16 September 1969
Supreme Court
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RAM NARAIN MAHTO Vs STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1563 of 1966


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PETITIONER: RAM NARAIN MAHTO

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 16/09/1969

BENCH:

ACT:     Sale  of Goods Act, 1930. ss. 18 and 21--Madhya  Pradesh Abolition  of  Property Rights (Estates,  Mahals,  Alienated Lands) Act 1 of 1950---Jagirdar selling timber of  specified girth  to  be  cut by  buyer   from   standing  trees--Jagir vesting  in state under M.P. Act 1 of 1950----If  buyer  can claim  compensation for logs not cut from standing trees  on date of vesting.

HEADNOTE:     A  Jagirdar executed a deed on August 5, 1949 in  favour of  the appellant for the sale of logs of a specified  girth to  be obtained from cutting the trees in his  forests.   On February  19,  1951 the Forest Officer  of  the’  respondent State prevented the appellant and the Jagirdar from  cutting the  trees.  On the coming into force of the Madhya  Pradesh Act  1 of 1951, the, interest of the Jagirdar in his  estate vested  in the respondent State. The appellant instituted  a suit  in  June  1954 against  the  respondent  Stateand  the Jagirdar for breach of contract and claimed compensation (i) for logs which were cut but which he could not remove;  (ii) for  logs which were cut but were stated to have ’been  lost due  to  the negligence of  the respondent; and  (iii)  logs from the standing timber which had not been cut or could not be  cut by the appellant from the jagirdar’s villages.  The’ respondent State contested the suit on the ground inter alia that  the deed could not be enforced against it  because  of the vesting of the Jagir under the Act in the State and that the  contract created a mere personal liability against  the Jagirdar.   The Trial Court granted the appellant  a  decree for  compensation under all the heads claimed at a rate  per log  determined  by the Court.  The High  Court   in  appeal disallowed  the  appellant’s  claim, under  items  (ii)  and (iii).   In  appeal  to this Court  by  certificate  it  was contended  on  behalf  of the appellant  that  the  rate  of compensation determined was inadequate; that the High  Court erred  in disallowing compensation four the logs which  were cut *but were lost,  and that it had wrongly disallowed  the claim  for value of logs of timber which the  appellant  was entitled  to, but could not cut because of the  restrictions imposed by  the’ State. HELD: Dismissing the appeal,     (i)  On  the  evidence,  the  High  Court  had   rightly disallowed  the claim in respect of logs cut but which  were stated to have been lost.     (ii)  Where  a thing is attached to, or forms  part  of, land at the time of the contract and which is to be  severed by  the  buyer, under s. 18  of the Sale of  Goods  Act  the property in the thing passes in the absence of a contract to

