Sahib Ram Vs. The Financial
Commissioner, Punjab & Ors [1970] INSC 38 (24 February 1970)
24/02/1970 VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
SHELAT, J.M.
CITATION: 1971 AIR 198 1970 SCR (3) 796 1970
SCC (1) 524
CITATOR INFO:
D 1974 SC 994 (26,70,72,73,91,113,117)
ACT:
Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act 10 of
1953, Section 18(1), sub ss. (i) & (ii)-Scope of-Whether to claim right of
purchase tenant should have been in continuous occupation of land for 6 years
before Act came into force.
HEADNOTE:
The question that arose for decision in these
writ petitions and civil appeals was whether a tenant, in order to claim the
right of purchase as against the land-owner, under s.
18(1) of the Punjab Security of Land Tenures
Act X of 1953 should have been in continuous occupation of the land comprised
in his tenancy for a minimum period of six years on the date when the Act came
into force (April 15, 1953), or on the date when he files the application for
purchase to the concerned authority under the Act. A subsidiary point for
consideration was whether the person, who claims the right to purchase, should
have been a tenant on the date when the Act came into force.
HELD : In order to claim a right of purchase
as against the land owner s. 18(1)(i) of the Act, the minimum period of six
years should have been completed at the time when the application for purchase
by the tenant is made, and it is not necessary that he should have been a
tenant of the land on April 15, 1953. Provided the other conditions are
satisfied such a tenant will be entitled to purchase the land. [808 G] Section
18(1)(i) gives a right to a tenant to purchase the land; and that right has to
be examined when an application under s. 18 is made and cannot be denied on the
ground that he was not a tenant for more than six years on April 15, 1953.
There is no limitation placed under cl. (i) of s. 18(1) that the tenant who
exercises his right should be a tenant on the date of the Act or that he should
have completed the period of six years on April 15, 1953 and there is no
warrant for reading in s. 18(1)(i) clauses which it does not contain. It is
enough if the continuous period of six years has been completed on the date
when the tenant files the application for purchase of land, [808 C] When the
object of the Act as seen from clause (ii) of section 18(1) is to attract even
a tenant who-got back into possession of the land after the date of Act, there
is no reason why a limitation should be read into clause (i) in respect of a
tenant who is in possession of the land that he should have completed the
period of six years continuous occupation even prior to the date of the Act.
Clause (iii) dealing with the third category
of tenants, admittedly relates to a tenant evicted from the property even
before the date of the Act and who was not in possession on the day when the
Act came into force. But, nevertheless, if such tenants had been in continuous
possession for six years at the time of their ejectment which must be before
the date of the Act, they are entitled to purchase the property but that right
must be exercised within a period of one year from the date of the commencement
of the Act. [807 B] It stands to reason that the tenants coming under clause
(i) and (ii) who are in actual possession of the land have been given the
option 797 either to continue as tenants and pay rent or to exercise their
right to purchase the land at any time. There is no question in their case of
there being any time-lagor doubt because,, being in possession no other
person's right wilt normally be affected; whereas in the case of a tenant
coming under clause (iii), he has already gone out of the land and therefore
the Legislature has specifically provided a very short period of one year from
the date of the Act for exercising, if he so chooses, his right to purchase the
land provided he satisfies the other conditions mentioned in the section. [807
F-H] Ganpat v. Jagmal, (1963) Punj. L.R. 652; Amar Singh v.State of Punjab,
I.L.R. [1967] 2 Punj. & Har. 120; Mam Raj v. State of Punjab, I.L.R. [1969]
2 Punj. & Har. 680;
distinguished.
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION : Writ Petitions Nos.
116 and 190 to 214 of 1968.
Petition under Art. 32 of the Constitution of
India for the enforcement of fundamental rights; and Civil Appeals Nos. 2356
and 2357 of 1966 and 1508 to 1514 and 1471 of 1968.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated
October 1, 1963 of the Punjab High Court in Civil Writ Nos. 715 of 1963 etc.
S. K. Mehta, K. L. Mehta and Sona Bhatiani,
for the petitioners (in all the petitioners) and the appellants (in C.As. Nos.
1508 to 1514 of 1968).
E. C. Agarwal, for respondents Nos. 5 and 6
(in W.P. No. 116 of 1968) and respondent no. 5 (in W.P. Nos. 191 and 209 of
1968 and C.As. Nos. 1508 to 1514 and 1471 of 1968).
