26 September 1962
Supreme Court
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RAMRAO JANKIRAM KADAM Vs STATE OF BOMBAY

Case number: Appeal (civil) 67 of 1956


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PETITIONER: RAMRAO JANKIRAM KADAM

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF BOMBAY

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/09/1962

BENCH: AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA BENCH: AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA SINHA, BHUVNESHWAR P.(CJ) GUPTA, K.C. DAS

CITATION:  1963 AIR  827            1963 SCR  Supl. (1) 322  CITATOR INFO :  R          1964 SC 436  (13)

ACT: Revenue  Sale-Public  auction-Connotation  of  "Sale"Whether sale for predetermined nominal price is such  sale-Legality- Suit to set aside sale-Limitation-Waiver and estoppel-Bombay Land  Revenue  Code 1879 (Bom.  V. of 1879)  Ch.   XI,  167, 203--Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876, (Bom.X of 1876), ss. 4(c) and 11-Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (IV of 1882), s. 41.

HEADNOTE: A  sum of about Rs. 9,000 was due from the appellant to  the Government  on  account  of excise dues.   The  movable  and immovable  property of the appellant was several  times  put for  sale by auction under Ch.  XI Bombay Land Revenue  Code but the amount remained unrecovered and three items of lands remained  unsold.   In  view of  a  Government  Order  dated August,  30,  1933,  which prescribed  such  a  course,  the Mahalkari  sought  permission  of the Collector  to  make  a nominal  bid  of  Re. 1/for each item of land  in  the  next auction.   The  permission  was granted  and  the  Mahalkari informed  the appellant that if no bidders came  forward  at the  next  auction the lands would be sold  at  the  nominal price of Re. 1. The auction was held and as no stranger came to bid the Mahalkari made the nominal bid of Re.  1 for each item of land.  The bid was accepted and the sales were later confirmed.  Subsequently, the Collector sold these lands for adequate  consideration  and  the  purchasers  were  put  in possession.   The  appellant filed a  suit  challenging  the validity of these sales.  The purchasers contended that  the suit  not having been brought within one year of  the  sales was time barred, that the suit was barred by ss. 4(c) and  1 1  of  the  Bombay Revenue jurisdiction Act  and,  that  the appellant  was  disentitled  to  relief  on  the  ground  of acquiescence and estoppel. Held, that the Sales were invalid and the suit was liable to be decreed.  The purchase for a predetermined nominal  price of  Re 1, irrespective of the actual market value was not  a sale  by  public auction as contemplated by s.  167  of  the Bombay  Land Revenue Code.  An auction is. a  proceeding  at

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which people are invited to compete for purchase of property by successive offers of advancing sums and a sale by auction is  a means of ascertaining what the property is worth  i.e. its fair  323 market  price If at the sale there are no bids there  cannot be  a sale.  The Government Order had no statutory force  at all, and could not authorise or render valid the transaction if  otherwise  it  lacked  a  legal  basis.   There  was  no provision  in the Code which authorised such a course  which amounted  to forfeiture of the property of a defaulter.   It was anomalous that the Collector who moved the machinery for realisation  of arrears by sale and who was constituted  the authority to determine judicially allegation of irregularity in the conduct of the sale should, without authority of  any statutory power, bid at the auction conducted by his deputy. The  mere fact that the appellant had been  informed  before hand of the nominal bid did not render the sales valid.  Nor was the appellant estopped from questioning the legality  of the sales. Tumdu  Dhansing  v. Government for the Province  of  Bombay, I.L.R. 1947 Bom. 75, approved. The  suit was not barred by Art.  11 of the Limitation  Act. The  article  was applicable only to cases where  there  was need for setting aside a sale and not to cases where no sale as contemplated by law had taken place. The provisions s. 4(c) Bombay Revenue jurisdiction Act, 1876 applied to cases where there was a sale and it was sought to be  set  aside on the ground of  irregularities  other  than fraud.  They did not apply where there was only a  purported sale  which  did not pass title, Section 1 1 barred  a  suit when  there  was  an  appeal provided  against  the  act  or omission of a revenue officer and the party failed to  avail of the remedy. in the present case there was no order  which was appealable under s.  203  and  s.  1  I  could  not   be applied. There was no scope for invoking the aid of s. 41 Transfer of Property  Act.   The  purchasers had  not  relied  upon  any representation, act or conduct of the appellants but on  the belief  that  Government had acquired a good  title  to  the lands.  If the Government had no title the purchasers  could not acquire any.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 67 of 1956. Appeal from the judgment and decree dated March 20, 1950, of the  Bombay High Court in first Appeals Nos. 142 and 211  of 1947. S.P. Varma, S. N. Andley, Rameshwar Nath and P. L. Vohra, for the appellant. 324 H.R.  Khanna,  R.  H.  Dhebar and  T.  M.  Sen,  for  the respondent No. 1. C.B. Agarwala and Naunit Lal, for the respondents Nos.  2 and 5. 1962.   September  26.   The  judgment  of  the  Court   was delivered by- AYYANGAR, J.-This appeal comes before us on a certificate of fitness  granted by the High Court of Bombay under Art.  133 (1) (a) of the Constitution. The appeal was heard by us in November last and judgment was reserved  on  9/11/1961.  Within a  short  time  thereafter, learned  Counsel  for the Appellant intimated  the  Registry

