11 October 1968
Supreme Court
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BADRI PRASAD Vs STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANR.

Bench: SIKRI,S.M.
Case number: Appeal Civil 18 of 1966


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PETITIONER: BADRI PRASAD

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/1968

BENCH: SIKRI, S.M. BENCH: SIKRI, S.M. BACHAWAT, R.S.

CITATION:  1970 AIR  706            1969 SCR  (2) 380  CITATOR INFO :  RF         1977 SC 687  (26,27)  F          1978 SC1076  (13)  F          1985 SC1293  (81)

ACT:     Abolition   of  Proprietary  Rights   (Estates,   Mahals Alienated Lands) Act, (M.P. 1 of 1951)  Forests and trees in Jagir--If vest in State.     Contract   to   cut  timber--If  sate   of   ascertained goods--Sale  of  Goods  Act (3 of 1930),  s.  19--Offer  and acceptance--Reservation in acceptance-If concluded contract.

HEADNOTE:     The  appellant  entered into a contract  in  respect  of certain  forests in a Jagir in Madhya Pradesh.  Under el.  1 of  the contract, he was entitled to cut teak trees of  more than  12  inches girth.  Under cl. 5, the  stumps  of  trees after  cutting, had to be 3 inches high.  After the  passing of  the  Abolition of Proprietary Rights  (Estates,  Mahals. Alienated Lands) Act, 1950 a notification was issued vesting the  estate in the State. and the appellant  was  prohibited from  cutting  timber in exercise of his  rights  under  the contract.  After some negotiations, a letter was written  on February 1, 1955, to the appellant, on behalf of the  State, that  the appellant’s claim to cut trees under the  contract would be considered only if he gave up his claim to a sum of Rs. 17,000 which he had already paid under the contract  and was  willing  to  pay a further sum   of  Rs.  17,000.   The appellant,  by his letter dated February 5,  1955  expressed his  willingness to pay the additional sum but reserved  his right  to  claim  a  refund of the  first  sum.   The  State Government rejected the appellant’s right to cut trees.   He then  filed  a  Suit claiming specific  performance  of  the contract  on the grounds: (1) The forest and trees  did  not vest  in the State under the Act; (2) Even if  they  vested, the  standing  timber, having been sold  to  the  appellant, did  .not  vest  in the State; and (3) In any  event  a  new contract  was  completed  on  February  5,  1955,  and   the appellant was entitled to its specific performance.     In appeal to this Court,     HELD: (1) The forest and trees vested in the State under the Act.360  F--G]

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   Mahadeo  v. State of Bombay, [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R.  339; State   of  M.P.v.  Yakinuddin,  [1963]  3  S.C.R.  13   and Mulamchand  v.  State  of M.P., C.A No  393  of  1965  dated February 20, 1968, followed.     (2) Under the contract the appellant had not become  the owner  of  the trees as goods.  The property in  the  timber could pass to the appellant only when the trees are  felled, but  before they were  felled, the trees had vested  in  the State. [391 B]     Under  el.  5 of the contract there was no sale  of  the whole  of  the  trees,  and,  under  cl.  1  it  had  to  be ascertained which trees fell within the description of trees which the appellant was entitled to cut.  Till that was done they  were not ’ascertained goods’ within s. 19 of the  Sale of Goods Act 1930. [391 A--B]     (3) Even if the letter of ist February could be  treated as  an offer, there was no unconditional acceptance  of  the offer, because, there was 381 a reservation by the appellant of his right to claim  refund in  his  letter dated 5th February and hence  there  was  no concluded contract.  [391 C--D]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.  18   of 1966. Appeal by special leave from the judgment and decree, dated October 9, 1962 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court  in  First Appeal No- 94 of 1959.     G.L. Sanghi and A.G. Ratnaparkhi, for the appellant.     I. N. Shroff, for respondent No. 1.     The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     Sikri,  J.   This appeal by special  leave  is  directed against  the judgment and decree of the Madhya Pradesh  High Court  allowing tile appeal of the State of  Madhya  Pradesh and  dismissing  the suit brought by  the  appellant,  Badri Prasad--hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff.          ,     The  relevant  facts for determining the  points  raised before us are these.  On December 27, 1950,- a contract  was entered into between Kumar Bharat Shah, minor, through  iris guardian, and the plaintiff, in respect of forests in  Mouza Sunderpani Jagir.  The terms were reduced to writing and  an agreement  was signed on January 21, 1951.  It is  necessary to  reproduce  the  agreement  in extenso  as  it  would  be necessary to interpret it carefully.                   "Deed of agreement executed by Shri  Kumar               Bharat  Shah  minor,  guardian  Shrimati  Rani               Umakuar Sahiba, Jagirdar of Mouza Sunderpani.               Conditions  of  contract, area,  forest  Mouza               Sunderpani                     1. Out of the area of 1704.46  acres  of               Mouza  Sunderpani  Jagir contract of  all  the               teak  trees  of  more  than  12  inches  girth               standing  in the 1,000 acres of the forest  of               big trees and excluding those teak trees which               have   girth  upto  12  inches  is  given   to               contractor  Badri  Prasad  Moolchand  firm  of               Timarni  for  a  sum  of Rs. 17,006 (seventeen               thousand rupees), on payment of the amount  in               a lump-sum.                      2.   In  respect  of  the  teak   trees               mentioned  in paragraph No. 1 contractor  Shri               Badri Prasad deposited with me the total mount

