12 September 1989
Supreme Court
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PANDURANG RAMCHANDRA MANDLIK (SINCE DEAD)BY HIS LRS. AND AN Vs SMT. SHANTABAI RAMCHANDRA GHATGE AND ORS.

Bench: SAIKIA,K.N. (J)
Case number: Appeal Civil 1582 of 1993


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PETITIONER: PANDURANG RAMCHANDRA MANDLIK (SINCE DEAD)BY HIS LRS. AND ANR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SMT. SHANTABAI RAMCHANDRA GHATGE AND ORS.

DATE OF JUDGMENT12/09/1989

BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) BENCH: SAIKIA, K.N. (J) VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)

CITATION:  1989 AIR 2240            1989 SCR  Supl. (2)   1  1989 SCC  Supl.  (2) 627 JT 1989 (3)   647  1989 SCALE  (2)572

ACT:     Bombay  Tenancy and Agricultural Lands  Act,  1948--Sec- tions  2(2), 2(5), 2(8), 2(17), 2(18), 25(2), 29(2),  70(b), 85A--Mamlatdar’s court--Whether Civil Court--’Or was at  any time in the past a tenant’ in Section  70(b)--Interpretation of--Jurisdiction  of  Civil  Court  to  decide  issues--When excluded.     Code   of   Civil   Procedure,   1898--Section   II--Res judicata--Heard and finally decided--Essentiality  of---What operates as res judicata is the ratio of what is fundamental to the decision.

HEADNOTE:     The appellants-landlords leased out their land,  situate at Kolhapur, to respondents Nos. 1 and 2 and the husband  of respondents  Nos. 3 and 4 on 12.10.1950 for a period of  ten years. After the expiry of the lease period, they  initiated proceedings under the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural  Lands Act,  1948,  for obtaining possession of the lands  but  the application was dismissed ex parte, as it was held that  the provisions of the Act were not applicable to the land  inas- much  as  only grass grew thereon naturally.  Thereupon  the appellants  terminated the tenancy under the  provisions  of the  Land  Revenue Code and filed a Civil Suit  against  the respondents  for possession mesne profits and  for  damages. Respondents 1 and 2 contested the suit contending inter alia that  the  civil court had no jurisdiction to try  the  suit inasmuch as the Act was applicable to the land and that they having  been in rightful possession, the notice of  termina- tion  of  tenancy  was invalid. The trial  court  tried  the issues  amongst others relating to the applicability of  the Act, jurisdiction of the civil court and estoppel and  after going  through the evidence led by the parties, decreed  the suit. The respondents appeal against the said decree  having failed  before  the first appellate  court,  they  preferred Second  Appeal to the High Court of Bombay. The  High  Court set  aside  the  judgment and order of the  trial  court  as affirmed by the first appellate court and remanded the  case back  to  the trial court with a direction  that  it  should raise  the necessary issues on the pleadings of the  parties and should make a reference to the competent authority under

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Section  85A  of the Act in regard to the issues  which  are required 2 to  be determined by the competent authority under  the  Act and on receipt of findings, dispose of the suit according to law. Being dissatisfied with the said order, the  appellants moved  application  for leave to appeal  under  the  Letters Patent  but the same having been dismissed they  have  filed this appeal after obtaining special leave.     The  appellants’ principal contention,  amongst  others, before this court is that the appellants’ application  under Section 29(2) read with section 25(2) of the Act having been dismissed on the ground that the Act was not applicable  and thus the authority had no jurisdiction to deliver possession is a finding which would operate as res judicata; hence  the High  Court’s direction making a reference to the  competent authority  under  s. 85A of the Act, now  would  be  barred. According to them the civil court itself has jurisdiction to decide  the  issues.  Respondents’ contention  is  that  the direction  of the High Court is consistent with  the  provi- sions of the Act and that the earlier proceedings under  the Act  initiated by the appellants having been  determined  ex parte, it could not operate as res judicata. Dismissing the appeal, this Court, HELD: After the amendment of s. 70(b) of the Act by  insert- ing  words  ’or was at any time in the past, a  tenant’  the position  has changed. The Civil Court has now no  jurisdic- tion to decide an issue arising incidentally in a civil suit which is to be specifically decided by a competent authority under  the Act. Civil Court in such a case shall  refer  the issue  to that authority and dispose of the suit in  accord- ance with the decision of the authority. [11F] (See G.S. Shinde v. R.B. Joshi, [1979] 2 SCC 495;)     The High Court in the instant case has rightly sent back the  suit  to the trial court with the  direction  to  refer issues, if raised to be determined exclusively by the compe- tent authority, to that authority. [13G]     If  a  matter directly and substantially in issue  in  a former  suit has been adjudicated upon by a court of  exclu- sive  jurisdiction, the adjudication will bar the  trial  of the same matter in a subsequent suit. [15E]     In  the instant case, the Mamlatdar having  decided  the appellants’  application  for  possession,  the   appellants themselves  went to the Civil Court and filed the  suit.  It does not now lie in their mouth to say that 3 the decision of the Mamlatdar would act as res judicata  for the trial  court.[15F]     The  Mamlatdar’s Court is a civil court for the  purpose of Section 85A of the Act. [15F]     In its comprehensive sense the word ’suit is  understood to apply to any proceeding in a court of justice by which an individual  pursues that remedy which the law  affords.  The modes of proceedings may be various but if a right is  liti- gated  between parties in a court of justice the  proceeding by which the decision of the court is sought may be a  suit. But  if  the proceeding is of a summary nature  not  falling within the definition of a suit it may not be so treated for the purpose of Sec. 11. [15H; 16A]     Besides, assuming the Mamlatdar in deciding the applica- tion in 1962-63 to have been a court of exclusive  jurisdic- tion for the purpose of s. 11 C.P.C., its decision rejecting the application would not be an evidence on the question  of tenancy merely because it could be inferred from that  deci- sion. [16B]