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that  the 2nd respondent had died on November 5,  1961,  and that steps were being taken to have the legal representative brought  on record.  The certificate under O. XVI  r.13  was received  by  this Court and on its basis  substitution  was ordered  at the end of August 1962.  The appeal  was  subse- quently  reported  for  hearing and we have  now  heard  the learned Counsel for the parties. The facts giving rise to the appeal are briefly as  follows: The  plaintiff  who is the appellant brought a suit  in  the Court  of the Civil judge at Jalgaon for a declaration  that the  sale  of certain of his lands which were  held  by  the Revenue  Authorities in circumstances which we shall  detail later was void, and to recover possession of the lands  from the  defendants  who had purchased these  lands  in  revenue auction.   In  view  of  the  prayer  for  the   declaration regarding the invalidity of the sale, the Province of Bombay was impleaded as a defendant to the suit. The  plaintiff’s father was an excise contractor and he  and the plaintiff were licensees of certain opium shops in 1931- 32.   By  the end of March 1934 a sum of about  Rs.  8,500/- were  due  to the Government in respect of the  excise  dues from  these opium shops.  For the realisation of these  dues the lands  325 belonging  to the plaintiff were brought to sale  and  among others Survey Field No. 35, 40 and 80 in Mauje Therole, Peta Edalabad  and a house bearing Survey No, 23A in the  village of  Kurhe was brought to sale and sold.  The three items  of lands were purchased by government at the sale for a nominal bid of Re. 1/- for each item for realisation of these  dues. The sale was confirmed and possession taken by government of these  lands.   Later the government sold the  land  bearing Survey  No.  80 to the second defendant for  Rs.  2,000/-and Survey  Nos.  35  and  40 to the  fifth  defendant  for  Rs. 1,750/-.   Possession of these properties was  delivered  to the  respective  defendants in 1939.  As  substantially  the arrears  due  to  government  still  remained  undischarged, because  the  sales  were for  nominal  amounts,  the  house property  at Kurhe was attached and brought to sale and  was sold  on November 6, 1940, but the purchase in the  case  of the house was not by the government but the property was bid for  and purchased by the second defendant for Rs. 76/-.   A certificate of sale was issued to him on February 13,  1941. It  was the validity of these sales that was  challenged  in the suit which has given rise to this appeal. The  suit  was  substantially  decreed  in  favour  of   the plaintiff by the trial-judge but on appeal the  plaintiff’s suit was dismissed in respect of the relief in regard to the three  plots above-named which were the subject of  sale  on September  21,  1938,  and of the house which  was  sold  on November  6,  1940.  The learned trial-judge had  held  that these  sales were not in accordance with the  provisions  of the  Bombay  Land Revenue Code and were  consequently  void. The  learned  judges of the High Court, on the  other  hand, were  of  the  opinion that the sales and  the  purchase  by government for a nominal sum of Re. 1/ for each of the plots were  authorized  by the Code and were therefore  valid  and binding  on  the plaintiff.  It is the correctness  of  this view  of the High Court that is raised for consideration  in the appeal. 326 Before dealing with the arguments addressed to us  regarding the validity of the sales it is necessary to      set    out the  statutory  provisions  which bear  upon  the  power  of government to effect sales for the realisation    of arrears

