Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHRIMANT DATTAJI RAOBAHIROJIRAO GHORPADE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHRIMANT VIJAYASINHRAO AND ANOTHER.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
29/04/1960
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
BENCH:
DAS, S.K.
SARKAR, A.K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
CITATION:
1960 AIR 1272
ACT:
Saranjam Estate-Maintenance grant to junior member-Power of
Government to resume and re-grant-Custom of lineal
primogeniture, extent and effect of-Suit challenging
Government order of resumption and re-grant-If barred-
Saranjam Rules-Bombay Revenue jurisdiction Act, 1876 (Bom.
X of 1876), s. 4.
HEADNOTE:
Upon the death of the holder in 1932, the Government of
Bombay by order dated June 7, 1932, resumed the Saranjam
estate of Gajendragad and re-granted the same to his eldest
son. By the same order the assignment of some lands out of
the estate in favour of B, a younger member of the family,
by way of maintenance was also continued. On May 14, 1940,
B died leaving his widow, A, and his undivided brother, D. A
asked the Government for permission to adopt a son but
without the permission being granted adopted V on July 10,
1941. By an order dated December 17, 1941, the Government
continued the maintenance grant (Saranjam potgi) to D.
Thereupon V filed a suit against the Government and D for
recovery of the lands on the grounds (i) that the order
of the Government dated December 17, 1941, was ultra vires,
null and void, and (ii) that by the custom of lineal
primogeniture which prevailed in the family the lands, upon
the death of B and upon the adoption of V by A, devolved
upon V in preference to D. The suit was contested, inter
alia, on the grounds: (i) that under the relevant Saranjam
Rules the interest of B came to an end on his death and was
not such as could devolve upon V despite the order dated
December 17, 1941, (ii) that the alleged family custom did
not apply to maintenance grants and (iii) that the suit was
barred under s. 4 Of the Bombay Revenue jurisdiction Act,
1876:
Held, that the plaintiff was not entitled to the lands
either under the Saranjam Rules or under the custom; further
that the suit was barred by $- 4 of the Bombay Revenue
jurisdiction Act, 1876.
103
790
The maintenance grant (potgi holding) was part of the
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Saranjam and was governed by the incidents of Saranjam
tenure and by the relevant Saranjam Rules. Saranjam grants
were granted or withheld at the will and pleasure of the
sovereign power and the grant was always subject to
interruption and revocation by resumption, temporary or
absolute. On the death of B it was open to the Government
to resume the grant and to grant it to D and this is what it
did by the order dated December 17, 1941. The taking in
adoption of the plaintiff by the widow of the deceased could
not affect the operation of the order passed by the
Government.
Daulatrao Malojiyao v. Province of Bombay (1946) 49 Bom.
L.R. 270, referred to.
Even under the custom of lineal primogeniture pleaded by the
plaintiff, D was entitled to get the properties after the
death of B. It was not pleaded that the properties once so
vested were divested by subsequent adoption by the widow.
Further it was neither pleaded nor proved that the custom
took away the right of the Government to resume the
maintenance grant and to make a fresh grant thereof.
Sub-clause 4 of the Bombay Revenue jurisdiction Act, 1876,
barred the jurisdiction of civil courts in respect of "
claims against the Government relating to lands granted or
held as Saranjam". The plaintiff asked for a finding that
the order of December 17, 1941, was null and void and did
not affect the properties in suit. Unless the order was out
of his way, the plaintiff was not entitled to claim recovery
of possession. The claim was one which fell within the
mischief of s. 4 and the suit was barred.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE, JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 37 of 1960.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated November 12, 1952,
of the Bombay High Court in First Appeal No. 492 of 1949,
arising out of the judgment and decree dated the 20th April,
1949, of the First Class Sub-Judge, Dharwar, in Special
Civil Suit No. 16 of 1943.
S. N. Andley, J. B. Dadachanji, Rameshwar Nath and P. L.
Vohra, for the appellant.
Naunit Lal, for respondent No. 1.