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   The  expression  ’heard and finally decided’, in  s.  11 means a matter on which the court has exercised its judicial mind  and  has after argument and consideration  come  to  a decision  on  a contested matter. It is  essential  that  it should have been heard and finally decided. What operates as res  judicata  is the ratio of what is  fundamental  to  the decision  but it cannot be ramified or expanded  by  logical extension. [16F-G]     (See  Vithal Yaswant v. Shikander Khan Mutumukhtan,  AIR 1963 SC 385.)     The law is well settled that a court which had no juris- diction to try a cause cannot by its own erroneous  decision confer on itself competence to decide it and its decision on the question of jurisdiction cannot operate as res judicata. Conversely  the decision relating to jurisdiction cannot  be said  to  constitute  the bar of res judicata  where  by  an erroneous  interpretation of a statute it holds that it  has no jurisdiction. [17B]     (See  Pandurang Mahadeo Kavade & Ors. v. Annaji  Balwant Bokil & Ors., [1971] 3 SCC 530;)     Shivappa  Satawappa Ashtekar v. Gajanan  Chintaman  Desh Pande,  [1953] 55 Bom. Law Reporter. 843; Dhondi Tukaram  v. Dadoo  Piraji,   [1952] 55 Bom. L.R.  663;  Bhimaji  Shanker Kulkarni v. Dundappa Vithappa Udapudi and Anr., [1966] 1 SCR 145; Mussamiya 4 Imam Haidar Bax Razvi v. Rabari Govindhai Ratnabhai &  Ors., [1969] 1 SCR 785; Trimbak Sopana Girme v. Gangararn Mhatarba Yadav,  55  Bom. L.R. 56; Ishverlal  Thakorelal  Almaula  v. Motibhai Nagjibhai, [1966] 1 SCR 367; Pandurang Hari  Jadhav v.  Shankar  Maruti  Todkar, 62 Bom.  L.R.  873;  Kalicharan Bhajanlal Bhayya v. Rai Mahalaxmi, 4 Guj. L.R. 145; Neminath Appayya Hanammannaver v. Jambu Rao Satappa Kocheri, AIR 1966 Mys.  154;  Jambu Rao Satappa Kocheri  v.  Neminath  Appayya Hanammannaver, [1968] 3 SCR 706; Noor Mohd. Khan Ghouse Khan Soudagar  v. Fakirappa Bharmappa Machenahalli, [1978] 3  SCC 188;  Ramchandra Rao v. Ramchandra Rao, [1922] 49  I.A.  129 and  Bhagwan  Dayal v. Mst. Reoti Devi, [1962]  3  SCR  440, referred to.

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1582  of 1973.     From the Judgment and Order dated 27.3.72 of the  Bombay High Court in Appeal No. 983 of 1966. S.B. Bhasme and V.N. Ganpule for the Appellants. Mrs. C.K. Sucharita for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     SAIKIA,  J. This plaintiffs’ appeal by special leave  is from  the  Judgment of the High Court of  Bombay  in  Second Appeal  No.  983 of 1966 setting aside the Judgment  of  the courts  below and remanding the case to the trial court  for hearing with a direction to refer the issue regarding tenan- cy to the tenancy authorities. The appellants are the owners of land bearing R.S. No.  1442 and  1445,  situate at Kasba Karvir,  within  the  municipal limits  of  Kolhapur. The said land was leased  out  to  the father  of  respondent Nos. 1 and 2 and the husband  of  re- spondent  Nos. 3 and 4 on October 12, 1950 for a  period  of ten years. The appellants had filed Revision Civil Suit  No. 298 of 1964 against the respondents for possession  thereof, mesne profits and for damages. It was averred in the  plaint that the appellants had earlier initiated proceedings  under