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due to them. Section  34  of  the Bombay Abkari Act  enables  arrears  of excise  revenue  to  be recovered as an  "  arrear  of  land revenue".   Chapter XI of the Bombay Land Revenue Code  lays down  the procedure for the realisation of land revenue  and other revenue demands.  Among the provisions of this Chapter it is necessary to refer to s.155 reading :               "155.  The Collector may also cause the right,               title  and  interest of the defaulter  in  any               immovable  property  other than  the  land  on               which the arrear is due to be sold." Section  165 directs the Collector to issue a  proclamation, in  the vernacular language of the district of the  intended sale,  specifying  the  time and place of  sale,  while  the section  following  requires that a written  notice  of  the intended sale should be affixed in the public offices  named therein.   Section  167 enacts that sales shall be  made  by auction  by  such  persons  as  the  Collector  may  direct. Section 171 is the next relevant section and this reads:               "When  the  sale is finally concluded  by  the               officer  conducting  the same,  the  price  of               every  lot  shall be paid for at the  time  of               sale,  or  as soon after as the  said  officer               shall  direct, and in default of such  payment               the  property shall forthwith be again put  up               and  sold.  On payment of  the  purchase-money               the  officer  holding the sale shall  grant  a               receipt  for  the  same, and  the  sale  shall               become   absolute  as  against  all   per-sons               whomsoever." As  some  point  was made before us of a  violation  in  the instant case of the provisions of ss. 172 and 173, we  shall read these also  327               "172.  When the sale is. subject to  confirma-               tion, the party who is declared to be the pur-               chaser  shall  be required  to  deposit  imme-               diately  twenty-five per centum on the  amount               of his bid, and in default of such deposit the               property  shall forthwith be again put up  and               sold.   The  full  amount’  of  purchase-money               shall  be paid by the purchaser before  sunset               of  the day after he is informed of  the  sale               having been confirmed, or, if the said day  be               a Sunday or other authorized holiday, then be-               fore sunset of the first office day after such               day.   On payment of such full amount  of  the               purchase-money,   the   purchaser   shall   be               granted., a receipt for the same, and the sale               shall  become absolute as against all  persons               whomsoever."               "173.  In all cases of sale of immovable  pro-               perty,  the  party who is declared to  be  the               purchaser  shall be required to deposit  imme-               diately  twenty-five per centum on the  amount               of his bid, and in default of such deposit the               property  shall forthwith be again put up  and               sold."               Section  175 sets out the effect of a  default               in payment of purchase-money and this runs:               "175.   In  default  of  payment  within   the               prescribed  period of the full amount of  pur-               chase-money,  whether of movable or  immovable               property,   the   deposit,   after   defraying               therefore  the expenses of the sale, shall  be

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             forfeited  to the Provincial  Government,  and               the   property  shall  be  resold,   and   the               defaulting  purchaser shall forfeit all  claim               to the property or to any part of the sum  for               which it may be subsequently sold." Section  178 enables sales to be set aside for  irregularity and this section runs 328               "178.   At any time within thirty  days from               the  date  of the sale of  immovable  property               application  may be made to the  Collector  to               set  aside  the  sale on the  ground  of  some               material  irregularity, or mistake, or  fraud,               in publishing or conducting it;               but,  except as is otherwise provided  in  the               next  following section, no sale shall be  set               aside  on the ground of any such  irregularity               or mistake, unless the applicant proves to the               satisfaction  of  the Collector  that  he  has               sustained   substantial   injury   by   reason               thereof.               If  the application be allowed, the  Collector               shall  set aside the same and direct  a  fresh               one."               The consequential provision is in s. 179 which               reads:               "179.   On the expiration of thirty days  from               the  date of the sale, if no such  application               as is mentioned in the last preceding  section               has been made, or if such application has been               made and rejected, the Collector shall make an               order  confirming the sale; provided that,  if               he  shall have reason to think that  the  sale               ought to be set aside notwithstanding that  no               such application has been made, or on  grounds               other  than those alleged in  any  application               which  has  been made and  rejected,  he  may,               after  recording his reasons in  writing,  set               aside the sale."               and s. 182 enacts :               "182.  The certificate shall state the name of               the person declared at the time of sale to  be               the actual purchaser; and any suit brought  in               a Civil Court against the certified  purchaser               on  the ground that the purchase was  made  on               behalf  of  another person not  the  certified               purchaser, though by agreement the name of the               certified   purchaser  was  used,   shall   be               dismissed."                329 Section  214  of the Code empowers a State Government  by  a notification published in the official gazette to make rules not inconsistent with the provisions of the Act to carry out the purposes and objects of the Act and for the guidance  of all persons in matters connected with the enforcement of the Act or in cases not expressly provided for therein.  In  the Rules  framed  under the Code Ch.  XVIII is  concerned  with making provision for sales.  Rule 128 which is the second of the Rules in this Chapter. prescribes               "Where  any land or other property is sold  by               public  auction, an upset price shall, if  the               Collector thinks fit, be placed thereon;               Provided  that  where in the  opinion  of  the               Collector   difficulty   is   likely   to   be               experienced  in effecting speedy  recovery  of