B. R. L. Iyengar and T. M. Sen, for respondent No. 2.
1960. April 29. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
S. K. DAS, J.-This is an appeal on a certificate given by
the High Court of Bombay, from the judgment and decree of
the said High Court dated
791
November 12, 1952, by which it reversed the decision of the
Civil Judge, First Class, at Dharwar dated-,, April 20,
1949, in Special Civil Suit No. 16 of 1943.
The material facts are these. Gajendragad in Taluk Ron in
the district of Dharwar is a Saranjam estate known as the
Gajendragad Saranjam bearing number 91 in the Saranjam list
maintained by Government. Within that estate lay village
Dindur and survey field No. 302 of Unachgeri, which are the
properties in suit. One Bhujangarao Daulatrao Ghorpade was
the holder of the Saranjam estate at the relevant time. In
1932 the Saranjam was resumed and re-granted to the said
Bhunjangarao by Resolution No. 8969 dated June 7, 1932, of
the Government of Bombay in the Political Department. This
Resolution said:
" The Governor in Council is pleased to direct that the
Gajendragad Saranjam should be formally resumed and re-
granted to Bhujangarao Daulatrao Ghorpade, the eldest son of
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the deceased Saranjamdar Daulatrao Bhujangarao Ghorpade, and
that it should be entered in his sole name in the accounts
of the Collector of Dharwar with effect from the date of the
death of the last holder. The Collector should take steps
to place the Saranjamdar in possession of the villages of
the Saranjam estate which were in possession of the deceased
Saranjamdar.
The Governor in Council agrees with the Commissioner,
Southern Division, that the assignments held by the
Bhaubands as potgi holders should be continued to them as at
present."
One of the younger branches of the Ghorpade family was
Babasaheb Bahirojirao Ghorpade, to be referred to
hereinafter as Babasaheb. He held by way of maintenance (as
potgi holder) the aforesaid village of Dindur and survey
field No. 302 of Unachgeri. He had an undivided brother
called Dattojirao, who was defendant No. 2 in the suit and
is appellant before us. In this judgment we shall call him
the appellant. Babasaheb died on May 14, 1940. On his
death he left a widow named Abayabai and the appellant, his
undivided brother. On July 10, 1941, Abayabai adopted
Vijayasinhrao as a, son to her deceased husband.
Vijayasinha was the plaintiff who brought the suit’
792
and is now the principal respondent before us. It will be
convenient if we call him the plaintiff-respondent, and
state here that he was the natural son of Bhujaugarao’s
younger brother, another Dattajirao to be distinguished from
the appellant who also bears the same name. On Babasaheb’s
death Abayabai asked for sanction of Government to her
taking a boy in adoption; this application was opposed by
the appellant. On December 17, 1941, the Government of
Bombay passed a Resolution in the following terms:
" 1. Government is pleased to direct that the Saranjam potgi
holding of village Dindur and Survey No. 302 of Unacbgeri,
which were assigned for maintenance to the deceased
potgidar, Mr. Babasaheb Bahirajirao Ghorpade, at the time of
the re-grant of the Gajendragad Saranjam, should be
continued to his undivided brother, Mr. Dattajirao
Babirojirao Ghorpade.
2.Government is also pleased to direct, under Rule 7 of the
Saranjam Rules, that the new potgidar, Mr. Dattajirao
Bahirojirao Gborpade, should give to Bai Abaibai, widow of
the deceased Potgidar, Mr. Babasaheb Bahirojirao Ghorpade,
an annual maintenance allowance of Rs. 300 for her life.
3.These orders should take effect from the 14th May, 1940,
i.e., the date on which the deceased potgidar, Babasaheb
Bahirojirao Ghorpade, died.
4.The Commissioner S. D. should be requested to communicate
these orders to Bai Abaibai, widow of the late potgidar,
with reference to her petitions addressed to him and also to
the Rayats of Dindur, with reference to their petition,
dated the 12th May, 1941. The orders should also be
communicated to the present Saranjamdar of Gajendragad."
