22 August 1967
Supreme Court
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STATE OF BIHAR & ORS. Vs SUBODH GOPAL BOSE & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 147 of 1966


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PETITIONER: STATE OF BIHAR & ORS.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: SUBODH GOPAL BOSE & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/08/1967

BENCH: SHAH, J.C. BENCH: SHAH, J.C. SIKRI, S.M.

CITATION:  1968 AIR  281            1968 SCR  (1) 313

ACT: Bihar  Tenancy  Act,  1885,  s.102--Custom-sheets   prepared under--Right  of  tenants  of  Lower  Murli  Hill  (Shahabad District)  to  quarry limestone for trade  purposes  whether supported  by  said custom sheets--Right  whether  could  be claimed  as a profit a prendre or customary  easement--Right must be reasonable to be accepted.

HEADNOTE: Respondent  No. 1 acquired tenancy rights in five  plots  in the  villages of Biknaur and Samahuta situated in  the  area known  as Lower Murli Hill in District Shahabad, Bihar.   In 1949 he filed a plaint in the Court of the Subordinate Judge Sasaram,  against  the State of Bihar and  others,  claiming inter  alia  that as a tenant he had a  customary  right  to quarry  limestone  for trade purposes from the  Lower  Murli Hill.  The claim was based mainly on certain entries in  the Custom-sheets  prepared at the time of the Cadastral  Survey in  1913 under s. 102 of the Bihar Tenancy Act,  1885.   The trial  court rejected the claim but the High Court held  the custom  to  be established by the evidence of  the  Customs- sheets.  The defendants appealed. Held  The High Court was in error in holding that the plain- tiff  had established the custom pleaded by him or  that  it was reasonable. (i)  There  was  nothing  to show  that  the  practices  and privileges recorded in the Custom-Sheets were exercised as a matter of right.  The record has presumptive value.  But the revenue authorities were concerned to ascertain the existing state of affairs and not to determine whether the  practices and   privileges  were  ancient,  certain,  reasonable   and continuous.  As evidence of local custom, the custom  sheets had therefore not much value.  On the other hand there  were indications  that  the exercise of the  privileges  recorded therein   was   permissive.   Even  on  the   most   liberal interpretation they did not provide evidence of the exercise of  the  privilege of commercial exploitation  of  limestone from the area in question. [317D; 319G] (ii) Even  granting that the Custom-sheets recorded a  local custom  that  the  tenants in the villages  of  Baknaur  and Samahuta  excavated stones from the hills near the  villages for  purposes  of trade, a claim of right  founded  on  that

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custom   must   be  held  unreasonable  and   incapable   of enforcement by the sanction of a court’s verdict, [320B] A  claim  in the nature of a profit a prendre  operating  in favour of an indeterminate class of persons and arising  out of  a  local  custom  may be held  enforceable  only  if  it satisfies the tests of a valid custom.  A custom is a  usage by virtue of which a class of persons belonging to a defined section  in  a locality are entitled  to  exercise  specific rights against certain other persons or property in the same locality.   To the extent to which it is  inconsistent  with the general law undoubtedly the custom prevails.  But to  be valid a custom must be ancient, certain and reasonable,  and being  in  derogation of the general rules of  law  must  be construed  strictly.   A right in the nature of a  profit  a prendre in the exercise of which the residents of a locality are entitled to excavate stone for trade purposes would  ex- facie 313 314 be  unreasonable,  because  the exercise  of  such  a  right ordinarily tends to the complete destruction of the  subject matter  of  the  profit.  The custom, if  exercised  in  its amplitude  as  claimed,  may also lead to  breaches  of  the peace,  for  it  would be open to all tenants  to  work  any quarry simultaneously for trade purposes. [321B-D; 324D] Lord Rivers v. Adams, L.R.3 Ex.  Div. 361, Harris & Anr.  v. Earl  of Chesterfield and Anr., [1911] A.C. 623,  Alfred  F. Beckett Ltd. v. Lyons [1967] 1 All E.R. 833, referred to Lutchhmeeput Singh v. Sadaulla Nushyo & Ors., I.L.R. 9  Cal. 698 and Arjun Kaibarta v. Manoranjan De Bhoumick, I.L.R.  61 Cal. 45, approved. Henry Goodman v. The Mayor and Free Burgesses of the Borough of Saltash. 7 A.C. 633 and Mercer v. Denne, [1904] 2 Ch.  D, 534, 557 distinguished.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 147 &  148 of 1966. Appeals from the judgment and decree dated November 15, 1960 of  the Patna High Court in Appeal from Original Decree  No. 212 of 1961. D.   P. Singh, K. M. K. Nair and S. P. Singh, for the appel- lants  (in  C.A. No. 147 of 1966) and respondent No.  2  (in C.A. No. 148 of 1966). A.   K.  Sen,  K.  K.  Sinha and  R.  P.  Katriar,  for  the appellant (in C.A. No. 148 of 1966). S.   T.  Desai,  R.  Chaudhuri, P. K.  Chatterjee  and  Arun Chandra Mitra, for respondent No. 1 (in both the appeals). The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shah,   J.   Subodh  Gopal  Bose-hereinafter   called   ’the plaintiff’   commenced  an  action  in  the  Court  of   the Subordinate  Judge,  Sasaram,  against  four  defendants-the State  of Bihar, the Collector of Shahabad,  the  Additional Sub-Divisional  Officer Sasaram, and Dalmia Jain  &  Company Ltd.,-for a decree declaring that he was entitled to  quarry limestone for trade purposes from the Murli Hills  described in the Schedule annexed to the plaint, and for an injunction restraining the defendants from dispossessing the  plaintiff or  granting, a lease of the land to any other  person.   In the Schedule, the two properties in respect of which  relief was  claimed were: (i) the Upper Murli Hill admeasuring  137 acres  together with subsoil and mineral rights  situate  in pargana Rohtas bearing Touzi No. 4769 Tahsil Circle Sasaram, and  (ii)  the Lower Murli Hill comprising an  area  of  250