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             of Rs. 17,000 (seventeen thousand rupees),  as               under :-                      Rs. 6,000 (Six thousand rupees) on  27-               12-1950.  Rs. 11,000 (Eleven thousand  rupees)               on  21-1-1951. Receipts have been  passed  for               depositing  the  above amount. 382                3.  The transfer of the forest shall  not  be               done  without  consent  of  the  owner.    The               contractor  shall  have to pay  Rs.  100  (One               hundred rupees), for transfer.               4.  For  the proper execution of work  of  the               forest the felling of the forest shall have to               be  done  from one side.  Excluding  the  teak               trees upto the girth of 12 inches the  cutting               of those teak trees which are above that girth               shall have to be serially done.               5.  After  felling, the stumps of  teak  trees               should  be 3 inches high from the  ground  and               slanting  so as to. drain  the water  off.  It               shall  be  necessary  to  prepare  the  stumps               within a week.  Till the stumps are passed the               wood  cannot be removed.  Only the paring  can               be  done. The coupe guard shall make a  hammer               mark  of passing on the stump and end  of  the               pared wood.               6.  The  contractor  shall  have  to  get  the               transit   of  goods done by the  coupe  guard.               The  contractor shall have to do. the  transit               of goods through the license book  and  submit               the  monthly  accounts.   Without  licence  no               goods shall be transported out of the forest.               7.  The contractor shall have to take care  of               the teak  trees of 12 inches girth standing in               the  forest.  If  damage   is  caused   proper               penalty shall be charged.               8.  The contractor can appoint an  agent  with               permission.               9.  The contractor shall have to deposit   Rs.               100   (One   hundred   rupees)for     properly               preparing  the stumps of the teak trees of the               forest before starting the work.  This  amount               shall be returned on completion of the work if               the  stumps are properly  prepared;  otherwise               the  expenses, which may be   incurred   shall               be deducted.               10.  The contractor shall be  responsible  for               any  damage  caused  to  the  forest  by   the               contractor  or his agent and he shall have  to               pay the penalty.               11.  The  period of the contract  shall  be  3               years, i.e., from 27-12-1950 to 27-12-1953.               Hence the agreement in execution and the  same               is     The  contractor  and the  owner  of  the               forest     On  January  22,  1951, the  Abolition  of   Proprietary Rights (Estates, Mahals, Alienated Lands) Act, 1950  (Madhya Pradesh  Act  1 of 1951 )---hereinafter referred to  as  the Act--received the assent of the President and was  published in  the  Gazette  on 383 January 26, 1951.  The plaintiff started working under  the. contract  in March 1951.  On March 31, 1951, a  notification was  issued vesting the estates in the State and  the  State Government  prohibited the plaintiff from cutting timber  in

