12 September 1986
Supreme Court
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C.G. GHANSHAMDAS & ORS. Vs COLLECTOR OF MADRAS

Bench: VENKATARAMIAH,E.S. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 3040 of 1986


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PETITIONER: C.G. GHANSHAMDAS & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: COLLECTOR OF MADRAS

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/09/1986

BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) BENCH: VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J) KHALID, V. (J)

CITATION:  1987 AIR  180            1986 SCR  (3) 754  1986 SCC  (4) 305        JT 1986   432  1986 SCALE  (2)414

ACT:      Tamil Nadu Court Fees & Suits Valuation Act, 1955, s.51 and Article  3(iii) (A) (1) (a) of Schedule 11-Memorandum of Appeal  u/s.  11  of  Requisitioning  Act,  1952-Court  fee- Computation and payment of.      Requisition &  Acquisition of  Immovable Property  Act, 1952, ss. 3, 5,  7-Requisition and  acquisition of Property- Distinction between.      Words & Phrases - ’order’ - Meaning of.

HEADNOTE:      The property  of the  appellants  continued  to  remain under requisition  by virtue  of the several amendments made to the  Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable Property Act 1952  and the  compensation payable in respect of it was required to  be revised  for a period of 5 years from 7.3.75 to 6.3.1980.  As there  was no agreement between the parties on the question of compensation payable for the said period, the said  question was  referred to an arbitrator under s. 8 of the  Requisitioning Act  to  determine  the  compensation payable. The  arbitrator by his award fixed the compensation payable for  the property  at Rs.21,000 per month as against the claim of Rs.77,270 per month made by the appellants.      Aggrieved  by   the  decision  of  the  arbitrator  the appellants filed  an appeal  before the High Court of Madras under s.11  of the  Requisitioning Act.  The Registry of the High Court raised an objection regarding the amount of court fee paid  on the memorandum of appeal. The matter was placed before the Division Bench of the High Court and it held that the  appellants   were  liable  to  pay  court  fee  on  the memorandum of  appeal under  s. 51  of the  Tamil Nadu Court Fees and  Suits Valuation  Act 1955  (for short, the Act) ad valorem on  the amount  of compensation which was in dispute in the appeal.      In appeal  to this Court, the appellants contended that the amount 755 of court  fee payable  on a memorandum of appeal filed under s. 11  of the  Requisitioning Act  should not be computed in accordance with  s. 51  of the  Act as a fixed court fee was payable under the residuary provision, that is, Art. 3 (iii)

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(A) (1)  (a) of  Schedule II  of the Act. In support of this contention the  appellants raised two points; (i) that since there is  no transfer  of title  to the  property  which  is requisitioned from  its owner  to the  Government, the  said transaction is not an acquisition and hence those provisions of the  Requisitioning  Act  under  which  the  property  is requisitioned  do   not  constitute   a  law  providing  for acquisition of  property and  therefore, s.  51 of  the  Act would not  be applicable  because it relates only to appeals filed against  an order  relating to  compensation under any Act for the time being in force for the acquisition of land; and (ii) that the award made by the arbitrator under s. 8 of the Requisitioning  Act not  being an  ’order’ as defined in the Code  of Civil  Procedure 1908, the appellants cannot be called upon to pay court fee in accordance with s. 51 of the Act since  s. 51 refers to court fee payable on a memorandum of appeal against an ’order’.      Dismissing the appeal, ^      HELD: 1.  The appeal  before the High Court filed under s. 11  of the  Requisitioning Act falls squarely under s. 51 of the  Act. Therefore,  the court  fee has to be paid on ad valorem basis  as provided  in Art.  1 of  Schedule I to the Act. It  follows that  the residuary  Article, that is, Art. 3(iii) (A)  (1) (a)  of  Schedule  II  to  the  Act  is  not attracted. [769E-F]      2(i) Section  3 of  the Act  states  that  in  the  Act ’unless  the  context  otherwise  requires’  the  words  and expressions defined  in that section shall carry the meaning given to them in various clauses in that section. It      is relevant to  note that in section 51 of the Act which arises for consideration  the  word  ’order’  does  not  appear  in isolation. The section states that the fee payable under the Act on  a memorandum  of appeal against an order relating to compensation in  any Act for the time being in force for the acquisition  of   property  for  public  purposes  shall  be computed on  the difference  between the  amount awarded and the amount  claimed by  the appellants. The ’order’ referred to in  s. Sl  of the  Act need  not be an ’order’ of a civil court as  defined in s. 2(14) of the Code of Civil Procedure but should  be an ’order’ relating to compensation under any Act for  the time  being in  force for  the  acquisition  of property for public purposes. [768G-H; 769A-C]      2(ii) There  is no  doubt that  the award passed by the Arbitrator 756 under the  Requisitioning Act  is a  formal expression  of a decision made  by a  competent authority which is binding on the parties  and it relates to compensation payable under an Act for  the time  being in  force for  the  acquisition  of property for the public purposes. Therefore, even though the expression ’order’  simpliciter has  to be understood in the sense in  which that  expression is  defined in s. 2 (14) of the Code of Civil Procedure, the word ’order’ found in s. 51 of the  Act bas  to be read differently having regard to the words which qualify that expression in that section, namely, ’relating to  compensation under  any Act for the time being in force  for the acquisition of properties’. The said order need not be an order of a civil court only. It can be of any statutory authority.  But it must determine compensation for a property  acquired under  a law of acquisition of property for public  purpose. In  the instant  case, the  award  made under s.  8 of the Requisitioning Act satisfies these tests. [769C-E]      Sahadu  Gangaram  Bhagade  v.  Spl.  Deputy  Collector,