The Judgment of the Court was -delivered by
Vaidialingam, J. The common question that arises for consideration in all these
writ petitions filed under Art.
32 and the civil appeals, on certificates
granted by the High Court, is whether a tenant, in order to claim the right of
purchase as against the landowner, under s. 18(1) of the Punjab Security of
Land Tenures Act, 1953 (Act X of 1953) (hereinafter referred to as the Act),
should have been in continuous occupations of the land comprised in his tenancy
for a minimum period of six years, on the date when the Act came into, force
(April 15, 1953), or on the date when he files the application for purchase to
the concerned authority under the Act. A subsidiary point also arises for
consideration viz., whether the person who claims the right to purchase, should
have been a tenant on the date when the Act came into force.
The circumstances under which these writ
petitions and appeals arose, may be briefly stated.
798 We shall first take up for consideration
Civil Appeal No. 2356 of 1966.
Respondents 2 and 3, who are the tenants
under the appellant land-owner, in this appeal, filed on January 10, 1961
before the Assistant Collector, I Grade, Fazilka, an application under S. 18(1)
of the Act for purchase from their land-lord 19 acres and 7 kanals of land
comprised in their tenancy.
Their case was that they had been in
continuous occupation of the land comprised in their tenancy for a minimum
period of six years and, as such, they were entitled to purchase the land.
Their claim was resisted by the appellant landowners on the ground that it was
only those tenants who had completed a continuous period of six years of
tenancy prior to the commencement of the Act who were entitled to purchase the
land under S. 18(1) of the Act and as the applicants did not satisfy that test,
the application was not maintainable.
The Assistant Collector, by his order dated
March 29, 1961 over-ruled the objections of the land-owners and held that the
application filed by the tenants was maintainable as similar purchase applications
had been entertained without regard to -any date of completion of six years of
continuous tenancy and in this view the matter was directed to be posted for
further hearing. The appellants challenged this order of the Assistant
Collector by an appeal taken before the Collector, Ferozepore. The Collector,
by order dated June 9, 1961 reversed the order of the Assistant Collector and
held that no tenant who had not been in continuous possession for six years on
the commencement of the Act could apply, under s.18(1) of the Act, for
purchasing the property and that the six year period should have been completed
at the time the Act came into force. In this view he held that the application
filed by the tenants was not maintainable.
The tenants carried the matter in appeal
before the Additional Commissioner, Jullundur Division, who, by his order dated
December 14, 1962 agreed with the Collector and dismissed the appeal. The
tenants went in revision before the Financial Commissioner, Revenue Punjab,
who, by his order dated April 24, 1963 reversed the orders of the Collector and
the Additional Commissioner. The Financial Commissioner held that the right of
purchase under S. 18(1) of the Act could be exercised by a tenant whose tenancy
existed on the date of the commencement of the Act and who has been in
continuous occupation of the land comprised in his tenancy for a minimum period
of six years on the date of the application for the purchase of the land and
the land has not been included in the reserved area of the landowner. The
Financial Commissioner further held that -a tenant who, on 799 the date of the
application for purchase, own or holds land exceeding the permissible area will
not be entitled to purchase the land under his tenancy. After setting aside the
orders of the Collector and the Additional Commissioner, the matters were
remanded to the Assistant, Collector, Fazilka, for a decision on merits.
The appellants-land owners filed Civil Writ
No. 715 of 1963 in the High Court of Punjab to quash the orders -of the
Financial Commissioner, Revenue, Punjab. The tenants of certain other
properties had also filed applications for purchase and their landlords had
filed Civil Writ No. 716 of 1963 before the Punjab High Court. Both these Civil
Writ Petitions were disposed of by common judgment of the High Court, dated
October 1, 1963. After a consideration of the scheme of the Act and in
particular the provisions of S. 18, the High Court held that to have the
benefit of S. 1 8 ( I ) (i), the tenants must be in continuous occupation of
the land under their tenancies for a period of six years on the date of making
the application for purchase under that section. Accordingly the High Court
agreed with the views expressed by the Financial Commissioner on this point and
left open for consideration by the Assistant Collector certain other aspects
that appear to have 'been pressed on behalf of the tenants.
