Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AGRICULTURAL & INDUSTRIAL SYNDICATE LTD.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT04/05/1973
BENCH:
DWIVEDI, S.N.
BENCH:
DWIVEDI, S.N.
RAY, A.N. (CJ)
CITATION:
1974 AIR 1920 1974 SCR (1) 253
1974 SCC (2) 27
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1980 SC1762 (34)
ACT:
Under Pradesh Consolidation of Holdings Act. 1953. Ss.
5(2), 49, 48A--Uttar Pradesh Imposition of Ceiling on Land
Holdings Act, 1960, Ss. 10, 12-- Objections to Statement
served under s. 10 of Ceiling Act and dispute as to plots to
be retained in the ceiling area-Initiation of Consolidation
proceedings under the Consolidation Act-Proceedings under
Ceiling Act if "in respect of declaration of rights or
interest in any land lying in tire area" within the meaning
s. 5(2) and therefore should abate.
HEADNOTE:
Section 5(2) of the Uttar Pradesh Consolidation Act enacts,
inter alia, that upon the issuance of a notification under
sub-section (2) of section 4 "every suit or proceedings in
respect of declaration of rights or interest in any land
lying in the area" "shall on an order being passed in that
behalf by the court or authority before whom such suit or
proceeding is pending, stand abated."
The appellant is the tenure holder of a large area of land.
Since the appellant did not file a statement of its holding
as required by s. 9 of the U.P. Imposition of Ceiling on
Land Holdings Act. the Prescribed Authority under the Act
served on it a statement prepared under section 10 in
respect of its holdings. The appellant filed objections to
the statement indicating the plots it wanted to retain as
its ceiling area. The Prescribed Authority did not accept
the appellant’s choice wholly. While the proceedings were
pending before the authorities under the Ceiling Act
consolidation proceedings were initiated in respect of
appellant’s lands under the Consolidation Act. A large
number of persons filed claims to the plots of the appellant
before the consolidation authorities. The appellants
thereupon filed applications before the authorities under
the Ceiling Act for stay of the proceedings under the
Ceiling Act. These were rejected. In- a writ petition the
High Court accepted the contention of the appellant that the
authorities under the Ceiling Act should have accepted
entirely the choice of plots which it wanted to retain as
the ceiling area and directed the authorities to decide the
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matter afresh. The High Court also directed that the
proceedings before the Consolidation Authorities would
remain stayed during the continuance of the proceedings
under the Ceiling Act. On the question whether the
proceedings under the Ceiling Act are "in respect of
declaration of rights or interest in any land lying in the
area," within the meaning of that expression in s. 5(2),
HELD : Allowing the appeal, that the proceedings under the
Ceiling Act were abated under s. 5(2) of the Consolidation
Act.
(i)The Prescribed Authority acting under Ss. 10(2) and 12
of the Ceiling Act is an "authority" within the meaning of
that expression in s. 5(2). [256E-F]
(ii)Section 5(2) will not apply where a tenure holder
voluntarily files a statement of his holdings under section
9 and there is no dispute about the right or interest in the
holdings, or when the tenure holder accepts the statements
sent to him by the Prescribed Authority under s. 10. But
where the tenure holder does not voluntarily file a
statement under s. 9 and claims that he is not the tenure
bolder of all or some of the plots’ included in the
statement prepared under s. 10 there ensues a dispute about
a right or interest in land and there is adversary
proceedings between him and the government. The prescribed
authority decides under s. 12 whether the tenure holder has
any right or interest in all or some of the plots, and those
plots in which he has no right or interest are excluded from
the statement served on him under s. 10. This is the very
question in issue before the Consolidation Authority under
the Consolidation Act. If the claims made to the
appellant’s plots pending under the Consolidation Act are
allowed a large area of land included in the statement under
S. 10 of the Ceiling Act Bill have to be excluded from
consideration by the prescribed Authority. Therefore. non-
stay of proceedings under the Ceiling Act would cause
hardship to the appellant. As soon as consolidation
operations are closed the proceeding under the Ceiling Act
may be resumed. [256H]
(iii)The purpose of the non obstante clause in s. 49 is
to exclude the operation of any other overlapping Act.