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the  contrary  to the buyer on the severance  of  the  thing from, the land.  Again under s. 21 of the Act, even if there be:  a  contract  for the sale of specific  goods,  but  the seller  is  obliged under the terms of the  contract  to  do something to the goods for the purpose of putting them into, a deliverable state, the property passes only when the thing agreed to be done is done and the buyer is informed thereof. [453 D]     In  the present case the contract by its terms  was  for the sale of logs out of trees in the forest with a girth  of two feet or more; but the timber had to be cut and had to be put in a deliverable state,.  Before the trees. 446  were  cut and the logs  appropriated to the  contract,  the estate  of  the  Jagirdar  vested in  the  State  of  Madhya Pradesh.   The, appellant’s claim to cut standing  trees  in the forests of the Jagir after they vested in the State  was therefore rightly negatived. [456 F-G]     Badische Anilin Fabrik v. Hickson, [1906] A.C. 419 at p. 421; KurseH v. Timber Operators and Contractors Ltd., [1927] 1  K.B.  298; Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel &  Company  v.  The State  of  Madhya  Pradesh,  [1953]  S.C.R.  476;   Shrimati Shantabat  v.  State  of Bombay & Ors.  11959]  S.C.R.  265; Mahadeo  v.  The State of Bombay, [1959]  Supp.  (2)  S.C.R. 339: .State of Madhya Pradesh v. Yakunuddin,  [1963]  S.C.R. 13;  referred tO.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: . of 1966. Civil  Appeal  No. 1563     Appeal  from the judgment and decree dated December  23. 1960 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in First Appeals  Nos. 67 :and 70 of 1957. Naunit Lal and Sharat Chandra Chaturvedi, for the appellant. 1. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah,  J.   Thakur Randhirshah, Jagirdar or   Sonpur   Jagir executed  a  deed  dated August, 5, 1949 in  favour  of  Ram Narain  Mahto---hereinafter called ’the  plaintiff--relating to sale of timber, for Rs. 51,501 and received Rs. 15,000 in part  payment. On February 19, 1951, the Forest  Officer  of the State of Madhya Pradesh prevented the plaintiff and  the Jagirdar  from  cutting the trees.  On March 31,  1951,  the Madhya  Pradesh  Abolition of Proprietary  Rights  (Estates, Mahals,  Alienated  Lands)  Act, 1950 (No. 1  of  1951)  was brought into force and by virtue of that Act the interest of the Jagirdar in the estate vested in the State.  On June 14, 1954, the plaintiff instituted an action in the Court of the Aditional  District Judge,  Chhindwara, for a   decree   for Rs. 1,50,000 for breach of the contract of sale against  the State  of  Madhya Pradesh and against the  Jagirdar.   There were four heads of the claim for compensation: (i) Rs. 21,375  .. being the value of 4275 logs of timber which were                           cut but which the plaintiff  could not remove; (ii) Rs. 30,000      ..   for 6,000 logs of timber which though cut were not                           found  on  the spot  and  some  of which were either                           burnt or stolen; (iii) Rs. 30,000           on account of 60,00 logs of

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timber from the standing timber of four villages which had not been cut: and (iv) Rs. 75,000     for 15,000 logs of timber which the plaintiff could  not cut from the remaining villages. 447 The plaintiff claimed compensation for the logs of timber at the rate of Rs. 5 per log in the aggregate.     The State of Madhya Pradesh contended that the  Jagirdar had started illegal cutting for which proceedings were taken against  him  and  that he was prevented  from  cutting  any timber; that sometime thereafter the logs of timber lying in the   forest  were  ’hammermarked"  and  the  Jagirdar   was permitted to remove the logs till March 31, 1953  subject to certain  conditions,  e.g.  obtaining malguzari  passes  for the transit and submitting weekly statement of the  removal, that the agreement dated August 5, 1949, being  unregistered was  inadmissible in evidence, and created no title, mat  in any  event the deed could not be enforced against the  State ’because  of  the  vesting of the Jagir  under  the   Madhya Pradesh Abolition of  Proprietary Rights (Estates,   Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, in the State; that the  contract created  a mere personal liability enforceable  against  the Jagirdar;  and  that  the State was  not  the  successor-in- interest  of the Jagirdar but claimed a right to  the  Jagir under a statute.     The Trial Court held that the plaintiff was entitled  to value  of the logs of timber described under the four  heads of his claim, at the rate of Rs. 1/8/- per log.  Accordingly the  trial Court determined the compensation payable to  the plaintiff  at  Rs. 46,912 and after giving  credit  for  Rs. 36,000  payable  by the plaintiff to the  Jagirdar  and  ’to which  the State became entitled, passed  a decree  for  the balance  of Rs. 10,912 and interest thereon.  The  plaintiff and  the State ’appealed to the High Court.  The High  Court agreed with the Trial Court that the rate per log could  not exceed Rs. 18/-.  The High Court disallowed the claim of the plaintiff  for items (ii), (iii) and (iv) and for  item  (i) the  High  Court allowed Rs. 3,712 being the value  of  2475 logs  of timber which had not been removed.  The High  Court held that out of the amount awarded nothing was liable to be deducted  towards the alleged arrears due to  the  Jagirdar. The plaintiff appeals to this Court with certificate granted by the High Court.     Counsel  for the plaintiff urged that the  Courts  below were  in  error in holding--( 1 ) that the rate per  log  of timber  was  Rs.  1/8/-; (2) that the High  Court  erred  in disallowing  compensation   for 6000 logs  of  timber  which were cut  and appropriated by  the plaintiff but which  were on account of negligence of the servants of the State either burnt   or  stolen;  (3)  that  the  High  Court  erred   in disallowing compensation for items (iii) and (iv) being  the value of logs of timber which the plaintiff was entitled to, but could not cut because of the restrictions imposed by the State.     On  the  first plea not much need be  said.   The  Trial Court  as well as the High Court, on a consideration of  the evidence held 448 that  the value of a log of timber did not exceed Rs.  18/-. That is a concurrent finding of fact and this Court will nor interfere with that finding, unless it’ is shown to be based on  no  evidence or is grossly erroneous  or  perverse.   No such  attempt  is  made before us.