Civil Appeals No. 2356 of 1966 and 2357 of
1966 are directed against the orders passed in Civil Writ Petitions Nos.715 and
716 of 1963 respectively. Similarly, a group of eight civil writ petitions had
been filed by other landowners before the Punjab and Haryana High Court
challenging the orders passed by the Financial Commissioner, Revenue, upholding
the right of the tenants to purchase the lands concerned. Civil Appeals Nos.
1471 of 1968 and 1508 to 1514 of 1968 are directed against the orders passed by
the High Court dismissing those writ petitions.
Certain other land-owners had contested the
maintainability of applications filed by their tenants for purchase under
s.18(1) and had made request to the concerned authorities to stay the
proceedings and await the decision of this Court in Civil Appeals No. 2356 and
2357 of 1966.
Apart from questioning the maintainability of
the application filed by the tenants and the jurisdiction of the authorities to
entertain those applications, certain other contentions had also been taken by
the landlords.
Stay of proceedings asked for by the
land-owners was declined by the authorities and finally, by the Financial
Commissioner,Revenue, by his order dated February 29, 1968.
Against this common order Writ Petitions Nos.
116 of 1968 and 190 to 214 of 1968 have been filed, under Art. 32. In those
Writ Petitions 800 the jurisdiction of the authorities to entertain the
applications under s. 18, filed by the tenants, arises for consideration.
At the outset we may state that in all these
matters we are giving our decision only regarding the interpretation of s. 18
of the Act with special reference to the points mentioned at the beginning of
this judgment, and any other matters which may arise for consideration in these
proceedings are left open to be adjudicated upon by the appropriate authorities
concerned, before whom proceedings may be pending.
On behalf of the land-owners, Mr. B. R.L.
lyengar, learned counsel, after a reference to the material provisions of the
Act, urged that the interpretation put on s. 18 by the High Courts against the
entire scheme of the statute and that such an interpretation will defeat the
very object and purpose for which the Act had been passed.
Counsel pointed out that the Act clearly
indicated that the lands treated as surplus area were exclusively intended for
being utilised for re-settlement of tenants already ejected from the land or
who were liable to be ejected under s. 9 (1) (i) of the Act. He further pointed
out that if the test of six years' continuous occupation, dealt with under s.
18 of the Act, is considered to be satisfied with reference to the date when the
application for purchase is made by a tenant, as held by the High Court, there
will be a conflict between s. 10-A and s. 18. Counsel finally urged that having
regard to the scheme of the Act, continuous possession for a minimum period of
6 years under s. 18 of the Act must be such possession on the date the Act came
into force viz., April 15, 1953 and tenants who did not satisfy this condition
were not entitled to exercise the right of purchase under s. 1 8.
Mr. S. V. Gupte, learned counsel appearing for
the tenants, on the other hand pointed out that the object of the Act was to
put a ceiling on the extent of property that could be held by a tenant or a
landlord and for stabilising tenancies of long duration and confer on such
tenants the -right of pre-emption and a right of purchase. Counsel pointed out
that the Act did not snap the relationship, of landlord and tenant,, but, on
the other hand, tried to maintain the same. There was no prohibition, he
pointed out, anywhere in the Act against creation of new tenancies after April
15, 1953. He further urged that the scheme of the Act clearly indicated that
apart from other rights, a right of purchase was given to a tenant who was in
actual possession of the land and if the tenant satisfied the requirement of
having been in continuous possession for a minimum period of six years on the
date of his filing an application for purchase, S. 18(1)(i) would stand
attracted.
It was also urged that having due regard to
the various 801 provisions of the Act, there was no warrant to restrict the
right of purchase under s. 18 (1) (i) only to a tenant who had been in
continuous occupation of the land for a minimum period of six years on the date
of the coming into force of the Act.
The other learned counsel, appearing in some
of these matters either for the landlords or for the tenants have adopted the
arguments of Mr. lyengar and Mr. Gupte, respectively.
It is necessary to broadly consider the
general scheme of the Act in the first instance. The Act came into force on
April 15, 1953 and it was to provide for the security of land tenure and other
incidental matters. The Act has been amended from time to time in 1953, 1955,
1959 and 1962.
Under the Act, as originally passed, it is to
be noted that there were two other sections viz., ss. 7 and 15, which were
later omitted. Even under s. 18, originally the period provided was 12 years.