On February 8, 1943, the plaintiff-respondent brought the
suit against the Province of Bombay as defendant No. 1, the
appellant as defendant No. 2 and Abayabai as defendant No.
3. The suit was contested by the Province of Bombay (now
substituted by the State of Bombay) and the appellant.
Abayabai supported the case of the plaintiff-respondent, but
she died during. the Pendency of the suit.
793
The claim of the plaintiff-respondent was that on his
adoption the estate of his deceased adoptive father devolved
on him by the, rule of lineal primogeniture in preference to
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the appellant. The main plea of the plaintiff-respondent
was stated in paragraph 6 of the plaint, which read as
follows:
" 6. The Government Resolution passed by defendant No. 1 in
1941 is ultra vires and null and void for the following
reasons:
(a)Defendant No. 1 made a re-grant of the Saranjam estate to
Shrimant Sardar Bhujaragarao Ghorpade in 1932 and therein
the suit properties were, according to defendant No. 1,
continued to the adoptive father of plaintiff Under the
Saranjam rules no occasion has arisen for interference by
Government at this stage. The re-grant made by Government
would in any case be effective during the life-time of the
grantee, viz., Shrimant Sardar Bhujangarao Ghorpade.
Further the said Shrimant Sardar Bhujangarao Ghorpade was
not consulted by defendant No. 1 before the said Government
Resolution.
(b)By the custom of the family to which the family belongs,
the estate of a deceased person devolves by the rule of
lineal primogeniture. Hence after the death of plaintiff’s
adoptive father and the adoption of plaintiff himself, all
the estate vested in plaintiff’s adoptive father has
devolved on the plaintiff in preference to defendant No. 2.
The action of defendant No. 1 in ignoring this rule of
succession prevalent in the family is ultra vires and null
and void."
On the aforesaid pleas, the plaintiff-respondent prayed for
(a) recovery of possession of properties in suit from the
appellant, (b) mesne profits, and (c) costs.
On behalf of the Province of Bombay several pleas by way of
defence were taken. The main pleas were (1) assuming that
the plaintiff-respondent was validly adopted, he had
nevertheless no legal claim to the properties in suit
because under the relevant Saranjam Rules the interest of
Babasabeb came to an end on his death and was not of such a
nature as would
794
devolve on the plaintiff-respondent despite the Government
Resolution dated December 17, 1941, (2) that the alleged
family custom did not apply to maintenance grants, and (3)
that, in any event, the suit was barred under s. 4 of the
Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876. The appellant
besides supporting the aforesaid pleas raised the additional
pleas that there was no valid adoption of the plaintiff-
respondent and Abayabai was expressly prohibited by her
husband from adopting a son.
On these pleadings several issues were framed. The suit was
originally dismissed on a preliminary ground, namely, that
the plaint did not disclose any cause of action. The
learned Civil Judge apparently took the view that the
properties in suit were subject to the Saranjam Rules and on
examining those rules, he came to the conclusion that as the
plaintiff-respondent on his adoption became a nephew of the
appellant and in that sense was claiming maintenance from
the latter, it was necessary for him to have alleged the
necessary circumstances under which certain members of a
Saranjam Family are entitled to claim maintenance under Rule
7 of the said Rules and as those circumstances were not
pleaded by the plaintiff-respondent, the plaint disclosed no
cause of action. The High Court rightly pointed out that
the plaintiff-respondent did not make a claim for
maintenance under Rule 7 of the Saranjam Rules, but claimed
that the properties in suit devolved on him by reason of his
adoption and the custom of lineal primogeniture. Therefore,
the High Court held that the claim of the plaintiff-
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respondent was much more fundamental than a mere claim of
maintenance, and the learned Civil Judge had misdirected
himself as to the true scope of the suit. Accordingly, the
High Court set aside the decree of dismissal and directed
the suit to be tried on all the issues.