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Ahmedanagar & Anr., [1971] 1 S.C.R. 146, relied upon.      Y.  Venkanna  Choudhary  v.  Government  of  India,  by Military Estates officer, Madras & Anr., AIR 1976 Madras 41, Laxshminarayana Rao  & Ors.  v. Revenue  Divisional officer, Kakinada  &   Ors.,  A.I.R.  1968  Andhra  Pradesh  348,  M. Ramachandran &  Ors. v.  State of  Madras represented by the Collector,   Coimbatore,   87   Law   Weekly   Madras   791, Balakrishnan Nambiyar  & Ors.  v. Kanakathidathil Madhavan & Ors., A.I.R.  1979 Kerala  40 & Ghouse Saheb v. Sharifa Bi & Ors., A.l.R. 1977 Karnataka 181, approved.      Hirji Virji  Jangbari v.  Government of  Bombay, A.I.R. 1945, Bombay  348, Kanwar  Jagat Bahadur Singh v. The Punjab State,  Crown’s   case,  A.l.R.  1957  Punjab  32  Crown  v. Chandrabhanlal and  Ors., AIR.  1957 Nagpur 8 and Mangal Sen v. Union of Indian A.l.R., 1970 Delhi 44, disapproved.      3(i) The expression ’acquisition’ is not defined in the Act. Sections 3 to 6 of the Requisitioning Act deal with the powers of  the Government  in respect  of requisitioning  of property and  section 7  of that  Act confers  power on  the Government  to   acquire   a   property   which   has   been requisitioned. Whenever  a property  is requisitioned by the competent authority it is entitled to call upon the owner or any other person who may be in possession of the property to surrender possession thereof to the Government. Section 5 of the  Requisitioning   Act  provides   that  all   properties requisitioned under section 3 shall be used 757 for such  purposes as  may be  mentioned in  the  notice  of requisition. Such  requisitioned property  may  be  released from requisitioning  under section  6. The title to property requisitioned under  the Requisition  Act continues  to rest with the  owner, the  Government being  entitled to only the possession of such property. [761 B-E]      3(ii) Not  only is  a right  to possession  a right  of property, but  where the  subject of proprietary rights is a tangible thing,  it is the most characteristic and essential of those  rights. Possession,  it is said, is nine points in law. An owner without possession has only a mere shell while the person  in possession  enjoys the property in many ways. In this  situation, it is difficult to say that there cannot be deprivation  of property  without  deprivation  of  title also. Deprivation  of possession for an indefinite period is acquisition of  property during that period though the title may continue  to rest  with  the  owner.  That  is  why  the requisitioning law  also had  to satisfy  Art. 19(1) (f) and Art.  31   of  the   Constitution  when  they  were  in  the Constitution. [764B-D]      3(iii)   The    Supreme   Court    has   treated   both requisitioning of  property and  acquisition of  property as meaning the  acquisition of  property in the large sense and there is no reason to depart from the views expressed by the two Constitution  Benches of this Court in the State of West Bengal v.  Subodh Gopal  Bose and  Ors,. 1954 S.C.R. 587 and Dwarkadas Shrinivas  of Bombay  v. The  Sholapur Spinning  & Weaving Co. Ltd. and Ors., [1954] S.C.R. 674.      The Minister  of State  for the  Army  v.  Dalziel,  68 C.L.R. 261, referred to.

JUDGMENT:      CIVIL APPELLATE  JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 3040 of 1986      From the  Judgment and  order dated  24.6.1985  of  the Madras High Court in S.R.No. 106081 of 1984.