By the amendment Act. Punjab Act Xi of 1955, the period was reduced to 6 years.
As Mr. lyengar, in the course of his
arguments, has referred to ss. 7 and 15, we shall just refer to the substance
of those provisions. Section 7, dealing with the minimum period of tenancy,
provided that no tenant on land other than the reserved area of a landowner
shall be liable for ejectment before the expiry of a period of ten years from
the commencement of the Act or from the commencement of his tenancy, whichever
is later, and this was notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in
any other law and except as provided by the Act. Section 15 is a -corollary to
s. 7 and it provided that when a tenant, after the expiration of the period
specified in s. 7 has been allowed to hold over, his tenancy shall be deemed to
have been renewed for a further period of 10 years commencing from the date of
his expiration, on the same terms and conditions. The object of Mr. lyengar
relying upon these provisions was to show that the only protection-intended to
be given to tenants on land other than on the reserved area of a landowner was
to give a fixity for a period of 10 years and, if such tenants hold over, the
tenancy was protected for a further period of 10 years. These sections, which
have been subsequently deleted, do not, in our opinion, lend any Support to Mr.
lyengar in the interpretation to be placed on s. 18.
By the Punjab Amendment Act XI of 1955,
certain amendments were made in the parent Act.
Section 2(5-a) defining 'Surplus Area' was
introduced by this Amendment. Section 7 of the original Act was deleted.
Section 10-A was introduced and the period of
12 years in s. 18 was 80 2 substituted by a reduced period of 6 years. Section
16 of the original Act was substituted by a new section.
Section 15 of the original Act was omitted by
the Punjab Act XXXII of 1959.
One of the amendments in 1962 was the
substitution of the new section 6 in the place of the old section.
We shall now refer to the material provisions
of the Act, as it stands at present.
We have already mentioned that the Act was
passed to provide for the security of land tenure and other incidental matters.
Section 2 defines the various expressions. In particular, it is only necessary
to refer to the definition of the expressions 'permissible area', 'reserved
area' and 'surplus area'. 'Permissible area' under s. 2(3), in relation to a
landowner or tenant means thirty standard acres and where such thirty standard
acres on being converted into ordinary acres exceed sixty acres, such sixty
acres. It is not necessary to refer to the proviso.
'Reserved area', under S. 2(4) means the area
lawfully reserved under the Punjab Tenants (Security of Tenures) Act, 1950 as
amended by President's Act of 1951. Section 2(5-a) defines 'surplus area'.
Broadly speaking, 'permissible area' related to the thirty standard acres which
a landowner or a tenant could possess and the 'reserved area' meant the area
lawfully reserved under the Act of 1950, as amended by President's Act of 1951.
That will be an area which the landowner will be entitled to choose for himself
from his holdings in order to enable him to have the permissible area of thirty
standard acres. Generally speaking, excess lands not covered by the reserved
area and not in the possession of any tenant will be the surplus area so far as
a landowner is concerned.
Section 5 gives a right to a landowner who
owns land in excess of the permissible area to reserve out of the entire land
held by him in the State of Punjab any parcel or parcels not exceeding the
permissible area. Section 5-A makes it obligatory on a landowner and tenant
holding land in excess of the permissible area to furnish a declaration in the
manner and within the period provided therein.
Section 5-B(1) enables a landowner who has
not exercised his right of reservation under the Act to select his permissible
area and intimate the selection to the authority conceded, in the manner and
within the period stated therein. Sub-s. (2) gives power to the prescribed
authority in cases where a landowner fails to select his permissible area to
select the parcel or parcels of land which such landowner may be entitled to
retain under the Act. Any transfer of land.
excepting those mentioned under S. 6, made
Between August 15, 1947 and February 803 2, 1955 will not affect the rights of
tenants of such land under the Act. Section 8 safeguards the continuity of a
tenancy. Section 9 provides for the conditions under which a tenant is liable
to be evicted and under sub-s. (1)(i) a tenant on the area reserved under the
Act or is a tenant of a small landowner can be evicted. But, under s. 9-A, a
tenant liable to ejectment under cl. (i) of sub-s. (1) of s. 9, cannot be
dispossessed unless he is accommodated on a surplus area in accordance with the
provisions of s. 10-A of otherwise on some other and by the State Government.