After this direction the learned Civil Judge tried all the
issues. Issues 1 and 2 related to the question of adoption,
namely, (1) whether the ceremony of adoption was properly
proved and (2) whether Babasaheb during his life-time had
prohibited his wife from making an adoption. On the first
issue the learned
795
Civil Judge found in favour of the plaintiff-respondent and
on the second against him. The High Court affirmed the
finding on the first issue, and on a careful and detailed
examination of the evidence held on the second issue that
the learned Civil Judge was wrong in holding that the
adoption was invalid by reason of the alleged prohibition of
Babasaheb. The High Court held that there was no such
prohibition, and the adoption was valid. We do not think
that this finding of the High Court has been or can be
successfully assailed before us. Therefore, we have
proceeded in this appeal on the basis that the plaintiff
respondent was validly adopted by Abayabai on July 10, 1941.
We go now to a consideration of those issues which are
material for a decision of this appeal. They are: Issue No.
3--Does plaintiff prove his title to the suit property ?
Issue No. 4--Is it proved that the Government Resolution (D.
G.) No. 8969 of December 17, 1941, is ultra vires and null
and void as alleged in the plaint ?
Issue No. 5-Is the suit barred under section 4 of the
Revenue Jurisdiction Act ?
Issue No. 7-Is the alleged custom set up in para. 6(b) of
the plaint proved ?
On all these issues the learned Civil Judge found against
the plaintiff-respondent, and held that the latter was not
entitled to recover possession Of the properties in suit,
that he had failed to prove the custom pleaded in paragraph
6(b) of the plaint, that the Government Resolution of
December 17,1941, was not ultra vires, and that the suit
itself was barred under s. 4 of the Bombay Revenue
Jurisdiction Act, 1876. The High Court reversed the
decision of the learned Civil Judge on all the aforesaid
issues, and held that as the properties in suit were given
to the junior branch of Babasaheb for its maintenance and
were impartible and governed by the rule of lineal
primogeniture, they devolved on the appellant after
Babasaheb’s death ; but as soon as Babasaheb’s widow
796
made a valid adoption, the properties were divested and
inasmuch as the plaintiff-respondent became the eldest
member of the senior branch of Babasaheb’s family, he became
entitled thereto as a result of the combined effect of the
family custom and ordinary Hindu law. The High Court said
that looked at from this point of view, no question arose of
the validity of the Government Resolution dated December 17,
1941, and no relief for possession having been claimed
against Government, the suit was not barred under s. 4 of
the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876.
On behalf of the appellant, it has been very strenuously
argued that the High Court was in error in holding that the
properties in suit which are part of a Saranjam, vested in
the appellant on ’the death of Babasaheb and were then
divested on the adoption of the plaintiff-respondent; it is
contended that such a conclusion is inconsistent with the
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nature of a Saranjam tenure and furthermore, the properties
in suit having vested in the appellant by reason of the re-
grant dated December 17, 1941, they could not be divested by
the adoption made on July 10, 1941. Nor does it follow, it
is contended, from the custom pleaded in paragraph 6(b) of
the plaint, apart from the question whether even that custom
has been proved or not, that the properties in suit having
once vested in the appellant will be divested on a valid
adoption. Secondly, it has been contended that the High
Court was also in error in holding that there was no claim
against Government within the meaning of the fourth sub-cl.
of s. 4(a) of the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876.
The argument before us has been that there was such a claim,
and no Civil Court had jurisdiction to determine it.
We are satisfied that these arguments are correct and should
be accepted. The claim of the plaintiff respondent that the
properties in suit devolved on him on his adoption may be
examined either from the point of view of the Saranjam Rules
or the custom which he pleaded in paragraph 6(b) of the
plaint. Let us examine the claim first from the point of
view of the Saraniam Rules assuming here that they apply,
797
as far as practicable, to maintenance grants (potgis) within
the Saranjam. In the Resolution of June 7, 1932, quoted
earlier, the Government of Bombay treated the potgi holders
as being within the Saranjam and made provision for them.