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             the  arrears  or  bidders  are  likely  to  be               deterred  from  offering bids, no  such  upset               price shall be placed." Rule  129 has a new sub-r. (4) added after the  sales  which are now in controversy were effected reading :               "Where   in  the  opinion  of  the   Collector               difficulty  is  likely to  be  experienced  in               effecting  speedy recovery of the  arrears  or               bidders   are  likely  to  be  deterred   from               offering  bids,  it shall be  lawful  for  the                             Collector or his nominee to bid at the  auctio n               and purchase the land or other property for  a               bid of rupee one." We  shall  now  proceed  to  narrate  the  proceedings  that preceded  the  impugned  sales where are  stated  to  be  in contravention of statutory provisions. Before doing so, however, we might point out that in  regard to  the  sale  of  the house in  the  village  of  Kurhe  no irregularity  which would vitiate the sale as  pointed  out, and  the  only  complaint  was  that  the  house  which  was estimated  to  the  worth about Rs. 200/- was  sold  for  an inadequate  sum of Rs. 76/-.  Obviously standing alone  this could not be a ground for holding 330 the sale void.  In the rest of this judgment, therefore,  we shall  confine our attention to the sale of the three  plots bearing  Survey Nos. 35, 40 and 80 which were  purchased  by the Government for a nominal bid of Re. 1/-. The  relevant facts in relation to the sale of  these  three plots were these: In January 1934 the Mahalkari of  Edalabad brought to the notice of the Collector of East Khandesh that an  amount of over Rs. 9,000/- was due in respect of  excise transactions  from  the  plaintiff and  his  father  and  he pointed   out   that   the   amount   remained   unrecovered notwithstanding  that the defaulter’s movable  property  was put  up for sale eighteen times and his  immovable  property eight times.  He suggested to the Collector that "’in  order to  bring home a sense of responsibility to  the  defaulters and to make them realise the need for quickly paying up  the arrears",  the  procedure laid down in  a  Government  order dated  August  30,  1933, might be  applied  to  them.   The procedure  indicated  was  that contained  in  a  Government resolution in the Revenue department bearing No. 474 of 1933 that  "if defaulters were contumacious the  Collector  would have  authority  to  purchase on behalf  of  Government  the defaulter’s  property on a nominal bid." By this letter  the Mahalkari desired to have the permission of the Collector to make  a nominal bid of Re.  1/- at the next auction of’  the defaulter’s property.  The principal question raised in this appeal  is  whether or not the procedure indicated  in  this resolution is in accordance with the provisions of the  Land Revenue  Code.   Before  continuing  the  narrative  it   is necessary to refer to a further resolution No. 4135 of April 16, 1936, which ran               "The  procedure  of purchasing  on  behalf  of               Government a defaulter’s property nominal  bid               should  be adopted in order a speedy  recovery               of  Government  by offering a order to  effect               dues  in  cases  where a  real  difficulty  is               experienced in making                331               such   recoveries   and   no   purchaser    is               forthcoming to buy the land......... It should               not  be adopted except as a last  resort  when

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             various remedies for the recovery of dues have               failed or unless it is clear that bidders  are               deterred  from offering bids by other  reasons               than purely economic considerations." The reason for the adoption of this procedure was stated  to be  that it would produce a good deterrent effect and  would put  a  stop  to  any  obstructive  tactics  on  behalf   of defaulting licensees. The permission sought was granted by the Collector  enabling the  Mahalkari  to  bid  at  the  auction.   Thereafter  the Mahalkari  intimated  the defaulters the plaintiff  and  his father  that  if no bidder came forward at the time  of  the public  auction-sale and nobody bid, the lands mentioned  in the  proclamation  would be sold at a nominal price  of  Re. 1/-  and  it  was after this notice  that  the  purchase  by Government on the above terms was effected.  The sales  were held,  no  stranger  bid  at  the  sale  and  thereupon  the Mahalkari acting under the resolution of Government and  the terms  of  the permission granted by the Collector,  made  a nominal  bid  of  Re.  1/- for each lot  on  behalf  of  the Government  and  the bids were accepted and  thereafter  the sales were confirmed. The  validity of the sale was attacked before us on  several grounds  : (1) that under r. 128 the Collector was bound  to have  fixed  an upset price and that his failure  to  do  so rendered the sale void., (2) Rather inconsistently with this that  the  Collector had actually fixed an upset  price  and that  in  the-  face of this fixation the  purchase  by  the Mahalkari  on behalf of the Government for a nominal sum  of Re.   1/- was illegal and rendered the sale void., (3)  that on  the terms of section 171, the sale-price had to be  paid for  at the time of the sale and that as this was not  done, the sale-officer was statutorily bound to have put up 332 the  property for sale again, (4) that ss. 172 and 173  laid an obligation on the purchaser to deposit 25 per cent of the sale-price immediately the bid was knocked down and  further required  him to pay the balance within 15  days  thereafter and  also prescribed the consequences of default, viz.,  the sale shall be avoided and that a resale shall take place and that in the present case the Mahalkari who bid on behalf  of the Government, or the Government itself had not made either the  deposit or the final payment with the result  that  the purchase  stood  automatically cancelled by reason  of  that default  and  (5) that the purchase by the Government  on  a nominal  bid of Re.1/- was not a sale by public  auction  as was  contemplated by s. 167 of the Code and  in  consequence the sale was void and that no title passed by reason of that sale. As  regards the first four of the objections set out  above, they have, in our opinion, no substance on the facts of  the present  case.  We do not however consider it  necessary  to deal  with them because they were raised for the first  time in this Court and they involve questions of fact which  were not  the subject of pleading or investigation in the  Courts below.   We intimated to the learned Counsel that  we  would not permit him to urge those grounds before us.  It is  only the  last  of these grounds that therefore  requires  to  be considered. This  raises  a  question  of some  importance  in  the  law relating to revenue sales.  The question of the validity  of such sales was raised before the High Court of Bombay on  an earlier  occasion and the judgment of the Court is  reported in  Pumdu Dhansing v. Government for the Province of  Bombay (1).   The  Court was then concerned  with  an  auction-sale