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   On  the  second plea also the plaintiff’s claim  must  , fail.   The  evidence led by the plaintiff relating  to  the cutting of 6000 logs of timber and appropriation thereof  is vague, and is not supported by reliable evidence.  The books of account and the registers maintained by the Jagirdar were not  tendered  in   evidence.  It was said  that  they  were burnt.   The High Court has disbelieved the story  that  the books  of  account and registers were burnt and  we  see  no reason   to  disagree with that   finding.   The   plaintiff himself  had no personal knowledge about the destination  of the  logs of timber; he merely repeated what the  Jagirdar’s men  had  told  him.  He admitted that out of  the  logs  of timber which were cut, 4500 logs were "hammer-marked" by the Forest Department and he was asked to remove them by the end of March 1953. The testimony of witnesses Badrinarayan  P.W. 4,  Ramlal P.W. 5, and Ramkesh P.W. 7 was found by the  High Court  to  be  unreliable. We have been  taken  through  the record  of the evidence by counsel for the plaintiff and  we see  no reason to disagree with the view which  appealed  to the High Court.  The second claim must also fail.     Then  remain the claims for items (iii) and (iv) in  the plaint.   The  logs  of  timber  under  these:  claim   were admittedly   not  cut.  There  were  standing  trees.    The relevant  terms  of the deed dated August 5, 1949,  may,  to appreciate the claim of the plaintiff, be read:                   "Deed  of agreement in respect of  selling               of timber of jungles of Sonpur Jagir.                   Deed of agreement executed by Shri  Thakur               Randhirshah,  Jagirdar of Sonpur   ......   in               favour of Bhai Ram Narayanji Mahto, contractor               of timber  to the following effect :--                   "I, the executant, have already taken  Rs.               15,000 ....  from the person, in whose  favour               the  deed   I  have  of  agreement  has   been               executed,   of  entered  into  a  contract  in               respect of selling timber, after getting  logs               2. feet or more than that in girth cut from my               below    mentioned   9   villages   for    Rs.               51,501 . . . and have Sold-the same subject to               the following conditions :--               449                   9 villages, timber of which has been  sold               by me, are as follows :--               (then follow the names of nine villages.)                   In  respect of cutting, 1  the  executant,               shall  cut  wood at my expenses and  the  same               will be supplied to you m the jungle.                   In  respect  of  cutting  (wood),  1,  the               executant shall be cutting wood from the below               mentioned jungles in this way :--                   (1)  I  shall  supply   wood   from    the               jungles   of   Bambani,  Kosami   and   Rajola               Khapadhanna  in  first two  years  (i.e.  from               August 1949 to July 1951).                   (2) I shall supply wood from Gotikhere and               Harai from August 1951 to July 1952.                   (3)  I  shall supply  wood  from  Dulhadeo               Baratmari and Budena from August 1952 to  July               1953.                   (4)  I  shall  supply  wood  from  Sejwara               Khalan from August 1953 to 1954.                   In  respect of transport, if there is  any               delay   in  transporting  contractor’s    wood               during   that   period, the  executant,  shall               extend  the  time  up to 6  months  so  as  to