The Resolution of December 17, 1941, also proceeded on that
footing. Two earlier Resolutions, one of 1891 (Ex. 100) and
the other of 1936 (Ex. 101), also treated the whole of
Gajendragad and also parts thereof as a Saranjam. Babasaheb
in his lifetime wanted to surrender the grant in his favour
to the Saranjamdar, but Government refused to accept such
relinquishment. Even Abayabai asked for permission of
Government to take a boy in adoption, which permission she
did not obtain. All this shows that the potgi holding was
part of the Saranjam and was treated as such by all the
parties concerned.
What is a Saranjam ? The word " Saranjam literally means
apparatus, provisions or materials. In his Glossary, Wilson
defines Saranjam as temporary assignments of revenue from
villages or lands for support of troops or for personal
service usually for the lifetime of the grantees. Dr. G. D.
Patel in his book on " The Indian Land Problem and
Legislation has said:
" According to the account given by Col. Etheridge in his
preface to the Saranjam List, it was the practice of the
former Governments, both the Muslims and the Marathas, to
maintain a species of feudal aristocracy for the State
purposes by temporary assignments of revenue either for the
support of the troops or personal service, the maintenance
of official dignity or for other specific reasons. The
holders of such lands were entrusted at the time with the
necessary powers for enabling them to collect and
appropriate the revenue and to administer the general
management of the lands. Under the Muslim rule, such
holdings were called Jahagirs and under the Maratha rule,
they came to be called Saranjam. However, this distinction
between these tenures ceased to exist during the Maratha
period. At the time of the introduction of the British
rule,
104
798
the difference between a Jahagir and a Saranjam ceased to
exist, to all intents and purposes. The two terms became
convertible and all such grants came to be known by the
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general term "saranjam". Apart from the Saranjam grants,
which were found only in the Deccan, there were other grants
of a political nature found scattered over the whole State.
Their origins did not materially differ from those of the
Saranjam with the result that the British treated them under
the same rules called the Saranjam Rules ".
The Saranjam Rules were made in exercise of the powers
referred to in r. 10 of Schedule B of Act Xi of 1852 and of
the second sub-cl. to el. 3 of s. 2 of Bombay Act VII of
1863. We may here reproduce some of these Rules:
" Rule I-Saranjams shall be ordinarily continued in
accordance with the decision already passed or which may
hereafter be passed by Provincial Government in each case.
Rule 2-A Saranjam which has been decided to be hereditarily
continuable shall ordinarily descend to the eldest male
representative in the order of primogeniture, of the senior
branch of the family descended from the First British
grantee or any of his brothers who were undivided in
interest. But Provincial Government reserve to themselves
the rights for sufficient reasons to direct the continuance
of the Saranjam to any other member of the said family, or
as an act of grace, to a person adopted into the same family
with the sanction of Provincial Government. When a saranjam
is thus continued to an adopted son, he shall be liable to
pay to Provincial Government a nazarana not exceeding one
year’s value of the saranjam, and it shall be levied from
him in such instalments as Provincial Government may in each
case direct.
Rule 5-Every saranjam shall be held as a life estate. It
shall be formally resumed on the death of the holder, and in
cases in which it is capable of further continuance, it
shall be made over to the next holder as a, fresh grant from
Provincial
799
Government, unencumbered by any debts or charges save such
as may be specially imposed by Provincial Government itself
Rule 7-Every saranjamdar shall be responsible for making a
suitable provision for the maintenance of the widow or
widows of the preceding saranjamdar, his own brothers, or
any other member of his family who, having a valid claim
arising from infancy, mental or physical deformity rendering
such member incapable of earning a livelihood, may be deemed
deserving of support at his hands. When this obligation is
not fulfilled by any saranjamdar, Provincial Government may
direct him to make suitable provision for such person and
may fix the amount, which he shall pay in each instance;
provided that no one who has independent means of his own,
or is, in the opinion of Provincial Government, otherwise
sufficiently provided for, shall be entitled to maintenance
from the Saranjamdar.
Rule 8-Every order passed by Provincial Government under the
above rule for the grant of maintenance by a Saranjamdar
shall hold good’ during his life only
The true nature of a Saranjam tenure was considered by a
Full Bench of the Bombay High Court in Daulatrao Malojirao
v. Province of Bombay(1) where their Lordships after
referring to the earlier decisions in Shekh Sultan Sani v.