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    Soli J.  Sorabjee, Joel  Peres and  D.N. Mishra for the Appellants.      Abdul Khader,  T.V. Ratnam and A.V. Rangam for the Res- pondent.      The Judgment of the Court was delivered by      VENKATARAMIAH, J. The short question which arises for 758 consideration in this appeal is whether under the Tamil Nadu Court-Fees  and   Suits  Valuation  Act,  1955  (hereinafter referred to  as ’the  Act’)  the  court  fee  payable  on  a memorandum  of   appeal  filed   under  section  11  of  the Requisitioning and  Acquisition of  Immovable Property  Act, 1952 (Act  30 of  1952) (hereinafter  referred  to  as  ’the Requisitioning Act’)  should be  computed in accordance with section 51  of the Act or a fixed court fee is payable under the residuary  provision that is Article 3 (iii) (A) (1) (a) of Schedule II to the Act.      The appellants  claim to  be the  co-owners of the land and building  bearing Door  No. 745 E.V.R. Periyar High Road (Poonamallee High  Road), Kilpauk,  Madras. The  land  along with  the   building   standing   thereon   was   originally requisitioned under the provisions of the Requisitioning Act for  the  purpose  of  accommodating  the  NCC  Headquarters through the  Collector of  Madras. The  above  property  was taken possession  of  on  9.2.1963.  In  order  to  fix  the compensation for  the period  of five  years beginning  from 9.6. 1963  to 20.2.1967,  an Arbitrator  was appointed.  The Arbitrator  by   his  award   dated   5.1.1970   fixed   the compensation at  Rs.6000 per  month and the compensation was being paid accordingly.      At this  stage it  is necessary to refer to the history of the  Requisitioning Act.  The power to requisition and to acquire immovable  property for  a public  purpose was first provided in  the Defence of India Act, 1939 which expired on the 30th  September, 1946.  It was, however, found necessary to retain  some of the properties for a longer period in the occupation of  the Government. Therefore, it was provided in the Requisitioned  Land (Continuance  of Powers)  Act,  1947 that any  property which  had been  requisitioned under  the Defence of  India Act,  1939 would  continue to remain under requisition.   Subsequently,    the    Requisitioning    and Acquisition of  Immovable Property  Act, 1952  that  is  the Requisitioning Act  with which we are concerned in this case was passed  in  the  year  1952  to  confer  powers  on  the Government in  this regard. The Act was initially to operate for a period of six years but its duration was extended from time  to   time.  The   Requisitioning  and  Acquisition  of Immovable  Property   (Amendment)   Act,   1970   made   the Requisitioning Act  a permanent  measure but  restricted the period for  which a requisitioned property could be retained under requisition  to three  years from  the commencement of the above  said Amendment  Act in  the  case  of  properties requisitioned before  such commencement  and in  the case of any other  property requisitioned after such commencement to three years from the date on which possession of such 759 property was  surrendered or  delivered to  or taken  by the competent authority  under section  4 of  the Requisitioning Act. Thus  properties requisitioned  before the commencement of  the   said  Amendment   Act  could   be  retained  under requisition up  to the  10th March  1973. A  large number of properties requisitioned  under the Requisitioning Act could not be  released by the said date and the maximum period for which properties  could be  kept under continued requisition was extended  for a  further period  of  two  years  by  the

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Requisitioning   and    Acquisition    immovable    Property (Amendment) Act,  1973. A number of properties requisitioned under the Requisitioning Act were still in possession of the Ministry of Defence and also some other Ministries. Although the Government  was expeditiously implementing the policy of acquiring or de-requisitioning the requisitioned properties, a large  number of  them were  expected to  be needed by the Government even  after  the  10th  March,  1975  for  public purposes. On  many of  the properties valuable constructions of a permanent nature connected with the national defence or the conduct of military operations or other important public purposes had  been put  up. Due  to financial stringency, it was not possible either to acquire the properties or take up large scale  construction programmes in the immediate future to  enable  the  Government  to  release  the  requisitioned properties. It  was, therefore,  found necessary to keep the properties under  the continued  requisition  for  a  longer period. Parliament, therefore, passed the Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable Property (Amendment) Act, 1975 (Act 11 of 1975) by which it amended the Requisitioning Act so as to extend  by five  years the  existing maximum  period  for which properties  could be retained under requisition and to provide for  quinquennial revision  of the recurring part of compensation .      The property  in question  by  virtue  of  the  several amendments made  to  the  Requisitioning  Act  continued  to remain under  requisition and  the compensation  payable  in respect of  it was required to be revised as provided by the Requisitioning Act as amended by Act II of 1975 for a period of five  years from  7.3.1975 to  6.3.1980. As  there was no agreement  between   the  parties   on   the   question   of compensation payable  for the  said period the said question was referred  to the  Principal  Judge,  City  Civil  Court, Madras who  had  been  appointed  as  the  arbitrator  under section  8  of  the  Requisitioning  Act  to  determine  the compensation payable  in respect of the property in question for the  said period.  The learned  Arbitrator by  his award dated August 31, 1984 fixed the compensation payable for the property at Rs.21,000 per 760 month as  against the  claim of  Rs.77,270 per month made by the appellants.      Aggrieved  by   the  decision  of  the  Arbitrator  the appellants filed  an appeal  before the High Court of Madras under section  11 of the Requisitioning Act. On an objection raised by  the Registry  of the  High  Court  regarding  the amount of the court fee paid on the memorandum of appeal the matter was  placed before a Division Bench of the High Court of Madras  for  its  decision.  After  hearing  the  learned counsel for  the appellants  the High  Court  following  its earlier decision  in Y.  Venkanna Choudhary v. Government of India, by  Military Estates officer, Madras & Anr., AIR 1976 Madras 41  held that the appellants were liable to pay court fee on  the memorandum of appeal under section 51 of the Act ad valorem  on the  amount  of  compensation  which  was  in dispute in the appeal. The appellants have filed this appeal by special leave against the said order of the High Court.      Section 51 of the Act which arises for consideration in this case reads thus:           "51.  The   fee  payable   under  this  Act  on  a           memorandum of  appeal against an order relating to           compensation under  any Act  for the time being in           force for  the acquisition  of property for public           purposes  shall  be  computed  on  the  difference           between the  amount awarded and the amount claimed

