Are you looking for a legal research tool ?
Get Started
Do check other products like LIBIL, a legal due diligence tool to get a litigation check report and Case Management tool to monitor and collaborate on cases.

Kunj Bihari Thakur And Others v. Umashankar Prasad And Others

Kunj Bihari Thakur And Others v. Umashankar Prasad And Others

(High Court Of Judicature At Patna)

| 02-09-1937

Rowland, J.This is an appeal by the defendant arising out of a suit for ejectment. The plaintiff was the proprietor of certain zirat land which he alleged that he had verbally settled with the defendant for one year only, viz. 1339 Fasti. The tenancy expired at the end of the agricultural year, i.e. on 14th September 1932, and the suit was brought on 14th August 1933. The defense was that the defendant has been holding the land in suit since the year 1309; and he produced receipts which the Munsif accepted and held that the defendant had occupancy rights under the provisions of the Bengal Tenancy Act, Section 116 of the Act hot being applicable to bar the acquisition of those rights, because the land had not been let on a lease for a term of years or on a lease from year to year.

2. The District Judge on appeal held that the tenancy was a new tenancy beginning in the year 1339 Fasli, and that the defendant bad no right to hold over after the expiry of that year.

3. In second appeal it is faintly contended that the findings of the lower Appellate Court are not good findings of fact because the learned District Judge has not considered the evidence regarding the defendants long possession which had been accepted by the Munsif. I think, however, that the District Judge having recorded findings of fact, I am not in al position to reopen the matter merely because some items of evidence may not have been considered. The facts will, therefore, be taken to be as stated.

4. This brings us to the substantial point taken in second appeal which is that though the defendant may not be able to prove that he has the right of occupancy in accordance with Ch. 5, Bengal Tenancy Act, nevertheless he has such rights as are described in Ch. 6 dealing with non-occupancy raiyats, because the land was not held by him under the lease for a term of years or under a lease from year to year; and that where those conditions are not fulfilled, Section 116 does not bar the application of Ch. 6 of the Act.

5. It is settled by the decisions in Shiva Shankar Prasad Pande Vs. Kali Ojha and Others, and Tengaroo Sukul Vs. Chatthu Bhar, , that unless a proprietor when letting out zirat takes the precaution of letting it "under a lease for a term of years or under a lease from year to year", the tenant inducted on the land, if he is "a person who has acquired a right to hold land for the purpose of cultivating it by himself or by members of his family", (i.e. within the definition of Section 5(2) of the Act, a raiyat) will get the benefit of the provisions of Ch. 6 thereof, and if he holds the land for twelve years, of Ch. 5. Mr. Mullick, appearing for the respondents, could not controvert this proposition. But he contended that his client, the lessor, bad in fact complied with the conditions laid down in Section 116 in that be had given out the land "under a lease for a term of years".

6. The argument was based on Section 13(2), General Clauses Act, (Act 10 of 1897) the purport of which is that unless there is anything repugnant in the subject or context, words in the singular shall include the plural, and vice versa. The Question is whether anything in the subject, or the context, is repugnant to reading "term of years" as including a term of one year or less.

7. In my opinion the subject and the context are both repugnant to such a reading. For centuries a term of "years" has been generally understood to have a plural and not a singular meaning both in law The Bishop of Baths case (1572 6 Co. Rep. 34. and in popular language; and one might regard quantitative measures of time as a subject in which it is repugnant to use the plural with a singular meaning.

8. Then as to context, the expression "lease for a term of years" was substituted for the words "lease for a term" which occurred in an earlier enactment, and this can hardly be without significance. I do not think that the words in Section 116 in the context in which they occur can reasonably be read as applying to a verbal lease for one year or less.

9. The language is in strong contrast with that used in Section 118, Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act, where the wording is "held by a tenant on a lease for a term exceeding one year, or, on a lease written or oral for a period of one year or less".

10. I think, therefore, that Section 116 did not apply so as to bar the operation of Ch. 6, Bengal Tenancy Act. That being so, the defendant having been inducted on the land for the purpose referred to in Section 5(2) of the Act, he became a non-occupancy raiyat and Ch. 6 applied to him.

11. He is, therefore, u/s 44 liable to ejectment on one or more of the grounds mentioned in that Section and not otherwise. The ground that the term of his lease has expired is a ground for ejectment u/s 44(c) only where he has been admitted to occupation of the land under a registered lease.

12. In my opinion, the defendant was not liable to be ejected by the plaintiff, and the judgment of the District Judge must be set aside and that of the Munsif restored, and the plaintiffs suit dismissed with costs throughout. Leave to appeal granted.

Advocate List
Bench
  • HON'BLE JUSTICE Rowland, J
Eq Citations
  • AIR 1938 PAT 38
  • LQ/PatHC/1937/155
Head Note

Tenancy and Land Laws — Bengal Tenancy Act, 1885 (2 of 1885) — S. 116 — Words "lease for a term of years" — Whether include a verbal lease for a term of one year or less — Held, for centuries a term of "years" has been generally understood to have a plural and not a singular meaning both in law and in popular language; and one might regard quantitative measures of time as a subject in which it is repugnant to use the plural with a singular meaning — Further, the expression "lease for a term of years" was substituted for the words "lease for a term" which occurred in an earlier enactment, and this can hardly be without significance — The words in S. 116 in the context in which they occur can reasonably be read as applying to a verbal lease for one year or less — General Clauses Act, 1897 — S. 13(2) — Words in the singular shall include the plural, and vice versa — Words and Phrases — "Year" (Paras 7 and 8) B. Land Laws and Titling — Chota Nagpur Tenancy Act, 1908 (1 of 1908) — S. 118 — Words and Phrases — "Year"