Shekh Ajmodin (2) and Raghojirao v. Laxmanrao(3) observed:
" An examination of the authorities, makes it clear that the
whole structure of a Saranjam tenure is founded in the
sovereign right, which can only change by conquest or by
treaty. So founded, jagirs and Saranjams, with the feudal
incidents connected with them, are granted or withheld at
the will and pleasure of the sovereign power, and, if
granted, the fixity of tenure is always subject to
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interruption and revocation by resumption, be it temporary
or absolute in character. No incident normally applicable
(1) (1946) 49 Bom. L.R. 270. (2) (1892) L.R. 20 I.A. 50.
(3) (1912) 14 Bom. L.R. 1226.
800
to private rights between subject and subject can fetter or
disturb the sovereign will ".
It seems to us manifestly clear that the Saranjam Rules
furnish no basis for the claim of the plaintiff respondent.
Abayabai asked for sanction to her taking a boy in adoption.
No such sanction was given. On the death of Babasaheb, it
was open to Government to resume the grant, and by its
Resolution of December 17, 1941, Government directed that
the Saranjam potgi holding of village Dindur and Survey No.
302 of Unachgeri should be continued to the appellant. This
really amounted to a resumption and fresh grant and we do
not agree with the High Court that the order passed amounted
to no more than recognising the legal position according to
the rule of succession and stood on the same footing as any
order of ordinary mutation. The High Court has emphasised
the use of the word " continued " in the Resolution dated
December 17, 1941, and has contrasted that Resolution with
the earlier Resolution dated June 7, 1932, which was clearly
a Resolution giving effect to a resumption and regrant of
the Gajendragad Saranjam. It may, however, be pointed out
that in paragraph 2 of the earlier Resolution, Government
used the same word " continued " in connection with the
maintenance grants, namely, potgi holdings within a
Saranjam. Nothing, therefore, turns upon the use of the
word " continued " and if the ]Resolution dated December 17,
1941, is read as a whole it is clear that the potgi of
village Dindur and Survey field No. 302 of Unachgeri was
granted to the present appellant. It was open to Government
to pass such an order, and we see no reasons to hold that it
was null and void. Indeed, the High Court did not say that
it was an invalid order; on the contrary, it said that it
was a good order and operated with effect from the death of
Babasaheb. But it said erroneously in our opinion, that by
reason of the subsequent event of adoption, the order
ceased, for all practical purposes, to have any effect from
that event. It is well to remember that the adoption took
place on July 10, 1941, and the Resolution was passed on
December 17,
801
1941, though it took effect retrospectively from the date of
death of Babasaheb. We see no reasons why S, a valid order
made by Government will cease to have any effect because of
an adoption made by Abayabai without sanction of Government.
To hold that the Government Order ceased to have any effect
by reason of the act of a private party will be to go
against the very nature of a Saranjam tenure.
Let us now examine the claim of the plaintiff respondent
from the point of view of the custom pleaded in paragraph
6(b) of the plaint. The custom pleaded was the rule of
lineal primogeniture. In its written statement Government
said:
" The family custom alleged in clause (b) is not admitted,
and it is denied that such a custom can apply in respect of
maintenance grants. Under Rule 7 of the Saranjam Rules,
which merely embody the customary law relating to Saranjams,
Government is given absolute discretion to determine whether
or not to make an order and what provision to make and in
whose favour
The appellant said:
" The contents of para. 6(b) of the plaint are not correct.
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The custom of descent by the rule of primogeniture is
denied. This defendant has become the owner by
survivorship, after the death of Babasaheb ".