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exercise  of  the  rights under  the  contract.   Apparently negotiations took place between the State Government and the plaintiff, and on February 1, 1955, ’ the Divisional  Forest Officer wrote to the plaintiff as follows:                    Subject  :---Contract  of  big  trees  of               Sunderpani village of Makrai State.                    Reference :--Memo No. 5424-4339-11, dated               21st October, 1954 of the Forest Department of               Madhya Pradesh Government.                    Kindly  inform whether you are  ready  to               any  further  Rs. 17,000  (seventeen  thousand               rupees),  for  the contract of  big  trees  of               Sunderpani  village  of  Makrai  Circle  which               (contract) is under dispute at present.   This               contract   can  be  given  to  you   on   this               compromise  only.  If you do not wish  to  pay               this  amount  you  may, in  future,  take  any               action you deem fit.                     2.  You may express your  desire  within               seven days of the receipt of this letter.   If               you fail to do. this it will be presumed  that               you   are  not  inclined  to  make  a   mutual               compromise.                     3.  On receipt of your reply  the  State               Government will be informed." It is this letter which the plaintiff contends was an  offer and  which  he  accepted  by  the  following  letter,  dated February 5, 1955:                     "Subject:   Contract  of sale  of  teak-               trees in Sunderpani Forest in Makrai Range.                      Reference  :---Your  letter  No.   180,               dated 1st Feb. 1955 .               Dear Sir,                      I am ready to  pay Rs. 17,000  provided               my  claim  to have the refund  of  Rs.  17,000               already paid, from Shri Bharat Shah, the owner               of   the   village   or   any   other   relief               consequential  to  the judgment of  that  case               remains  unaffected.   I reserve my  right  to               claim  the  said or like amount.   Subject  to               these   conditions I  shall  pay Rs.17,000  as               required in your above referred letter." By memorandum, dated October 24, 1956, the Government  wrote to the plaintiff as follows: 384      "Reference :--.Your application, dated 12th  September, 1956, addressed to the Minister for Forests, Madhya Pradesh.       Government  regret  that  the  request  made  in  your application  under  reference  cannot be  acceded  to.  Your application has, therefore, been rejected." The  application, dated September 12, 1956, is not  included in the printed record but the plaintiff states that it is by this  memorandum that the Government finally repudiated  its obligations under the contract.       Thereupon  the plaintiff filed the suit praying for  a declaration  that the rights granted to the plaintiff  under the  licence, dated January 21, 1951, had not been  affected by  the vesting of the estates in the State under  the  Act. In  the  alternative  he  prayed that  he  was  entitled  to specific performance and delivery of the contract which  was completed  on February 5, 1955.  He further prayed  that  in case  he  was  not entitled to  these  reliefs,  Rs.  50,000 damages be awarded against the State. Three points have been raised before us:     (1) that the ’forest and trees did not vest in the State

