State of Uttar Pradesh Vs. Ata Mohd
[1980] INSC 115 (8 May 1980)
KAILASAM, P.S.
KAILASAM, P.S.
FAZALALI, SYED MURTAZA
CITATION: 1980 AIR 1785 1980 SCR (3)1095 1980
SCC (3) 614
ACT:
Uttar Pradesh Municipalities Act, Sections
2(23) 7, 116 (g) and 118-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent applied in the year 1939, to
the Municipal Board, Gorakhpur for granting to him of a lease of plot No. 227
measuring 45'X20' adjoining Patri along with the road running from Golgarh to
Alinagar in Gorakhpur. The Board declined to grant him the lease. On a second
application dated 10-10-1945, the Municipal Board passed a resolution on
24-11-1945 granting the lease to the respondent. On 8-3-1946 the District
Magistrate accorded his approval of the resolution of the Municipality. On
12-4-1946 the respondent executed a "KABULIYAT" in favour of the
Municipal Board, Gorakhpur. On 23-4-1946 the respondent applied for permission
to construct a house and submitted a plan for sanction. The plan was sanctioned
by the Municipality on 8-5-1946.
On receipt of certain representations on
10-6-1947, the District Magistrate directed the Chairman of the Municipal Board
not to allow the construction till decision was taken on the question. On
13-6-1947, the Chairman, Municipal Board directed the respondent not to proceed
with the construction of the house. The State Government on being satisfied
that the resolution regarding the grant of the lease was not within the
competence of the Municipality, directed the Commissioner to cancel the lease granted
to the respondent, whereupon the respondent was served with a notice on 13-7-
1948 cancelling the lease and calling upon him to remove the construction and
deliver vacant possession within 15 days of the receipt of the notice. The
respondent filed a suit no. 86 of 1948 for an injunction restraining the
Municipal Board from demolishing or otherwise interfering with the construction
made by him on the disputed land. The Civil Judge, Gorakhpur decreed the suit
and that has become final.
Thereafter, claiming the land as the Nazarul
land belonging to the State, the appellant-State filed suit no. 109 of 1949 in
the Court of Civil Judge, Gorakhpur against the respondent Ata Mohd. for a
mandatory injunction directing the respondent to remove his material and
construction and for a decree for possession over the land measuring 45'X20'.
The Civil Judge Gorakhpur dismissed the suit by judgment and decree dated
3-10-1950. The appellants plaintiff preferred first appeal No. 27 of 1951 to
the High Court of Allahabad. The appeal was heard by a Bench of two Judges but
on a difference of opinion, the matter was referred to the third Judge. In
accordance with the view of the majority, the appeal preferred by the appellant
plaintiff was dismissed by its judgment dated 25th August, 1965. On a
certificate granted by the High Court under Art.
135 of the Constitution and also Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution, the present appeal in this Court was filed by
the plaintiff/appellant.
1096 Allowing the appeal, the Court
HELD : 1. The Municipalities in various
States were created under the respective Municipalities Acts in order to
facilitate the efficient administration of the Municipal areas and to provide
lighting, watering and maintaining of public streets and places. The duties of
the Municipal Boards are specified in S. 6 of the U.P. Municipalities Act.
Under S. 118 of the Act, the Municipal Board
is empowered to manage or control any property entrusted to its management and
control. The vesting of the property, in the Municipality is under S. 116 of
the Act. S. 116 provides that subject to any special reservation made by the
State Government, all property of the nature specified in this section and
situated within the Municipality shall vest in and belong to the Board, and
shall, with all property which may become vested in the Board, be under its
direction, management and control. While under clause (f) of S. 116, all lands
and other property transferred to the Board by the Government by gift, purchase
or otherwise for local public purposes vest in the Municipality, under Cl. (g),
the streets vest only qua streets and not as absolute property with the
Municipality. In the present case the property falls within the definition of
`Street' under section 2(23) of the Act. [1100 A-D, E-F, H]
2. Though the street vested in the Municipal
Council under section 116 of the U.P. Municipal Act, it does not transfer to
the Municipality the right of the owner in the site or soil over which the
street exists. Therefore, when a street ceases to be a highway by its being
diverted to some other use, the interest of the Corporate body determines.
Therefore, what is vested in the municipality
under section 116(g) is the street qua street and if the Municipality put the
street to any other user than that for which it was intended, the State as its
owner, is entitled to intervene and maintain an action and to get any person in
illegal occupation evicted. [1102 A, G, 1103 A-B] Municipal Board, Mangalur v.
Sri Mahadeoji Maharaj, [1965] 2 S.C.R. 242; followed.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal
No. 1513 of 1970.