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conducted  by  the  Mamlatdar---a  revenue  officer  of  the Government  by  which  a property  of  a  substantial  value belonging to a surety for a toll-contractor was sold to  the Revenue-Patel acting for and on behalf of the government for a nominal sum of Re. 1/-.  The (1)  I. L. R. 1947 Bom. 75. 333 contractor was in default and for the recovery of the amount due  from him the provisions of Ch.  XI of the  Bombay  Land Revenue Code became applicable.  Several attempts were  made to sell the property of the defaulter and the reserve prices which   were  fixed  for  the  lots  were   never   reached. Subsequently  at  ’the  next  auction  when  no  bids   were forthcoming,  the  Patel  acting under  the  orders  of  the Collector made a bid on behalf of Government, of Re. 1/- for each  lot  and this was accepted by the  Mamlatdar  who  was conducting the auction, and this sale was confirmed later by the  Collector  and possession was thereafter taken  of  the property  thus purchased.  It was the validity of this  sale that  was  challenged  in a suit  filed  by  the  defaulter. Support  for  the  validity of the sale was  sought  in  the resolutions of the Government of 1933 and 1936 which we have extracted  earlier.   On the facts of the  case  before  the Court there were certain special features to which attention was drawn by the learned judges : (1) The first was that the proclamation  of sale set out that a reserve price had  been fixed and where a sale was subject to such a condition, "the conditions of sale" which are prescribed by the rules made a special provision invalidating the acceptance of bids  below the  reserve  price,  (2) there was  no  evidence  that  the defaulter  had been served with any special notice that  the different  procedure of the purchase for a nominal price  by government would be resorted to.  Though the learned  judges pointed out these two features, the reasoning by which  they held  the sale void rested on wider grounds.   Stone  C.J. speaking for the Court said:               "The  production of the nominal one rupee  for               all the property, cannot be regarded as bid at               an auction sale for property lotted into  five               lots  with a separate reserve price  on  each.               The  word  "nominal’  shows  that  there   was               nothing  of substance about the offer and  the               endorsements               334               and  formalities by which an attempt was  made               to give some semblance regularity to what  was               done cannot in my opinion cloak in legal guise               that which was nothing better than a device to               vest  the  appellant’s property in  a  Revenue               Officer holding on behalf of Government.  The               Bombay  Land  Revenue Code contains  no  power               either   to   forfeit  or   to   foreclose   a               defaulter’s   property.    Yet   the    scheme               formulated  by the Resolutions referred to  at               the  commencement  of this  judgment  aims  in               effect  at bringing about such a result,  for,               if    effective   it   would    achieve    the               extinguishment in favour of Government of  all               the  appellant’s rights and ownership  in  his               land.   In my judgment what took place at  the               alleged auction sale was of no effect and  did               not give to the Revenue Pail or to  Government               any   right,   estate  or  interest   in   the               appellant’s property." When the present appeal was before the learned judges of the

