Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF BIHAR AND ANOTHER
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UMESH JHA
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/05/1961
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
BENCH:
SUBBARAO, K.
KAPUR, J.L.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1962 AIR 50 1962 SCR (2) 687
CITATOR INFO :
F 1962 SC1044 (12)
R 1965 SC 632 (11)
RF 1972 SC2097 (6)
ACT:
Land Reform-Vesting of estate in the State-Enactment em-
Powering collector to set aside anticipatory settlement-
Constitutional validity-Amendment-Effect--Bihar Land Reforms
Act, 1950 (Bihar 30 of 1950, as amended by, Bihar Land
Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1959 (Bihar 16 of 1959), S. 4(h)-
Constitution of India, Arts. 14, 19, 31, 31A.
HEADNOTE:
Section 4(h) of the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, as amended
by the Bihar Land Reforms (Amendment) Act, 1959, which
empowers the Collector to annul anticipatory transfers of
land designed to defeat the object of the Act, is protected
by Art. 31A of the Constitution although it does not by
itself provide for the acquisition by the State of any
estate or of any rights therein or for the extinguishment or
modification of any such rights and its constitutional
validity cannot be questioned under Arts. 14, 19 and 31 of
the Constitution since the Act of which it is an integral
part, is itself directed to that end and is protected by
that Article.
Thakur Raghubir Singh v. State of Ajmer, [1959] Supp. 1
S.C.R. 478, applied.
On a true construction of S. 3 of the Amending Act, the
second proviso to S. 4(h) cannot be retrospective in
operation and therefore, in respect of an order of annulment
made by the Collector before the Amending Act came into
force the previous sanction obtained from the State
Government would be sufficient, but subsequent confirmation
by the State Government would be necessary in the case of an
order made after the Amending Act came into force.
JUDGMENT:
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 425 of 1957.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated February 21, 1956,
of the Patna High Court in Misc. Judicial Case No. 53 of
1955.
B. K. P. Sinha and D. P. Singh, for the appellants.
L. K. Jha and R. C. Prasad, for the respondent.
1961. May 3. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
688
SUBBA RAO, J.-This appeal by certificate raises the question
of the construction of s. 4(h) of the Bihar Land Reforms
Act, 1950 (Act 30 of 1950) (hereinafter referred to as the
Act), as amended by the Bihar Land Reforms (Amendment) Act,
1959 (Bihar Act 16 of 1959) (hereinafter called the Amending
Act).
The facts giving rise to the appeal lie in a small compass.
Plots NOW. 383 and 1033 are tanks in village Lakshmipur
alias Tarauni in the District of Darbhanga. The respondent
claims to have taken settlement of the said plots in the
year 1943 from the landlords of Raghopur Estate of which the
said plots formed a part. After the coming into force of
the Act, the said Estate vested in the State of Bihar.
Thereafter, one Sheonandan Jha and some other villagers of
Lakshmipur filed a petition before the Collector alleging
that the alleged settlement was not true, and that in fact
the settlement was nominally effected only after January 1,
1946. The Additional Collector, Darbhanga, in exercise of
the powers conferred on him under s. 4(h) of the Act, held
that the said settlement was actually made after January 1,
1946, and that it was only a paper transaction; having
annulled the said settlement, the Additional Collector, by
his order dated January 18, 1955, called upon the respondent
to give up possession of the said plots by January 30, 1955.
Aggrieved by the said order, the respondent filed a petition
in the High Court of Judicature at Patna under Art. 226 of
the Constitution for a rule in the nature of a writ of
mandamus or any other appropriate writ cancelling the order
of the Additional Collector dated January 18, 1955, and res-
training the appellants from interfering with his possession
of the said two plots. That petition came to be decided by
a division bench of the High Court; and the learned Judges
by their order dated February 21, 1956, held that the
Additional Collector had no jurisdiction to entertain and
decide the question whether the settlement, which was prima
facie shown to have been made before January 1, 1946, was
actually made after that date. On the basis of that
finding, the order of the Additional Collector was set
aside.
689
The State of Bihar and the Additional Collector of Darbhanga
have preferred the present appeal against the said order.
Learned counsel for the State contends that s. 4(h) of the
Act has been amended with retrospective effect, that under
the amended section the Collector has power to decide
whether a transfer is made before 1946 or thereafter, and
that, therefore, the order of the High Court can no longer
be sustained.
