09 December 1965
Supreme Court
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SUB-DIVISIONAL, OFFICER, MIRZAPUR Vs RAJA SRI NIWAS PRASAD SINGH

Bench: GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ),WANCHOO, K.N.,HIDAYATULLAH, M.,RAMASWAMI, V.,SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.
Case number: Appeal (civil) 751 of 1963


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PETITIONER: SUB-DIVISIONAL, OFFICER, MIRZAPUR

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: RAJA SRI NIWAS PRASAD SINGH

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 09/12/1965

BENCH: HIDAYATULLAH, M. BENCH: HIDAYATULLAH, M. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ) WANCHOO, K.N. RAMASWAMI, V. SATYANARAYANARAJU, P.

CITATION:  1966 AIR 1164            1966 SCR  (2) 970  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1975 SC 865  (34)

ACT: Uttar- Pradesh Zamindari  Abolition  and Land  Reforms  Act, 1952 (U.P. 1 of 1952),   v.   343--Compensation   Assessment Roll, Objection to-Notice to State Government-If  necessary- Manner of Service.

HEADNOTE: The Sub-Divisional Officers of Mirzapur and Chunar  Tahsils, functioning as Compensation Officers under the Uttar Pradesh Zamindari  Abolition  and Land Reforms  Act,  1952  prepared draft  Compensation Assessment Rolls, and notified  them  in the Official Gazette as required by s. 46(1) (a) of the Act. A notice was also served on the respondent, who was entitled to  compensation  under  the  Act.   The  ’respondent  filed objections  and  claimed  higher  compensation.   The  State Government  was not given notice of the objections  nor  any intimation  of  the date of hearing- was sent to it.   As  a result of the objections, the Compensation ,awardable to the respondent  was enhanced, and the final  compensation  Rolls were   then   signed  and  sealed.   Nearly   eight   months thereafter,  the State Government filed applications  before the Compensation Officer for reopening the objection  cases, and claimed to have made these applications on the 30th  day of  their  knowledge about the revision of the  Rolls.   The respondent opposed the applications alleging that the  State had  knowledge  of  the  proceedings,  and  asked  for   the production  of  certain documents to prove  that  the  State Government had notice of the proceedings and the State, had, in  fact,  appeared  through the  Zamindari  Abolition  Naib Tahsildars to contest the objections.  The State  Government claimed  privilege  which  was  allowed  by  the   Objection Officer.   Thereupon the respondent challenged the claim  of privilege  in a writ petition to the High Court,  where  the respondent  was also allowed to claim a writ of  prohibition against  the reopening of the objection cases.   The  Single Judge  dismissed  the  writ petition,  but  on  appeal,  the Division  Bench quashed the order of the  Objection  Officer

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holding  the  documents were privileged.  It also  issued  a writ of prohibition.  In appeal, HELD : Section 343 says that Government shall be a party  to every  proceeding  and it was therefore  necessary  to  join Government  and to send it a notice of the  objection.   The definition  of  "person  interested" is  not  an  exhaustive definition and the interest of Government is manifest.  When the  section  says that Government shall be deemed to  be  a party, it only means that Government can appear even if  not joined. [977 G; 978 C] A  notice  to  Government  must  be  sent  to  the  District Collector  and till notice is so sent Government  cannot  be treated as served. [978 F] Every court and tribunal is entitled to reopen a  proceeding which has proceeded ex parte, not because a party has failed to  appear  but  because a notice has not  been  sent  to  a necessary party. [980 A-B] As  the question whether the compensation officer  would  or would  not  allow the objection cases to be  reopened  still remained  to  be  decided, the High Court was  in  error  in issuing a writ of prohibition when the                             971 Compensation  Officer had jurisdiction to determine  whether to reopen the proceedings.  The question of jurisdiction can only  be  decided  after  it  has  been  considered  by  the Compensation   Officer  and  he  proceeds  to   reopen   the proceedings. [980 E-G]

