17 August 1967
Supreme Court
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SMT. KALAWATI Vs BISHESHWAR

Case number: Appeal (civil) 963 of 1964


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PETITIONER: SMT. KALAWATI

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: BISHESHWAR

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 17/08/1967

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

CITATION:  1968 AIR  261            1968 SCR  (1) 223

ACT: U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1951 (U.P.  1 of 1951) s. 23(1) (b)--Transfers made after July 7, 1949, if rights could be enforced--U.P. Land Reforms (Amendment)  Act 1954  (U.  P. 20 of 1954), s. 6--Effect--U.P.  Land  Reforms (Amendment)  Act, 1956 (U. P. 18 of 1956), s. 3--Effect.

HEADNOTE: The U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1951  was enforced  from  July 1, 1952.  Section 23(1)(b) of  the  Act provided  that no transfer of any estate after July 7,  1949 shall be recognised for any purpose and the estate shall  be deemed to continue to vest in the transferor.  By U.P.  Land Reforms  (Amending)  Act,  1954, s. 23(1)  (b)  was  deleted prospectively  from  October  10, 1954 and  by  U.  P.  Land Reforms  (Amendment)  Act,  1956, s.  23(1)(b)  was  deleted retrospectively  from  the  date  of  commencement  of   the principal Act with regard to the right of the transferee  to compensation  and rehabilitation grant.  K, the owner  of  a grove sold it to the appellant in June 1952.  Thereafter, on the  respondent’s failure to deliver possession, K  and  the appellant filed a suit for respondent’s eviction.  In  1959, K withdrew from the suit.  The respondent contended that the effect of s.23(1)(b) was that the transfers made after  July 7,  1949  were  void  from its  inception  and  neither  the prospective   deletion   nor  the   retrospective   deletion conferred the status of bhumidar on the appellant, and  that in any event, K’s withdrawal from the suit must date back to the  institution of the suit and therefore the suit must  be dismissed. HELD:The appeal must be allowed. The sale in favour of the appellant was valid and not  void. It was she who became the intermediary and it was her rights as  such  intermediary  which s. 4 of the  U.  P.  Zamindari Abolition  & Land Reforms Act abolished.  By virtue  of  the combined  effect of ss. 4 and 18 of the Act she  became  the bhumidar.   But for cl. (b) of s. 23(1) her rights  as  such bhumidar would have been recognised and she would have  been entitled to the rights as such bhumidar under the Act.   But by  reason  of the bar against recognition of  the  sale  no court  could recognise and give effect to those rights.   As

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the  property  was  deemed  to  continue  to  vest  in   the transferor it was he who could exercise these rights.  As  a result of the deletion of cl. (b) from October 10, 1954  the bar against recognition was removed and the transferee could enforce  his right as from that date.  This deletion of  cl. (b)  in  1954 was prospective.  There. fore for  the  period between July 1, 1952 and October 10, 1954 the rights of  the transferee  under the Act such as the right to  compensation and rehabilitation grant, would still not be recognised.  To remove  this difficulty by another Amendment Act,  1956  cl. (b) war, deleted retrospectively with regard to transferee’s right  to compensation and rehabilitation grant.  [228  E-H; 230 A-D]. When the suit was filed though the appellant was the  inter- mediary and the bhumidar under s, 18, her right to evict the respondent  could  not  be recognised.  As  the  estate  was deemed to 224 continue  to  vest in the transferor, K had to join  in  the suit  as  co plaintiff.  From October 10, 1954 the  bar  was removed  and the appellant became entitled to  maintain  the suit  in her own right and the withdrawal of K as  plaintiff did  not  effect  the  maintainability  of  the  suit.   The respondent’s  contention that the withdrawal must be  deemed to  date back to the institution of the suit had  no  force. No such order was made by the Trial Court which ordered  the withdrawal.   The withdrawal therefore took place after  the bar  under  cl. (b) against recognition of  the  appellant’s rights was deleted and the appellant therefore had the right to maintain the suit. [230 D-F].