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             complete the transportation.                   (Then follows the manner in  which  amount               of Rs. 36,501 was to be paid.)                        Wood sold does not include the  trees               on the bank of the river or padao or any  such               place,   which  are  prohibited  to   be   cut               according  to law.  The wood of  those  places               has not been sold.     Under the deed all trees standing in the forests in  the nine  villages were not agreed to be sold: it  was  provided that trees with   logs of "2 feet or more in girth" were  to be  cut  and  the  logs were      to  be  supplied  in  four different periods set out in the deed.  The 1  deed  created by its own force no rights in the standing trees, for    the Jagirdar was to cut the trees at his expense, and to  supply the    logs. 450     By  s. 3 of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of  Proprietary Rights  (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, (1  of 1951), msolar as it is relevant,. it is provided:                   "(1)  Save as otherwise provided  in  this               Act,  on and from a date to be specified by  a               notification  by the State Government in  this               behalf,  all proprietary rights in an  estate,               mahal, alienated village or alienated land, as               the case may be, in the area specified in  the               notification, vesting in a proprietor of  such               estate,  mahal, alienated  village,  alienated               land,  or in a person having interest in  such               proprietary  right  through  the   proprietor,               shall pass from such proprietor or such  other               person  to  and  vest in  the  State  for  the               purpose   of   the   State    free   of    all               encumbrances.               Section 4 provides, insofar as it is material:                   "(1) When the notification under Sec. 3 in               respect of any area has been published in  the               gazette,   then,   notwithstanding    anything               contained  in any contract, grant or  document               or  in  any other law for the  time  being  in               force  and save as otherwise provided in  this               Act, the consequences as hereinafter set forth               shall,   from  the  beginning  of   the   date               specified    in   such   notification   ......               ensue, namely :--                   (a) all rights, title and interest vesting               in   the  proprietor  or  any  person   having               interest in such proprietary right through the               proprietor   in  such  area   including   land               (cultivable  or  barren),  grass  land,  scrub               jungle, forest, trees, .                 shall               cease and be vested in the State for’ purposes               of the State free of all encumbrances;     The  relevant  provisions of the Sale of Goods  Act  may also  be  noticed.  Section 2(7) of the Sale  of  Goods  Act defines  "goods" as meaning "every kind of movable  property other  than actionable claims and money; and includes  stock and  shares, growing crops, grass, and things attached_   to or  forming part of the land which are agreed to be  severed before  sale  or under the contract of  sale".   Trees  from which  logs  of timber were agreed to be cut  and  sold  are things  attached to or forming part of the land.  The  trees were  agreed  to be severed under the contract of  sale.   A contract  for sale of logs is doubtless a contract for  sale of goods.  But in view of the terms of the deed the contract

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was  not  for sale of ascertained goods. Only  logs  with  a girth not less than 2’ were to 451 be supplied after the trees were cut by the Jagirdar.   This is not a contract under which the trees of the entire forest in a particular village were agreed to be sold.  Goods to be sold were, therefore, unascertained, and it is well  settled that  a contract for unascertained goods is not  a  complete sale, but only a promise to sell: Badische Anilin Fabrik  v. Hicksan(1) :’ it was said in that case:                   "Where  the goods are not  ascertained  or               may  not  exist at the time of  the  contract,               from   the  nature  of  the  transaction,   no               property   in  the  goods  can  pass  to   the               purchaser  by virtue  of the contract  itself;               but where certain goods have been selected and               appropriated  by  the seller,  and  have  been               approved  and assented to by the  buyer,  then               the  case  stands  as to the  vesting  of  the               property  very  much in the same  position  as               upon  a contract for the sale of  goods  which               are ascertained at the time of the bargain."     Where a thing is attached to, or forms part of, land  at the  time of the contract and which is to be severed by  the buyer, the property in the thing passes in the absence of  a contract  to the contrary to the buyer on the  severance  of the thing from the land. This is clearly the effect of s. 18 of  the  Sale  of  Goods Act.  For  property  to  pass,  the identity  of  the  thing intended to be  delivered  must  be ascertained,  and unless the parties are agreed as  to  what goods  are  to  pass under the terms of  the  contract,  the property  will  not pass.  It is essential  that  the  thing should  be  specific and ascertained in the  manner  binding upon the parties: unless that be so, the contract cannot  be construed as a contract for sale of movable property.  Again under  s.  21 of the Sale of Goods Act even if  there  be  a contract  for the sale of specific goods, but the seller  is obliged  under the terms of the contract to do something  to the goods for the purpose of putting them into a deliverable state, the property passes only when the thing agreed to  be done is done and the buyer is informed thereof.     Granting  that  the contract was for  sale  of  specific goods,  that is, it was a contract for Sale of logs  out  of trees  in the forest with a girth of two feet or  more,  the timber  had  to be cut and had to be put  in  a  deliverable state.   The Jagirdar did not by the deed sell the trees  of his  forests.   The plaintiff had no right even to  cut  the trees.   The  logs of timber agreed to be  supplied  had  no existence  as individual chattel, until the trees  were  cut and severed ,from the land, ’and logs of the  specifications were separated.  But before the trees were cut and the  logs appropriated  to  the contract, the estate of  the  Jagirdar vested in the State of Madhya Pradesh.  It is true that  the provisions of the Sale of Goods Act, (1) [1906] A.C. 419 at p. 421. 452 especially  ss.  18  to  44 are  rules  of  construction  of contracts  for determining the interest of the  parties.  If there be a contract that the property is to pass even before the  property is put into a deliverable state, the  property may  pass.  But in the contract executed by the Jagirdar  no such intention appears.     It  is  not necessary to refer to the  large  number  of cases cited at the Bar..except a few.  In Kutsell v.  Timber Operators  and  Contractors Ltd. (1) under  a  contract  the