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 751 of 1963. Appeal from the judgment and decree dated November 21, 1961, of  the  Allahabad High Court in Special Appeal No.  123  of 1960. C.   B. Agarwala and O. P. Rana, for the appellants. G.   S.  Pathak, B. Dutta, C. S. P. Singh, S. N. Prasad  and J.  B. Dadachanji, for the respondent. The Judgment  of  the Court was delivered by Hidayatullah, J. This is an appeal by certificate under Art. 133(1)(b)  and (c) of the Constitution against the  judgment of the High Court of Allahabad in Special Appeal No. 123  of 1960, dated November 21, 1961.  By the judgment under appeal the  Divisional  Bench reversing the decision of  a  learned single  Judge of that Court accepted a petition  under  Art. 226  of the Constitution filed by the present respondent  in the following circumstances. The  respondent Raja Sri Niwas Prasad Singh owned  extensive zamindari  interests  in  tahsils  Mirazpur  and  Chunar  of Mirzapur  District  in Uttar Pradesh.  The  present  dispute concerns  the assessment of compensation to which  the  Raja became entitled under the Uttar Pradesh Zamindari  Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 (U.P. Act 1 of 1951) from July 1, 1952.  Under that Act, the proprietary interests of the Raja in  the  Zamindari properties situated in  the  two  tahsils vested  in the State of Uttar Pradesh.   The  Sub-Divisional Officers   of   Mirzapur  and  Chunar  tahsils,   who   were functioning as Compensation Officers under the Act, prepared draft  Compensation Assessment Rolls and they were  notified in  the official Gazette as required by cl. (a) of s.  46(1) of  the  Act.  A copy of the notice was also served  on  the Raja along with a copy of the draft Compensation  Assessment Rolls as required by cl. (b).  The Raja filed objections  to the draft Rolls, contending that the amount of  compensation should  have  been  higher than what was fixed.   It  is  an

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admitted fact that no notice of the objections filed by  the Raja  was given to the State of Uttar Pradesh; nor  was  any intimation   of  the  date  of  hearing  sent.   The   State Government  had,  however, issued a  notification  [No.  145 Z.A.C.-5/158(1953)]   on  July  29,  1953  instructing   all District  Officers that in objection cases, in which it  was deemed 972 necessary  to  arrange  for  the  State  Government  to   be represented  before the Compensation Officers, the  District Officers   should  specifically  authorise   the   Zamindari Abolition  Naib Tahsildars to plead on behalf of  the  State Government.   No  special  authorisation  in  terms  of  the notification  was  however,  issued  in  the  present  case, although the Naib Tahsildars without authorisation  appeared as  a matter of course.  As a result of the objections,  the Compensation  awardable  to  the  Raja  for  his   zamindari interest  in  Mirzapur  Tahsil was  enhanced  by  about  Rs. 3,01,348-5-0.  The compensation in respect of his  interests in Chunar Tahsil was also substantially enhanced.  The final Compensation  Rolls were then signed and sealed  on  various dates, the last being January 31, 1955 in the Mirzapur  case and December 13, 1954 in the Chunar case.  The Raja received the bonds in respect of the original compensation and also a part  of  the enhanced compensation.  A sum of  over  rupees three lakhs remains still to be paid. On  August  22, 1955 the State of Uttar  Pradesh  filed  two applications  before the Compensation Officers  at  Mirzapur and Chunar praying that the objection cases be re-opened and the  State Government given a hearing.  The main  ground  on which  the State Government claimed to have the  proceedings re-opened was that notices of the objections were not issued to the State Government as required by the Act and that  the State  Government,  having no knowledge of  the  objections, could  not appear and contest the case set up by  the  Raja. The  State  Government claimed that the  final  Compensation Rolls were not binding upon it. The State Government averred that  information  about the revision  of  the  Compensation Rolls was received by it for the first time on July 22, 1955 and  the  applications  were moved  immediately.   The  Raja opposed   the  applications  and  alleged  that  the   State Government had knowledge of the proceedings and had actually participated  in  them  before  the  Compensation   Officers through its Naib Tahsildars.  He urged that the Compensation Rolls had become final and could not be reopened.  The  Raja also  stated that the State Government and its officers  had in their possession certain documents from which it could be proved  conclusively  that  the State  Government  had  full knowledge of the objections filed by him.  In support of his plea  the  Raja filed an application on  November  11,  1955 before the Compensation Officer, Mirzapur, tinder 0. 11  rr. 12  and 14 of the Code of Civil Procedure for discovery  and production  of the documents mentioned in  the  application. The  State Government claimed privilege under ss.  1-23  and 124  of  the  Indian Evidence Act and  the  application  was rejected the same day by the Compensation 973 Officer.  A similar application for discovery and production of  documents made before the Compensation Officer,  Chunar, on  December 15, 1955 was rejected on January 5,  1956  when the State Government claimed privilege.  On October 6,  1956 the   District  Judge,  Allahabad,  consolidated   the   two compensation  cases pending in Mirzapur and  Chunar  Tahsils and directed that they should be heard by the Sub-Divisional Officer (Compensation Officer), Mirzapur.