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         by the appellant. "      The corresponding provision in the Court Fees Act, 1870 (Central Act  VII of  1870) which  was in force prior to the Act coming  into force  in Tamil  Nadu is  section 8 of that Act. It reads thus:           "8. Fee  on memorandum  of  appeal  against  order           relating  to  compensation.  -The  amount  of  fee           payable under  this Act  on a memorandum of appeal           against an  order relating  to compensation  under           any Act  for the  time  being  in  force  for  the           acquisition of  land for  public purposes shall be           computed according  to the  difference between the           amount awarded  and  the  amount  claimed  by  the           appellant."      Two principal  contentions are  urged by the appellants in support  of this  appeal. The  first contention  is  that since there is no transfer of title to the property which is requisitioned from its owner to the Go 761 vernment, the  said transaction  is not  an acquisition  and hence those provisions of the Requisitioning Act under which the property  is  requisitioned  do  not  constitute  a  law providing for acquisition of property. On the above basis it is urged  that section 51 of the Act would not be applicable because it  relates only  to appeals  filed against an order relating to compensation under any Act for the time being in force for the acquisition of land.      The expression ’acquisition’ is not defined in the Act. We  will   have  to   ascertain  from   the  scheme  of  the Requisitioning Act  whether an acquisition of property takes place when it is requisitioned under the relevant provisions of  the   Requisitioning  Act.   Sections  3  to  6  of  the Requisitioning Act deal with the powers of the Government in respect of  requisitioning of property and section 7 of that Act confers  power on  the Government  to acquire a property which  has   been  requisitioned.  Whenever  a  property  is requisitioned by  the competent  authority it is entitled to call upon  the owner  or any  other person  who  may  be  in possession of  the property  to surrender possession thereof to the  Government. Section  S  of  the  Requisitioning  Act provides that  all properties  requisitioned under section 3 shall be  used for  such purposes as may be mentioned in the notice of  requisition. Such  requisitioned property  may be released from  requisitioning under  section 6. The title to the  property   continues  to   rest  with  the  owner,  the Government being  entitled to  only the  possession of  such property.      In the  State of  West Bengal  v. Subodh Gopal Bose and Ors., [1954] S.C.R. 587, Patanjali Sastri CJ., has explained the meaning of the word ’acquisition’ at page 610 thus:           "The word  "acquisition" is not a term of art, and           it ordinarily  means coming  into  possession  of,           obtaining, gaining  or getting as one’s own. It is           in this  general sense that the word has been used           in articles  9,  11  and  19(1)  (f)  and  not  as           implying any transfer or vesting of title ........           ...................  To   say   that   acquisition           implies the  transfer and  vesting of title in the           Government is  to overlook  the real nature of the           power of  the State  as a sovereign acting through           its   legislative    and   executive   organs   to           appropriate the  property of a subject without his           consent. When  the State  chooses to exercise such           power, it  creates title  in  itself  rather  than           acquire it from the owner the nature and extent of