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bighas within the Banskati Mahal together with the  surface, subsoil and mineral rights situate in pargana Rohtas,  Touzi No.  4771 Tahsil Circle Sasaram.  The trial Court  dismissed the  suit.  In appeal the High Court of Patna  modified  the decree  passed  by  the trial Court and  declared  that  the plaintiff  was  entitled  to  quarry  limestone  for   trade purposes from the Lower Murli 315 Hill, "subject to the right which the owner of the  Banskati Mahal  had  therein  as  set  out  in  the  judgment",   and restrained  the  defendants by a permanent  injunction  from dispossessing  the  plaintiff  from  the  Lower  Murli  Hill described  in  the  Schedule annexed to  the  plaint.   With certificate  granted by the High Court, the State  of  Bihar and  the  Dalmia  Jain  and  Company  Ltd.  have  separately appealed. By his plaint the plaintiff claimed that he was a tenant  in possession  of 250 bighas of land of the "Lower Murli  Hill" within  the Banskati Mahal and that he was in possession  of the  Upper  Murli  Hill as the local agent  of  the  Kuchwar Company  which  held lease$ for twenty years from  April  1, 1928  to  March 31, 1948, for quarrying limestone  and  that under  the  covenant  for renewal in the  said  leases,  the Kuchwar  Company  had remained in possession  of  the  upper Murli Hill and the State of Bihar had accepted rent from the Company and had otherwise assented to the Company  remaining in   possession.   The  plaintiff  also  claimed   that   by immemorial  custom  and  usage  recognized  by  the   survey authorities  the  plaintiff as a tenant of land  within  the Banskati  Mahal had a right to quarry and  remove  limestone for  trade purposes.  The Court of First Instance held  that at the date of the suit, the plaintiff was in occupation  of 250  bighas  of  land in the Lower Murli Hill,  but  he  was proved to have derived tenancy rights from the Zamindar only in  respect  of plot No. 168 of Baknaur and plots  Nos.  42, 128,  130 and 44 of Samahuta.  The Court further  held  that 32.50 acres out of plot No. 44 of Samahuta were acquired for the  Dehri-Rohtas Light Railway Company and the  plaintiff’s right derived from the Zamindar was pro tanto  extinguished. The Court also held that the lease in favour of the  Kuchwar Company  was  not  renewed,  that  the  customary  right  to excavate   minerals  for  trade  purposes  claimed  by   the plaintiff  in the Lower Murli Hill was not proved, that  the minerals  in the Lower and Upper Murli Hill were  vested  in the  State of Bihar and the plaintiff was merely a  licensee from  the State in respect of the Upper Murli Hill  and  was not  a tenant holding over.  In appeal to the High Court  of Patna  the claim to excavate minerals from the  Upper  Murli Hill was not pressed by the plaintiff.  It was also conceded by the plaintiff that he was, as found by the trial Court, a tenant  from the Zamindar only of five plots one in  Baknaur and  the  other four in Samahuta.  The finding that  at  the date  of  the suit, the plaintiff was in occupation  of  250 bighas  of  land  was  not  challenged  on  behalf  of   the defendants.  In the view of the High Court the right to  the minerals in the Lower Murli Hill vested in the Zamindar  and not  in  the  State, and the Banskati right  was  merely  an incorporeal  right  to levy tax on the removal  of  "various spontaneous  products and minerals, and did not extend to  a right  of ownership in the products and. the minerals."  The High  Court  also  held  that  the  custom  pleaded  by  the plaintiff of the right to take for trade purposes  limestone from the quarries within the Banskati Mahal was prov- 316 ed. The High Court confirmed the decree passed by the  trial