Section 10 gives a right of restoration to a
tenant who has been ejected from any land in excess of the permissible area
between August 15, 1947 and April 15, 1953 provided the land is under
self-cultivation and the ejectment has been on grounds other than those
mentioned in S. 9. Under sub-s. (4) of s. 10, in case of such restoration, the
landowner or any other person in actual possession is entitled to such
compensation as may be determined by the Assistant Collector from the tenant
intended to be restored. Section 10-A gives power to the State Government or
any officer empowered by it in that behalf to utilise any surplus area for the
resettlement of tenants ejected or to be ejected under cl. (i) of sub-s. (1) of
S. 9.
It will be seen that while providing for
eviction of a tenant from a reserved area under S. 9(1) (i), that tenant is
safeguarded by s.9-A providing that his dispossession shall not take place
unless he is accommodated on a surplus area and s.10-A provides for utilisation
of surplus area for resettlement of tenants ejected or to be ejected under cl.
(i) of sub-s.(1) of s.9. These three
provisions are interlinked and inter-connected. The Explanation to s. 10A(b)
makes it clear that the utilization of any surplus area' will not affect the
right of a landowner to receive rent from the tenant so settled.
Section 12 provides for the quantum of rent
payable by a tenant for the land held by him. Section 14-A provides for the
procedure to be adopted by a landowner desiring to eject a tenant under the
Act. Under S. 16, excepting id the case of lands acquired by the State
Government or by a heir by inheritance, no transfer or disposition of land
after February 1, 1955 shall affect the rights of the tenant thereon under the
Act. Section 17 gives to the tenants mentioned therein, a right of preemption.
The various provisions, referred to above, in
our opinion, clearly indicate that the Act does not snap the relationship of
landlords and tenants once and for all. In fact that relationship is fairly
well preserved and a limited right of evicting tenants is given to the landlord
and an obligation to pay rent is also cast upon the tenant. But, in respect of
tenants who -are evicted or are liable to be evicted under s.9 (1) (i) of the
Act. Provision 8 04 is made for re-settling them under s.9-A read with s.10-A
of the Act. Such re-settlement does not affect the right of the landowner to
receive rent from the tenant. The provisions of s.6 and s.16 also indicate that
excepting the particular types of transactions, referred to therein, no other,
dealing with the property by the, landowner will affect the rights that the
tenant has under the Act, In fact these two provisions take in cases of
transfer prohibited thereunder after August 15, 1947 and also subsequent to the
date of the coming into force of the Act. It will also be noted that the
definition of 'surplus area' under s.2(5-a) and s-10-A giving power to the
State Government to utilise the surplus area for re-settlement of the tenants
were both brought in by the Amendment Act of 1955 and with retrospective effect
from the date of the original Act, viz., April 15, 1953 We then come to the
material section, s.18, which is as follows "18(1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in any law, usage of contract, a tenant of a
land-owner other than a small land-owner(i) who has been in continuous
occupation of the land comprised in his tenancy for a minimum period. of six
years, or (ii) who has been restored to his tenancy under the provisions of
this Act and whose periods of continuous occupation of the land comprised in
his tenancy immediately before ejectment and immediately after restoration of
his tenancy together amounts to six. years or more, or (iii)who was ejected
from his tenancy after the 14th day of August, 1947, and before the
commencement of this Act, and who was in continuous occupation of the land
comprised in his tenancy for a period of six years or more immediately before
his ejectment, shall be entitled to purchase from the landowner the land so
held by him but not included in the reserved area of the land-owner, in the
case of a tenant falling within clause (i) or clause (ii) at any time, and in
the case of a tenant falling within clause (iii) within a period of one year
from the date of commencement of this Act.
Provided 'that no tenant referred to in this
subsection shall be entitled to exercise any such right in respect of the land
or any portion thereof if he had 80 5 sublet the land or the portion, as the
case may be, to any other person during any period of his continuous
occupation, unless during that period the tenant was suffering from a legal
disability or physical infirmly, or, if a woman, was a widow or was unmarried;
Provided further that if the land intended to
be purchased is held by another tenant who is entitled to preempt the sale under
the next preceding section, -and who is not accepted by the purchasing tenant,
the tenant in actual occupation shall have the right to pre-empt the sale.
. . . . . . ." Section 18(2) deals with
the procedure to be adopted by the tenant who is desirous of purchasing land.