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the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948, herein- after referred to as ’the Act’, and in the said  proceedings it was held that the provisions of the Act were not applica- ble to the land inasmuch as only grass grew thereon natural- ly.  It was further averred that on expiry of the period  of lease the 5 appellants  terminated the tenancy under the  provisions  of the Land Revenue Code and filed the aforementioned suit. The respondent  Nos. 1 & 2 contested the suit contending,  inter alia,  that the civil court had no jurisdiction inasmuch  as the Act was applicable to the land; and that they having not been in wrongful possession thereof, the notice of  termina- tion  was invalid. The learned trial court tried the  issues regarding the applicability of the Act, jurisdiction of  the civil  court,  and estoppel, out of the  issues  framed,  as preliminary  issues and by order dated March 16, 1965  fixed the  date for hearing of the other issues and on  that  date the respondent Nos. 1 & 2 being absent, after recording  the appellants evidence, by Judgment dated July 17, 1965 decreed the  suit  in  favour of the  appellants.  The  respondents’ appeal  therefrom  having  been dismissed  by  the  District Judge,  they took Second Appeal No. 983 of 1966 to the  High Court of Bombay, and the learned Single Judge has set  aside the  Judgment  of the trial court as affirmed by  the  lower appellate  court,  and remanded the case back to  the  trial court  with a direction that it should raise  the  necessary issues  on  the pleadings of the parties and should  make  a reference to the competent authority under s. 85A of the Act with respect to those issues which are required to be decid- ed  by the competent authority under the Act and on  receipt of  the findings, dispose of the suit according to law.  The appellants’  application for leave to appeal under the  Let- ters  Patent  having been rejected by the High  Court,  they have obtained special leave to appeal.     Mr. S.B. Bhasme, the learned counsel for the  appellants submits, inter alia, that the appellants’ application  under s. 29(2) read with s. 25(2) of the Act, being case No./84 of 1962-63 having been dismissed by the tenancy authorities  on the  ground that only natural grass grew thereon and  there- fore the authority had no jurisdiction to deliver possession thereof  under s. 29(2) of the Act, that finding should  act as  res  judicata, wherefore, remitting of the case  by  the High Court to the trial court for hearing and deciding after making a reference to the competent authority, under s.  85A of  the Act with respect to those issues which are  required to  be  decided by the competent authority  under  the  Act, would be barred; and that in the facts and circumstances  of the  case the civil court itself has jurisdiction to  decide the  issues which have been directed to be referred  to  the civil court.     Mrs.  C.K.  Sucharita, the learned counsel for  the  re- spondents submits that under s. 85A in a civil suit  involv- ing  any  issues which are required to be decided  or  dealt with  by  any authority competent to settle or  decide  such issues under the Act, the civil court is to settle the 6 issues  and  refer  those to such  competent  authority  for determination;  that the High Court’s direction in  the  im- pugned Judgment is consistent with this provision; and  that the appellant’s earlier proceedings under the Act before the tenancy  authority having been dismissed ex parte, it  could not operate as res judicata.     The  question to be decided, therefore, is  whether  the High Court was correct in directing the trial court to refer

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the  issues relating to tenancy to the  competent  authority under  the Act. To decide it, we may conveniently  refer  to the relevant provisions of the Act. The Act has amended  the law which governs the relations of landlords and tenants  of agricultural lands. As defined in s. 2(8) of the Act, "land" means--(a)  land which is used for agricultural purposes  or which is so used but is left fallow, and includes the  sites of farm buildings appurtenant to such land. This  definition is  as  amended  by Bom. 15 of 1957. The  amendment  is  not material for the purpose of our case. As defined in s. 2(1), "Agriculture"  includes horticulture, the raising of  crops, grass or garden produce, the use by an agriculturist of  the land  held by him or a part thereof for the grazing  of  his cattle,  the use of any land, whether or not an appanage  to rice  or paddy land, for the purpose of rab manure but  does not  include allied pursuits, or the cutting of  wood  only. This  definition is after amendments by Bom. 13 and   15  of 1956  and 1957, respectively. As defined in s. 2(2),  "Agri- culturist" means a person who cultivates land personally. As defined  in  s. 2(5), "to cultivate"  with  its  grammatical variations and cognate expressions means to till or  husband the land for the purpose of raising or improving agricultur- al  produce, whether by manual labour or by means of  cattle or  machinery,  or to carry on any  agricultural  operations thereon;  and the expression "un-cultivated" shall  be  con- strued  correspondingly. The explanation thereunder says:  A person  who takes up a contract to cut grass, or  to  gather the fruits or other produce of trees on any land, shall  not on that account only be deemed to cultivate such land.  This definition is as substituted by Bom. 13 of 1956. As  defined in  s. 2(17), "Tenancy" means the relationship  of  landlord and  tenant;  and as defined in s. 2(18), "tenant"  means  a person who holds land on lease and includes (a) a person who is  deemed to be a tenant under s. 4; (b) a person who is  a protected  tenant; and (c) a person who is a permanent  ten- ant; and the word "landlord" shall be construed accordingly. This definition is as substituted by Bom. 13 of 1956.     The High Court has found that the appellants had  leased out  the land on October 12, 1950 for a period of  10  years under a Kabulayat at 7 an  annual  rental of Rs. 1000 and that  period  expired  on October  11, 1960. The appellants submitted  an  application under  s. 29(2) of the Act, being case No. 2068 of 1957  but that  application  was  dismissed.  Thereafter,  they  moved another  application under s. 88C of the Act being case  No. 285  of 1961 and that application was also dismissed on  the ground  that the lands were governed by s. 43C of  the  Act, but  the  Act  did not apply as the lands  were  within  the limits  of the municipal borough. Thereafter,  they  started the  third proceeding being application under s. 29(2)  read with s. 25(2) of the Act being case No. 184 of 1962-63. That application also came to be dismissed by the tenancy author- ities  on  the ground that the lands in dispute  were  lands growing  natural grass and, therefore, the  authority  under the  Act had no jurisdiction to deliver possession under  s. 29(2)  of the Act. The High Court noticed that the  applica- tion  was decided ex-parte but the Court did not know  under what  circumstances,  the competent authority  proceeded  ex parte. The effect of that decision was that the  application filed  by the appellants as landlords for possession of  the lands  treating  the opponents thereof as tenants  was  dis- missed.  It was only thereafter that the  appellants  served the  respondents with a notice terminating the  tenancy  and demanding possession, and the defendants having not complied