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Court  insofar  as  it related to  the  claim  to  excavate, limestone  from the Upper Murli Hill and decreed  the  claim for a declaration that the plaintiff had the right to quarry limestone and manufacture lime from the Lower Murli Hill and to carry on trade in limestone, "subject to the right  which the  owner of the Banskati Mahal had of levying duty on  the products  removed",  and for an injunction  restraining  the defendants  from interfering with the plaintiffs  possession of the Lower Murli Hill. [His Lordship after discussing the evidence, held that  "It is  sufficient  to record that there is no evidence  on  the record of specific instances of the tenants of the  villages having  ever exercised the right to excavate limestone  from the   slopes   of  the  Lower  Murli  Hill   for   domestic, agricultural or trade purposes" and proceeded]: The High Court placed very strong reliance upon the  entries in  the Custom-Sheet prepared under the Bihar  Tenancy  Act, 1885.  Section 102 of the Act, provides, inter alia.               "Where an order is made under section 101, the               particulars to be recorded shall be  specified               in the order, and may include, either  without               or  in addition to other particulars, some  or               all of the following, namely: -                   .................................. (h)  the  special conditions and incidents, if any,  of  the tenancy." At  the  Cadastral  Survey which was completed  in  1913,  a record of customs and practices was prepared.  Exhibits  11, 11 (a) and 11 (b) are the "Custom-Sheets" in respect of  the three villages-Baknaur, Samahuta and Murli Hill (Upper Murli Hill).   In respect of the villages Baknaur and Upper  Murli Hill  the  Custom-Sheets are in the form  of  questions  and answers.   Questions 12 & 13 and the answers thereto in  the Custom-Sheet of Baknaur may be set out: - "12.  Whether or not the rai-   On obtaining free pass they yats have any right to       can bring (stone) for construc- take away stone, if there       tion of house and well. is one, what is that? 13.Whether  the raiyats have  They can prepare lime for  any right to take away         cultivation work from the forests lime, lac, or any other        in the Mahal. Nothing is forest product. If they        realised for it. If they pre- have one, what is that?        pare lime for sale purposes,                                fee is realised according to                                Schedule vide Memo. No.                                270 dated 14-12-1904; and lac                                jungle is made settlement." By  the Schedule of fees, "stone chips" were  chargeable  at rates varying between-/4/ 4 and /1/1 per ton and big stones for  construction of houses were chargeable at the  rate  of Rs.  1/2/-  per hundred.  In Ext.  II (b)  relating  to  the Upper  Murli  Hill  in  answer to question  No.  12  it  was recorded that the Hill "has been given in B settlement  i.e. in  thika: " only the tenants can get stone chips  from  the Hill.   In  answer to Question No. 13 it was  recorded  that "the 317 basti  is  unpopulated:  the  Hill  has  been  let  out   in settlement:  the people of the village cannot  prepare  lime from the Hill of this Mauza, but they can prepare lime  from the  Hill  of  other Mauzas of this  Mahal  for  cultivation purposes."  In  Ext.  11(a) which  relates  to  the  village Samahuta,  the relevant entries which are in narrative  form are as follows: -               "The   residents   take   away   stones    for