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under the Act;     (2) that even if they vested, the standing timber having been  sold to the plaintiff did not vest in the State  under the Act;     (3)  that  a new contract was completed on  February  5, 1955, and the plaintiff was entitled to specific performance of the contract.     The  Act and the rights of persons holding contracts  to cut  and take away timber and fruits of the trees have  been the subjectmatter of consideration by this Court on  several occasions.   But  the  learned  counsel  for  the  plaintiff contends  that  none of those cases cover the  case  of  the plaintiff  because,  according to him, none of  those  cases dealt  with  standing timber.  He says that  the  plaintiffs contract  is  a  contract  for the sale  of  goods  and  the property  in the goods had vested in him and, therefore,  it stands on a different basis from the contracts construed  in the earlier cases. The learned counsel for the  respondents, on  the  other hand, maintains that the plaintiffs  case  is covered by the earlier decisions and all the arguments which he  has advanced have been rejected by this Court  in  those cases.               The  relevant statutory provisions of the  Act               are these:                   "Section 3.  Vesting of proprietary rights               in  the  State..--(  1  )  Save  as  otherwise               provided in this Act, on 385               and   from  a  date  to  be  specified  by   a               notification  by the State Government in  this               behalf,  all proprietary rights in an  estate,               mahal, alienated village or alienated land, as               the case may be, in the area specified in  the               notification, vesting in a proprietor of  such               estate,  mahal, alienated  village,  alienated               land,  or in a person having interest in  such               proprietary  right  through  the   proprietor,               shall pass from such proprietor or such  other               person  to  and  vest in  the  State  for  the               purposes   of   the   State   free   of    all               encumbrances.                   (2)  After  the issue  of  a  notification               under  sub-section  (1),  no  right  shall  be               acquired in or over the land to which the said               notification relates, except by succession  or               under  a grant or contract in writing made  or               entered into by or on behalf of the State; and               no  fresh clearing for cultivation or for  any               other  purpose  shall  be made  in  such  land               except in accordance with such rules as may be               made by the State Government in this behalf                   Section 4. Consequences of the vesting.--(               1  )  When the notification under  sec.  3  in               respect of any area has been published in  the               Gazette,    then,   notwithstanding   anything               contained  in any contract, grant or  document               or  in  any other law for the  time  being  in               force  and save as otherwise provided in  this               Act, the consequences as hereinafter  setforth               shall,   from  the  beginning  of   the   date               specified  in such  notification  (hereinafter               referred  to  as the date of  vesting)  ensue,               namely :-                   (a) all rights. title and interest vesting               in   the  proprietor  or  any  person   having

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             interest in such proprietary right through the               proprietor   in  such  area  including   land’               (cultivable  or  barren),  grass  land,  shrub               jungle,   forest,  trees,  fisheries,   wells,               tanks,   ponds,   water   channels,   ferries,               pathways,  village  sites,  hats,  bazars  and               melas; and in all sub-soil, including  rights,               if  any, in mines and minerals, whether  being               worked  or not, shall cease and be  vested  in               the  State for purposes of the State free.  of               all  encumbrances;  and the mortgage  debt  or               charge  on  any proprietary right shall  be  a               charge  on the amount of compensation  payable               for  such proprietary right to the  proprietor               under the provisions of this Act  ..........                   Section 5. Certain properties to  continue                             in   possession   of   proprietor   or     other               person.---Subject   to   the   provisions   in               Sections 47 and 63--                   (a)   all   open   enclosures   used   for               agricultural   or  domestic  purposes  and  in               continuous possession for twelve’ 386               years  immediately  before 1948-49;  all  open               house-sites  purchased for consideration;  all               buildings,  places  of worship; wells situated               in  and  trees standing on lands  included  in               such   enclosures  or  house-sites   or   land               appertaining  to such buildings or  places  of               ownership; within the limits of a village-site               belonging   to   or  held  by   the   outgoing               proprietor or any other person shall  continue               to belong to or be held by such proprietor  or               other person, as the case may be, and the land               thereof  with the areas’ appurtenant  thereto.               shall  be  settled  with  him  by  the   State               Government on such terms and conditions as  it               may determine;                   (b)  all  private wells and  buildings  on               occupied  land  belonging to or  held  by  the               outgoing proprietor or any other person  shall               continue to belong to or be held by               such proprietor or other person;                   (c)  all trees standing on land  comprised               in a homefarm or homestead and belonging to or               held  by the outgoing proprietor or any  other               person shall continue to belong to or held  by               such proprietor or other person;                   (d)  all trees standing on  occupied  land               other than     land comprised in home-farm  or               homestead and belonging to or held by a person               other  than the outgoing proprietor      shall               continue  to  belong  to or be  held  by  such               person;                   (e) all tanks situate on occupied land and               belonging   to   or  held  by   the   outgoing               proprietor  or any other person shah  continue               to  belong  to or held by such  proprietor  or               other person;                    (f)  all tanks, belonging to or  held  by               the  outgoing proprietor which are situate  on                             land  other than village site or occup ied  land               and  in  which  no  person  other  than   such