Section 5(2) and 49 indicate clearly
254
that the proceedings in the instant case are to be abated
under s. 5(2). Further, the absence of a provision like s.
48A in relation to the jurisdiction of the Prescribed
Authority under the Ceiling Act lends support to this
inference. [258A]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
Civil Appeal No. 2043 of 1971
Appeal by Certificate from the judgment and order dated July
27, 1970 of Allahabad High Court in Writ Petition No. 1701
of 1964-.
A. H. Khwaja in person, for the appellant.
G. N. Dikshit, S. P. Singh, R. Bana and O. P. Rana for
the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
DWIVEDI J. The appellant, the Agricultural & Industrial
Syndicate Ltd., is the tenure-bolder of a large area of land
in two villages in the district of Saharanpur in Uttar
Pradesh, Aithal Buzurg and Bukkanpur. Some of its land have
been declared as ’surplus land’ under the U.P. Imposition of
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Ceiling on Land Holdings Act (hereinafter referred to as the
Ceiling Act). It went in appeal against the order declaring
surplus land to the District Judge, but without success.
Its writ petition has been partly allowed and partly
dismissed by the Allahabad High Court. This appeal, by
special leave, is directed against the latter part of the
order of the High Court.
The scheme of the Ceiling Act is to allow a tenure-holder to
retain such of his plots as are assigned to him as his
ceiling area and to acquire the remaining plots as surplus
land. The ceiling area and the surplus land are determined
by the Prescribed Authority appointed under the Ceiling Act.
The Prescribed Authority issues a general notice calling
upon all the tenure-holders of a village to file a statement
in respect of their holdings. Under s. 9 a tenure-holder
files his statement in respect of all his holdings as well
as indicates the plot or plots which he would like to retain
as his ceiling area. Where a tenure holder fails to file a
statement or submits an incomplete or incorrect statement
under s. 9, section 10 enables the Prescribed Authority to
prepare a statement in regard to Was holdings and serve it
on him. As the appellant did not file a statement under s. 9, a
statement prepared under S. 10 was served on it. An
objection was filed by it. The objection indicated the
plots which it wanted to retain as its ceiling area. The
Prescribed Authority did not accept its choice wholly.
After the decision of the Prescribed Authority, it received
C. H. Form V issued under the provisions of the U.P. Con-
solidation of Holdings Act (hereinafter to be referred as
the Consolidation Act) with respect to the land situated in
village Bukkanpur. A review application was then moved
before the Prescribed Authority on the ground of the
pendency of consolidation operations in village Bukkanpur.
The application was rejected on September 15, 1962. While
the appeal against the order of the Prescribed Authority was
pending, village Aithal Buzurg was also brought under
consolidation operations. The appellant received C.H. Form
V issued under the Consolidation Act with respect to the
plots situate in village Aithal Buzurg. It made an
application to the appellate authority informing him of the
initiation of consolidation operations in the
255
two villages. It is said that the appellate authority took
no notice of the application and decided the appeal on
merits. The appellate authority also did not accept wholly
the choice of the appellant in regard to the plots to be
retained as its ceiling area. In the writ petition before
the High Court, the appellant pressed two points for.
consideration. First, the Prescribed Authority and the
appellate authority should have accepted entirely the choice
of the plots which it wanted to retain as the ceiling area;
second, the two authorities should have stayed the
proceedings under the Ceiling Act during consolidation
operations in the said villages. The first contention was
accepted by the High Court; the second was rejected. The
High Court quashed the order of the appellate authority and
directed it to decide the appeal in the light of its
judgment. The High Court also directed that the proceedings
before the consolidation authorities would remain stayed
until the appeal was decided by the appellate authority
under the Ceiling Act. This appeal is confined to the
second point.
The High Court has rejected the second argument for two
reasons: One, there was no merit in the argument; second,
the appellant had not raised the argument before the
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Prescribed Authority and the appellate authority.
It now transpires that while the petition was pending in the
High Court, the Consolidation Officer and the Asstt.