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             constructing houses and wells and prepare lime               for their personal use without paying any  fee               and  for sale they pay fees according  to  the               rates entered in the Schedule.               Thika settlement is made in respect of lac." Relying  upon  these entries the High Court  held  that  the right  to  trade in limestone was vested by  custom  in  the tenants in the Banskati Mahal.  We are unable to accept this interpretation of the Custom-Sheets.  ’The record is  merely a  catalogue of practices and privileges of the  tenants  in the  villages within the Banskati Mahal,there is nothing  to show that it was recorded that the practices and  privileges were  exercised as a matter of right by the villagers.   Un- doubtedly the record has presumptive value.  But the revenue authorities  were concerned to ascertain the existing  state of  affairs and not to determine whether the  practices  and privileges were ancient, certain, reasonable and continuous. As   evidence  of  local  custom,  the  custom-sheets   have therefore   not  much  value.   There  are  again   inherent indications  in the custom-sheets that the exercise  of  the privileges recorded therein was permissive. Harbans Rai--descenent of Raja Shah Mal--had imposed  duties on the removal of forest produce and the minerals.  There is no record of the nature of the duties imposed in the days of Harbans  Rai and of exemptions, if any.  The entries in  the custom-sheets indicate that the forest produce and  minerals taken by the tenants in the village were subject to  certain duties.   Imposition  of  duties  upon  forest  produce  and minerals was evidently in exercise of signorial rights.   In the custom-sheets of the villages Baknaur and Samahuta it is recorded that the tenants "take minerals and forest produce" for domestic and agricultural purposes, but if they  prepare lime  for sale they have to pay duties.  Recognition of  the practice  of  taking stone and forest produce  for  domestic purposes without payment of duty is easily explained.  In  a predominantly  agricultural  commuinity it would  have  been regarded  as  churlish,  for the Zamindar who  was  for  all practical purposes the local representative of the Ruler  to deny to the tenants of lands the facility of taking articles of  small  value  for  domestic  or  agricultural  purposes. Acceptance of liability to pay duties on forest produce  and minerals taken for purposes other than domestic or  agricul- tural,  is destructive of the claim of a right to  take  the articles: it indicates that the removal was permissive being only  on  payment of duty.  The custom-sheet  of  the  Upper Murli  Hill recites that because the Hill had been  let  out the tenants cannot prepare lime from  318 the  Hill  of the Mauza lends strong support to  that  view. Again  the  recitals in Exts.  11 and 11 (a)  that  a  thika settlement  was made in respect of "lac" also leads to  that inference:  it  clearly implies that the tenants  could  not take  "lac" from the forest because of the grant of a  thika contract.   The  evidence  therefore  shows  that  even  the practices  recorded  in the custom-sheets were  followed  so long  as  the Government had not disposed of the  corpus  in favour  of  the  contractors.  The duties  set  out  in  the Schedules  to  the Custom-Sheets are also not  shown  to  be permanently  fixed.  The Schedule of fees mentioned  in  the Custom-Sheets was apparently published on December 14, 1904, and there is no evidence that it was merely a record of fees levied  since the days of Harbans Rai.  From the  answer  to question  No.  4 in the Custom-Sheets it  appears  that  the Government  had  treated the forest as  a  protected  forest under  a notification dated June 30, 1909, and that  implies

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that restrictions were imposed upon the taking and  disposal of  forest produce.  The report dated December 17,  1909  by Jagdum   Sahai-a   Revenue  Officer-that  "as   the   custom throughout  the Rohtas Pargana has been that  the  Zamindars and the cultivators and raiyats in all the villages in which the  Government had its Banskati rights could take  free  of Government duty any quantity of timber, lime and stone  etc. for  their  domestic and agricultural  purposes  within  the limits of their own village, it was difficult to prevent  or check  the  people  of Samahuta Gurmain,  and  Baknaur  from entering  into the pure Khas Mahal portion of this  Hill  to which  they had no right for want of distinct marks  of  its boundary",  does not even by implication support a right  to take forest produce and limestone for trade purposes. The  record  of  customs  and practices  is  in  respect  of Banskati  Mahal and the area which originally extended  over 500  sq.  miles,  was later reduced to 200  sq.  miles,  and consisted of 108 villages.  The Custom-Sheets recorded  that the  villagers were accustomed to take dry wood, timber  and bamboo  for  agricultural purposes Ind for  construction  of houses and that was permitted free of charge.  Assuming that a customary right in that behalf is established, removal  of forest  produce  for  other purposes  with  permits  and  on payment  of duty fixed by the authorities cannot be said  to be  in  exercise of a right.  The  conditions  of  obtaining permit and payment of fee for removal of the forest  produce and   limestone  for  purposes  other  than   domestic   and agricultural indicate that the removal was not as of  right, but  depended upon the sanction of the authorities  in  whom the  right to the Banskati was vested.  In Ext. 11  (a)  the privilege recorded is of "residents" to take away stones for constructing  houses  and wells and prepare lime  for  their personal  use without paying any fee, and for sale they  had to pay fees according to the rates entered in the  Schedule. Granting  that the expression "residents" means tenants,  if the  privilege  to take forest produce and  stone  is  being subject  to conditions of obtaining permits and  payment  of fee it cannot be regarded as a right enforceable against the State. 319 In  the  plained it was it was claimed  that  by  immemorial customs  and usage, the tenants in the Banskati Mahal had  a right  to quarry and remove limestone and  manufacture  lime from  the  quarries and hills within the  Mahal.   The  plea apparently  was that all tenants within the  Banskati  Mahal had the right to quarry and remove limestone and manufacture lime  from all the limestone quarries and Hills  within  the Mahal  and  to  carry on trade  therein.   Counsel  for  the plaintiff in this Court did not press for acceptance of this somewhat  audacious claim and conceded that the right  which the plaintiff merely claimed, notwithstanding the  unguarded phraseology used in the plaint, was that:               a tenant of a village within Banskati Mahal is               "entitled  under  customary law  to  carry  on               quarrying operations for trade purposes on any               forest    (waste   land)   of   the    village               irrespective  of whether" he is "a  tenant  in               respect of such forest land or not." Counsel  said  that the right claimed by  the  plaintiff  is exercisable  only  by tenants in the quarries and  hills  in their village and belonging to the Zamindar and not in other villages  of the Banskati Mahal.  This case was not  pleaded in  the  plaint.  Even if it be assumed that  the  plaintiff intended  to  set  up a right not as  extensive  as  it  was pleaded,  and intended to restrict it only to  the  quarries