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vendors agreed to Sell and the purchasers agreed to purchase all  the  merchantable  timber growing in a  forest  in  the Republic of Latvia.  Merchantable timber was therein defined to  be "all trunks and branches of trees but  not  seedlings and  young  trees of less than six inches in diameter  at  a height of four feet from the ground".  Timber was to be’ cut subject  to  certain  conditions.  After  the  contract  was entered into the Latvian Assembly passed a law by which  the forest  became  the property of the Latvian  State  and  the contract  stood  annulled  and all property  and  rights  of vendors  and purchasers in the forest were confiscated.   It was held by the Court of Appeal that the contract was not  a contract  for  the Sale of specific goods in  a  deliverable state within the meaning of s. 18 r. 1 of the Sale of .Goods Act,   1893;  that  the  goods  in  question  were   neither identified  nor agreed upon; that it was not every  tree  in the  forest  which  passed, but only  those  complying  with certain measurements not then made; that the timber was  not in  a deliverable state until the purchasers had severed  it and that they could not under the definition in the rule  be bound to take delivery of an undetermined part of a tree not yet  identified, and accordingly the property in the  timber had not passed under s. 18 r. 1. Several cases have arisen in’ this Court in which the breach of  claim  to a fundamental right of the purchaser  who  had entered into a contract for purchasing standing trees before the enactment of the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, was set up.   These  cases may be briefly  noticed.   In  Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Company v. The State of Madhya  Pradesh(2) this  Court  held  that  the  rights  conferred  upon   "the contractors  under  agreements with the proprietors  of  the estates  before the date on which the estates vested in  the State, under which they were entitled to _pluck, collect and carry away tender leaves, to cultivate, culture and  acquire lam,  and  to cut and carry away teak and timber  and  other species of trees were merely rights of licence, and that the contractors  were  not proprietors nor  persons  having  any interest in the proprietary rights through the  proprietors, within  the  meaning  of  the  Act.  The  rights     of  the contractors were also held not to be encumbrances within the meaning of the expression "free from encumbrances in s. 3(1) (1) [1927] 1 K.B, 298.           (2) [1953] S.C.R. 476. 453 of  the Act.  The contractors were held entitled to  a  writ against  the  State prohibiting the State  from  interfering with  the  rights of the contractors  under  the  cointracts which  they had entered into with the proprietors.  In  that case  the Court held that the estate vested in the State  by virtue  of  ss. 3 and 4 of the Madhya Pradesh Act,  and  the right  to the trees also vested in the State, but the  State had no right to obstruct the contractors in exercise of  the rights  under  the contracts and on that ground  a  writ  of prohibition  was issued.  It was held that  the  contractors had no proprietary rights nor did they possess any  interest in  the  proprietary rights through the proprietors  to  the trees and the leaves, and on that account the rights of  the contractors  did  not vest in the State.   It  was  assumed, without  indicating the ground on which it was  so  assumed, that  the contractual obligations which  were undertaken  by the  Jagirdars were enforceable against the State after  the estate vested in it.  It was observed at p. 483:                   "The  petitioners are neither  proprietors               within  the  meaning of the  Act  nor  persons               having  any interest in the proprietary  right