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Bombay  High Court it was pressed before the Division  Bench which  heard  the  appeal in the  first  instance  that  the reasoning  of the decision in Tumdu Dhansing  v.  Government for  the  Province of Bombay (1) governed the  present  case also  and  entitled the plaintiff to succeed  and  that  the appeal should be dismissed.  The learned judges observed:               "It  must be conceded that if the decision  in               Tumdu Dhansing v. Government for the  Province               of Bombay represents good law, the decision of               the trial Court is correct".               They however, went on to say :               "With  respect however, to the learned  judges               who  decided  that  case  (Tumdu  Dhansing  v.               Government for the Province of Bombay) we find               great difficulty in understanding the  reason-               ing and  doubt  whether  the  conclusion  is               correct". (1) I. L. R. 1947 Bom. 75. 335 They therefore suggested a reference to a Full Bench for  an answer to the question :               "Whether  when at a sale held under s. 153  of               the Bombay Land Revenue Code the land is  pur-               chased  by the Government under a nominal  bid               the sale is either void or voidable": The  learned  Judges  of  the  Full  Bench  however  without deciding   whether  the  decision  in  Tumdu   Dhansing   v. Government  for the Province of Bombay was right  or  wrong, upheld   the   sale   in  the  present   case   on   certain distinguishing  features : (1) the sale proclamation in  the present case did not fix a reserveprice and therefore  there was no purchase for a nominal sum in disregard of the  price so fixed, (2) Before the bid for a nominal sum and a sale by the  acceptance of such a bid notice had been given  to  the defaulter  stating  that the Government intended  to  pursue that course.  Though on these grounds they held the sale not to  be void, the learned judges proceeded to point out  that this  practice of purchasing property for nominal bids  was neither fair nor equitable.  With this answer the case  came back to the Division Bench where the appeal by the defendant was allowed. The question now for our consideration is whether a sale for a "nominal" bid of Re. 1/- is "a sale by auction" within the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code.  Before entering on  a discussion of the relevant provisions it is  necessary to state that the Government Resolutions of 1933 and 1936 do not  purport  to have and have no statutory  force  at  all. They  cannot  authorise or render valid the  transaction  if otherwise  it lacked a legal basis.  A further matter  which requires to be pointed out is that para. (4) of r.     129, already set out, which authorises the purchase by Government for a nominal price was added only in   1946 long after  the sales in the present case and cannot serve as any basis  for sustaining the validity (1)  I. L. R. 1947 Bom. 75. 336 of  the sale.  In the circumstances it is not  necessary  to consider  the  scope or validity of this rule or  its  legal efficacy for authorising such a sale or purchase. It is common ground that the power of Government to effect a sale  by summary process for the recovery of amounts due  to them  has to be gathered from the four comers of Ch.  XI  of the Code read in conjunction with the relevant rules in  Ch. XVIII.   Section  155 of the Code enables the  Collector  to cause the right, title and interest of the defaulter in  the

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immovable  property to be sold.  The manner in  which  those sales  might  take  place is provided for by  s.  167  which enacts that "sales shall be by public auction by such person as  the Collector may direct." Leaving aside for the  moment the provisions which detail the procedure to be followed  in the conduct of these sales, the point to be observed is that the  realisation of the dues has to be by "sates" by  public auction to be held in the manner prescribed.  This therefore does not and cannot authorise a forfeiture of the  immovable property of a defaulter because of his contumacious  conduct in not paying up his dues when demanded.  Nor does the  Land Revenue  Code contemplate or provide for any  punishment  of defaulters because of their conduct in either not paying  up their  dues  or in not facilitating the realisation  of  the dues payable by them by co-operating with the Government and securing a proper price for their property such as would  be sufficient  for the discharge of their dues.  While on  this point it might be interesting to point out that s. 58 of the Revenue Sale Law (Bengal Revenue Sale Law) Act 11. of 1  859 enacts:               "’When an estate is put up for sale under this               Act for the recovery of arrears of revenue due               thereon,  if there be no bid the Collector  or               other  officer as aforesaid may  purchase  the               estate  on account of the Government  for  one               rupee  ...................."  337 There  is no provision corresponding to this in  the  Bombay Code.   The  question then arises whether a purchase  for  a predetermined  nominal  price  of rupee  one  for  property, whatever  its  actual  market value, is  a  sale  by  public auction  within  s. 167 of the Code.  An  auction  has  been described as "’the proceeding at which people are invited to compete for the purchase of property by successive offers of advancing  sums"  and  a  sale by  auction  is  a  means  of ascertaining what the thing is worth, viz., its fair market price.   If at the sale there are no bids there cannot be  a sale.  A sale for a predetermined nominal sum cannot, in our opinion,  be  held to be a "sale by public auction"  in  the absence  of  any provision for such sales  in  the  statute. Such  a sale appears to us to be somewhat analogous to  what Sir Richard Couch described, though in a slightly  different context.   "’The  offer  and acceptance of  a  rupee  was  a colorable  attempt to obtain a title without paying for  the land.   Virtually it was a present which it was not open  to the  authorities  to make". (vide Luchmeswar  Singh  v.  the Chairman, of the Darbhanga Municipality(1).  It may not also be out of place to point out that it is the Collector who on behalf  of Government sets in motion the machinery  for  the realisation  of  the  arrears by  bringing  the  defaulter’s property  to  sale and it is he who is by the  Land  Revenue Code  invested with the power to make arrangements  for  the sale  and s. 178 constitutes him the authority to  determine judicially  any  allegation about the  irregularity  in  the conduct of the sale.  In these circumstances it looks to  us somewhat  anomalous  that the Collector should  of  his  own motion  and  without the authority of  any  statutory  power claim  the right to bid at the auction which his  deputy  is conducting  on  his behalf for the realisation of  the  dues which  he  as  the executive authority  is  to  recover  and particularly  when  he  is  constituted  the  authority   to consider  the  validity  or  irregularity  in  the   auction conducted  at  his  instance and the purchase  made  at  his instance. (1)  (1890) 1. I,.  R. 18 Cal. 99, 106.