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             proprietor has any rights of irrigation, shall               belong. to or be held by such proprietor.                     (g) all tanks and embankments (bandhans)               belonging   to   or  held  by   the   outgoing               proprietor  or  any  other  person  which  are               situate  on  land  other  than  village   site               occupied land and the beds of which are  under               cultivation of such proprietor or such   other               person  shah  "belong to or be  held  by  such               proprietor  or such other person and the  land               under  such  tanks and  embankments  shall  be               settled  with  such proprietor or  such  other               person  on  such terms and conditions  as  the               State Government may determine;                     (h)  all  groves  wherever  situate  and               recorded in -village papers in the name of the               outgoing proprietor or  any other person shall               continue to belong to or be held 387               by  such proprietor or such other  person  and               the  land under such groves shall  be  settled               with  such proprietor or such other person  by               the   State  Government  on  such  terms   and               conditions as it may determine.                      Section  6.  Certain  transfers  to  be               void.  (1) Except as provided  in  sub-section               (2), the transfer of any right in the property               which  is  liable to vest in the  State  under               this  Act made by the proprietor at  any  time               after the 16th March, 1950, shall, as from the               date. of vesting, be void." Let us now look at the decisions of thiS Court and see  what has been laid down therein.  In Chhotabhai jethabai Patel v. The  State  of Madhya Pradesh,(1) which we may  mention  has since  been  overruled, the contract was in respect  of  the right  to  pluck, collect and carry away  tendu  leaves,  to cultivate,  culture  and acquire lac, and to cut  and  carry away teak and timber and other species of tree and  bamboos. The Court observed:                       "It  is clear from the  provisions  in               the impugned Act that only those rights of the               proprietor   vest  in  the  State  which   the               proprietor  had on the specified  date   .....               The scheme of the Act as can be gathered  from                             the  proviSions  referred  to  above makes  it               reasonably clear that whatever was done before               16th March, 1950, by the proprietors by way of               transfer  of rights is not to be disturbed  or               affected, and that what vests in the State  iS               what the proprietors had on the vesting  date.               If  the  proprietor had any rights  after  the               date of vesting which he could enforce against               the  transferee  such  as  a   lessee  or    a               licensee, those rights would no doubt vest  in               the State. In all these petitions, the several               contracts and agreements were before the  date               of  vesting, and many of them were prior  even               to  the 16th March, 1950. The petitioners  had               taken possession of the subject matter of  the               contracts,    namely,   tendu   leaves,    lac               palsadies,   teak,   timber    and   hardwood,               bamboos  and miscellaneous   forest  produce."     The Court construed the contracts in that case thus:                  "The  contracts and agreements  appear   to

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             be  in               essence  and  effect licences granted  to  the               transferees to cut, gather and carry away  the               produce in the shape of tendu leaves, or  lac,               or timber, or wood." The  Court further held that the rights  of-the  petitioners were  not encumbrances within the meaning of the  expression "free  from  encumbrances" in s. 3 ( 1 ) of  the  Act.   The Court  accordingly issued a writ prohibiting the State  from interfering in any manner with (1) [1953] S.C.R. 476, 479, 481,483. 388 the enjoyment of those rights by the petitioner.  It may  be mentioned  that in that case the Court was dealing  with  an application under Art. 32 of the Constitution.     Chhotabhai’s(1) case was distinguished in Ananda  Behera v. The State of Orissa(2) which again dealt with a  petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution.  In Anand Behara v.   The State of Orissa(2) the subject-matter of licence was fishery rights  and  the  Act which was  construed  was  the  Orissa Estates Abolition Act, 1951.  The Court held that the  right sought  to be acquired by the petitioners by  their  several purchases was not in respect of any future goods as  claimed by them but was a license to enter on the land coupled  with a grant to catch and carry away the fish, in other words,  a profit  a  prendre which is immovable  property  within  the meaning  of the Transfer of Property Act read with s.  3(25) of  the General Clauses Act. The Court further held that  as it was an oral licence it contravened s. 54 of the  Transfer of Property Act, and therefore, no title or interest therein passed   to  the  petitioners  in  that  case.   The   Court distinguished Chhotabhai’s(1) case on the following grounds:                     "It  is  necessary  to  advert  to  Firm               Chhotabhai  jethabai Patel & Co. v. The  State               of Madhya Pradesh(1) and explain it because it               was held there that a right to ’pluck, collect               and carry away’ tendu leaves does not give the               owner of the right any proprietary interest in               the land and so that sort of right was not  an               ’encumbrance’ within the meaning of the Madhya               Pradesh  Abolition of Proprietary Rights  Act.               But the contract there was to ’pluck,  collect               and  carry away’ the leaves. The only kind  of               leaves  that can be ’plucked’ are  those  that               are  growing on trees and it is  evident  that               there  must  be  a fresh  crop  of  leaves  at               periodic  intervals.   That would  make  it  a               growing   crop   and   a   growing   crop   is               expressly  exempted  from  the  definition  of               ’immovable  property’   in   the  Transfer  of               Property  Act.  That case  is  distinguishable               and does not apply here." In  Mahadeo  v. The State of Bombay,(a) which  was  again  a petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution,  Chhotabhai’s(1) case was not followed. In flus case some of the  proprietors had granted to the several petitioners rights to take forest produce,  mainly tendu leaves, from the forests included  in the Zamindaris belonging to the proprietors.  The agreements conveyed to the petitioners  in addition to the tendu leaves other forest  produce  like  timber, bamboos, etc., the soil for making bricks, and the right to build on and occupy land for the purpose of their business.  These rights (1) [1953] S.C.R. 476.       (2) [1955] 2 S.C.R. 919. (3) [1959] Supp. 2 S.C.R. 339. 389