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with the notice, the appellants filled the instant suit,     Considered in the light of the above definitions and the provisions  of s. 85A of the Act there arises no doubt  that some of the issues involved in the suit may be such as  have necessarily  to be decided by the competent authority  under the  Act  and to that extent the jurisdiction of  the  civil court to decide those issues may be excluded.     In Shivappa Satawappa Ashtekar v. Gajanan Chintaman Desh Pande,  [1953] 55 Bombay Law Reporter 843; AlR  1954  Bombay 107, in the landlord’s suit for possession of lands filed in civil court, the defendants having contended that the  lands were  agricultural lands and that the defendants  were  pro- tected tenants, interpreting the then s. 85(1) it was held:               "Ex facie, by the operation of s. 70 and s. 85               of  the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural  Lands               Act, 1948, the jurisdiction of the civil court               to decide whether the defendants were  tenants               or  protected  tenants  must  be  regarded  as               excluded  and  the  Mamlatdar  alone  must  be               regarded as competent to decide that question.               That  is  the view which has been taken  by  a               division bench of this Court in Dhondi Tukaram               v. Dadoo Piraji, [1952] 55 Bom. L.R. 663." 8 Section 70(b) of the Act then provided: "For  the  purposes of this Act the following shall  be  the duties and functions to be performed by the Mamlatdar:           (a) ...............           (b)  to decide whether a person is a tenant  or  a protected tenant." Section 85(1) provided:               "No  Civil  Court shall have  jurisdiction  to               settle, decide or deal with any question which               is  by or under this Act required to  be  set-               tled,  decided or dealt with by the  Mamlatdar               or  Tribunal, a Manager, the Collector or  the               Bombay Revenue Tribunal in appeal or  revision               or  the State Government in exercise of  their               powers of control."     This  Court  in  Bhimaji Shanker  Kulkarni  v.  Dundappa Vithappa Udapudi and Anr., [1966] 1 SCR 145, considering the decision  in Dhondi Tukaram’s case (supra) which  held  that the  Mamlatdar  had exclusive jurisdiction to  decide  those issues  though  they arose for decision in a  suit  properly cognisable by a civil court, observed:               "The  result was somewhat startling, for  nor-               mally the Civil Court has jurisdiction to  try               all  the  issues arising in  a  suit  properly               cognisable  by  it. But having regard  to  the               fact  that the Bombay Legislature approved  of               Dhondi Tukaram’s case and gave effect to it by               introducing  s.  85A, we must  hold  that  the               decision  correctly interpreted the law as  it               stood  before  the  enactment of  s.  85A.  It               follows that independently of s. 85A and under               the  law as it stood before s. 85A  came  into               force, the courts below were bound to refer to               the Mamlatdar the decision of the issue wheth-               er the defendant is a tenant." Section 70 of the Act now provides:               "For  the purposes of this Act  the  following               shall  be the duties and functions to be  per-               formed by the Mamlatdar:               (a) to decide whether a person is an  agricul-               turist;