Learned counsel for the respondent, while conceding the
retroactivity of the amendment, relies upon the second
proviso added by the amendment to s. 4(h) and contends that
under the said proviso the order of the Collector cannot
take effect nor possession taken thereunder, unless the said
order has been confirmed by the State Government and that in
the instant case there has not been any such confirmation.
Further he questions the constitutional validity of the said
section on the ground that it infringes the fundamental
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right of the respondent under Arts. 14, 19 and 31 of the
Constitution and is not saved by Art. 31A thereof.
The second contention of learned counsel for the respondent
may be disposed of first. Under Art. 31A of the
Constitution, no-law providing for the acquisition by the
State of any estate or of any rights therein or the
extinguishment or modification of any such rights shall be
deemed to be void on the ground that it is inconsistent
with, or takes away or abridges any of the rights conferred
by Art. 14, Art. 19 or Art. 31. The question is whether s.
4(h) of the Act is such a law as to be hit by Art. 31A of
the Constitution. Section 4(h) of the Act confers power on
a Collector, inter alia, to make inquiries in respect of any
transfer of any land comprised in an estate and to cancel
the same if he is satisfied that such transfer was made any
time after January 1, 1946, with the object of defeating any
provisions of the Act or causing loss to the State or
obtaining compensation thereunder. It is said that the
section ex proprio vigore does not provide for acquisition
by the State of any estate or of
690
any rights therein or for the extinguishment or modification
of any such rights and therefore, is not protected by Art.
31A of the Constitution This argument in effect disannexes
s. 4(h) of the Act from the setting in which it appears and
seeks to test its validity independently of its interaction
on the other provisions of the Act. Section 4(h) is an
integral part of the Act, and taken out of the Act it can
only operate in vacuum. Indeed, the object of the section
is to offset the anticipatory attempts made by landlords to
defeat the provisions of the Act. Suppose the Collector
cancels a transfer of land by the owner of an estate under
the said section; the said land automatically vests in the
State, with the result that the rights of the transferor and
the transferee therein are extinguished. The said result
accrues on the basis that the said land continued to be a
part of the estate at the time the Act came into force.
That apart, the section is a part of the Act designed to
extinguish or modify the rights in an estate, and the power
conferred on a Collector to cancel a transfer of any land in
an estate is only to prevent fraud and to achieve
effectively the object of the Act. This question was
directly raised and answered by this Court in Thakur
Raghubir Singh v. State of Ajmer (1). There, the
constitutional validity of the Ajmer Abolition of
Intermediaries and Land Reforms Act, 1955 (Ajmer III of
1955) and s. 8 thereof was attacked. Section 8 of the said
Act conferred a power on the Collector to cancel a lease or
contract, if he was satisfied that it was not made or
entered into in the normal course of management, but in
anticipation of legislation for the abolition of
intermediaries. Repelling the said contention, Wanchoo, J.,
speaking for the Court, observed thus:
"The provision is not an independent
provision; it is merely ancillary in character
enacted for carrying out the objects of the
Act more effectively...... Such cancellation
would sub-serve the purposes of the Act, and
the provision for it therefore be an integral
part of the Act, though ancillary to its main
object, and would thus be protected under Art.
31A(1)(a) of the Constitution."
(1) [1959] SUPP. 1 S.C.R. 478. 482.
691
The same reasoning applies to s. 4(h) of the Act, and for
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the same reasons we hold that s. 4(h) of the Act is likewise
protected by Art. 31A of the Constitution.
The first question turns upon the interpretation of the
relevant provisions of the Amending Act. To appreciate the
argument it would be convenient to read the material
provisions of the said Act.
Section 3. Amendment of section 4 of Bihar Act XXX of 1950.-
In section 4 of the said Act,-
(iv) in clause (h)-
(a) the words, figures and commas "made at
any time after the first day of January,
1946," shall be omitted and shall be deemed
always to have been omitted;
(b) after the words "if he is satisfied that
such transfer was made," the words, figures
and commas "at any time after the first day of
January, 1946," shall be inserted and shall be
deemed always to have been inserted; and
(c) the words "and with the previous
sanction of the State Government" shall be
omitted;
(v) to clause (h) as amended above, the
following provisos shall be added, namely:-
"Provided that an appeal against an order of
the Collector under this clause, if preferred
within sixty days of such order, shall lie to
the proscribed authority not below the rank of
the Collector of a district who shall dispose
of the same according to the prescribed
procedure:
Provided further that no order annulling a
transfer shall take effect nor &hall
possession be taken in perursuance of it
unless such an order has been confirmed by the
State Government."