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When the cases went before the Sub-Divisional  Officer-(Com- pensation  Officer), Mirzapur, two fresh  applications  were filed  on  August  22, 1957 for  discovery,  production  and inspection  of  the  documents already the  subject  of  the previous  applications and some more.  The State  Government again  objected to the last application, claiming  privilege and also pointing out that similar applications had  already been  rejected earlier.  The State Government requested  the Compensation Officer, Mirzapur (Mr.  R. K. Misra) to  decide the  question whether a second application was  maintainable after  the  first  had been rejected.  By  an  order,  dated October 12, 1957, Mr. Misra held that the question could  be reconsidered  and  directed  the State  Government  to  file objections  in  detail.  Before, however,  Mr.  Misra  could decide  the  matter  finally  he  was  transferred  and  was succeeded  by  Mr. Upadhaya as Compensation Officer  in  the Tahsil.  Mr. Upadhaya differed from Mr. Misra and held  that the  proceedings  could not be reopened.   He,  accordingly, rejected the two applications for discovery and  inspection. His order was made on March 31, 1958. The  Raja,  thereupon, filed on April 11, 1958,  a  petition under  Art.  226 of the Constitution,  impugning  the  order passed  by Mr. Upadhaya and asking that it be quashed  by  a writ  of  certiorari.   The Raja also asked for  a  writ  of mandamus  or direction to the Compensation Officer, to  hear and  determine his (Raja’s) application under 0. 1 1 rr.  12 and  14 of the Code of Civil Procedure.  Subsequently,  with the court’s permission, two more grounds   were added on May 5, 1958 and one such ground was the following               "Because  the  Assessment  Rolls  have  become               final  and  they  cannot  be  opened  at  this               stage". Although the matter in dispute really was whether inspection and discovery had been wrongly disallowed, the High Court at the hearing permitted the Raja to raise the more fundamental question  : whether the State of Uttar Pradesh was  entitled to 974 claim  to reopen the proceedings by which  compensation  was revised.   The  main ground on which  the  State  Government resisted  the  plea of the Raja was that it  had  no  notice under the Act of the proceedings for revision.  Mr.  Justice Jagdish  Sahai who heard the petition for writ dismissed  it on  February  23,  1960,  but on  appeal  his  judgment  was reversed by the Divisional Bench on November 21, 1960.   The Divisional  Bench quashed the order, dated March  31,  1958, and   issued   a  writ  of   prohibition   restraining   the Compensation  Officer,  Mirzapur from proceeding  ’with  the applications   filed  by  the  State  Government   for   the restoration  of  the objection cases to file.   The  present appeal has been filed against the last order. It is hardly necessary to set down the reasons given by  Mr. Justice  Jagdish Sahai and the Divisional Bench in  reaching opposite  conclusions, or the arguments that  were  advanced before  us in support of the rival cases.  The matter is  to be resolved on a construction of the sections of the Act and as  we  proceed  to consider them we  shall  advert  to  the arguments where necessary. Chapter  III  of the Act deals with the Assessment  of  Com- pensation.   Under  S. 27 every intermediary  whose  rights, title  or  interests in any estate are  acquired  under  the provisions  of  the Act is entitled to receive and  be  paid compensation.   The  sections  that  follow  lay  down   how compensation  is  to  be assessed.  The  first  step  is  to prepare  draft Compensation Assessment Rolls in  respect  of