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         the title  thus created  depending on  the purpose           and 762           duration  of   the  use   to  which  the  property           appropriated is intended to be put as disclosed in           the law authorising its acquisition. No formula of           vesting is necessary."      In  Dwarkadas  Shrinivas  of  Bombay  v.  The  Sholapur Spinning &  Weaving Co.  Ltd. and  Ors., [1954]  S.C.R.  674 Mahajan, J. has observed at page 704 thus:           "In  my   judgment,  the   true  concept   of  the           expression "acquisition"  in our  Constitution  as           well as  in the Government of India Act is the one           enunciated by  Rich J.  and the  majority  of  the           court in  Dalziel’s case.  With great respect I am           unable   to    accept   the   narrow   view   that           "acquisition"  necessarily  means  acquisition  of           title in  whole or  part of  the property.  It has           been  rightly   said  that  a  close  and  literal           construction of constitutional provisions made for           the security  of person and property deprives them           of half  their efficacy  and  ends  in  a  gradual           depreciation  of   the  right   as  if  the  right           consisted more  in sound  than  in  substance.  In           other words,  such provisions can not be construed           merely by  taking a  dictionary in  hand. The word           "acquisition" has quite a wide concept meaning the           procuring  of   property  or   the  taking  of  it           permanently   or    temporarily.   It   does   not           necessarily imply  the acquisition  of legal title           by the State in the property taken possession of."      In both  the above  decisions the  learned Judges  drew support for  their views from the decision of the High Court of Australia  in The  Minister of  State  for  the  Army  v. Dalziel, 68  C.L.R. 261.  In that  case the  High  Court  of Australia had to consider the scope of the legislative power with respect  to acquisition  of property  conferred on  the Commonwealth by  section 51  (xxxi) of  the Commonwealth  of Australia Constitution  Act of  1900 including  the power to take possession  for indefinite period. In the said case the placitum of  the Australian  Constitution which  came up for consideration read like this:           "The   Parliament    shall,   subject    to   this           Constitution, have  power to  make  laws  for  the           peace,  order,   and  good   government   of   the           Commonwealth with  respect to-the  acquisition  of           property on  just terms  from any  State or person           for any purpose in respect of which the Parliament           has power to make law."      Rich, J.  who was  one of  the Judges  constituting the majority in that Bench observed. 763           "The language  used is  perfectly general. It says           the acquisition  of property. It is not restricted           to  acquisition   by  particular   methods  or  of           particular types  of interests,  or to  particular           types of  property. It  extends to any acquisition           of any interest in any property .............. But           there is  nothing in  the placitum to suggest that           the legislature  was intended  to be at liberty to           free itself from the restrictive provisions of the           placitum by  taking care  to seize something short           of the  whole bundle  owned by  the person whom it           was expropriating ................................           .............. It  would, in my opinion, be wholly

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         inconsistent with  the language of the placitum to           hold that,  whilst preventing the legislature from           authorising  the  acquisition  of  citizen’s  full           title except upon just terms, it leaves it open to           the legislature  to seize possession and enjoy the           full fruits  of possession,  indefinitely, on  any           terms it chooses, or upon no terms at all ...... I           am not  impressed by  the argument  sought  to  be           based upon  the fact  that  in  the  expropriation           legislation  of  fully  sovereign  legislatures  a           distinction  is   sometimes  drawn   between   the           permanent  appropriation   of  property   and  the           temporary assumption of the possession of adjacent           property for use whilst works are being erected on           the   property    which   has   been   permanently           appropriated. It  was pointed  out  that  in  such           legislation the  two types  of  appropriation  are           differently  dealt   with,  and   that   different           language has been used to describe them by learned           judges who  have had  occasion to  refer to  them.           This is  no doubt  so. ...................... But,           with all  respect. I  fail to see how the practice           of such  legislatures  or  the  language  used  by           judges in  referring to  their legislation, throws           any light  upon the  construction or  operation of           placitum  xxxi,   occurring,  as  it  does,  in  a           Constitution which  confers powers  which are both           limited and conditional. "      The majority  in that decision ultimately took the view that the taking under regulation 54 of the National Security (General) Regulations  by the Commonwealth for an indefinite period of  the exclusive  possession of property constituted an acquisition  of property  within the  meaning of  section 51(xxxi) of the Australian Constitution.      "Possession in  the Common  Law". by Pollock and Wright (1888) 764 says:  ’So   feeble  and  precarious  was  property  without possession or  rather without  possessory remedies,  in  the eyes of  medieval lawyers,  that possession  largely usurped not only the substance but the name of the property ........ Possession confers  more than personal right to be protected against wrongdoers: it confers qualified right to possess, a right in  the nature  of property  which  is  valid  against everyone who cannot show a prior or better title............ ......... Possession  is a  root of  title.’ Not  only is  a right to  possession a  right of  property,  but  where  the object of  proprietary rights is a tangible thing, it is the most  characteristic   and  essential   of   those   rights. Possession, it  is said,  is nine  points in  law. An  owner without possession has only a mere shell while the person in possession  enjoys  the  property  in  many  ways.  In  this situation, it  is difficult  to say  that  there  cannot  be deprivation of  property without  deprivation of title also. Deprivation  of  possession  for  an  indefinite  period  is acquisition of  property during that period though the title may continue  to rest  with  the  owner.  That  is  why  the requisitioning law also had to satisfy Article 19(1) (f) and Article 31  of  the  Constitution  when  they  were  in  the Constitution.      It  is   no  doubt   true  that  in  India  before  the Constitution there  were two  modes of depriving a person of immovable property  in exercise  of  the  right  of  eminent domain of  the State, namely, requisitioning of property and acquisition of property and even after the Constitution came