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were  spread  over many years but in the case of a  few  the period  during which the agreements were to operate  expired in  1955.  This  Court held  that  the  agreements  required registration  and pointed out that some aspects had not been brought to the notice of the Court in Chhotabhai’s(1)  case. Hidayatullah,  J.,  as he then was, speaking for  the  Court observed:               "But  what was the nature of those rights,  of                             the  petitioners  ? It is plain, that  if  they               were  merely contractual       right  then  as               pointed  out  in the two later  decisions,  in               Ananda  Behera  v.  The  State  of  Orissa(2),               Shantabai’s case(a) the State has not acquired               or  taken possession of those rights  but  has               only declined to be bound by the agreements to               which they were not a.party.  If, on the other               hand, the petitioners were mere hcensees, then               also, as pointed out in the second of the  two               cases  cited, the licences came to an  end  on               the extinction of the title of the  licensers.               In  either case there was no question  of  the               breach  of  any  fundamental  rights  of   the               petitioners which could support the  petitions               which  were  presented under Art.  32  of  the               Constitution." The Court then construed the agreements in question and came co  the conclusion that the agreements could not be said  to be  contracts  of  sale of goods  simply.   Then  the  Court examined  the  provisions  of the Central  Provinces  I  and Revenue Act and came to the following conclusion:                     "From  this,  it  is  quite  clear  that               forests and trees belonged to the proprietors,               and  they  were items of  proprietary  rights.               The  first of the two questions posed  by  us,               therefore,  admits of none but an  affirmative               answer.                     If   then  the  forest  and  the   trees               belonged to the proprietors as items in  their               ’proprietary  fights’, it is quite clear  that               these  items of proprietary rights  have  been               transferred to the petitioners.  The answer to               the   second   question   is   also   in   the               ’affirmative.  Being a ’proprietary right’, it               vests  in the State under ss. 3 and 4  of  the               Act.  The decision in Chhotabhai’s(1)  treated               these  rights  as bare licences,  and  it  was               apparently  given  per  incuriam  and   cannot               therefore be followed."     It  seems  to  us  that  this  decision  concludes   the controversy before us.  This decision was followed in  State of  Madhya Pradesh v.Yakinuddin(4)  Various agreements  were construed in that case; one agreement was to propagate  lac, another agreement was to (1) [1953] S.C.R. 476.           (2) [1955] 2 S.C R. 919. (3) [1959] S.C.R. 265.           (4) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 13. 390 collect tendu leaves, and another agreement was with respect to  a right to collect fruits and flowers of  Mahua  leaves. It was contended that these rights were saved in view of the provisions  of  the Act, but this contention was  negatived. Sinha,  C.J.,  speaking  for the Court,  observed  that  the distinction  between  a bare licence and a  licence  coupled with  grant  or  profit a  prendre  was  irrelevant  because "whatever  may  have  been the nature of the  grant  by  the