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each intermediary.  After the draft Compensation  Assessment Rolls  are ready they are published.  Section 46  lays  down how they are to be published.  It reads               "46.   Preliminary  publication of  the  draft               Compensation Assessment Roll.               (1)   After the draft Compensation  Assessment               Roll  in respect of any intermediary has  been               prepared, the Compensation Officer shall-               (a)   publish  a notice in the Gazette and  in               such other manner as may be prescribed to  the               effect  that  the  Statement  referred  to  in               section   38   and  the   draft   Compensation               Assessment  Roll mentioned in section 40  have                             been prepared and are open to inspecti on by the               persons concerned;               (b)   serve  or  cause  to be  served  on  the               intermediary  concerned a copy of  the  notice               aforesaid  along  with  a copy  of  the  draft               Compensation Assessment Roll.               975               (2)   The  notice under sub-section (1)  shall               call upon all persons interested, including  a               person  who  claims  that  the  name  of   the               intermediary  is, in respect of any  share  or               interest  to  which such person  is  entitled,               entered in a representative capacity or in the               capacity of the karta of a joint Hindu family,               to  appear  and  file  objections  upon   such               statement  or  roll  within a  period  of  two               months :               Provided that no objection on the ground  that               the  intermediary is entitled to a greater  or               lesser  share or part of the estate or is  not               entitled to any share or part thereof shall be               entertained  except when it is on any  of  the               grounds  mentioned  in  the notice  or  is  in               pursuance  of  any order under section  32  or               33." A notice was in fact published in the Gazette as required by cl.  (a) of sub-s. (1) and a special notice was served  upon the  intermediary  as required by cl. (b).  The  notice’  in sub-s.  (1) is addressed to "persons interested" which  term is defined in s. 63 as including all persons whether or  not recorded in the record-of-rights claiming to be entitled  as intermediaries  to  the compensation or any  part  or  share therein   to  be  assessed  and  paid  on  account  of   the acquisition  of the estates under the Act.   The  definition does  not  include  Government but  it  is  not  exhaustive. Persons  interested  are  called upon  to  appear  and  file objections   within  2  months  of  the  publication.    The question,  therefore,  is whether the State  Government  was bound  to  appear  in answer to a notice  published  in  the Gazette  under  s.  46 or a separate  notice  to  the  State Government was necessary when objections were raised to  the amount  of  compensation.   This  can  only  be  decided  by referring to a few sections of the Act and some of the rules framed under it.  The first section to consider is S. 343 which provides               "343.   State Government to be a party in  the               proceedings under chapters HI to V."               (1)   The  State  Government shall be  and  be               deemed  to  be  a party  in  every  proceeding               before   the  Compensation  Officer   or   the               Rehabilitation  Grants Officer under  chapters