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             through   the   proprietors.   There   is   no               provision in the Act which extinguishes  their               rights in favour of the State." But this case was dissented from in a later decision of this Court  in Shrimati Shantibai v. State of Bombay  &  Ors.(1). In  that case under an unregistered instrument a  contractor was  granted  a right to take and appropriate all  kinds  of wood  from  certain  forests  in  the  Zamindari  After  the enactment  of  the Madhya Pradesh Abolition  of  Proprietary Rights  (Estates,  Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act,  1950,  all proprietary  rights  in  land vested in the  State  and  the contractor  could  no longer cut any wood.   The  petitioner applied to the Deputy Commissioner and obtained from him  an order  under s. 6(2) of the Act permitting her to  work  the forest  and start cutting the trees.  The Divisional  Forest Officer later passed an order directing that her name may be cancelled  and materials cut by her forfeited.   A  petition for  a  writ was then moved in this Court. This  Court  held that the contractor had no right in the forest or the trees. The  Court  observed  that if it was a  right  in  immovable property   it  could not be enforced because  there  was  no registered  instrument:  if it was claimed that  a  profess- prenatal  was  transferred by it  ,was  still  unenforceable because the instrument granting the right was  unregistered: if it was a contract giving rise to a purely personal right, assuming  that the contract was property within the  meaning of  Art.  19(1)(f) and Art. 31(1) of  the  Constitution  the State had not acquired or taken possession of that property. The  Court declined to follow the earlier judgment  of  this Court in Chhotabhai Jethabhai Patel & Company’s case(2). (1) [1959] S.C.R. 265            (2) [1953] S.C.R. 476. L2 Supe. CI/70  17 454       In  Mahadec,  v.  The State of  Bombay  (1),  again,  a similar  question  was  raised  by  a  contractor  who   had purchased  the right to reove forest produce---mainly  tendu leaves, from the forests included in the Zamindari belonging to  the  proprietors prior to the enactment  of  the  Madhya Pradesh  Abolition of Proprietary Rights  (Estates,  Mahals, Alienated  Lands)  Act, 1950.  The Court in that  case  held that the contracts were unenforceable, because they were not registered  and  that in any event the  agreements  did  not amount to grant of any proprietary right by the  proprietors to  the  contractors and their remedy was  not  against  the State  because the State had not taken of such contracts  or licenses.     In   State  of  Madhya  Pradesh  v.  Yakunuddin(2)   the contractors’  right derived from the Jagirdar prior  to  the enactment   of  the Madhya Pradesh Abolition of  Proprietary Rights (Estates, Maltais, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950, to cut and  remove the trees was held not enforceable  against  the State.     In all these cases there had been a partial  examination of  the problem in the light of a claim to an  existing  and enforceable fundamontal right vested in the contractor.   In the  first  case  Chhotabhai  Jethabhai  Patel  &  Company’s case(3) the Court held, without disclosing the ground for so holding,  that the fundamental right of the  contractor  was enforceable  against  the State.   In  Shrimati  Shantabai’s case(4) ’and Mahadeo’s case(1) the Court held that there was no infringement of any fundamental right and in Yakinuddin’s case(2)  which reached this Court in ’appeal from  an  order held  that  the  rights were not  enforceable  ’against  the State.     The present case arises.   out of a suit instituted  for

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recovery  of compensation by a contractor who was  prevented from  enforcing  his claim in respect of  the  forest  trees under  the  terms  of the contract  entered  into  with  the Jagirdar.  The contract was one relating to sale  of  future goods,  but  it  was not a contract  for  sale  of  specific property  in a deliverable state.  Title to the  logs  which the plaintiff had agreed to purchase did not vest in him  at the  date on which the estate vested in the State of  Madhya Pradesh.   On  that  ground the  plaintiff’s  claim  to  cut standing  trees  in the forests of Sonpur Jagir  after  they vested in the State was rightly negatived. The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. R.K.P.S. Appeal dismissed. (1) [1959] Supp. 2 S C.R. 339. (3) [1953] S.C.R. 476. (2) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 13. (4) [1959] S.C.R. 265. 455