Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 4
PETITIONER:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
VYASENDRA
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1983
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
CITATION:
1983 SCR (3) 1 1983 SCC (3) 70
1983 SCALE (1)519
ACT:
Maharashtra Agricultural Lands (Ceiling on Holdings)
Act, 27 of 1961-s.4(1)-Scope of-Land owned and held by wife
as separate property or stridhan property-Deemed to be held
by the family unit.
HEADNOTE:
Whether the land owned and held by the wife as her
separate property can be clubbed together with the lands
held by her husband and the other members of the family for
the purpose of computing the ceiling on the holding of the’
family unit’ under the Maharashtra Agricultural Lands
(Ceiling on Holdings) Act, 1961.
Section 4(1) of the said Act provides that for the
purpose of determining the ceiling area of the family unit
all land held by each member of a family unit, whether
jointly or separately, shall be deemed to be held by the
family unit. Explanation to s. 4(1) states that ’Family
unit’ means a person and his spouse and their minor sons and
minor unmarried daughters, if any.
Respondent’s claim that certain land which stood in the
name of his wife was her separate property was not accepted
by the Surplus Lands Determination Tribunal, which included
that land in the total holding of the respondent. Before the
Additional Commissioner, the respondent contended that the
land which was sold by his wife after the notified date was
wrongly included in the holding of the family unit. The
Additional Commissioner remanded the matter to the Tribunal
for a fresh inquiry into the question as to whether the sale
effected by the Respondent’s wife was supported by legal
necessity. On a writ petition filed by the respondent the
High Court directed the Tribunal to enquire also into the
question as to whether the land which was in the name of the
respondent’s wife was her separate property. On appeal, the
appellant contended that the High Court was in error in
enlarging the scope of the order of remand passed by the
Additional Commissioner.
Allowing the appeal,
^
HELD: All land held by each member of the family unit,
whether jointly or separately, is to be deemed to be held by
the family unit, for the purpose of determining the ceiling
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 4
area which the family unit may retain. The circumstance that
the land held by a constituent members of the family unit is
separate property or stridhan property is a matter of no
consequence whaatso-
2
ever for the purpose of determining the ceiling area which
the family unit can retain. [4 E-G]
In the instant case the respondent, his wife and their
minor sons and minor unmarried daughters, if any, are all
constituent members of the family unit and all the lands
held by them have to be pooled together for the purpose of
determining the ceiling area which is permissible to the
family unit. The nature or character of their interest in
the land held by them is irrelevant for computing the
ceiling area which the family unit may retain. [4 G-H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4264 of
1983.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 25th April, 1979 of the Bombay High Court in Writ
Petition No. 1117 of 1979.
V. S. Desai and M. N. Shroff with him for the
Appellant.
Nemo for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. A question frequently arises under
the Agricultural Ceiling Acts passed by the State
Legislatures as to whether the land owned and held by a wife
as her separate property can be clubbed together with the
lands held by her husband and the other members of the
family for the purpose of computing the ceiling on the
holding of the ’family unit’. That question arises in this
appeal under the Maharashtra Agricultural Lands (Ceiling on
Holdings) Act, 27 of 1961, (The Act’).
The respondent Vyasendra filed a return under section
12 of the Act showing the lands held by him and mentioning
that certain lands which stood in the name of his wife were
her separate property. The Surplus Lands Determination
Tribunal held under section 21 of the Act that the total
holding of the respondent, including the land which was
alleged to be the separate property of his wife, was 67
acres and 34 gunthas. Since the ceiling under the Act is 54
acres, the respondent was asked to surrender an area
admeasuring 13 acres and 34 gunthas.
The Additional Commissioner, Aurangabad, called for the
record and proceedings of the Tribunal suo motu. The
respondent
3
contended in those proceedings that an area of 17 acres and
27 gunthas which was sold by his wife after the notified
date, was wrongly included in the holding of the family unit
on the basis that the sale was mala fide and was not
supported by legal necessity. By an order dated January 16,
1979 the Additional Commissioner remanded the matter to the
Tribunal for a fresh inquiry into the question as to whether
the sale of land effected by the respondent’s wife after the
notified date was supported by legal necessity. The
contention was that the respondent’s wife had sold the land
in order to meet the medical expenses in connection with her
illness.