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into force  the same  pattern of  laws is  continued  to  be maintained but this Court has treated both requisitioning of property  and   acquisition  of   property  as  meaning  the acquisition of  property in the larger sense and there is no reason to  depart  from  the  views  expressed  by  the  two Constitution Benches  of this Court referred to above. We do not, therefore,  find any substance in the argument that the requisitioning of property under the Requisitioning Act does not amount  to acquisition  and the  provisions contained in the said Act providing for the requisitioning of property do not constitute  a law  relating to  acquisition of  property referred to  in section 51 of the Act. The first contention, therefore, fails.      The second contention urged on behalf of the appellants is that  the award made by the Arbitrator under section 8 of the Requisitioning  Act not being an order as defined in the Code of  Civil Procedure,  1908  the  appellants  cannot  be called upon  to pay the court fee in accordance with section 51 of  the Act  since section  51 of the Act refers to court fee payable  on a  memorandum of  appeal against an ’order’. Elaborating the above contention the learned counsel for the appe- 765 llants submitted  that the  expression ’order’ in section 51 of the  Act can  only mean  an order  as defined  in section 2(14) of  the Code  of Civil  Procedure in  view of  section 3(iv) of  the Act  which provides  that expressions used and not defined  in the Act or in the Tamil Nadu General Clauses Act, 1891  (Tamil Nadu  Act I  of 1891),  but defined in the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Central Act V of 1908), shall have the  meanings respectively assigned to them in the said Code, and the expression ’order’ is defined in section 2(14) of the  Code as  the formal  expression of any decision of a Civil Court  which is  not a decree. It is argued that since the  Arbitrator   appointed   under   section   8   of   the Requisitioning Act is not a Civil Court, the award passed by him cannot  be termed  as an  ’order’ bringing it within the mischief of section 51 of the Act. Reliance is placed by the appellants  in  support  of  the  above  contention  on  the decision of the High Court of Bombay in Hirji Virji Jangbari v. Government  of Bombay  A.l.R. 1945 Bombay 348 which was a decision rendered  on the  basis of  section 8  of the Court Fees Act, 1870 which was in force in Bombay at that time and which was  more or  less couched  in the  same  language  as section 51  of the Act. We have already quoted above section 8 of  the Court Fees Act, 1870. The Act corresponding to the Requisitioning Act,  which was  under consideration  by  the High Court  of Bombay  in that  decision was  the Defence of India Act,  1939. In that case under rule 75A of the Defence of India  Rules, 1939 framed under the Defence of India Act, 1939 a  plot of  land belonging  to the claimant therein was acquired by  the Government for and on behalf of the Defence authorities and as no agreement could be arrived between the claimant and  the Government  with regard  to the  amount of compensation payable, the Government of Bombay appointed the Chief Judge  of the  Court of  Small Causes as an arbitrator under section  19(1) (b)  of  Defence  of  India  Act,  1939 corresponding to  section 8  of the  Requisitioning Act,  to determine  the   amount  of   compensation  payable  to  the claimant. The artibtrator fixed the amount payable to him at Rs.45,855. The  claimant being dissatisfied with that amount filed an  appeal in  which  he  claimed  a  further  sum  of Rs.47,896/8 in  addition to the amount awarded to him by the arbitrator. The question that arose in that case was whether the appellant  was liable to pay court fee on the memorandum