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURSISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 963 of 1964. Appeal from the judgement and decree dated April 2, 1963  of the  Allahabad High Court, Lucknow Bench in  Special  Appeal No. 30 of 1962.  B.  P. Jha and C.P, Lal, for the appellant  S.  S. Shukla, for the respondent.  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Shelat, J-This appeal by certificate raises the question  of construction  of cl. (b) of s. 23(1) of the  U.P.  Zamindari Abolition  and  Land  Reforms Act, 1  of  1951  (hereinafter referred  to as the Act) and the effect of its  deletion  by section  6 of the U.P. Land Reforms (Amendment) Act,  XX  of 1954  and  later  by  section 3 of  the  U.P.  Land  Reforms (Amendment) Act XVIII of 1956. Some of the relevant facts may first be set out:  Prior  to June 14, 1952 Kapurthala Estate was the owner  of the  mango grove in suit.  On June 14, 1952 the Estate  sold the  said  grove  to the appellant.  A notice  to  quit  was thereafter served, on the respondent-tenant but as he failed to   deliver  possession  the  Kapurthala  Estate  and   the appellant  filed on May 12, 1954 the suit out of which  this appeal  arises.   On October 1, 1959 the  Kapurthala  Estate withdrew  from  the  suit leaving  the  appellant  the  sole plaintiff.  The respondent-tenant raised several defences in his  written  statement.   The Trial  Court  raised  several issues  amongst which Issue No. 7 was: "Whether  any  rights have  accrued in law in favour of plaintiff No. 2 under  the sale deed dated 14th June 1952." The Trial Court tried  that as a preliminary issue and held that the sale deed in favour of  the  appellant  was  void,  that  she  did  not  acquire thereunder  any interest in the said property, and  in  that

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view dismissed the suit.  In appeal the learned Civil Judge, Mohanlalganj, held that the sale deed was not void and  that after the deletion of cl. (b) of section 23(1) by  Amendment Act,  XX of 1954 the appellant was entitled to maintain  the suit   despite   withdrawal  by   the   Kapurthala   Estate. Consequently,  he remanded the case to the Trial  Court  for deciding  the  rest of the issues.  Against that  order  the respondent filed an appeal in the High Court contending once again that the said sale was void and conferred 225  no  right,  title or interest in the appellant,  and  being void  from  its inception, remained void for  all  time  and could  not  be  taken into consideration  in  spite  of  the deletion of the said clause (b).  The learned Single  Judge, who  heard  that appeal dismissed it holding that  the  said sale  was a valid transfer, that cl. (b) of section  23  (1) only  provided  a  ban against recognition for  any  of  the purposes under the Act and that after its deletion first  by Act  XX of 1954 and then by Act XVIII of 1956 the  appellant could  maintain  the suit though the Kapurthala  Estate  had withdrawn  therefrom.  The Division Bench of the High  Court which  heard the Special Appeal against the judgment of  the learned Single Judge differed from the view of section 23(1) (b) taken by him, allowed the appeal and dismissed the suit. Counsel for the respondent contended (i) that the effect  of section 23(1)(b) was that transfers made after July 7,  1949 were  void for any purpose whatsoever; and (ii) that in  any event withdrawal by the Kapurthala Estate from the suit must date  back from the inception of the suit and therefore  the Division  Bench  was  correct in dismissing  the  suit.   To appreciate  these contentions it is necessary to read  first some of the provisions of the Zamindari Abolition Act. The  object of the Act as declared by its long title  is  to provide  for  abolition of the  Zamindari  system  involving intermediaries between the tiller of the soil and, the State for  acquisition of their rights, title and interest and  to reform the law relating to land tenure consequent upon  such abolition   and  acquisition.   Section  3(12)  defines   an "intermediary"’to  mean  with  reference  to  any  estate  a proprietor,  under-proprietor,  sub-proprietor,  the  kadar, permanent  lessee  in Avadh and permanent  tenure-holder  of such   estate  or  part  thereof.   Clause  13  defines   an "intermediary grove" to mean grove land held ,or occupied by an  intermediary  as such.  Section 4 authorises  the  State Government to declare by notification that as from the  date to be specified, all estates shall vest in the State and  as from  the  date so specified all such  estates  shall  stand transferred  to  and  vest in the State  except  as  therein provided.   Section  6  lays down the  consequences  of  the vesting  and provides inter alia that all rights, title  and interest  of all the intermediaries in every estate in  such area as may by notification be specified shall cease and  be vested  in the State.  Section 18 deals with  settlement  of certain lands with intermediaries as bhumidhars and provides that  subject to certain sections therein set out all  lands in  possession  of  or  held or deemed  to  be  held  by  an intermediary as sir, khudkasht or an intermediary’s grove on the date immediately preceding the date of vesting shall  be deemed  to  be  settled by the State  Government  with  such intermediary  who  shall  be  entitled  to  take  or  retain possession  as a bhumidhar hereof.  Section 23(i)  reads  as follows:-               "Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in  any               law,  no transfer, by way of sale or  gift  of               any estate or part thereof-