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             III  to  V and every notice to  be  served  or               intended to be served on the State  Government               may   be  served  on  the  Collector  or   any               authority nominated by the Collector.               976               (2)   Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               the said chapters or clause (d) of sub-section               (1)  of Section 344, the period of  limitation               for filing of an appeal by or on behalf of the               State Government shall be ninety days from the               date of the order appealed against. This section must be construed with ss. 47 to 52.  Under  S. 47 it is provided that if any objection is filed it shall be registered by the Compensation Officer who shall fix a  date for hearing the same and give intimation to the intermediary concerned and to any person Who may have, appeared in  reply to the notice under s. 46. It is contended on behalf of  the respondent  that  no  notice to  the  State  Government  was necessary because it was not a person interested and had not appeared  in  reply  to  the notice  under  s.  46.   It  is contended  on behalf of the State Government that the  State Government was entitled to a notice because the Act  intends that  it  should be a party to every proceeding  before  the Compensation  Officer.  Both sides refer to ss. 48 to 52  in aid  and construe them in their favour.  Under s. 48  it  is stated   that  in  hearing  and  deciding   objections   the Compensation  Officer shall have all the powers of  a  civil court  and, subject to modifications as may  be  prescribed, must  follow  the procedure laid down in the Code  of  Civil Procedure  for  hearing and disposal of  suits  relating  to immovable  properties.  The State Government  contends  that the  proceedings  before the Compensation Officer  are  thus equated to a suit and the State Government which has to  pay the compensation is in the position of a dependent and  must receive   notice  of  the  objection.   On  behalf  of   the respondent  it  is contended that the  State  Government  is already  a party by virtue of the deeming clause in  s.  343 and no notice is therefore required unless the State appears in answer to the Gazette notification.  One thing is clear : that  a notice to the State Government was not sent  in  the manner required by s. 343 which says that every notice to be served or intended to be served on the State Government  may be  served on the Collector or any authority  ’nominated  by the  Collector.   No  notice could be given  except  to  the Collector and it was not enough to publish a general  notice in the Gazette because notice to the State Government had to be in the manner laid down by the section and no other.   If it was desired that the State Government should have  notice of  the objection, a notice under S. 343 had to  issue.   No notice  was  served upon the Collector as laid down  in  the section and no intimation of the date was sent to the  State Government under s. 47 informing the State Government of the date fixed for, hearing of the objections.  The State 977 Government  contends that as under s. 49 the order under  S. 48  is  deemed  to  be a decree of  a  civil  court  and  is appealable under ss. 50 and 51 to the District Court and  to the  High  Court,  if a notice had been sent  to  the  State Government  it could have availed itself of  these  sections and  appealed  against  the  decision  of  the  Compensation Officer  and refer to the special limitation laid  down  for appeals  by  State  Government in s.  343(2)  quoted  above. This,  it is contended, indicates that the State  Government is to be a party to the proceedings.  The other side, on the other hand, contends that as a notice was already  published

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in the Gazette under s. 46 the State Government was bound to appear  on its own and the only remedy which it had  was  by way  of an appeal since there is no provision in the Act  by which the order     of  the Compensation Officer,  which  is deemed to be a decree,   can  be set aside.  The  respondent says that the provisions of   0. 9 and s. 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure under which the    decrees which are  passed ex parte, are ordinarily set aside do not apply and contends that  since the State Government did not appear and  contest the  objection  ’to the amount of compensation and  did  not appeal  under  s.  50  to  the  District  Court  the   final Compensation  Assessment Roll, which was signed and  sealed, became final under s. 52(1) and (2) of the Act and it cannot now  be  re-opened.   This  is  the  case  accepted  by  the Divisional Bench. We  have first to construe s. 343 of the Act which seems  to have  led to the rival conclusions in the High Court.   That section says that the State Government shall be deemed to be a  party to every proceeding.  Now it cannot be denied  that on the objection being made, a proceeding started before the Compensation  Officer.  The State Government must be  deemed to  be a party to that proceeding and the only  question  is what  the  Act means by saying that  "the  State  Government shall  be a party" to every proceeding.  The learned  Single Judge  found the section inartistic but, in our opinion,  it clearly conveys two ideas which are quite distinct.  By  the words  "the State Government shall be a party"  is  intended that the State Government must be joined as a party to every proceeding  under  the Act.  The effect of  the  words  "the State  Government  shall be deemed to be a  party  to  every proceeding"  is that it does not have to apply to be  joined as a party even if not so joined.  The State Government  can always  appear  without being joined because  it  is  always deemed to be a party.  Even if the State Government was left out by the, objector and no other party asked that the State Government  be  joined, the State  Government  could  always intervene, 978 not by    asking  to be joined but as one already deemed  to be  a  party.The  section,  therefore,  works  in  two-ways. It entitles State   Government   to   take   part   in   any proceeding  without being in the array of the  parties.   It also compels any one starting a proceeding to join the State Government  as a party.  The result of this section is  that when a notice is issued under S. 46(1) the State  Government may  object  to a draft Compensation Assessment Roll  if  it chooses, but it must be made a party to a proceeding started on  an objection by any party.  The definition of "  persons interested" is not an exhaustive definition and the interest of the State Government is manifest because it is the  party which is required to pay the compensation.  By virtue of  s. 343,   therefore,  State  Government  is  always  a   person interested  in  every  proceeding  and  it  was,  therefore, incumbent   upon  the  Compensation  Officer  to   send   an intimation of the date of hearing to the State Government so that  the  State  Government  might  make  arrangements  for opposing  the objections if it chose.  It is futile  to  say that because the State Government is deemed to be a  party,’ it was not entitled to the special intimation which the  law requires should be given to an intermediary as well as every person  interested.   There were thousands of  such  compen- sation  cases  and  it would be  impossible  for  the  State Government  to  arrange to appear in  every  objection  case without intimation and to watch the proceedings in  hundreds of  courts for this purpose.  It is thus provided by s.  343