Appeal by Certificate from the Judgment and
decree dated 25th August, 1965 passed by the Allahabad High Court in first
Appeal No. 27 of 1951.
G. N. Dikshit and S. Markandeya for the
Appellant.
Yogeshwar Prasad, Mr. & Mrs. S. K. Bagga
& Mrs. Rani Chhabra for Respondent The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by KAILASAM, J.-This appeal is preferred by the State of Uttar Pradesh by
certificate granted by the High Court of Judicature at Allahabad on 18-5-1970
in Supreme Court Appeal No. 105 of 1966 against its judgment and decree dated
25th August, 1965 passed by it in first appeal No. 27 of 1951 dismissing the
suit filed by the State of Uttar Pradesh.
1097 The State of Uttar Pradesh filed suit
No. 109 of 1949 in the Court of Civil Judge, Gorakhpur against the respondent
Ata Mohd. for a mandatory injunction directing the respondent to remove his
material and construction and to clear the land and the plot No. 227 in Mohalla
Purdilpur in the City of Gorakhpur and for a decree for possession over the
land measuring 45' X 20'. The Civil Judge, Gorakhpur dismissed the suit by
judgment and decree dated 3- 10-1950. The plaintiff preferred first appeal No.
27 of 1951 to the High Court of Allahabad. The appeal was heard by a Bench of
two Judges but on a difference of opinion, the matter was referred to the third
Judge. In accordance with the view of the majority, the appeal preferred by the
plaintiff was dismissed by its Judgment dated 25th August, 1965. On a
certificate granted by the High Court under Art.
135 of the Constitution and also Art.
133(1)(c) of the Constitution, the present appeal in this Court was filed by
the plaintiff/appellant.
The facts of the case are briefly as follows :
The plot in dispute is plot No. 227 measuring 45' X 20' adjoining Patri
alongwith the road running from Golgarh to Alinagar in Gorakhpur. The
respondent Ata Mohd applied to the Municipal Board, Gorakhpur for grant to him
of a lease in the year 1939. The Board declined to grant him lease. The
respondent again applied on 10-10-1945. The Municipal Board passed a resolution
on 24-11-1945 granting to the respondent the lease and forwarded the resolution
to the District Magistrate to accord his approval who on 8-3-1946 approved the
resolution of the Municipality. On 12-4-1946, the respondent executed a
`KABULIYAT' in favour of the Municipal Board, Gorakhpur. On 23rd April, 1946,
the respondent applied for permission to construct a house and submitted a plan
for sanction. The plan was sanctioned by the Municipality on 8th May, 1946.
On receipt of certain representations on
10-6-1947, the District Magistrate directed the Chairman of the Municipal Board
not to allow the construction till a decision was taken on the question. On
13-6-1947, the Chairman Municipal Board directed the respondent not to proceed
with the construction of the house. The State Government on being satisfied
that the resolution regarding the grant of the lease was not within the
competence of the Municipality, directed the Commissioner to cancel the lease
granted in favour of the respondent. The Executive Officer, Municipal Board,
issued a notice on 13-7-1948 to the respondent cancelling the lease and called
upon him to remove the construction and deliver vacant possession within 15
days of the receipt of the notice. The respondent filed a suit No.
86 of 1948 for an injunction restraining the
Municipal Board from demolishing 1098 or otherwise interfering with the
construction made by him on the disputed land. The Civil Judge, Gorakhpur,
decreed the suit as prayed for. The present suit out of which this appeal
arises was filed by the State of Uttar Pradesh subsequently in 1949.
In the plaint the State of U. P. submitted
that plot No. 227 is Nazrul land and is the property of the Government. It
described the disputed land as adjoining the Patri of the Municipal Board
running from Golgarh crossing to Alinagar and situated beyond the limits of the
road and Patri. According to the Government, the Municipal Board without
knowing the true position of the land passed the resolution on 24-11-1945 to
lease the portion of the land in favour of the defendant. In paragraph 10 of
the plaint the State of U.P. alleged that the Government or the District
Magistrate were not originally aware of the land being Nazrul and of its being
dealt with by the Municipal Board in an objectionable manner and that the
Municipal Board was under the wrong impression and that on realising the true
state of affairs on instructions of the Government, the Municipal Board served
a notice cancelling the resolution of the Municipality to lease the land to the
respondent. The Government submitted that it was entitled to retain its
possession on the ground (1) that it never leased out the land to defendant nor
did the defendant make the construction with the plaintiff's permission; (2)
that the Municipal Board is not the owner of the land and has no interest in it
and the Municipal Board did not, in fact, execute any lease in favour of the defendant
and that neither the resolution of the Municipality nor the `KABULIYAT'
executed by the defendant would confer any right on the respondent, the
respondent in his written statement admitted that the land in dispute formed
part of the Patri of the public road running from Golgarh to Alinagar in the
City of Gorakhpur. He pleaded that there was a practice in the Municipal Board,
Gorakhpur not to execute a lease but to obtain KABULIYATS from lessees and that
he bona fide believed the Municipal Board is the owner of the plot and asked
for permission and acting on the permission granted, put up a double storey
house costing more than ten thousand rupees. He further contended that even
assuming though without admitting that the land in dispute belonged to plaintiff
Government, the Municipal Board is fully authorised to let out such a land, to
him. He further submitted that as the Collector of Gorakhpur has authorised the
lease of the land by the Municipality and sanctioned the grant of the lease to
the respondent, the Government is not entitled to eject him.
