases in which the
decision of the Settlement Officer was not successfully
challenged in the civil court on the ground that the parti-
cular property was not an inam village; for, it would be
pointless, only in such cases, to hold a further inquiry
into-the matter.
The second hint of legislative intent is available in s. 64-
A (2) which has not been touched by the Amending Act.
Section 64-A(2) provides that the decision of the civil
court on any matter within its jurisdiction shall be binding
on the parties thereto and persons claiming under them in
any proceeding under the Abolition Act before the Tribunal
or the Special Tribunal. If the intention was to exclude
the Jurisdiction of the civil court altogether, s.64-A(2)
would either have been deleted or drastically amended so as
to alter the basic conditions with effect from the very
inception of the parent Act, that in the altered Conditions
those decisions could not have been rendered by the civil
courts. For instance, it could say that the decision of the
Settlement Officer on the question whether a particular
property is an ’inam village’ or not, would be conclusive
and final and would always be deemed to have been so."
In view, of what has been said above, we are of the opinion
that s.9-A takes in its retrospective sweep only those
decisions of the settlement Officer or the Tribunal which at
the commencement of the Amending Act 20 of 1960 were
subsisting and had not been totally vacated or rendered non-
est by a decree of a competent court. The decision dated
September 2, 1950 of the Settlement Officer in the instant
case, was not such a decision. It had ceased to exist as ’a
result of the inter-linked decree in O.S. 47 of 1953 and
O.S. 101 of 1954, passed before the enactment of this
Amending Act. The Amending Act of 1960, therefore, does not
in any way, affect the finality or the binding effect. of
those decrees.
Quite, a number of authorities were cited by the learned
Counsel on both sides, but it is not necessary to notice all
of them because in lost of them the facts were materially
different. Only one of those cases in which the
interpretation of ss. 9-A and 64-A was involved reserves to
be noticed. It is reported in Yeliseth Satyanarayana v.
Aditha agannadharab and ors.(1)
(1) [1966] I.L.R. A.P. 729.
676
The writ petitioners in that case had challenged the order
of the Estates Abolition Tribunal which had held (1) that
the previous order of the Civil Court holding the suit lands
to be an estate, by virtue of the Amending Act XVIII of 1936
to the Madras Estates Land Act, 1908, was not res judicata
under s. 64-A of the Abolition Act and (2) that the land-
holder had a right of appeal under s. 9-A of the said Act,
and that the inam was not of the whole village and, conse-
quently, was not an ’estate’.
The first question for consideration by the High Court was,
whether the appeal filed by the land-holder before the
Estates Abolition Tribunal was maintainable, notwithstanding
the fact that such an appeal was not entertained earlier by
the Tribunal on the ground of its being incompetent. On the
construction of s. 9-A(b), this question was answered in the
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affirmative.
The second question before the High Court was, whether the
previous judgments of the Civil Court were res judicata
under s. 64-A. The Bench analysed and explained the
circumstances in which the first or the second sub-s of s.
64-A operates. It will be useful to extract those
observations here
"The bar under s. 64-A is applicable in two
sets of circumstances; one, where the decision
was of a Tribunal or Special Tribunal or of a
Judge of the High Court hearing a case under
section 51; (2) the other, where it is a
decision of a Civil Court on any matter
falling within its jurisdiction. The
decisions mentioned in the first category are
binding on the Civil Courts and the decisions
mentioned in the second category are binding
on the Tribunal or Special Tribunal or a Judge
of the High Court when he hears a case under
s. 51 (2). In so far as the facts of this
case are concerned, it is sub-section (2) of
section 64-A that is applicable."
On the second question, the learned Judges held that the
previous decisions of the Civil Court could not operate as
res judicata because the issue as to whether the suit
property was an estate under the Amending Act of 1957, was
not under contest. Both the parties as a matter of
concession, had conceded that fact and the Government. was
not a party to the proceeding. In these peculiar circum-
stances, it was held that the ’concession or assumption made
in the previous proceedings, was not a ’decision’ within the
meaning of s. 64-A(2). In the case before us, as already
observed, the State had contested this issue regarding
Kadakalla being an estate or not, right upto the High Court.
It would, therefore, operate as res judicata between the
State and the land-owners. The same binding effect is
produced by estoppel raised by the consent decree in the
suit out of which the present appeal has arisen. Thus, this
ruling does not, advance the case of the respondents.
For all the foregoing reasons, we allow this appeal, reverse
the judgment of the High Court and send the case back to it
for decision
677
on the remaining issues in accordance with law. We make no
orders as to the costs of this Court.
KRISHNA IYER, J.-The judgment just delivered has my
concurrence. But a certain juristic thought expressed
therein and consecrated in an authoritative passage which
has fallen from Bowen, L.J., in Reid v. Reid(1) persuades me
to break my silence not so much in dissent but in
explanatory divagation. The proposition there expressed and
here followed relates to the presumption against vested
rights being affected by subsequent legislation. Certainly
this legal creed of Anglo-Indian vintage has the support of
learned pronouncements, English and Indian. But when we
apply it in all its sternness and sweep, we err. Precedents
should not be petrified nor judicial dicta divorced from the
socioeconomic mores of the age. Judges are not prophets and
only interpret laws in the light of the contemporary ethos.
To regard them otherwise is unscientific. My thesis is that
while applying the policy of statutory construction we
should not forget the conditions and concepts which moved
the judges whose rulings are cited, nor be obsessed by
respect at the expense of reason. Justice Gardozo(2) has in
felicitous words made the same point :
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"There should be greater readiness to abandon
an untenable position .... when in its origin
it was the product of institutions or
conditions which have gained a new signifi-
cance or development with the progress of the
years. In such circumstances, the words of
Wheeler, J., in Dwy v. Connecticut Co., 89
Conn. 74, 99,. express the tone and temper in
which problems should be met : "That court
best serves the law which recognizes that the
rules of law which grew up in a remote
generation may, in the fullness of experience,
be found to serve another generation badly,
and which discards the old rule when it finds
that another rule of law represents what
should be according to the established and
settled judgment of society, Ind no
considerable property rights have be-come
vested in reliance upon the old rule. It is
thus great writers upon the common law have
discovered the source and method of its
growth, and in its growth found its health and
life. It is not and it should not be
stationary, Change of this character should
not be left to the,, legislature." If judges
have woefully misinterpreted the mores of
their day, or if the mores of their day are no
longer those of ours, they ought not to tie ,
in helpless submission, the hands of their
successors."
The Indian Constitution, adopting the fighting faith of
equal_protection of the laws to all citizens, necessarily
contemplates a new jurisprudence where vested rights may be,
and often-times are, extensively interfered with for
achieving the founding fathers’ social goals.
(1) [1886] 31 Ch.D.402;408.
(2) Cardozo The Nature of Judicial Process; PP. 151-52.
678
Legislative exercises directed towards-distributive justice,
as in the present case, cannot be considered in the light of
a dated value system, though sanctified by bygone decisions
of Courts.
However, in the present case, let me hasten to repeat, the
Act in question is clear about its intent and its
application gives little difficulty. I have said these
words only to enter a mild caveat, on the lines indicated,
so as to obviate future misapprehensions about the,rule,of
interpretation-not to add a new element of judicial sub-
jectvism. Speaking generally, courts have to be anchored to
well known canons of statutory construction and if they are
out of time with the law-makers’ meaning and purpose the
legitimate means of setting things right is to enact a new
Interpretation Act.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
679