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that if a notice has to be sent or is intended to be sent to the  State  Government  it shall be  sent  to  the  District Collector.  No general notice can suffice.  Till a notice is sent, the State Government will not be deemed to be  served. It  is,  therefore, quite clear that  the  State  Government ought to have been joined by the objector to the proceedings for  enhancement of compensation.  It is equally clear  that even though not joined the State Government was entitled  to a  special  notice, in common with  the  intermediaries  and other persons interested, of the date of the hearing.  Since no such intimation was sent the proceedings will not,  prima facie,  bind  the State Government and that in fact  is  the claim  made by the State Government by its applications  for the  reopening  of the proceedings before  the  Compensation Officers. It  is contended that under certain notifications  all  Sub- Divisional   Officers  were  empowered  to   discharge   the functions  of  a Collector under the Abolition Act  and  all Assistant  Collectors  were  made  ex  officio  Compensation Officers  and  the Compensation Officer having  notice,  the State  Government must be deemed to have notice also.   This is not correct.  The Compensation 979 Officer  acts  as  a court and a-court  cannot  represent  a party.  A separate notice was necessary. It  was  contended  that the  State  Government  could  have appealed  against the decision of the Compensation  Officer. An  affidavit  has  been  sworn  on  behalf  of  the   State Government  that  it  did  not  know  the  decision  of  the Compensation   Officer  till  the  22nd  July,  1959.    The application  for reopening the proceedings was filed on  the 30th day and, would be within time for setting aside and  ex parte   decree  if  the  intimation  did  reach  the   State Government on July 22 for the first time.  This matter  must be  tried and has not been tried.  The respondent,  however, contends  that  there is no provision for review;  that  the Compensation  Rolls became final under s. 52; and  that  the State  Government  not  having  appealed,  the  Compensation Officer  cannot  reopen  the  proceedings.   This,  in   our opinion,  is not quite correct.  The other side relies  upon Craig  v.  Kanssen(1) and contends that failure to  serve  a notice  rendered null and void the order against  the  State Government and the State Government was entitled to have  it set aside and the Compensation Officer has inherent power to set  it  aside.   The other side  challenges  this  inherent power. No doubt the Code of Civil Procedure is to be used as far as may be and even if 0. 9 does not strictly apply the inherent power  conferred  by s. 151 of the Code of  Civil  Procedure must  be  available  to the  Compensation  Officer.   It  is contended that no general power of review is granted by  the Act and as the Civil Procedure Code provides for the  manner in which ex parte decrees can be set aside, inherent  powers to  set  aside ex parte decrees may not be  invoked  by  the Compensation  Officer  and the proceedings  before  him  for reopening  the objection case must be without  jurisdiction. Reference is also made to S. 61 under which a slip order can be  made and it is contended that the  Compensation  Officer after signing and sealing the final Compensation  Assessment Rolls  cannot do more than correct slips or errors  apparent on the record. Here  the question is not one of reopening the  Compensation Roll  or  the  objection  case  for  purposes  of  making  a correction or for review.  The question here is that one  of the  necessary  parties to the objection cases  was  neither