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L/P(N) 1SCI-16 226               (a)   made  on  or  after  the  first  day  of               July,1948 shall be recognised for the  purpose               of  assessing  the  amount  of  rehabilitation               grant payable to the intermediary;               (b)   Notwithstanding  anything  contained  in               any law, no transfer by way of sale or gift of               any  estate  or part thereof  made  after  the               seventh day of July 1949, shall be  recognised               for  any  purpose whatsoever  and  the  estate               shall  be  deemed to continue to vest  in the               transferor." Chapter  III of the Act deals with compensation  payable  to the  intermediary and its assessment and sections 73 and  74 in  Chapter IV provide for rehabilitation grant  payable  to such  intermediary.  By section 6 of the Act XX of 1954  the legislature repealed cl.(b) of section 23(1).  In 1956,  the legislature passed another Amendment Act XVIII of 1956 which by  section  3  provided that "section 6 of  the  U.P.  Land Reforms (Amendment) Act 1954 deleting cl. (b) of sub-section 1  of  section  23 shall in the  matter  of  assessment  and payment of compensation or rehabilitation grant be deemed to have had the effect from the date of the commencement of the Principal Act." As  aforesaid,  Kapurthala  Estate  sold  the  property   in question  to the appellant before July 1, 1922 when the  Act came  into operation.  Therefore as the law then  stood  the sale was a valid transaction and vested in the appellant all the  right, title and interest which the  Kapurthala  Estate possessed  in  the  said land, subject  of  course  to  such rights,  if any, which the respondent had as a tenant  under any tenancy law in force then.  The question is what was the impact  of  the Act which was brought into force  after  the said  sale.  Did the Act prohibit any such sale  or  declare such sale to be void and of no effect though valid when made before the Act came into force?  Leaving aside for the  time being cl.(b) of section 23(1) there is otherwise nothing  in the  Act  which provides that a  transfer  validly  effected prior to July 1, 1952 shall be void and will have no effect. There  is also nothing, in the Act touching the  consequence of such a transfer under the Transfer of Property Act. The  learned Single Judge of the High Court held  that  what section  23(1)(b) did was only to preclude recognition of  a sale  made  on  or  after  July  7,  1949  for  any  purpose whatsoever.  that is, for any of the purposes under the  Act but  did  not  render  such a  sale  void.   Therefore  "for purposes under the Contract Act the transfer was not invalid and a transfer of property had taken place; but for purposes of  the  U.  P. Zaminadri Abolition and  Land  Reforms  Act, primarily for assessment of compensation and calculation  of rehabilitation grant, the transfer was not to be  recognised but that does not mean that the transfer was declared void." The sale, according to him, 227 was thus a valid transfer but it could not be recognised  by the  courts  until the ban in cl.(b) existed.   He  observed that  as  the deletion of clause (b) by Act XX of  1954  was prospective,  so far as the courts were concerned it  was  a case of devolution of property with effect from October  10, 1954.  Consequently, withdrawal in 1959 by Kapurthala Estate from  the suit did not affect its maintainability,  the  ap- pellant being on the record as the second plaintiff and  the ban  against  recognition of the sale in her  favour  having been already removed before the withdrawal.