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338 The next question for consideration is whether the fact that the defaulter was appraised that Government would bid for  a nominal  sum  of one rupee for the property at  the  auction renders the sale valid.  We do not find it easy to  discover the  precise  legal  basis upon which prior  notice  to  the defaulter would have the effect of validating the sale.   If a sale for a nominal bid of one rupee were "a sale by public auction" within s. 167 of the Code, notice to the  defaulter that  such  a procedure would be followed would  be  legally unnecessary  and would not add to the legal efficacy of  the sale.  If, on the other hand, such a sale or a sale in  such circumstances  was not a sale by public auction then  notice to  the defaulter could be of value only if (a) it  operated as a waiver of the requirement of s. 167, or (b) created  an estoppel  which precluded him from questioning the  legality of  the  proceeding.   First  as to  waiver,  the  power  of Government  to  effect  the sale by  summary  process  is  a special  provision  resting on public grounds and  being  so very  special it is clear that the limitations on the  power thus  conferred  should  be  strictly  construed.   In   our opinion,  it  is an essential condition of  the  passing  of property from the defaulter in invitem that there should  be a  sale  by public auction and if a sale in  the  manner  in which  it  has been conducted in the present case  does  not amount  to a sale by public auction there is no question  of the title to property passing by virtue of such a sale.  The plea of waiver cannot therefore be of any avail. Nor  is there any basis for any argument that by  reason  of the  notice the defaulter is estopped from  questioning  the legality  of  the sale.  If waiver cannot  cure  the  defect there  is  still  less scope for invoking  the  rule  as  to estoppel,  for  the essential condition of  estoppel,  viz., representation  by  the  person sought to  be  estopped  and prejudice  to  the person seeking the benefit of  the  rule, would both be absent.  We therefore 339 come to the conclusion that the fact that the defaulter  was informed  that  the Government would make a nominal  bid  of rupee one and purchase the property is really irrelevant for considering the validity of the sale. The  conclusion we have indicated earlier is in accord  with the  decision of the Bombay High Court in Tumdu Dhansing  v. Government  for  the Province of Bombay(1) and  we  consider that  that  case is correctly decided.  We  are  further  of opinion that the ratio of that decision would also cover the case where notice was served on the defaulter of the Govern- ment’s  intention  to purchase the property  for  a  nominal price. Learned  Counsel for the respondent raised several  defenses besides seeking to support the judgment of the High Court on the  reasoning of the learned judges and sought  to  sustain the impugned sale on various grounds.  His first  submission was that the sale was at the worst irregular which  rendered it voidable and that no suit having been brought within  one year  of  the sale, the suit was barred by Art.  11  of  the Indian Limitation Act.  We consider however that there is no substance in this contention because if, as we hold, a  sale of the type now impugned was not authorised by the statutory provision  in that regard then it was not a question of  any mere irregularity in the conduct of a sale but a case  where there  was no sale at all with the consequence that no  pro- perty  passed from the defaulter.  It was not disputed  that Art.  II of the Indian Limitation Act would only apply to  a case where there is need for the setting aside of a sale and