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outgoing  proprietors  in favour of the  respondents,  those grants  had no legal effect as against the State, except  in so.  far  as the State may have recognised  them.   But  the provisions  of  the Act leave no manner of  doubt  that  the rights  ’claimed  by  the respondents could  not  have  been enforced against the State, if tiao latter was not  prepared to  respect  those  rights and the  rights  created  by  the transactions between the respondents and their grantors  did not come within any of the saving clauses of s. 5."  Earlier he had observed that "any person claiming some interest as a proprietor or as holding through a proprietor in respect  of any  proprietary interest in an estate has got to bring  his interest within s. 5, because on the date of vesting of  the estate,   the Deputy Commissioner takes charge of all  lands other  than  occupied  lands  and  homestead,  and  of   all interests vesting in the State under s. 3.  Upon such taking over  of  possession, the State becomes liable  to  pay  the compensation  provided  for  in  s.  8  and,the   succeeding sections.   The respondents have not been able to show  that their interest comes under any of the clauses aforesaid of S.  5."     The  last  case  in which this  Act  was  construed  was Mulamchand  v.  State of Madhya Pradesh(1).   In  that  case Mulamchand  had  purchased  a right to  pluck,  collect  and remove forest produce like lac, tendu leaves, etc., from the proprietors   of  the different  Malguzari  jungles.    This Court followed State of Madhya Pradesh v. Yakinuddin(2)  and negatived  the  claim of Mulamchand to exercise  his  rights under the agreement.     In  view  of .these cases it is too late in the  day  to contend  that the forest and the trees did not vest  in  the State under the Act.     There  is  no  force in the contention  of  the  learned counsel  that  under the contract the plaintiff  had  become owner  of trees as goods.  It is true that trees  which  are agreed  to be severed before sale or under the  contract  of sale  are  "goods"  for  the purposes of the Sale  of  Goods Act.   But before they cease to be "proprietary"  rights  or interest  in proprietary rights within the meaning of ss.  3 and  4(a)  of  the  Act they must  be  felled  under  1  the contract.   It  will  be noticed that under  cl.  1  of  the contract (1) Civil Appeal No. 393 of 1965 dated February 20, 1968. (2) [1963] 3 S.C.R. 13. 391 the plaintiff was entitled to cut teak trees of more than 12 inches  girth.   It had to be ascertained which  trees  fell within  that description.  Till this was. ascertained,  they were  not  "ascertained goods" within s. 19 of the  Sale  of Goods  Act.   Clause  5 of the  contract  contemplated  that stumps of trees, after cutting, had to be 3 inches high.  In other  words, the contract was not to sell the whole of  the trees.   In these circumstances property in the  cut  timber would  only pass to the plaintiff under the contract at  the earliest  when  the  trees  are  felled.   But  before  that happened the trees had vested in the State.     This brings us.to the last point, namely, whether a  new contract  was  concluded  between  the  Government  and  the plaintiff.  It  is extremely doubtful  whether  the  letter, dated  February  1, 1955, is an offer.  It seems  to  be  an invitation to the plaintiff to make an offer.  Be that as it may,  even  if  it  is treated as  an  offer  there  was  no unconditional  acceptance by the letter, dated  February  5, 1955.  The plaintiff expressly reserved his right to claim a refund  of  Rs.  17,000.  .According to the  letter  of  the

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Divisional  Forest  Officer,  dated February  1,  1955,  the plaintiff  had to give up his claim to Rs,  17,000 which  he had   already  paid  and had to pay a  further  sum  of  Rs. 17,000.   The High Court, in our opinion, rightly held  that the  alleged  acceptance of the offer made  on  February  1, 1955, was conditional and qualified.   In  the  result  the appeal fails and  is  dismissed  with costs. V.P.S.                            Appeal dismissed. 392