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The  Division  Bench of the High Court disagreed  with  this view  and held that the words "any purpose" in  cl.(b)  were wide enough to include all purposes, that therefore the sale could not be recognised, that even if those words were given a restricted meaning as the learned Single Judge did,  viz., for any purpose under the Act it made no difference, for, no court could recognise the transfer for any purpose under the Act.   Therefore,  on July 1, 1952 when the  Act  came  into force  the  question  would  arise  as  to  who  became  the bhumidhar  under  the  Act, the  Kapurthala  Estate  or  the appellant.    Since   clause  (b)  placed  a   ban   against recognition  of that transfer for any purpose under the  Act it  was the Kapurthala Estate which became the bhumidhar  as clause  (b)  provided that in the case of  a  transfer  made after  July 7, 1949 the estate was to be deemed to  continue to   vest  in  the  transferor.   Accordingly  it  was   the Kapurthala  Estate  which  became  the  bhumidhar  and   was entitled to the rights of a bhumidhar and not the appellant. This  position continued till October 10, 1954  when  clause (b) was deleted.  But since the amendment was prospective it did  not serve any useful purpose for it affected  transfers made  after  and  not  before  the  amendment  was  enacted. Therefore,  the  Kapurthala Estate  remained  the  bhumidhar under section 18 and as such bhumidhar the Kapurthala Estate alone  could sue the respondent for eviction.  According  to the  Division  Bench section 3 of Act XVIII  of  1956  which retrospectively deleted clause (b) from the commencement  of the Act did not help the appellant, for the deletion was for a  limited  purpose,  viz., for assessment  and  payment  of compensation and rehabilitation grant.  It did not therefore change the position so far as the question as to who  became the  bhumidhar  on July 1, 1952  is  concerned.   Kapurthala Estate continued to remain the bhumidhar and its  withdrawal from  the  suit rendered the suit  non-maintainable  as  the appellant  could  not continue the suit as she was  not  the bhumidhar.   In this view. the Division Bench held that  the Kapurthala Estate was the intermediary on June 30, 1952  and bhumidhar  from  July  1, 1952 and  this  position  was  not affected  by  the repeal of cl.(b). The Estate and  not  the appellant  therefore  could claim  bhumidhari  rights  under section 18 to evict the respondent. Counsel  for the respondent in support of this  view  argued that the effect of cl. (b) was that the transfer was ,  void from its L/P(N)1SCI--17 228 inception and therefore neither the prospective deletion  of that  clause in 1954 nor the retrospective deletion  thereof in 1956 conferred the status of bhumidhar on the  appellant. That  being the position, he argued that the  appellant  was not  entitled to maintain the suit after withdrawal  by  the Kapurthala  Estate  therefrom.  In our opinion,  it  is  not possible to accede to these contentions.  There  is a clear distinction between a  transaction  being void that is, non-existent from its very inception and a ban against its recognition.  Indeed when it is said that such a transaction  is  not  to  be  recognised  for  any   purpose whatsoever it postulates that the transaction does exist and is  valid but is not to be recognised.   Recognition  means, according to Jowitt’s Dictionary of English Law, p. 1486, an acknowledgment.   According  to the Shorter  Oxford  English Dictionary,  (3rd ed.) Vol. 11, p. 1673, recognition  means: "The  action or fact of perceiving that some thing,  person, etc.,  is  the  same as one  previously  known;  the  mental process  of  identifying  what has been  known  before;  the

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action  or fact of apprehending a thing as having a  certain character  belonging  to a certain class." There is  thus  a clear  distinction between a transaction being void and  one though  valid and existent which is not to be recognised  or acknowledged.   The  legislature also appears  to  be  fully aware of the distinction between a void transaction and  one which  is not to be recognised.  In sections 24 and 166  the legislature  has declared certain transactions  therein  set out void and of no effect as against cl.(b) of section 23(1) where  it  provides only a bar  against  recognition.   That being so it is impossible to say that the bar of recognition in  cl.(b) to a transfer made after July 7, 1949 means  that such  a  transfer  is  void.  The  sale  in  favour  of  the appellant  was  therefore valid and did have the  effect  of conveying  and vesting the ownership of the property in  the appellant. What then is the true effect of cl. (b)?  The sale in favour of the appellant transferred all rights of ownership of  the Kapurthala  Estate  in  the  appellant  and  therefore   the appellant  became the zamindar in respect of that  property. Section  4  of  the Act abolished rights  and  vested  those rights  in the State.  Under section 18 the zamindar who  is the intermediary would become the bhumidhar and therefore by reason  of the sale in her favour it was the  appellant  who became  entitled to the bhumidhar’s rights.  But for  cl.(b) of section 23(1) it would be the appellant who would have to be  recognised  as such bhumidhar and it would  be  she  who would  be  entitled  to  the  rights  of  compensation   and rehabilitation  grant  under  Chapters  III  and  IV  as  an intermediary, the right to retain possession of the property and  to  evict  a  tenant therefrom.   That  is  the  simple position emerging from sections 4, 18 and 23 (1)(b). In  the  earlier  part of its judgment  the  Division  Bench expressed  its  inability  to  appreciate  as  to  why   the legislature went out of 229  its  way  to enact cl. (b).  For it did not matter  to  the State as to whether it was the transferor or the  transferee who  became the bhumidhar.  But the legislature had a  clear purpose  in  enacting cl.(b) and it is because  the  learned Judges  failed to appreciate that purpose that they  allowed themselves to deviate from the true construction and  object of  that clause.  The legislature was aware  that  transfers would  be the intermediaries and therefore bhumidhars  under section  18  with  rights inter  alia  to  compensation  and rehabilitation  grant.   The  purpose  of  the   legislature however  was to recognise the original owners, that is,  the transferors as. persons entitled to the rights of bhumidhars and therefore provided in cl.(b) that no such transfer is to be   recognised  "for  any  purpose   whatsoever".    Though therefore   such   a  transfer  made   the   transferee   an intermediary  and  therefore a bhumidhar  under  section  18 clause  (b)  laid down a bar against its  recognition.   The words "any purpose whatsoever" were used in cl.(b) as cl.(a) of s.23(1) provided that a transfer made on or after July 1, 1948  was  not  to be recognised for  the  purpose  only  of assessing  rehabilitation grant payable to an  intermediary. But  there are purposes under the Act other than payment  of rehabilitation  grant  such as  compensation  payable  under Chapter  III  and other rights of a  bhumidbar  provided  in other  parts  of the Act.  When section 23(1) is read  as  a whole it is clear that with respect to transfers made  after July 7, 1949 the legislature wanted to lay   down   a    bar against  its  recognition for all these  purposes  also  and hence advisedly used the words "for any purpose whatsoever",