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that  it  has  no  application to cases  where  no  sale  as contemplated by law has taken place. It  was next submitted that the appellants’ suit was  barred by ss. 4 (c) and II of the Bombay Revenue (1)  1. L. R. 1947 Bom. 75. 340 jurisdiction Act, 1876.  Section 4(c) runs:-               "4.  Subject  to the  exceptions  hereinafter’               appearing,  no  Civil  Court  shall   exercise               jurisdiction  as  to  any  of  the   following               matters:               (a)..........................................               (b)...........................................               (c)...........................................               claims   to   set   aside,   on   account   of               irregularity,  mistake  or  any  other  ground               except  fraud,  sales  for  arrears  of  land-               revenue;               and s. 11 enacts:               "11.  No Civil Court shall entertain any  suit               against  the Government on account of any  act               or omission of any Revenue-Officer unless  the               plaintiff  first  proves  that  previously  to               bringing  his suit, he has presented all  such               appeals allowed by the law for the time  being               in  force, as within the period of  limitation               allowed   for  bringing  such  suit,  it   was               possible to present." As  to  the applicability of s. 4 (c), it would  be  noticed that  resort to the Civil Courts is barred only  as  regards certain specified classes of suits in which the validity  of sales for arrears Land Revenue are impugned.  The classes so specified  are  those in which the plaintiff  seeks  to  set aside  a sale on account of irregularities etc., other  than fraud.   The  provision obviously assumes that there  is  in existence  a  sale though irregular under  which  title  has passed to the purchaser and that sale has to be set side, on grounds  other than fraud, before the plaintiff  can  obtain relief.  Where however there is only a purported sale  which does  not  pass  title  and the  suit  is  for  recovery  of possession of property ignoring  341 such a sale, the provision and the bar that it creates  have no application. Nor  is there any scope on the facts of the present case  to attract  the application of s. 11.  The section is based  on the  principle  that  a  party  must  exhaust  the  remedies provided by the Act before he can seek the assistance of the Civil  Court in respect of a claim against  the  Government. It  therefore  posits three matters  before  its  protection could be invoked. (1) There must be an act or omission of  a revenue  officer  which gives rise to a  claim  against  the Government; (2) the Act must provide for appeals against the said  act or omission; and (3) lastly the party should  have failed  to avail himself of the remedy by way of  appeal  to obtain redress for his grievance.  The only "act" of  which, on the facts, the appellant could be said to complain  would be the direction by the Collector anthorising the  Mahalkari to  offer  the  nominal  bid of Re.  1/-  and  purchase  the property.   The  question that next arises  is  whether  the Statute  had  provided an appeal against this "act"  It  was admitted that there was no such specific provision.  Learned Counsel for the respondent however drew our attention to  s. 203 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code.               "203.  In the absence of any express provision

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             of  this Act or of any law for the time  being               in force to the contrary, an appeal shall  lie               from any decision or order passed by a revenue               officer  under this Act or any other  law  for               the  time  being in force, to  that  officer’s               immediate  superior, whether such decision  or               order  may itself have been passed  on  appeal               from a subordinate officer’s decision or order               or not." In  the  present  case however, there was no  order  by  any authority which could be the subject of any appeal under  s. 203.    The   Collector  authorised   administratively   the Mahalkari  to offer the bid and that is certainly  not "’a decision" which is capable of 342 appeal  within  s. 203.  No other order which could  by  any stretch  of  language  be construed to  be  a  decision  was pointed  out in respect of which an appeal could  have  been filed.   In fact, there was no decision and except the  sale which is complained of as void and of no effect nothing took place.  If s. 203 is not attracted it was not suggested that s.  1 1 of the Revenue jurisdiction Act created any  bar  to the entertainment of the present suit. It was then suggested that the plaintiff was disentitled  to any  relief by reason of an estoppel raised by s. 41 of  the Transfer  of Property Act.  The basis for this argument  was that  some  time  after the sale the  second  defendant  had purchased  the  plot bearing Survey No. 80 for  Rs.  2,600/- from  the  Government while the  fifth  defendant  similarly purchased  plots  bearing  Survey Nos. 35  and  40  for  Rs. 1,750/-  and  that  the inaction of  the  plaintiff  without taking  proceedings  to  set aside the  sale  constituted  a representation  to  the  world  that  the  Government   were properly the owners of the property which they had purchased for  nominal bids and this was the reasoning by which s.  41 of  the Transfer of Property Act was sought to  be  invoked. The  argument  has only to be stated to  be  rejected.   The respondent did not rely on any representation or any act  or conduct  on the part of the appellant but their belief  that Government had acquired title by reason of their purchase at the revenue sale.  If the Government had no title to convey, it  is  manifest the respondents cannot acquire  any.   They would  clearly  be  trespassers.  In  the  circumstances  we consider  there  is  no scope for invoking the  rule  as  to estoppel contained in s. 41 of the Transfer of Property Act. Lastly,  it  was  submitted that the  respondents  had  made improvements  to the property since they had purchased  them for which they were entitled to compensation under s. 51  of the  Transfer  of Property Act.  But no basis was  laid  for this plea which is 343 one of pure fact.  No evidence was led and no issues  struck before  the  trial judge and we do not  therefore  think  it proper to entertain this point at this stage. The Government of Bombay did not file any Written  Statement before  the  trial-judge, nor did they seek to  support  the sale  before the High Court.  As we have stated,  they  were impleaded as the first respondent in the appeal before  this Court.  In their statement of the case which they filed they did not oppose the appeal but left it to the Court to decide the matter and they took no part in the hearing except  that learned  Counsel appearing on their behalf made a  statement that no order as to costs might be passed against them. In the result the appeal is allowed and the suit decreed  as regards  the three items of land bearing Survey Nos. 35,  40

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and 80.  The appeal will however stand dismissed as  regards the,house in village Kurhe.  In view of the partial  success of  the appellant the appellant will be entitled to half  of the  costs of the appeal here to be paid by the  respondents other than the State of Bombay (now Maharashtra). Appeal partly allowed. 344