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and hills of the Zamindar in the village in which the tenant claiming  the  right resided, in our judgment,  a  customary right  to  quarry stone out of the Lower Murli Hill  and  to manufacture  lime from limestone for trade proposes  is  not supported by the customsheets. We are not concerned in this case with the privilege of  the tenants  of  taking for agricultural  or  domestic  purposes pieces  of  stones  either  lying on  the  surface  or  even underneath  the  surface.  Whether that would  amount  to  a customary right enforceable against the owner of the surface and the minerals is a matter on which we do not feel  called upon  to  express  any opinion.   The  privilege  of  taking limestone  for  domestic and agricultural  purposes  is  one privilege  : the privilege of taking limestone for  manufac- turing  lime  by an agriculturist, even if it be  for  sale, with  his  primitive methods is another privilege,  and  the privilege of commercial exploitation of more than a hundred thousand  tons ’of limestone a year to be extracted  out  of the  Lower Murli Hill with the aid of machinery is  quite  a different privilege and even the most liberal interpretation of the custom-sheets will not be evidence of the exercise or grant of the last privilege.  Therefore, the customary right pleaded in the plaint that every tenant of any land  covered by the Banskati Mahal was entitled to take limestone out  of any  quarry  in any hill in Banskati Mahal and to  trade  in stone  or  lime  manufactured out of the  limestone  is  not supported by instances 320 of  exercise  of  such right and is  not  supported  by  the entries  in the Custom-Sheets.  The entries in  the  Custom- Sheets  contain on the other hand strong indications to  the contrary. Even granting that the Custom-Sheets recorded a local custom that  the  tenants in the villages of Baknaur  and  Samahuta excavated  stones  from the hills near  their  villages  for purposes  of trade, a claim of right founded on that  custom must  be held unreasonable and incapable of  enforcement  by the sanction of a Court’s verdict.  The right exercisable by the tenants in the villages to excavate limestone for  trade purposes was not claimed by the plaintiff as an easement: it could  not  be so claimed, for it is not a right  which  the owner or occupier of certain land possesses as such, for the beneficial enjoyment of that land, to do and continue to  do something,  or to prevent and continue to prevent  something being  done,  in, or upon, or in respect of,  certain  other land  not his own: Section 4 of the Indian Easements Act,  5 of  1882.   The  Indian  Easements Act  no  doubt  makes  no distinction  for the purpose of acquisition by  prescription between  the  right of easement strictly so-called  and  the right which under the English common law is called a profit- a-prendre.  By the Explanation to s. 4 the expression "to do something"   includes  removal  and  appropriation  by   the dominant owner, for the beneficial enjoyment of the dominant heritage, of any part of the soil of the servient  heritage, or  anything  growing or subsisting  thereon.   A  profit-a- prendre   is  therefore  included  in  the   definition   of "easement"  in  S. 4 of the Indian Easements  Act.   But  an easement being a right which is super-added to the  ordinary common  law  incidents  of  the  ownership  of  a   dominant tenement,  and  which connotes a corresponding burden  on  a servient  tenement,  can  only be created by  grant,  or  by statute.  An apparent exception to this rule is a  customary easement.   But a customary easement is not an  easement  in the true sense of that expression.  It is not annexed to the ownership of a dominant tenement, and it is not  exercisable