The learned Civil Judge found that the custom pleaded in
paragraph 6(b) of the plaint was not proved. The High Court
has not referred to any evidence on which the custom could
be said to have been proved, but observed that " it is
common ground that the properties which had been assigned to
this branch for its maintenance is impartable and goes by
primogeniture". Even if we assume that the High Court is
right in its observation, though in face of the denial in
the two written statements it is difficult to see how this
could be common ground between the parties, we fail to
appreciate how the assumption helps the plaintiff-
respondent. On the operation of the rule of lineal
primogeniture after the death of Babasaheb, the appellant
became entitled to and got the
802
properties. It was not pleaded in the plaint that the
properties once vested by the customary rule of lineal
primogeniture were divested on subsequent adoption, by the
widow. No such plea was specifically taken, but the High
Court relied on the concession made by learned advocate for
the appellant that under ordinary Hindu law the properties
which were vested in the appellant were divested on a
subsequent valid adoption by the widow. We consider it
unnecessary to go into the vexed question of divesting of an
estate on a subsequent valid adoption by the widow. It is
enough to point out that the plaint disclosed no such case;
no such issue was raised and it was not open to the
plaintiff-respondent to make out a new case for the first
time in appeal. The plaintiff-respondent set up a family
custom of lineal primogeniture different from the ordinary
law of inheritance; it was incumbent on him to allege and
prove the custom on which he relied and to show its precise
extent and how far it prevailed over ordinary Hindu law. In
our opinion, he failed to plead or prove any family custom
by which the properties devolved on him. Moreover, in order
to succeed the plaintiff respondent must further establish
that the custom was such as would bind the Government. The
appellant and the Government never conceded that the custom
of lineal primogeniture, if it prevailed in the family, took
away the right of Government to resume the maintenance grant
which was part of a Saranjam and make a fresh grant thereof
in accordance with the Saranjam Rules.
Now, as to s. 4 of the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act,
1876. The section, so far as it is relevant for our
purpose, says:-
" S. 4.-Subject to the exceptions hereinafter appearing, no
Civil Court shall exercise jurisdiction as to any of the
following matters:
(a)claims against the Government relating to any property
appertaining to the office of any hereditary officer
appointed or recognised under Bombay Act no. III of 1874 or
any other law for the time being in force, or of any other
village-officer or servant, or
803
claims to perform the duties of any such officer or servant,
or in respect of any injury caused by,, exclusion from such
office or service, or
suits to set aside or avoid any order under the same Act or
any other law relating to the same subject for the time
being in force passed by the State Government or any officer
duly authorized in that behalf, or
claims against the Government relating to lands held under
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treaty, or to lands granted or held as Saranjam, or on other
political tenure, or to lands declared by the Provincial
Government or any officer duly authorized in that behalf to
be held for service".
In Mallappa alias Annasaheb Basvantrao Desai Nadgouda v.
Tukko Narshimha Mutalik Desai and Others (1) it was pointed
out that in the section a distinction has been made between
claims and suits. The subclause we are concerned with is
the fourth sub-clause which relates inter alia to " claims
against the Government relating to lands granted or held as
Saranjam ". The High Court has taken the view that no claim
was made against Government in the present case. We are
unable to agree. In express terms, the plaintiff respondent
asked for a finding that the Government Resolution dated
December 17, 1941, was null and void and did not affect the
properties in suit because the Government had either no
authority to make such an order or no occasion to do so. He
asked for possession of those properties in spite of the
orders of Government. In these circumstances we must hold
that Government was more than a purely formal party, and a
claim was made against it in respect of the orders contained
in its Resolution dated December 17, 1941. Unless the
Resolution is out of his way, the plaintiff-respondent is
not entitled to claim recovery of possession from the
appellant with mesne profits, etc. The Civil Court has no
jurisdiction to determine any claim against the Government
in the matter of the Resolution of December 17, 1941, relat-
ing to Saranjam lands, and the suit was barred under
s. 4 of the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876.
(1) I.L.R. [1937] Bom. 464.
804
We accordingly allow this appeal, set aside the judgment and
decree of the High Court dated November 12, 1952, and
restore that of the learned Civil Judge dated April 20,
1949. The appellant will be entitled to his costs
throughout from the plaintiff-respondent.
Appeal allowed.