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of appeal  ad valorem, as required by section 8 of the Court Fees Act,  1870 or  whether he was liable to pay a fixed fee under Schedule  II Article  11 of  the Court Fees Act, 1870. The learned  Judge who  decided the  said case held that the order of  the arbitrator in that case being not a decree nor an order  having the  force of  a decree  and there being no provision in  section 19 of the Defence of India Act and the Rules made  thereunder by  which the  awards made under that Act were deemed to be the 766 decrees, the  award could  not be treated as an order within the meaning  of section 8 of the Court Fees Act. The learned Judge, therefore,  came to the conclusion that a fixed court fee was  payable under  the residuary Article 11 of Schedule II to the Court Fees Act, 1870. It was brought to our notice that this decision had been followed in Crown v. Chandrabhan Lal and  Ors., A.I.R. 1957 Nagpur 8. We find that earlier to the above  decision a  contrary view  had been  taken by the Calcutta High  Court In  re Ananda  Lal Chakrabutty  & Ors., A.I.R. 1932  Calcutta 346.  In  that  case  Rankin  CJ.  who decided it observed thus:           "Section 8, while not itself imposing any fee upon           any one,  provides a  rule for  computation of the           fee payable  under the  Act in  a certain class of           cases. What  it says  is that,  in  the  class  of           cases, which  it deals with, the amount of fee pay           able under  the Act  on a memorandum of appeal, it           is to  be computed  according  to  the  difference           between the  two sums.  Now, that section standing           in the  text of  the Act proceeds clearly upon the           assumption that  otherwise in  the Act  there is a           charge which  is an ad valorem charge and is not a           fixed charge;                .......... The  provisions of s. 8, involving           as they  do that  fee in  the class of cases dealt           with  is   an  ad   valorem  fee,  are  themselves           sufficient to  exclude any  question of Article 11           of Schedule  II  being  made  applicable  to  such           cases. It is not necessary to consider whether the           Tribunal’s award,  which is  an order  and  not  a           decree, is  an order having the force of a decree.           Whatever the effect of that phrase may be, section           8  shows   one  perfectly  clear  that  an  appeal           regarding compensation  in a Land Acquisition case           is not under Article 11 of Schedule II, because it           is not a fixed fee at all ...... ..."      In Satya  Charan Sur  v. State  of West  Bengal, A.I.R. 1959 Calcutta 609 the High Court of Calcutta while following the  decision  in  Ananda  Lal  Chakrabutty’s  case  (supra) expressly dissented  from the  view expressed in Hirji Virji Jangbari’s case  (supra), After  the Bombay  Court Fees Act, 1959  came   into  force   a  similar   question  arose  for consideration in  C.B.G. Trust  v. Union  of  India,  [1970] Bombay Law  Reporter, 4()7,  regarding the  proper court fee payable on  an appeal  filed against an award made under the Requisitioning Act.  In the  Bombay  Court  Fees  Act,  1959 section 7(1) provided that the amount of fee payable 767 under that  Act on  a memorandum  of appeal against an order relating to compensation under any Act for the time being in force for the acquisition of land for public purposes should be computed  according to  the difference between the amount awarded  and  the  amount  claimed  by  the  appellant.  The language of  that section  was similar  to the  language  of section 51  of the  Act and  of section  8 of the Court Fees

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Act, 1870.  A Division  Bench of  the High  Court of Bombay, which heard the said case held that the Court fee payable on the memorandum  of appeal preferred against award made under section 8  of the  Requisitioning Act  was as  prescribed by Article 3 of Schedule 1 read with section 7(1) of the Bombay Court Fees  Act, 1959.  They disapproved the decision of the Bombay High Court in Hirji Virji Jangbari’s case (supra) and followed the  decision of  the Calcutta High Court in Ananda Lal Chakrabutty’s  case (supra).  An identical question came before this  Court  for  consideration  in  Sahadu  Gangaram Bhagade v. Spl. Deputy Collector, Ahmedanagar & Anr., [1971] 1 S.C.R.  146. In  that case  this Court  approved the  view expressed  by   the  Calcutta   High  Court  in  Ananda  Lal Chakrabutty’s case  (supra) and  in  C.  B.  G.  Trust  case (supra) and  held that the contention that the award made by the Arbitrator had no effect and, therefore, it could not be considered as  an  order,  was  not  acceptable.  The  Court proceeded to  hold that though the award was not an order as defined in  the Civil  Procedure Code,  1908 having not been made by the Civil Court but since the expression ’order’ had not been  defined in  that Act,  the award of the Arbitrator was undoubtedly  a formal expression of a E decision made by a competent  authority which  was binding  on the parties to the proceedings  in which  it was  made. The learned counsel for the  appellants tried  to distinguish this decision from the present  case on  the ground  that while  the expression ’order’ had  not been  defined in the Bombay Court Fees Act, 1959 which  arose for consideration in the said decision, in the present  case it  had been  defined as stated earlier by stating in section 3(iv) of the Act that the expression used and not defined in the Act, but defined in the Code of Civil Procedure should  have the  meaning respectively assigned to them in  the said Code, and in view of the above distinction the decision in Sahadu Gangaram Bhagade’s case (supra) would not govern  the present  case. We do not find much substance in the  above contention.  On carefully  going  through  the decision of  this Court  in Sahadu  Gangaram Bhagade’s  case (supra) we  find that  the decision did not really turn upon the presence  or the  absence of  the definition of the word ’order’ in the Bombay Court Fees Act, 1959 although there is a reference  to this  aspect of  the matter in the course of the decision. The relevant 768 part of  the decision  in  Sahadu  Gangaram  Bhagade’s  case (supra) at page 150 reads like thus:           "Section 11  provides for  an appeal  to the  High           Court against the award made by the arbitrator. In           the Act  there is  no provision  similar  to  sub-           section (2)  of s. 26 of the Land Acquisition Act,           1894 where  under every  award made  by  the  Land           Acquisition officer is to be deemed to be a decree           of court.  Therefore,  the  question  whether  the           award made  under s. 8 of the Act is executable or           not is  a matter  that requires further considera-           tion. For  the present,  we shall  proceed on  the           basis that it, is not executable. But section 9 of           the Act  requires the  competent authority  to pay           the compensation  awarded to the person or persons           entitled thereto.  Therefore,  we  are  unable  to           accept the  contention of  the learned counsel for           the  appellant   that  the   award  made   by  the           arbitrator is  something which  has not effect and           therefore it  cannot be considered as an order. It           is true  that it  is not  an ’order’ as defined in           the Civil Procedure Code, the same having not been