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for the more beneficial enjoyment of the dominant  tenement: it is recognised and enforced as a part of the common law of the locality where it obtains.  A customary easement  arises in  favour  of  an indeterminate class of  persons  such  as residents  of a locality or members of a certain  community, and though not necessarily annexed to the ownership of land, it  is  enforceable  as a right to do  and  continue  to  do something upon land or as a right to prevent and continue to prevent  something being done upon land.  Sanction  for  its enforceability  being in custom, the right must satisfy  all the  tests  which a local custom for recognition  by  courts must satisfy. A  profit-a-prendre in gross-that is a right exercisable  by an indeterminate body of persons to take something from  the land of others, but not for the more beneficial enjoyment of a dominant tenement-is not an easement within the meaning of the Easements 321 Act.  To the claim of such a right, the Easements Act has no application.   Section  2  of the  Easements  Act  expressly provides that nothing in the Act contained, shall be  deemed to  affect,  inter alia, to derogate from any  customary  or other  right  (not  being a license) in  or  over  immovable property which the Government, the public or any person  may possess  irrespective of other immovable property.  A  claim in  the nature of a profit-a-prendre operating in favour  of an indeterminate class of persons and arising out of a local custom  may  be held enforceable only if  it  satisfies  the tests  of a valid custom.  A custom is a usage by virtue  of which a class of persons belonging to a defined section in a locality  are entitled to exercise specific  rights  against certain other persons or property in the same locality.   To the extent to which it is inconsistent with the general law, undoubtedly the custom prevails.  But to be valid, a  custom must  be  ancient,  certain and  reasonable,  and  being  in derogation  of  the general rules of law must  be  construed strictly.   A right in the nature of a  profit-a-prendre  in the exercise of which the residents of locality are entitled to  excavate  stones for trade purposes would  ex  facie  be unreasonable because the exercise of such a right ordinarily tends  to the complete destruction of the subject-matter  of the  profit.  It is said in Halsbury’s Laws of England,  3rd Edn.  Vol.  11, Art. 324 at p. 173:               "If a right in alieno solo amounts to a profit               a  prendre  it  cannot  be  claimed  under  an               alleged  custom; for no profit a  prendre  and               therefore no right of common can be claimed by               custom  except in certain  mining  localities;               nor can there be a right to a profit a prendre               in  an  undefined  and  fluctuating  body   of               persons." That view is supported by a considerable body of  authority. In  Lord  Rivers  v. Adams (1) it was held  that  the  right claimed by inhabitants of a parish to cut and carry away for use  as  fuel in their own houses fagots or haskets  of  the under-wood  growing upon a common belonging to the  lord  of the  manor is a right to a profit-a-prendre in the  soil  of another: such a right cannot exist by custom,  prescription, or grant, unless it be a Crown grant which incorporates  the inhabitants.   The House of Lords in Harris and  Another  v. Earl of Chesterfield and Another(2) held that a prescription in  a  que  estate for a profit a  prendre  in  alieno  solo without stint and for commercial purposes is unknown to  the law.   In the case of Harris and Another(2) the  freeholders in  parishes  adjoining the river Wye were in the  habit  of

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fishing  a  non-tidal portion of the  river  for  centuries, openly, continuously, as of right and without  interruption, not merely for sport or pleasure, but commercially in  order to  sell  the  fish and make a living by  it.  The  riparian proprietors  claiming to be owners of the bed of  the  river brought an action of trespass against the freeholders for (1) L.R. 3 Ex.  Div. 361.       (2) [1911] A.C. 623. 322 fishing.   It was held by a majority of the House  of  Lords that  the  legal  origin  for  the  right  claimed  by   the freeholders could not be presumed and that the action by the plaintiffs was maintainable. In  Lutchhmeeput  Singh v. Sadaulla Nushyo and  Others(1)  a Division Bench of the Calcutta High Court accepted the prin- ciple in the case of Lord Rivers v. Adams(2).  In that  case the plaintiff sought to restrain the defendants from fishing in certain bhils belonging to his Zamindar.  The  defendants pleaded  inter  alia that they had a prescriptive  right  to fish  in the bhils, under a custom, according to  which  all the  inhabitants of the Zamindari had the right of  fishing. It  was held that no prescriptive right of fishery had  been acquired  under  s. 26 of the Limitation Act  and  that  the custom  alleged  could not, on the ground that  it  was  un- reasonable, be treated as valid. Counsel  for the plaintiff contended that the  present  case falls within the principle enunciated by the House of  Lords in  Henry  Goodman v. The Mayor and Free  Burgesses  of  the Borough of Saltash(3).  The facts in Henry Goodman’s case(3) were  peculiar.   A prescriptive right to a  several  oyster fishery  in a navigable tidal river was proved to have  been exercised from time immemorial by a borough corporation  and its  lessees without any qualification except that the  free inhabitants  of  ancient tenements in the borough  had  from times  immemorial without interruption, and claiming  as  of right,  exercised the privilege of dredging for  oysters  in the  locus in quo from the 2nd of February to Easter Eve  in each  year,  and  of catching and  carrying  away  the  same without  stint  for sale and otherwise.  This usage  of  the inhabitants tended to the destruction of the fishery, and if continued  would  destroy it.  It was held by the  House  of Lords  (Lord  Blackburn dissenting) that the  claim  of  the inhabitants  was  not to a profit a prendre in  alieno  solo that  a lawful origin for the usage ought to be presumed  if reasonably possible; and that the presumption which ought to be  drawn.  as reasonable in law and probable in  fact,  was that the original grant to the corporation was subject to  a trust-  or  condition in favour of the free  inhabitants  of ancient  tenements  in the borough in  accordance  with  the usage.  The case came before the Court of Common Pleas, as a special case on facts stated, that the mayor and corporation of  Saltash as a corporation was the owner  by  prescriptive right of the bed and soil and several oyster fishery in  the estuary of the River Tamar, and that the free inhabitants of the  ancient  tenements in the borough of Saltash  had  from time  immemorial,  without interruption and claiming  as  of right,  exercised the privilege of dredging for  oysters  in the  river.   The  House was called upon  to  reconcile  two conflicting rights of the corporation to the several fishery and  of  the free inhabitants to take  oysters.   The  House reconciled the rights by (1) I.L.R. Cal. 698.             (2) L.R. 3 Ex.  Div. 361. (3)  7 A.C, 633 323 holding  that the grant to the corporation of the  soil  and the oyster fishery, which must be taken to have been a grant