The respondent filed a writ petition (No. 1117 of 1979)
in the High Court of Bombay against the judgment of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 4
Additional Commissioner. The contention of the respondent
before the High Court was that the Additional Commissioner
should have remanded the proceedings to the Tribunal not
only for the purpose of determining whether the respondent’s
wife had sold the land for the purpose of legal necessity
but also for the purpose of determining whether the land
which stood in the name of the respondent’s wife constituted
her separate or Stridhan property. This contention was
accepted by the High Court which, by its judgment dated
April 25, 1979 enlarged the scope of the remand by directing
the Tribunal to inquire also into the question as to whether
the land which stood in the name of the respondent’s wife
was her separate property. The correctness of the judgment
of the High Court is challenged by the State of Maharashtra
in this appeal.
By an order dated March 8, 1983 this Court had issued a
show cause notice to the respondent stating therein that the
matter will be finally heard and disposed of at the next
hearing. The show cause notice has been served on the
respondent but he has not put in his appearance.
Shri V. S. Desai, who appears on behalf of the
appellant, contends that the High Court was in error in
enlarging the scope of the order of remand passed by the
Additional Commissioner by directing the Tribunal to hold an
inquiry into the question whether the land which stood in
the name of the respondent’s wife and which was sold by her
allegedly for medical expenses, was her separate property.
This contention is well-founded and must be accepted.
Section 3(1) of the Act provides, to the extent material,
that no ’family unit’ shall after the commencement date,
hold land in excess of the ceiling
4
areas as determined in the manner provided by the Act. By
subsection (2) of section 3, the land held by a family unit
in excess of the ceiling area is regarded as surplus land,
liable to be dealt with in the manner prescribed by the Act.
Section 4(1) of the Act, which is of crucial importance in
this case, reads thus:
"4. Land held by family unit-(1) All land held by
each member of a family unit, whether jointly or
separately, shall for the purposes of determining the
ceiling area of the family unit, be deemed to be held
by the family unit.
Explanation-A ’Family unit’ means,-
(a) a person and his spouse (or more than one
spouse) and their minor sons and minor
unmarried daughters, if any; or
(b) where any spouse is dead, the surviving
spouse or spouses, and the minor sons and
minor unmarried daughters; or
(c) where the spouses are dead, the minor sons
and minor unmarried daughters of such
deceased spouses."
It is clear from these provisions that all land held by each
member of the family unit, whether jointly or separately, is
to be deemed to be held by the family unit, for the purpose
of determining the ceiling area which the family unit may
retain. The expression ’family unit’ is defined by the
Explanation to mean "a person and his spouse...".
The circumstance that the land held by a constituent member
of the family unit is separate property or stridhan property
is a matter of no consequence whatsoever for the purpose of
determining the ceiling area which the family unit can
retain. The respondent, his wife and their minor sons and
minor unmarried daughters, if any, are all constituent
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 4
members of the family unit and all the lands held by them
have to be pooled together for the purpose of determining
the ceiling area which is permissible to the family unit.
The nature or character of their interest in the land held
by them is irrelevant for computing the ceiling area which
the family unit may retain. The High Court was therefore in
error in directing the Tribunal to
5
inquire into the question as to whether the land which stood
in the name of the respondent’s wife and which was sold by
her was her personal or separate property. Assuming it was
so, it is still liable to be aggregated with the land held
by the respondent.
In the result, we allow the appeal, set aside the
judgment of the High Court and confirm the order of remand
passed by the Additional Commissioner, Aurangabad. The
Surplus Lands Determination Tribunal will inquire into the
limited question referred to it by the Additional
Commissioner, Aurangabad, only.
There will be no order as to costs.
H.S.K. Appeal allowed.
6