From the pleadings, it is clear that the
disputed land adjoins Patri of the road running from Golgarh to Alinagar.
It is also admitted 1099 that the
Municipality did not execute the lease but the respondent executed a
`KABULIYAT' regarding the land. The contention on behalf of the plaintiff State
of Uttar Pradesh is that the land belonged to the State and the Municipality
had no power to lease the land.
The Trial Court found that the land in
dispute does not belong to the plaintiff Government but was a
"street" and belonged to the Municipal Board, Gorakhpur. It also
found that though no lease deed was executed by the Municipality as the
defendant took possession under the contract and admittedly built up a house,
the plaintiff is estopped from praying for demolition and for possession of the
building.
On appeal, the High Court accepted the
findings of the Trial Court that the disputed land is adjoining Patri but as
two Judges took the view that land in dispute vested in the Municipality under
S. 116 (g) of the Uttar Pradesh Municipal Act, it was the only competent
authority to sanction the lease in respect of the land and the State Government
had no right or interest left in the land and could not, therefore, challenge
the validity of the transaction entered into by the Board in exercise of the
power conferred under the Municipalities Act. As a result of the finding that
the State had no right to the property, it was held that the Government was not
entitled to challenge the lease granted by the Municipal Board. In this view,
the appeal preferred by the State was dismissed.
It may be noted that the suit filed by the
respondent against the municipality for injunction restraining the Municipal
Board from demolishing or interfering with the constructions made by him was
decreed in O.S. No. 86/1948 and that decree has become final. In the present
suit, the municipality is not a party. Therefore, the contention that the
municipality had not leased the site to the respondent by a document as
required by Municipal Act, would be of no avail. Equally, the plea that it
acted beyond the scope of its authority, is not available to the municipality.
The plea of the State taken before the High Court, and before us, by Mr. Dixit
learned counsel for the appellant, is that the State is the owner of the
property inspite of the fact it had vested in the municipality as a
"street" under S.
116(g) of the Act. It was submitted that when
the property is put to a different use, it is open to the Government to assert
its title and require anyone in illegal possession of the property to vacate.
There is not much dispute that the property belonged to the State before the
Municipal Act was passed. The High Court has found that the State was the owner
of the property till the Municipal Act was passed and this finding was not
challenged before us. The only point on which the State lost the suit before
the High Court was that after the passing 1100 of the Uttar Pradesh Municipal
Act, the property vested in the Municipality and the State ceased to be the
owner and, therefore, cannot maintain the suit for evicting the respondent.
The Municipalities in various States were
created under the respective Municipalities Acts, in order to facilitate the
efficient administration of the Municipal areas and to provide lighting,
watering and maintaining of public streets and places. The duties of the
Municipal Boards are specified in S.7 of the U. P. Municipalities Act. Under S.
118 of the Act, the Municipal Board is empowered to manage or control any
property entrusted to its management and control. The vesting of the property,
in the Municipality is under S. 116 of the Act. S. 116 provides that subject to
any special reservation made by the State Government, all property of the
nature specified in this section and situated within the Municipality shall
vest in and belong to the Board, and shall, with all property which may become
vested in the Board, be under its direction, management and control.
Cl.(g) relates to vesting of streets and is
as follows :- "All public streets and the pavements, stones and other
materials thereof, and also all trees erections, materials implements and
things existing or on appertaining to such streets".
It may be noted that while under cl.(f) of
S.116 all lands and other property transferred to the board by the Government
by gift, purchase or otherwise for local public purposes vest in the
Municipality, under cl.(g), the streets vest only qua streets and not as
absolute property with the Municipality. The word `street' is defined under S.2
(23) as follows :- Street means any road, bridge, foot-way, lane square, court,
alley or passage which the public or any portion of the public, has right to
pass along, and includes, on either side, the drains or gutters and the land
upto the defined boundary of any abutting property, notwithstanding the
projection over such land of any verandah or other superstructure".
It has been found that the property in
dispute is Patri and is a land which is within the defined boundary of the
property abutting into the road. Thus the property in question falls within the
definition of the word `street'.