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before  legal memory, was made by the Crown or the Duchy  of Cornwall  subject  to a trust or condition  binding  on  the grantee,  the  corporation, to allow the owners  of  ancient tenements within the borough the limited right to dredge for oysters  notwithstanding  that the right might lead  to  the destruction   of  the  fishery.   In  Harris  v.   Earl   of Chesterfield(1),  Lord Ashbourne observed at p.  633,  after referring to the judgment in Henry Goodman’s case(2) that:               "It   was  a  splendid  effort  of   equitable               imagination  in furtherance of  justice.   The               conception  was reasonably possible  and  that               sufficed." In  a  recent case before the Court of  Appeal  in  England: Alfred F. Beckett Ltd. v. Lyons(3) it was observed by Harman and  Winn  L.JJ.,  that  the claim made  on  behalf  of  the inhabitants of the County Palatine of Durham that they  were entitled by custom of the locality to collect sea-borne coal from  the foreshore being a profit-a-prendre, a  fluctuating body  such as the inhabitants of a county could not  acquire by custom a right of that nature. Counsel for the plaintiff also relied upon the  observations made  by Farwell, J., in Mercer v. Denne(4) at p. 557,  that the period for determining whether a custom is reasonable or not  is  its inception.  In Mercer’s case(4)  fishermen  who were  inhabitants  of the parish Walves were  accustomed  to spread  their nets to dry on the land of a private owner  at all times seasonable for fishing.  In an action on behalf of the  firshermen of the parish for a declaration of right  in terms ’of the custom and an injunction restraining the owner of the land from building on or dealing with the land so  as to  disturb the right of the fishermen, it was urged by  the defendant that the, custom was unreasonable, because the sea may recede for a mile or more, and it was impossible to sup- pose  that  any such extent of ground could ever  have  been intended to be appropriated to such a custom.  Farwell,  J., observed  that as the event had not happened for upwards  of 700 years, he could not see the unreasonableness of it.   He also  observed  that the period for ascertaining  whether  a custom  is reasonable or not is its inception.  Counsel  for the plaintiff relying upon those observations submitted that if  the  custom in its inception was  unreasonable,  a  more extensive  burden imposed by the exercise of the  custom  by the  passage of time does not make it unreasonable.   It  is difficult  in  the  very  nature  of  things  to  ascertain, especially  under the English law where proof by  immemorial user  must date back to the reign of Richard 1,  i.e.  1,189 A.D., the conditions existing at the inception of a  custom, assuming that one can trace its inception.  It is (1) [1911] A.C. 623.          (2) 7 A.C. 633. (3) [1967] 1 All E.R. 833.    (4) [1904] 2 Ch.  D. 534, 557. 324 however,  unnecessary  to dilate upon that  matter  in  this appeal; if by the exercise of a customary right in favour of an  indefinite  body of persons the property  which  is  the subject-matter of the profit-a-prendre is in danger of being destroyed the customary right will not be recognised:  Arjun Kaibarta v. Manoranjan De Bhoumick(1). Counsel  for  the  plaintiff contended that  the  Court  may ignore the exaggerated claim appearing from the averments in the  plaint and declare, relying upon the  custom-sheets,  a right  to  excavate limestone and to utilise  it  for  trade purposes limited to the tenants in the two villages.  We are unable  to accede to that request.  In the present case  the right  to take "spontaneous produce of forest and  minerals" for domestic or agricultural purposes by the tenants is  not