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             9               (b)  to decide whether a person is, or was  at               any time in the past, a tenant or a  protected               tenant or a permanent tenant;                                   XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX                                   XXXXX XXXXX XXXXX                        (n) to take measures for putting  the               tenant or landlord or the agricultural labour-               er or artisan or person carrying on as  allied               pursuit  into  the possession of the  land  or               dwelling house under this Act;                        (o)  to decide such other matters  as               may be referred to him by or under this Act." The  words  "person is, or was at any time in  the  past,  a tenant", and the words "or a permanent tenant" were  substi- tuted for the words "person is a tenant" by Mah. 49 of 1969. Section  85 and s. 85A as inserted by Bombay Act 13 of  1956 provide:               85. (1) No Civil Court shall have jurisdiction               to  settle, decide or deal with  any  question               including  a question whether a person  is  or               was  at  any  time in the past  a  tenant  and               whether any such tenant is or should be deemed               to  have purchased from his landlord the  land               held  by  him which is by or  under  this  Act               required to be settled, decided or dealt  with               by  the Mamlatdar or Tribunal, a Manager,  the               Collector or the Maharashtra Revenue  Tribunal               in appeal or revision or the State  Government               in exercise of their powers of control.                        (2)  No order of the  Mamlatdar,  the               Tribunal,  the  Collector or  the  Maharashtra               Revenue Tribunal or the State Government  made               under  this  Act shall be  questioned  in  any               Civil or Criminal Court.               Explanation--For the purposes of this  section               a  Civil  Court shall  include  a  Mamlatdar’s               Court constituted under the Mamlatdar’s Courts               Act, 1906."               "85A. (1) If any suit instituted in any  Civil               Court  involves any issues which are  required               to be settled, decided or dealt               10               with  by  any authority competent  to  settle,               decide or deal with such issues under this Act               (hereinafter  referred  to as  the  "competent               authority")  the  Civil Court shall  stay  the               suit  and refer such issues to such  competent               authority for determination.                        (2) On receipt of such reference from               the Civil Court, the competent authority shall               deal with and decide such issues in accordance               with  the  provisions of this  Act  and  shall               communicate  its decision to the  Civil  Court               and such court shall thereupon dispose of  the               suit in accordance with the procedure applica-               ble thereto.               Explanation--For the purpose of this section a               Civil Court shall include a Mamlatdar’s  Court               constituted under the Mamlatdar’s Courts  Act,               1906." This section was inserted by Bombay Act 13 of 1956.     Before  the amendment of s. 70(b) by Maharashtra Act  49 of 1969, when the question as to whether a party was in  the past  tenant or not for the purpose of acquiring some  other

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right, that is, not as main issue but as a subsidiary issue, Civil  Court’s jurisdiction to decide such subsidiary  issue could  not  be said to be barred. Section 70(b) of  the  Act imposed a duty on the Mamlatdar to decide "whether a  person is  a  tenant" and not "whether a person was or  was  not  a tenant  in the past". In Mussamiya Imam Haider Bax Razvi  v. Rabari  Govindhai  Ratnabhai & Ors., [1969] 1 SCR  785,  the appellant  filed  a suit on July 11, 1958  for  recovery  of possession of the suit lands and mesne profits averring that the lease was fraudulently obtained by the respondents.  The respondents contended that they became statutory owners u/s. 32 or s. 88 of the Act and the Civil Court had no  jurisdic- tion  to decide the suit. The trial court decreed  the  suit and on appeal the High Court held that fraud was not proved; the  respondents  failed to prove that they  were  statutory owners before the date of the suit; that the Civil Court had jurisdiction  to decide whether defendants were  tenants  on the  relevant dates namely, July 28, 1956 or May  11,  1958; and  that  the  Civil Court had no  jurisdiction  to  decide whether the defendants were tenants on date of the suit  and that  question  was to be referred to  the  Mamlatdar.  This Court on consideration of the provisions of s. 70 and s. 85A with other relevant provisions held at page 797:               "We are accordingly of the opinion that s.  85               read with               11               S. 70 of the Act does not bar the jurisdiction               of  the Civil Court to examine and decide  the               question  whether the defendants had  acquired               the title of statutory owners to the  disputed               lands  under the new Act. In this context,  it               is  necessary  to bear in mind  the  important               principle  of construction which is that if  a               statute  purports  to  exclude  the   ordinary               jurisdiction  of a Civil Court it must  do  so               either by express terms or by the use of  such               terms as would necessarily lead to the  infer-               ence  of such exclusion. As the Judicial  Com-               mittee observed in Secretary of State v.  Mask               & Co., 671.A. 222,236.               ’It  is settled law that the exclusion of  the               jurisdiction of the civil courts is not to  be               readily inferred, but that such exclusion must               either  be  explicitly  expressed  or  clearly               implied.’               In  our opinion, there is nothing in the  lan-               guage or context of s. 70 or s. 85 of the  Act               to suggest that the jurisdiction of the  Civil               Court is expressly or by necessary implication               barred with regard to the question whether the               defendants had become statutory owners of  the               land and to decide in that connection  whether               the defendants had been in the past tenants in               relation to the land on particular past dates.               We are also of the opinion that the  jurisdic-               tion  of  the  Civil Court is  not  barred  in               considering  the question whether  the  provi-               sions  of  the Act are applicable or  not  ap-               plicable to the disputed land during a partic-               ular period."     It may be noted that after the amendment of s. 70(b)  of the  Act by inserting the words "or was at any time  in  the past,  a tenant", the position has changed. The Civil  Court has now no jurisdiction to decide an issue arising  inciden- tally in a civil suit which is to be specifically decided by