Sub-s. (3) provides for the purchase price being three-fourths of the value of
the land determined by the Assistant Collector.
Under sub-s. (4) it is open to the tenant to
pay the purchase price either in a lump-sum or in six-monthly installments not
exceeding ten. It further provides that on the purchase price or the first installment
thereof being deposited, a tenant shall be deemed to have become the owner of
the land. The other matters dealt with in s. 18 are not necessary to be gone
into.
Under s. 18(1) three categories of tenants
have been given a right to purchase from the land-owner the land so held by
him, but not included in the reserved area of the land-owner and they are (i) a
tenant who has been in continuous occupation of the land for a minimum period
of six years;
(ii) a tenant restored to his tenancy under
the Act and whose period of continuous occupation of the land comprised in his
tenancy immediately before ejectment and after restoration amounts to six years
or more; and (iii) a tenant who was ejected from his tenancy after August 14,
1947 and before April 15, 1953 and who was in continuous occupation of the land
comprised in his tenancy for a period of six years or more immediately before
his ejectment.
Before dealing with the first category, we
will refer to the tenants coming under categories (ii) and (iii). Regarding the
second category, the period of occupation by a tenant both prior to and after
the date of the Act are taken into account for computing the period of occupation
of six years or more. It is thus clear that the occupation by him for part of
the period which will be after the date of the Act is admittedly taken into
account to give him a right to purchase the land. He also represents the type
of tenants whose possession has been disturbed prior to the date of the Act and
who gets Possession again by virtue of being restored under the Act to his
tenancy and such possession is counted in his favour. For persons coming in
category (ii), 80 6 there is no time limit within which they should exercise
the right to purchase. On the other hand S. 18(1) clearly gives such persons a
right to purchase the land at any time.
Category (iii) deals with tenants who have
been ejected after August 14, 1947 and before April 15, 1953, but prior to such
eviction they have been in continuous occupation of the land for six years or
more. Admittedly, such persons were not in possession of the land as tenants on
the date when the Act came into force, i.e., on April 15, 1953. But, nevertheless,,
if such a person who has been evicted during the particular period above
mentioned had been at the time of his ejectment in continuous occupation of
land comprised in his tenancy for a period of six years or more, he is given a
right to purchase the land. That is, a person who had lost all contact with the
land on the date of the Act as a tenant, and who was not in possession on the
date of the coming into force of the Act, is also given a right to purchase the
land provided his ejectment was after August 14, 1947 and before April, 15,
1953. For a tenant coming under this category the section provides that he must
exercise his right to purchase within a period of -one year from the date of
commencement of the Act.
Coming to clause (i) of s. 18(1), that clause
does not expressly state as to when the tenant referred to therein should have
completed his continuous occupation of a minimum period of six years. According
to the land-owners, such a tenant must have completed the period of six years
on April 15, 1953, whereas, according to the tenants it is enough if the period
of six years had been completed on the date when an application for purchase is
made. The question now is whether the scheme of the Act indicates whether the
six year period should have been completed on April 15, 1953, the date when the
Act came into force.
In our opinion, having due regard to the
scheme of the Act, there is no warrant for importing any such restriction in S.
18 (1) (i) of the Act. If the intention of the Legislature was that the tenant
under s. 18 (1) (i) should have been in continuous occupation for a minimum
period of six years on the date of the Act,, it would have been specifically so
provided for in the said clause.
There is also intrinsic evidence in S. 18 (1)
(i) itself that it is not necessary for -a person coming under sub-cl.
(i) that he should have completed his
continuous occupation of six years on the date of the Act. We have already
referred to the category of tenants coming under cl. (ii) and shown that the
Act recognizes their possession for a period a part of which must certainly be
subsequent to the commencement of the Act. When the Object of the Act, as seen
from cl. (ii) is to protect even tenants who get back into possession of the
land after the date of the Act, we do not see any reason why a limitation
should be read in cl.
(i) 80 7 in respect of a tenant who is in
possession of the land that he should have completed the period of six years of
continuous occupation even prior to the date of the Act.