Settlement Officer had adjudicated upon the objections of a
large number of persons claiming interest in the plots of
the appellant. Their objections were dismissed. They filed
revisions against those orders. The revisions were pending
when the petition was heard by the High Court. After the
decision of the High Court, the State Government has issued
a notification under s. 6 of the Consolidation Act
canceling the notification bringing the aforesaid villages
under consolidation operations. But the High Court has
admitted a writ petition of the appellant against this
notification and has stayed the operation of the notifica-
tion.
The second reason assigned by the High Court for rejecting
the second argument of the appellant may be disposed offirst.
It is clear from the facts already stated that the
appellantdid raise at the proper time before the Prescribed
Authority and the appellate authority the argument that the
proceedings under the Ceiling Act should remain stayed
during consolidation operations. Accordingly, we will now
proceed to examine the correctness of the first reason
assigned by the High Court. Its plea before the appellate
authority before and after the decision in the writ
petition, in effect was this: As revisions were pending
under the Consolidation Act, its interest in the plots was
under cloud. It might or might not be held to be the
tenure-holder of all or some of the plots. If the
proceedings under the Ceiling Act were not stayed, it would
lose surplus land, and it might also lose some of the plots
included in its ceiling area as a result of an adverse
decision in the revisions under the Consolidation Act. In
plain language, its argument, in the alternative, was that
it might not be the tenure-holder of all the plots.
256
Consolidation proceedings are started in a village by virtue
of a notification issued by the State Government under s. 4
of the Consolidation Act. Section 5 specifies the
consequences which follow the issuance of a notification
under s. 4. Sub-section (1) of s. 5 states certain
consequences with which we are not concerned in this
appeal. Sub-section (2) is material for our purpose, and it
materially reads as follows:
"Upon such publication of the notification
under subsection (2) of section 4 the
following further consequences shall ensue in
the area to which the notification relates:
(a) every proceeding for the correction of
records and every suit and proceedings in
respect of declaration of rights or interest
in any land lying in the area, or for
declaration or adjudication of any other right
in regard to which proceedings can or ought to
be taken under this Act, pending before any
court or authority whether of the first
instance or of appeal, reference, or revision,
shall, on an order being passed in that behalf
by the court or authority before whom such
suit or proceeding is pending stand abated.
Provided further that on the issuance- of a
notification under sub-section (1) of section
6 in respect of the said area or part thereof,
every such order in relation to the land lying
in such area or part...... shall stand
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vacated.
(b) such abatement shall be without prejudice
to the rights of the persons affected to
agitate the right or interest in dispute in
the said suits or proceedings before the
appropriate consolidation authorities under
and in accordance with the provisions of this
Act and the rules thereunder."
The Prescribed Authority acting under s. 10(2) and 12 of the
Ceiling Act is an authority within the meaning of that
expression in s. 5(2). The proceeding before him will be a
proceeding within the meaning of the said word in s. 5(2).
But the proceeding before him is not a proceeding for the
correctness of records or for ’declaration or adjudication
of any other right in regard to which proceedings can or
ought to be taken’ under the Consolidation Act. So the
limited question to be considered is whether the proceeding
in the present case is on "in respect of declaration of
rights or interest in any land lying in the area."
When a tenure_holder voluntarily files a statement of his
holdings under s. 9, the proceeding before the Prescribed
Authority is not of this kind, because the tenure-holder
admits that the holdings are his. There is ordinarily no
dispute about any right or interest in the holdings before
the Prescribed Authority. Again, when the tenure holder
accepts the statement sent to him by the Prescribed
Authority under s. 10, there is no dispute with respect to
any right or interest in land. In these two instances
section 5(2) will not apply. But where the tenure-holder
does not voluntarily file a statement under s 9 and disputes
that he is not the tenure-holder of all or some of the plots
257
included in the statement prepared under s. 10, there ensues
a dispute about a right or interest in land. According to
s. 32 of the Ceiling Act, the State Government is a party to
every proceeding. So in such a case there is an adversary
proceeding before the Prescribed Authority between him and
the Government. The Prescribed Authority will decide under
s. 12 whether the tenure-holder has any right or interest in
all or some of the plots if the Prescribed Authority finds
that he has no right or interest in all or some of the
plots,_ he will exclude those plots from the statement
served on him under s. 10 and determine the ceiling area and
surplus land without taking into account the excluded plots.