After the said amendment the relevant part of
the section reads:
The Collector shall have power to make
inquiries in respect of any transfer including
the settlement..... if he is satisfied that
such transfer was made at any time after th
e
first day of January, 1946, with the object of
defeating any provisions of this Act or
causing loss to tile State or obtaining higher
692
compensation thereunder, the Collector may,
after giving reasonable notice to the parties
concerned to appear and be heard and with the
previous sanction of the State Government
annul such transfer, dispossess the person
claiming under it and take possession of such
property on such terms as may appear to the
Collector to be fair and equitable.
The main differences material to the present enquiry between
the section as it was before. the amendment and thereafter
are that under the unmended section it was a moot point
whether the Collector had the power to set aside a transfer,
whether it was effected before or after January 1, 1946;
whereas under the amended section such a power is clearly
and expressly conferred on him: while under the original
section, the Collector had to take the previous sanction of
the State Government before he made the order annulling a
transfer and dispossessing the person claiming under it,
under the amended section the order made by the Collector
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shall neither take effect nor can he take possession before
his order is confirmed. The short question is whether the
second proviso, added by the Amending Act, is retrospective
in operation, that is, whether the order of the Collector
made before the Amending Act, though made with the previous
sanction of the State Government, would still require for
its taking effect a subsequent confirmation by the State
Government.
Learned Counsel for the State contends that the amendments
made by s. 3(iv)(a) and (b) are retrospective, but the
amendment made by s. 3(v) of the Amending Act is
prospective. This contention appears to be sound, both in
letter as well as in spirit. The different phraseology used
in cls. (a) and (b) of subs. (iv) of s. 3 of the Amending
Act in the matter of omissions supports it. While in cl.
(a) the omission ,%hall be deemed always to have been
omitted, in cl. (c) the words mentioned therein shall only
be omitted indicating by contrast that the omission in the
former is expressly made retrospective while in the latter
it is necessarily prospective., If that be the true con-
struction, the condition of previous sanctions would
693
continue to operate in respect of the Collector’s order made
before the amendment came into force. If the proviso be
given a retrospective operation, it directly comes into
conflict with the result brought about by cl. (c) of sub-s.
(iv) of s. 3 of the Amending Act. An order with the
previous sanction of the Government may have been passed and
possession also taken by the Collector, yet a further
confirmation by the Government should be sought for to
revalidate it. This construction would not only attribute
to the Legislature redundancy but would also enable a party
to seek for restoration of the land taken possession of by
the Collector on the basis of a technicality. Even in a
case where possession has not been taken by the Collector,
the said anomaly would persist, for two sanctions would be
required. The alternative construction makes the working of
the section smooth and avoids the introduction of the said
incongruity and, therefore, we prefer to accept it,
particularly when it is consistent with the plain meaning of
the words used in the section. The result is that in
respect of an order already made by the Collector before the
Amending Act, the previous sanction obtained would suffice,
and in respect of an order made after the Amending Act, a
subsequent confirmation by the State Government is required.
Even so, it is argued by learned counsel for the respondent
that the High Court, presumably in view of its acceptance of
the respondent’s preliminary point, did not consider the
question whether the inquiry had been made by the Collector
in strict compliance with the provisions of the section, and
whether the previous sanction of the State Government was
obtained before he made the said order. In the affidavit
filed in support of the petition in the High Court there is
no specific allegation that no such inquiry has been made or
that no such sanction has been obtained. Nor did the
counsel for the appellant raise the said question in the
arguments before the High Court. In the circumstances we do
not think that this Court is justified in allowing
88
694
the respondent to raise the said question for the first time
before us. We, therefore, reject this plea.
In the result we set aside the order of the High Court and
allow the appeal. But, in the circumstances of this case,
we direct the parties to bear their own costs here and in
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the High Court.
Appeal allowed.