The question as to the nature of the right
that vest in the Municipality under S. 116(g) of the Uttar Pradesh
Municipalities Act will have to be considered. This Court in Municipal 1101
Board. Mangalur v. Sri Mahadeoji Maharaj, had to consider the nature of the
right that vested in the Municipality over the streets, Subba Rao, J. (as he
then was) after considering the decisions of the English Courts and the High
Courts, summed up the law on this subject as follows :- The inference that the
side lands are also included in the public way is drawn easily as the said
lands are between the metal road and the drains admittedly maintained by the
Municipal Board. Such a public pathway vests in the municipality, but the
Municipality does not own the soil. It has the exclusive right to manage and
control the surface of the soil and `so much of the soil below and of the space
above the surface as is necessary to enable it to adequately maintain the
street as a street. It has also a certain property in the soil of the street
which would enable it as owner to bring a possessory action against
trespassers. Subject to the rights of the Municipality and the public to pass
and repass on the highway, the owner of the soil in general remains the
occupier of it and, therefore, he can maintain an action for trespass against
any member of the public who acts in excess of his rights." After
referring to S.116(g) of the Uttar Pradesh Municipalities Act, under which a
public street vests in a Municipality, the learned Judge referred to a decision
of a Division Bench of the Madras High Court in S. Sundaram Ayyar v. The Municipal
Council of Madura and the Secretary of State for India in Council where the
scope of the vesting under the Madras District Municipalities Act was dealt
with.
The learned Judge extracted the head note
from the Madras decision observing that it brought out the gist of the
decision. The head note runs as follows :- "When a street is vested in a
Municipal Council, such vesting does not transfer to the Municipal authority
the rights of the owner in the site or soil over which the street exists. It
does not own the soil from the centre of the earth usque ad caelum, but it has
the exclusive right to manage and control the surface of the soil and so much
of the soil below and of the space above the surface as is necessary to enable
it to adequately maintain the street as a street. It has also a certain
property in the soil of the street which would enable it as owner to bring a
possessory action against trespassers." 1102 The view taken by the
Division Bench of the Madras High Court was that though the street vested in
the Municipal Council, it does not transfer to the Municipality the rights of
the owner in the site or soil over which the street exists. The question has
been dealt with at some detail in the Madras decision and as it has been
approved by this Court, it may be usefully referred to. The High Court while
observing that if the land itself had been acquired by the Municipality, either
by purchase or otherwise and roads and drains formed thereon, the Municipality
would have been the owner of the land but if the street or highway over the
land was dedicated to the public either by the State or by the owners of the
land adjoining the highway will continue vested, subject only to the burden of
the highway, in the State or the respective owners of the land on either side
of the highway ad medium filum, or in any other person who may have dedicated
the street to the public as the case may be.
The Court after pointing out that the Madras
Municipal Act was a modelled after the English Metropolis Local Management Act,
1855 referred to the English cases which dealt with the vesting of the street
in the Municipality and observed :- "The conclusion to be drawn from the
English case law is that what is vested in urban authorities under statutes
similar to the District Municipalities Act, is not the land over which the
street is formed, but the street qua street and that the property in the street
thus vested in a Municipal Council is not general property or a species of
property known to the Common Law, but a special property created by statute and
vested in a corporate body for public purposes, that such property as it has in
the street continues only so long as the street is a highway by being excluded
by notification of Government under section 23 of Act IV of 1884 or by being
legally stopped up or diverted, or by the operation of the law limitation
(assuming that by such operation the highway can be extinguished), the interest
of the corporate body determines." It is, therefore, clear that when a
street ceases to be a highway by its being diverted to some other use, the
interest of the corporate body determines. After referring to the decisions of
the High Courts in India, it expressed its concurrence with the decisions in
Chairman of the Naihati Municipality v. Kishori Lal Goswami, Madhu Sudhun Kunda
v. Pramode Nath Roy and Nihal Chand v. Azmat Ali Khan and concluded that the
nature or the right that vested in the 1103 Municipality as regards public
streets there is no disposal by the Indian Legislature of any land or hereditament
vested in the Government. What is vested in the Municipality under S. 116(g) is
the street qua street and if the Municipality put the street to any other user
than that for which it was intended, the State as its owner, is entitled to
intervene and maintain an action and to get any person in illegal occupation
evicted. We accept the contention of Mr. Dixit, learned counsel for the State
of U.P. that the State is the owner and in the circumstances of the case
entitled to maintain action for eviction of the respondent. The view taken by
the High Court is erroneous. The result is that the appeal by the State is
allowed with costs and there will be decree in favour of the plaintiff as
prayed for.
S.R. Appeal allowed.
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