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that is, for all purposes under the Act.  The Division Bench therefore was not right in saying that cl. (b) did not serve any  useful purpose and that it did not appreciate  why  the legislature had enacted that clause.  It is because this was the purpose of enacting clause (b) that the legislature also enacted a deeming provision under which the estate is to  be deemed to continue to vest in the transferor.  The impact of cl.  (b)  on the transfer made after July 7,  1949  is  that though the transferee by reason of such transfer becomes the intermediary  and  a  bhumidhar under section  18,  it  bars recognition of his rights as such bhumidhar for any of  the purposes of the Act whatsoever.  Instead, as a result of the deeming provision in the clause, the transferor continues to have  those  rights notwithstanding the  transfer.   If  the clause  had  rendered  such a  transfer  void,and  therefore nonexistent, the transferor would have remained the owner of the property and would have the rights of a bhumidhar  under s.18 and there would not have been any necessity of enacting the  deeming  provision  under  which  the  property  though transferred   is  deemed  to  continue  to  vest   in   such transferor.  In  this view the sale in favour of the appellant  was  not void  but  a  valid  sale.   It  was  she  who  became   the intermediary  and  it was her rights  as  such  intermediary which section 4 abolished.  By virtue 230 of  the combined effect of sections 4 and 18 she became  the bhumidhar.  But for clause (b) her rights as such  bhumidhar would have been recognised and she would have been  entitled to  the  rights  as such bhumidhar under the  Act.   But  by reason  of the bar against recognition of the sale no  court can  recognise  and  give effect to those  rights.   As  the property is deemed to continue to vest in the transferor  it is  he  who can exercise those rights.  As a result  of  the deletion of cl.(b) as from October 10, 1954 the bar  against recognition  is removed and the transferee can  enforce  his rights as from that date.  The deletion of cl. (b) by Act XX of 1954 was however prospective.  Therefore, for the  period between July 1, 1952 and October 10, 1954 the rights of  the transferee  under the Act such as the right to  compensation and rehabilitation grant, would still not be recognised.  To remove  this difficulty the legislature by section 3 of  the Amendment Act 1956 made the deletion of cl.(b) retrospective from the date of the commencement of the Act with regard  to the  right of the transferee to compensation  and  rehabili- tation grant.  The  position  which emerges from this discussion  is  that when  the  suit  was  filed though  the  appellant  was  the intermediary  and the bhumidhar under section 18, her  right to  evict  the respondent could not be recognised.   As  the estate  was  deemed to continue to vest in  the  transferor, Kapurthala Estate had to join in the suit as a co-plaintiff. From October 10, 1954 the bar was removed and the  appellant became  entitled to maintain the suit in her own  right  and the  withdrawal of Kapurthala Estate as plaintiff No. 1  did not affect the maintainability of the suit.  The  contention of  Mr.  Shukla that the withdrawal must be deemed  to  date back  to  the  institution of the suit has in  our  view  no force.   No  such order was made by the  Trial  Court  which ordered the withdrawal.  The withdrawal therefore took place after  the bar under clause (b) against recognition  of  the appellant’s  rights was deleted and the appellant  therefore had the right to maintain the suit. The appeal is allowed; the judgment and decree of the  Divi- sion  Bench  of the High Court are set aside,  the  suit  is

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restored and the Trial Court is directed to proceed with the suit in accordance with law.  The respondent will pay to the appellant costs throughout. Y.P.                                Appeal allowed. 231