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         made by  a civil court. But the expression ’order’           is not  defined in  the  Act.  The  award  of  the           arbitrator is undoubtedly a formal expression of a           decision made by a competent authority. Further it           is a  decision  binding  on  the  parties  to  the           proceedings in  which it  is made.  Therefore  the           question  whether   the  order   in  question   is           executable or  not appears  to us to be irrelevant           for the purpose of determining the point in issue.           "                                             (emphasis added)      The portion  of the  judgment of  this Court  which has been under  lined clearly brings out the effect of an award. This Court  has held  that the  award of  the arbitrator  is undoubtedly a  formal expression  of a  decision made  by  a competent authority.  We are  also of  the  view  that  much reliance cannot  be placed on the definition clause found in section 3(iv) of the Act since the definitions given in that section have  to be read subject to the context in which the expressions defined  therein appear in the Act. Section 3 of the Act states that in the Act ’unless the context otherwise requires’ the  words and expressions defined in that section shall carry  the meaning given to them in various clauses in that section.  It is  relevant to note that in section 51 of the Act  which arises  for consideration  before us the word ’order’ does not appear in isola- 769 tion. The  section states that the fee payable under the Act on a  memorandum of  appeal against  an  order  relating  to compensation in  any Act for the time being in force for the acquisition  of   property  for  public  purposes  shall  be computed on  the difference  between the  amount awarded and the amount  claimed by  the appellants. The ’order’ referred to in section 51 of the Act need not therefore be an ’order’ of a  civil court as defined in section 2(14) of the Code of Civil  Procedure  but  should  be  an  ’order’  relating  to compensation under  any Act  for the time being in force for the acquisition of property for public purposes. There is no doubt that  the award  passed by  the Arbitrator  under  the Requisitioning Act is a formal expression of a decision made by a competent authority which is binding on the parties and it relates to compensation payable under an Act for the time being in  force for  the acquisition  of  property  for  the public purposes.  Hence we  are of the view that even though the expression  ’order’ simpliciter  has to be understood in the sense  in which  that expression  is defined  in section 2(14) of  the Code of Civil Procedure, the wold ’order found in section  51 of  the Act has to be read differently having regard to  the word  which qualify  that expression  in that section, namely,  relating to compensation under any Act for the time  being in force for the acquisition of properties’. The said  order need  not be an order of a civil court only. It can  be of any statutory authority. But it must determine compensation  for   a  property  acquired  under  a  law  of acquisition of  property for  public purpose. The award made under section  8 of  the Requisitioning  Act satisfies these tests. We  do not,  therefore, find  any substance  in  this contention too.  Since according to us the appeal before the High Court  filed under section 11 of the Requisitioning Act falls squarely under section 51 of the Act, court fee has to be paid  on ad  valorem basis  as provided  in Article  1 of Schedule 1 to the Act. It follows that the residuary Article i.e. Article  3(iii)(A)(1)(a) of  Schedule 11  to the Act is not attracted.  The High  Court was  right in  following its earlier decision in Y. Venkanna Choudhary’s case (supra) and

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directing the  appellants to  pay court  fee an  ad  valorem basis under section 5 1 of the Act.      We may  add  that  the  decision  in  Srunguri  Lakshmi Narayana Rao  & Ors. v. Revenue Divisional officer, Kakinada & Ors.,  A.I.R. 1968  Andhra Pradesh,  348 M. Ramachandran & Ors. v.  State  of  Madras  represented  by  the  Collector, Coimbatore, 87 Law Weekly Madras 791 Satya Charan Sur’s case (supra), Balakrishnan  Nambiyar &  Ors., v.  Kanakathidathil Madhavan &  Ors., A.I.R.  1979 Kerala 40 and Ghouse Saheb v. Sharifa Bi  & Ors., A.I.R. 1977 Karnataka 181 have taken the came view as we have taken. 770      The decisions  in Hirji  Virji Jangbari’s case (supra), Kanwar Jagat  Bahadur Singh v. The Punjab State, A.I.R. 1957 Punjab 32.  Crown’s case  (supra) and Mangal Sen v. Union of India, A.I.R. 1970 Delhi 44 are not approved by us.      We,  therefore,   dismiss  the   appeal.  There  shall, however, be no order as to costs.      The appellants  are granted  three months’  time to pay the deficit court fee on the memorandum of appeal. M.L.A.                                     Appeal dismissed. 771