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a  competent authority under the Act. Civil Court in such  a case shall refer the issue to that authority and dispose  of the  suit in accordance with the decision of the  authority. In  G.S. Shinde v. R.B. Joshi, [1979] 2 SCC 495, the  appel- lant  filed the suit for specific performance of a  contract for  sale  of land dated December 15, 1965  coupled  with  a supplementary  agreement  dated April 26, 1966 for  sale  of agricultural  land. The suit was resisted by the  defendant, contending, inter alia, that the provisions of the Act  were applicable to the land and the appellant not being an  agri- culturist, s. 63 of the Act was a bar to his purchase of the land,  and the agreement being contrary to law could not  be specifically enforced. The plaintiff (appellant) sought 12 to  repel that contention by producing a  certificate,  Ext. 78,  issued by the Mamlatdar certifying that  the  plaintiff was  an agricultural labourer and the bar of s. 63  was  not operative. If that Ext. 78 was not taken note of, the  issue would  arise whether the plaintiff was an agriculturist  and in  view of the provisions s. 70(a) read with s. 85  and  s. 85A  of the Act, the issue would have to be referred to  the Mamlatdar  for  decision as the civil court  would  have  no jurisdiction  to decide the issue. The trial court  and  the High  Court held that Ext. 78 had no evidentiary  value  and the  issue whether the plaintiff was an agriculturist  being an  incidental  issue,  main issue being  that  of  specific performance,  Civil  Court had  jurisdiction.  Allowing  the appeal  therefrom and remanding the suit to the trial  court this Court speaking through Desai, 3. held at para 10:               "Now,  if Section 85 bars the jurisdiction  of               the  Civil  Court to decide or  deal  with  an               issue  arising  under the Tenancy Act  and  if               Section 85A imposes an obligation on the Civil               Court  to  refer such issue to  the  competent               authority  under the Tenancy Act, it would  be               no  answer to the provisions to say  that  the               issue  is  an incidental issue in  a  properly               constituted  civil suit before a  Civil  Court               having jurisdiction to entertain the same.  In               fact Section 85A comprehends civil suits which               Civil Courts are competent to decide but takes               note of the situation where upon a contest  an               issue  may  arise therein which would  be  re-               quired to be settled, decided or dealt with by               the competent authority under the Tenancy Act,               and, therefore, it is made obligatory for  the               Civil Court not only not to arrogate jurisdic-               tion to itself to decide the same treating  it               as  a subsidiary or incidental issue,  but  to               refer  the  same to  the  competent  authority               under the Tenancy Act. This is an  inescapable               legal  position that emerges from  a  combined               reading      of      Sections      85      and               85A   ...................   In  a  civil  suit               nomenclature  of  the issue  as  principal  or               subsidiary or substantial or incidental  issue               is  hardly helpful because each issue,  if  it               arises,  has  to be determined  to  mould  the               final  relief.  Further, Sections 85  and  85A               oust  jurisdiction of Civil Court not  in  re-               spect  of civil suit but in respect  of  ques-               tions  and issues arising therein and  Section               85A  mandates the reference of such issues  as               are  within  the competence of  the  competent               authority.  If there is an issue which had  to

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             be settled, decide or dealt with by  competent               authority under the Tenancy Act, the jurisdic-               tion of the Civil Court,               13               notwithstanding the fact that it arises in  an               incidental  manner  in a civil suit,  will  be               barred and it will have to be referred to  the               competent authority under the Tenancy Act.  By               such camouflage of treating issues arising  in               a suit as substantial or incidental or princi-               pal or subsidiary, Civil Court cannot arrogate               to  itself jurisdiction which  is  statutorily               ousted.   This  unassailable  legal   position               emerges  from the relevant provisions  of  the               Tenancy Act."     After considering the precedents in Trimbak Sopana Girme v.  Gangaram Mhatarba Yadav, 55 Bom. L.R. 56=AIR  1953  Bom. 241; Dhondi Tukaram Mali, (supra); Bhimaji Shanker Kulkarni, (supra); Ishwerlal Thakorelal Almaula v. Motibhai Nagjibhai, [1966]  1 SCR 367=AIR 1966 SC 459; Pandurang Hari Jadhav  v. Shankar Maruti Todkar, 62 Bom. L.R. 873; Kalicharan  Bhajan- lal  Bhayya  v.  Rai Mahalaxmi, 4 Guj.  L.R.  145;  Neminath Appayya Hanammannaver v. Jambu Rao Satappa Kocheri, AIR 1966 Mysore  154; Jarnbu Rao Satappa Kocheri v. Neminath  Appayya Hanamrnannaver, [1968] 3 SCR 706=AIR 1968 SC 1358; Mussamiya Imam,  (supra) and Noor Mohd;  Khan Ghouse Khan Soudagar  v. Fakirappa  Bharmappa Machenahalli. [1978] 3 SCC  188=1978  3 SCR 789, their Lordships observed at para 19:               "Thus,  both  on principle  and  on  authority               there  is no escape from the  conclusion  that               where  in  a  suit  properly  constituted  and               cognizable  by the Civil Court upon a  contest               an  issue arises which is required to be  set-               tled,  decided  or dealt with by  a  competent               authority under the Tenancy Act, the jurisdic-               tion  of the Civil Court to settle, decide  or               deal with the same is not only ousted but  the               Civil Court is under a statutory obligation to               refer  the  issue to the  competent  authority               under  the Tenancy Act to decide the same  and               upon  the  reference being answered  back,  to               dispose  of  the suit in accordance  with  the               decision of the competent authority under  the               Tenancy Act." In the instant case, applying the settled law as  enunciated above,  and  in view of the certainty of the  questions  in- volved,  we are of the view that the High Court has  rightly sent back the suit to the trial court with the direction  to refer issues, if raised any, to be determined exclusively by the competent authority, to that authority. We now deal with the submission of Mr. Bhasme that the order 14 of the tenancy authority in case No. 184 of 1962-63 dismiss- ing his application under s. 29(2) read with s. 25(2) of the Act  holding that it had no jurisdiction to deliver  posses- sion  of the land on the ground that the natural grass  grew thereon, should act as res judicata, wherefore, referring of issues  to  the Mamlatdar in the suit remitted by  the  High Court would be barred. Counsel submits that the Mamlatdar in deciding  the aforesaid application acted under the  Mamlat- dar’s  Courts Act, 1906 (Bom. Act No. II of 1906) and  would be  a Court competent to determine the issue as  to  whether the  act  was applicable to the appellants’ land  under  the lease, and it already decided that the Act was not  applica- ble  as  on that land only natural grass grew,  which  meant