This is the, very question which is in issue before; the
Consolidation authority under the Consolidation Act. Under
s. 10, of the Consolidation Act-the Consolidation Officer is
called upon to adjudicate upon various claims to the plots
falling within the consolidation area. Take this particular
case. Admittedly a large number of persons have filed
claims to the plots of the appellant before the
Consolidation Authorities. Their claims are pending
consideration in revisions under s. 48 of the Consolidation
Act. If their revisions are allowed, a large, area of land
included in the statement under S. 10 of the Ceiling Act
will have to be excluded from consideration by the
Prescribed Authority. It is therefore obvious that the non-
stay of proceedings under the Ceiling Act would cause great
hardship to the appellant. Counsel for, the respondent has
submitted that all those claimants before the, revising
authority under the Consolidation Act can be impleaded as
parties in the proceedings under the Ceiling Act.. Assuming
in argument that they can be so impleaded, the question
still remains whether the proceedings under the Ceiling Act
can go, on while proceedings with respect to any right or
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interest in the plots of the appellant are simultaneously
going on before the consolidation authorities. As soon as
those claimants are impleaded in the proceeding under s. 12
of the Ceiling Act, the proceeding will more pointedly
become a proceeding "in respect of declaration of right or
interest in any land" under s. 5(2) of the Consolidation
Act.
It is true that the purposes of the two Acts are different.
Under the Ceiling Act, the ceiling area and surplus land of
a tenure-holder are determined; under the Consolidation Act,
the holdings of a tenure holder are consolidated. But
neither purpose may in a large number of cases be
accomplished without first determining the right or interest
of various claimants in the plots. So the crucial question
for decision is as to whether the Prescribed Authority under
the Ceiling Act or the Consolidation authority under the
Consolidation Act has got a preemptive jurisdiction to
determine rival rights and interests in the land of the
appellant. We have already shown that the proceeding under
s. 12 of the Ceiling Act is a proceeding within the purview
of s. 5(2) of the Consolidation Act. Section 49 of the
Consolidation Act materially provides :
"Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force, the
declaration and adjudication of rights of
tenure-holders in respect of land lying in an
area, for which a notification has been issued
under subsection (2) of s. 4 .... shall be
done in accordance with the provisions of this
Act. . . . "
258
Obviously the purpose of the non-obstante clause in s. 49 is
to exclude the operation of any other overlapping Act. So
the non-obstante clause would exclude the operation of the
Ceiling Act while the Consolidation Act is in operation in a
particular area. Section 5(2) and s. 49 indicate clearly
that the proceedings in the instant case are to be abated
under s. 5(2). Section 48A of the Consolidation Act
expressly saves the jurisdiction of the Custodian of the
Evacuee properties to decide claims to the, plots of the
evacuees during consolidation operations. The absence of a
like provision in relation to the jurisdiction of the
Prescribed Authority under the Ceiling Act lends support to
our inference.
We do not think that the construction of s. 5(2) should be
influenced by the argument that if the proceedings under s.
12 of the Ceiling Act are abated, the appellant would retain
lands in its hands permanently or for a long time. As soon
as the consolidation operations are closed on the valid
issue of a notification under s. 6 or s. 52, the proceeding
under the Ceiling Act may be resumed. In any event, it is
plain from the language of ss. 5 (2), 48A and 49 of the
Consolidation Act that the proceedings under the Ceiling Act
cannot continue in the circumstances of this case as long as
the consolidation operations are going on.
As in a fresh petition the High Court has stayed the
operation of the notification under s. 6 of the
Consolidation Act, it is of no ;avail to the respondent in
this. appeal.
The appeal is allowed and the judgment of the High Court is
set aside. The writ petition filed by the appellant in the
High Court is allowed in toto. The order of the District
Judge, dated January 31, 1964, is quashed and the
proceedings under the Ceiling Act are abated under s. 5(2)
of the Consolidation Act. The proceedings under the Ceiling
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Act may be resumed after the issue of a notification under
s. 52 or after the dismissal of the writ petition
challenging the notification under s. 6. In the
circumstances of this case, there will be no order as to
costs.
S.B.W.
Appeal allowed.
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