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joined  nor  noticed to appear.  The most  important  party, besides   the   objector,  claiming   enhancement   of   the compensation,  was the State which has to pay  the  enhanced compensation.   That  party  had to be joined  to  the  pro- ceedings under s. 343 and a notice or intimation of the date of’ (1)  L.R. [1943] K.B.D. 256. the hearing had to be sent as laid down in S. 343.   Section 343  prescribes not only the manner of serving  notices  but lays  down that the State Government must be joined.   Every court and tribunal is entitled to reopen a proceeding  which has  proceeded ex parte, not because a party has  failed  to appear but because a notice has not been sent to a necessary party.   A decision reached behind the back of  a  necessary party to whom notice must be sent is not binding upon such a party and the Court may in such a case reopen the proceeding to give the party a chance to state its case. When the petition for writ was filed the proceedings  before the  Compensation Officer were at a very early  stage.   The State Government had applied for reopening of the  objection cases  and the Zamindar had asked for certain  documents  to prove   that  the  State  Government  had  notice   of   the proceedings and had, in fact, appeared through the Zamindari Abolition  Naib Tahsildars to contest the  objections.   The State  Government  had claimed privilege and  the  claim  of privilege  was  allowed  by  the  Objection  -Officer.   The Zamindar  had thereupon filed the application  to  challenge the  claim  of privilege and to get the order  of  the  Com- pensation  Officer  quashed.  As we have  said  earlier  the matter was allowed to be enlarged so that the respondent was enabled to claim a writ of prohibition to stifle the case of the  State Government for reopening of the  objection  case. The  High  Court  not only quashed the order  by  which  the documents  asked to be produced were held to be  privileged, but  at  the same time issued a writ of prohibition  in  the case.   The question whether the Compensation Officer  would or would not allow the objection cases to be reopened  still remains  to  be decided and the High Court was in  error  in issuing a writ of prohibition when the Compensation  Officer had clearly jurisdiction to determine whether to reopen  the proceedings.   The  question  of jurisdiction  can  only  be decided  after  it has been considered by  the  Compensation officer and he proceeds to reopen the proceedings.  No  such question appears to have been raised before the Compensation Officer  and  in  fact  it was not so  raised  even  in  the petition  before the High Court.  In such circumstances  the writ of prohibition was not called for and ought not to have been  issued.  It is manifest that the State Government  was not sent a notice of the hearing of the ,objection cases and it  has a right to move the Objection Officer to reopen  the proceedings.  Whether the Compensation Officer would ,reopen the proceeding or not is a matter for the Objection  Officer to decide in the first instance.  It cannot be said at  this stage that there is no jurisdiction in the Objection Officer to consider the petition of the State Government. 981 In  the circumstances, we dissolve the writ  of  prohibition which  has  been issued by the High Court but  maintain  the order of the High Court quashing the order, dated March  31, 1958.  This does not mean that the State Government is bound to produce all the documents.  The Compensation Officer will be required to decide, in the light of the decisions of this Court  reported  in  The State of Punjab  v.  Sodhi  Sukhdev Singh(1)  and  Amar  Chand  Butail v.  Union  of  India  and Others(1),  whether  the claim of privilege  raised  by  the

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State  Government should be sustained or not.  That must  be done  after  appropriate  affidavits by  the  heads  of  the Departments  concerned are filed and the claim of  privilege is properly examined. In  the  result the writ of prohibition issued by  the  High Court  is dissolved but the order quashing the order,  dated March  31, 1958, is upheld.  The claim for  privilege  which has not be-en properly raised shall be raised in  accordance with  law.   The  Cornpensation  Officer,  who   undoubtedly possesses  jurisdiction  to reopen the  case,  shall  decide whether  to reopen it or not after passing an order  on  the claim  of privilege in accordance with the rulings  of  this Court.  The respondent shall be entitled to raise such pleas in  opposition as may be open to him in law.  The appeal  is thus allowed in part but in the circumstances the respondent shall pay the costs of the appellant. Appeal allowed in part. (1)  [1961] 2 S.C.R. 371. (2)  A.I.R. 1964 S.C.R. 1658, 982