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that it was not ’land’ and the defendants were not ’tenants’ as defined in the Act. Section  11  of  the C.P.C. which deals  with  res  judicata provides:               "No Court shall try any suit or issue in which               the  matter.  directly  and  substantially  in               issue  has been directly and substantially  in               issue  in a former suit between the same  par-               ties,  or between parties under whom  they  or               any  of them claim, litigating under the  same               title, in a Court competent to try such subse-               quent suit or the suit in which such issue has               been  subsequently raised, and has been  heard               and finally decided by such Court." (Explanations I to VIII are not so relevant for the  purpose of this case) In Duchess of Kingston’s case Sir William de Grey said:               "From  the variety of cases relative to  judg-               ments being given in evidence in civil  suits,               these two deductions seem to follow as  gener-               ally  true: first that judgment of a court  of               concurrent  jurisdiction,  directly  upon  the               point,  is, as a plea, a bar, or  as  evidence               conclusive between the same parties, upon  the               same  matter, directly in question in  another               Court;  secondly that the judgment of a  Court               of  exclusive  jurisdiction, directly  on  the               point, is, in like manner, conclusive upon the               same matter, between the same parties,  coming               incidentally in question in another Court, for               a different purpose. But neither the  judgment               of a Court, of concurrent or exclusive  juris-               diction  is evidence of any matter which  came               collaterally in question, though within  their               jurisdiction nor of any matter incidentally               15               cognizable,  nor of any matter to be  inferred               by argument from the judgment."     Section  11 bars the trial of a suit or issue  in  which the  matter directly and substantially in issue has  already been  adjudicated  upon  in a previous  suit.  This  Section applies  in  terms to cases where the matter in issue  in  a subsequent ’suit’ was an issue in a "former suit". A  ’suit’ is a proceeding which is commenced by a plaint. As  provided in  Section 26 of the C.P.C. every suit shall be  instituted by  the presentation of a plaint or in such other manner  as may be prescribed. In the instant case admittedly the appel- lants  submitted  an application to the Mamlatdar  under  s. 29(2)  read with s. 25(2) of the Act. Sub-section (2) of  s. 29 provides:               "Save  as  otherwise provided  in  sub-section               (3A),  no landlord shall obtain possession  of               any  land or dwelling house held by  a  tenant               except  under an order of the  Mamlatdar.  For               obtaining such order he shall make an applica-               tion  in  the  prescribed form  and  within  a               period of two years from the date on which the               right  to  obtain possession of  the  land  or               dwelling house, as the case may be, is  deemed               to have accrued to him." This  sub-section is as amended by Mah. 39 of 1964. It  does not  speak of a plaint, a suit or a decree.  The  appellants did not call its application a plaint or the case a suit.     If  a  matter directly and substantially in issue  in  a former  suit has been adjudicated upon by a Court of  exclu-