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in  issue.  What is in issue is the right claimable  by  all the  tenants  of  the two villages-even  on  the  restricted interpretation  of  the  claim set up  by  counsel  for  the plaintiff-to  excavate stone from all lands in the,  village for  trade purposes by installing machinery.  Such a  custom would, if exercised in its amplitude as claimed, may lead to breaches  of the peace, for it would be open to all  tenants to  claim  to  work  any  quarry  simultaneously  for  trade purposes,  and  may  also tend to  the  destruction  of  the subjectmatter.  Such a custom would be unreasonable. The  High  Court was, in our judgment, in error  in  holding that the plaintiff had established the custom pleaded by him or that it was reasonable. The  plaintiff had claimed in the plaint that he was at  the date of the suit in possession of 250 bighas of land in  the Lower  Murli Hill.  The trial Court held that the  plaintiff established tenancy rights in respect of only five plots  of land from the Zamindar-plot No. 168 in village Baknaur,  and four Plots Nos. 42. 44, 128 and 130 in village Samahuta.  It does not appear that this finding was challenged before  the High  Court.  It is true that the plaintiff claimed that  he was  in possession at the date of the suit of 250 bighas  in the two villages of Baknaur and Samahuta and it was so found by the trial Court and the finding was not challenged before the  High Court either by the State or by the Dalmia Jain  & Co.  Ltd.   But  that claim  of  possession  was  apparently founded   on   the   plea  that  the   plaintiff   was   the representative  of the tenant holding over under the  leases granted  by the State of Bihar to the Kuchwar  Company.   It was  held that the plaintiff’s occupation of the  lands  was not  as a tenant holding over, but was merely permissive  so long  as  no final decision was made by  the  Government  of Bihar on the application by the Kuchwar Company for  renewal of  the  leases  which had expired.   After  the  Government decided  not to grant renewal of the leases,  the  plaintiff had no right as an agent of the Kuchwar Company to (1) I.L.R.     61 Cal. 45, 325 remain in occupation of the lands other than those in  which he  had  leasehold  interest  derived  from  the   Zamindar. Counsel  for  the plaintiff has  therefore restricted  his claim  to an injunction in respect of the land in  which  he establishes his interest as a tenant from the Zamindar. The  claim of the plaintiff to a declaration in  respect  of the  area  of  32.50 acres of land out of  plot  No.  44  of Samahuta  which  was  acquired for  the  Dehri-Rohtas  Light Railway  Company between the years 1912 and 1917 remains  to be  considered.   The  right of the  Zamindar  in  the  land together  with  all encumbrances in the  land  acquired  was extinguished  when  possession  was taken by  the  State  in exercise  of  the  authority of the  Land  Acquisition  Act. Thereafter  no  one could claim in that land  title  derived from the Zamindar. 30.933 acres out of the land after it was transferred  by the acquiring authority to the  Railway  was leased out to the Kuchwar Company and under a grant from the Kuchwar Company the plaintiff obtained the leasehold rights. The lease granted by the Dehri-Rohtas Light Railway  Company to  Kuchwar Company was in the first instance for one  year, and  determinable  by notice expiring with the  end  of  the year.   It  was the case of the State and of Dalmia  Jain  & Company  Ltd.  that by a notice served by  the  Dehri-Rohtas Light Railway Company upon the Kuchwar Company the lease was determined.   The plaintiff contended at the trial that  the notice was not received by the Kuchwar Company and therefore there  was  no determination of the lease.   Manifestly  the

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plaintiff  cannot  seek  to enforce his right  to  the  land acquired  from the Dehri-Rohtas Light Railway Company  as  a tenant  from the Zamindar, and at the date of the  suit  the plaintiff  had no right in the land, for the  conveyance  by the Kuchwar Company in favour of the plaintiff was  executed several  months  after the date of the  suit.   Neither  the Kuchwar  Company nor the Dehri-Rohtas Light Railway  Company is  on  the  record,  and it  would  be  impossible  in  the circumstances to record any finding on the question  whether the  lease  was  terminated.  But since  the  right  of  the Company was not transferred to the plaintiff before the date of  the suit, his claim for a declaration of his  right  and for  injunction restraining the defendants from  interfering with his possession cannot be sustained.  ’The plaintiff as a tenant of the surface rights of the five plots of land  in villages  Baknaur  and  Samahuta  but  excluding  the   area acquired  for  the  Dehri-Rohtas Light  Railway  Company  is however   entitled   to  protect  his   possession   against unauthorised disturbance. We  accordingly modify the decree passed by the  High  Court and  declare  that the plaintiff has no right by  custom  to excavate  limestone for trade purposes out of the slopes  of the Lower Murli Hill or from any other land of the  villages in  Baknaur  and Samahuta for trade  purposes.   The  decree passed  in favour of the plaintiff restraining the State  of Bihar, its agents and servants, and the 326 Dalmia  Jain  &  Company  Ltd.  from  interfering  with  the plaintiff’s possession is maintained in respect of plot  No. 168  of Baknaur village and plots Nos. 42, 128, 130  and  44 (excluding  the  land acquired for  the  Dehri-Rohtas  Light Railway  Company)  of the village Samahuta so  long  as  the tenancy  rights  vested in the plaintiff  are  not  lawfully determined. The appeals will accordingly be partially allowed.  In these appeals  the  plaintiff  claimed primarily  to  enforce  his customary  right  to take valuable minerals from  the  Lower Murli Hill, and he has failed to establish that right.   The plaintiff  will  therefore pay the costs to the  State  of Bihar  and the Dalmia Jain & Company Ltd.  throughout.   One hearing fee, in the two appeals in this Court. G.C.                   Appeals allowed in part. 327