There is an additional reason why we cannot
read any such limitation into cl. (i). Clause (iii) dealing With the third
category of tenants, admittedly relates to a tenant evicted from the property
even before the date of the Act and who was not in possession on the day when
the Act came into force. But, nevertheless, if such tenants had been in
continuous possession for six years at the time of their ejectment which must
be before the late of the Act, they are entitled to purchase the property, but
hat must be exercised within a period of one year from-the date of the
commencement of the Act. If Mr. Iyengar's contention that the tenants in
category (i) should have completed the continuous period of six years on the
date of the Act is correct, such tenants and tenants coming under category
(iii) will be on a par in that both would have completed their period of six
years before the date of the Act.
Nevertheless in the case of tenants coming
under category (iii), the Legislature has specifically stated that they must
exercise their right of purchase within a period of one year from the date of
the Act whereas in the case of tenants coming under cl. (i) they could exercise
the right at any time. This itself clearly indicates that the tenants coming
under category (i) -are entirely different from the tenants coming under
category (iii). If (iii). If both types of tenants coming under clause (i) and
clause (iii) stand on the same footing, the position would be that both would
have completed the period of continuous occupation of six years prior to the
Act and the Legislature would have provided that both should exercise the right
of purchase within a period of one year. The distinction made regarding the
period within which these two categories can exercise their right, clearly
indicates the intention of the Legislature to the contrary. It stands to reason
that the tenants coming under clauses (i) and (ii) who are in actual possession
of the land have been gives the option 'either to continue as tenants and pay rent
or to exercise their right to purchase the land at any time. There is no
question in their case of there being any time-lag or doubt because, being in
possession no other person's right will normally be affected; whereas in the
case of a tenant coming under cl.
(iii), he has already gone out of the land
and therefore the Legislature has specifically provided a very short period of
one year from the date of the Act for exercising, if he so chooses his right to
purchase the I-and provided he satisfies the other conditions mentioned in the
section.
The Legislature did not want the position to
be kept nebulous and doubtful in respect of such a person who was not in
possession as a tenant on the date of the Act. While coming to a tenant who
satisfies the requirements of cl. (iii) of s. 18 (1), the 808 Legislature has
taken care to see that those types of tenants are made to take a decision to
purchase the land within the shortest possible time so that other peoples'
rights may not be jeopardized.
Nor is there any warrant for the contention
of Mr. lyenger that the person who claims the right under cl. (i) should have
been a tenant on April 15, 1953. So far as we could see, there is no
prohibition under the Act placing any restriction against the right of the landowner
creating new tenancies after the date of the Act. In fact the second proviso to
s.9-A clearly indicates to the contrary. It deals with the contingency of
tenancy coining into force after the commencement of the Act.
section 18 (1) (i) gives a right to a tenant
to purchase the land; and that right has to be examined when an application
under s. 18 is made and cannot be denied on the ground that he was not a tenant
for more than six years on April 15, 1953. There is no limitation placed under
cl.(i) of s.18(4) that the 'tenant who exercises his right should be a tenant
on the date of the Act or that he should have completed the period of six years
on April 15, 1953 and there is no warrant for reading in s.18(1)(i) clauses
which it does not contain. It is enough if the continuous period of six years
has been completed on the date when the tenant files' the application for
purchase of the land.
We were referred to three decisions : Ganpat
v. Jagmal (1);
Amar Singh v. State of Punjab(1). and Mam Raj
v. State of Punjab (3). In the first decision the question was whether a
transfer by a landowner in excess of the reserved area has to be ignored when
the rights of a tenant under s.18 are being considered. In the second and third
decisions the question was whether an order for. purchase passed in favour of a
tenant under s. 18 can be ignored by the Collector when exercising his
functions under s. 10-A of the Act. In none of the decisions the points now
decided by us came up for consideration directly and therefore it is not
necessary to deal with those )decisions in detail.
To conclude we are of opinion that in order
to claim a right of purchase as against the landowner under S. 18 (1) (i) of
the Act, the minimum period of six years should have been completed at the time
when the application for' purchase by the tenant is made, and it is not
necessary that he should have been a tenant of the land on April 15, 1953.
Provided the other conditions are satisfied, such a tenant will be entitled to
purchase the land.
In the result the writ petitions and appeals
are dismissed with costs-such costs to be one hearing fee.
R.K.P.S. Petitions and appeals dismissed.
(1) (1963) Punj L.R. 652. (2) I.L.R. [1957] 2
Punj. & Har. 120.
(3) I.L.R. [1969] 2 Punj. & Har. 680.
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