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sive  jurisdiction, the adjudication will bar the  trial  of the  same matter in a subsequent suit. In the  instant  case the Mamlatdar having decided the appellants’ application for possession,  the  appellants themselves went  to  the  Civil Court and filed the suit. It does not now lie in their mouth to  say that the decision of the Mamlatdar would act as  res judicata  for  the trial court. We have seen  that  now  the Mamlatdar’s Court is a Civil Court for the purpose of s. 85A of the Act.     It  is  true that s. 11 is now made  applicable  by  the Explanations  and  interpretation  to  certain   proceedings giving  more  extensive meaning to the word ’suit’.  In  its comprehensive  sense the word ’suit’ is understood to  apply to any proceeding in a court of justice by which an individ- ual pursues that remedy which the law affords. The modes  of proceedings may be various but that if a right is  litigated between 16 parties  in a court of justice the proceeding by  which  the decision  of the Court is sought may be a suit. But  if  the proceeding  is  of a summary nature not failing  within  the definition  of  a  suit, it may not be so  treated  for  the purpose  of  s.  11. In the absence of the  details  of  the proceeding  concerned in the instant case, it has  not  been possible for us to hold that it was of the nature of a  suit and not a summary proceeding. Besides, assuming the  Mamlat- dar  in deciding the application in 1962-63 to have  been  a court  of  exclusive jurisdiction for the purpose of  s.  11 C.P.C., its decision rejecting the application would not  be an  evidence  on the question of tenancy merely  because  it could be inferred from that decision.     Admittedly  the appellants’ application was  decided  ex parte.  It is true that ex parte decrees operate  to  render the matter decided res judicata, and the defendants’ failure to  appear will not deprive the plaintiff of the benefit  of his  decree. But in the case of a suit in which a decree  is passed  ex parte, the only matter that can be ’directly  and substantially  in issue’ is the matter in respect  of  which relief  has been claimed by the plaintiff in the  plaint.  A matter  in respect of which no relief is claimed  cannot  be ’directly  and substantially in issue’ in a suit in which  a decree is passed ex parte though the Court may have gone out of  its  way  and declare the plaintiff to  be  entitled  to relief in respect of such matter. In the instant case apply- ing  the  above principle the order having  been  passed  ex parte,  assuming  the doctrine of res judicata  applied,  it could  be only to the extent of the appellants  having  been not  entitled  to possession at the relevant  time;  and  it could  not  be extended logically to the issue  whether  the defendants were tenants under the Act.     The  expression  ’heard and finally decided’  in  s.  11 means a matter on which the court has exercised its judicial mind  and  has after argument and consideration  come  to  a decision  on  a contested matter. It is  essential  that  it should have been heard and finally decided. What operates as res  judicata  is the ratio of what is  fundamental  to  the decision  but it cannot be ramified or expanded  by  logical extension. In Vithal Yaswant v. Shikandar Khan  Mutumukhtan, AIR 1963 SC 385, it has been held by this Court that when  a court  bases  its decision on more than one point,  each  of which  would by itself be sufficient for the ultimate  deci- sion, the decision on each one of those points would be  res judicata. In the instant case what were the points  specifi- cally urged and decided are not clear. In Pandurang  Mahadeo Kavade  & Ors. v. Annaji Balwant Bokil & Ors., [1971] 3  SCC

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530 it was held that in order to operate as res judicata  it must be established that the previous 17 decision was given by a court which had jurisdiction to  try the present suit, and there would be no res judicata if  the previous decision was by a court having no jurisdiction.  Of course that was a case of pecuniary jurisdiction, but  there is  no  reason why the same principle should  not  apply  in other cases of courts without jurisdiction. The law is  well settled  that  a court which had no jurisdiction  to  try  a cause cannot by its own erroneous decision confer on  itself competence to decide it and its decision on the question  of jurisdiction cannot operate as res judicata. Conversely  the decision relating to jurisdiction cannot be said to  consti- tute the bar of res judicata where by an erroneous interpre- tation of a statute it holds that it has no jurisdiction. It is  stated that there was no appeal filed by the  defendants from  the order of the Mamlatdar. That is not  material.  In Ramchandra  Rao v. Ramchandra Rao, [1922] 49 I.A.  129,  the Privy  Council decided that where the suit as to  the  title for  compensation had been referred to the Court,  a  decree thereon  was not appealed from, the question of title  would be  res judicata in a suit between the parties to  the  dis- pute.     In Bhagwan Dayal v. Mst. Reoti Devi, [1962] 3 SCR 440, a dispute arose as to proprietary title. A suit was filed in a Revenue Court under the U.P. Tenancy Act. The Revenue  Court framed  an issue thereon and referred it to the Civil  Court as  required by the Act. The Civil Court held that  the  re- spondent  had a half share in the villages and on the  basis of this finding the Revenue Court decreed his suit. Thereaf- ter, the appellant filed a suit in Civil Court for a  decla- ration that he was the absolute owner of all the property in the suit. The defendants contended that the suit was  barred by res judicata. This Court held that a subsequent suit  was not  barred by res judicata by the Judgment of  the  Revenue Court,  as it was not within the exclusive  jurisdiction  of the  Revenue  Court and suit was maintainable in  the  Civil Court.  The  Judgment of the Revenue Court on the  issue  of proprietary  title  could not operate as res judicata  as  a Revenue Court was not competent to try the subsequent suit.     In the instant case, the Mamlatdar declined to  exercise jurisdiction holding that the Act did not apply. If an issue is  referred  to it by the trial court under  the  Act,  the question of jurisdiction would not arise and there could  be no  question of res judicata as to jurisdiction of the  Mam- latdar on reference.     Bearing in mind the above provisions and the  principles of  law, we are of the view that there could arise no  ques- tion  of res judicata in the instant case. Section 11  would not be a bar to the trial court in 18 referring issues which are to be exclusively determined by a competent  authority under the Act, to that  authority.  Nor should arise any such question of res judicata in the compe- tent authority deciding those issues when referred to by the trial court.     In the result, we find no merit in this appeal which  is accordingly dismissed, but without any order as to costs. Y. Lal                                 Appeal dismissed. 19