Mohd. Shaukat Hussain Khan
v.
State Of Andhra Pradesh
(Supreme Court Of India)
Civil Appeal No. 1637 Of 1967 | 02-05-1974
1. The appellant had filed a suit against the respondent, State of Andhra Pradesh, for a declaration that the abkari rights of the appellant in the suit inam lands were not abolished when the inams, which included the inams granted to him were abolished under the Hyderabad Inams Abolition Act, 1955 and therefore, he was entitled to the full income namely Baithak of Sendhi shops (rental or licence fee or right of sale), tree tax, Haque Malikana (tree owners fee) and for recovery of the said abkari income from the respondent. This suit was dismissed against which an appeal was filed in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh which was dismissed. Against that judgment this appeal is by certificate.
2. The appellant is the maktedar of the suit inam lands situate in Sardarnagar and Kurvaguda in Hyderabad District. The grant by the Nizam of the Makta in favour his predecessors-in-interest in respect of Sardarnagar inam lands was by muntakab (decree) Ex. P-1 dated August 15, 1944. This grant was in perpetuity with specific term Ba Hama-Abwab (with all sources of income) and Bila-Quiyame-Haqe-Sirkar (without any deduction as Government share). A similar muntakab Ex. P-2 was granted by the Atiyat court in respect of the Arazi Maktha (minor inam) of inam lands of Jurvaguda village. The appellant enjoyed all the rights granted to him under the respective mumtakabs which included the right of selling Sendhi shops, collection of tree tax and other similar rights. Earlier the erstwhile Hyderabad Government by its order dated 22nd Isfendar 1355F corresponding to 24th January 1946 acquired the right of the appellant in respect of selling opium, ganja and the right of distilling liquor by payment of compensation but it did not acquire the tight of selling Sendhi or tree tax, Haque Malikana and licence fee in respect of which Government was making annual payments till July 19, 1955 when on the abolition of the inams under the Hyderabad Inams Abolition Act 8 of 1955 (hereinafter referred to as the Abolition Act) the inams granted to the appellant became vested in the Government. Thereafter the Government discontinued payment of Baithak of Sendhi shops and tree tax under the wrong impression that Hyderabad Abolition Act prohibited any such payment. On April 20, 1956 the Abolition Act was amended by Act 10 of 1956 whereby the provisions relating to payment of compensation were superseded while those relating to vesting continued in force. The Government therefore issued a circular to the effect that all amounts collected as land revenue from the erstwhile inam lands including the inam lands of the appellant were to be kept in a suspense account. From December 5, 1957 the Sendhi rights in Sardarnagar lands i.a. Haque Malikana, licence fee were recognised, by the Government of Andhra Pradesh in G. O. 2254. It may be mentioned that the provisions of the Act relating to compensation were to come into force on and from a notified date so much so that even after more than three years of the Abolition Act no notification as provided under sub-sec. (3) (b) of Section 1 was published to bring into effect the provisions relating to compensation.
3. Thus it was contended that no principle of payment of compensation under the Abolition Act for only land revenue was taken into consideration but no rights of the appellant as referred to in Section 3 (2)(a) were taken into consideration (sic). It was further stated that as S. 3(2)(b) was not taken into account and as Sections 12 to 14 of the Act do not contain any provisions for adequate and fair compensation in respect of the right, the provisions are invalid and ultra vires of the Constitution.
4. The respondent, the State of Andhra Pradesh, contended that by virtue of the Abolition Act all inams vested in the Government and hence all rights of the appellant had also vested in the Government. No compensation is therefore payable to the appellant separately for each item of right but as a whole for the inam which was abolished and vested in the Government. Nothing was therefore due or payable to the appellant. The trial Judge however found that under Section 3 (2)(b) of the Abolition Act, Abkari rights are also included so the term inam would include these rights also and that Sections 17 to 20 show the mode for determining total compensation payable in respect of inams; so it cannot be said that the aspect of compensation for the Abkari right is not covered by the Act. It accordingly dismissed the suit.
5. In appeal against that judgment the High Court also held that Abkari rights are not granted independtly splitting them from the inams and since all rights, title and interest in the inam lands have been abolished by the Abolition Act which on an interpretation of Section 3 (2) (b) of the Act read with the definition of land in Land Revenue Act 1317F would also vest the Abkari rights of the inamdar in the Government. As the appellants rights have been extinguished his suit was held to be rightly dismissed and consequently the appeal also was dismissed.
6. The simple question in this case, therefore, is whether the inams granted under Exs. P-1. and P-2 vested in the Government along with the Abkari rights as contended by the respondent or is it only the lands that have vested in the Government on the abolition of the inams without the Abkari rights which still vest in the appellant as contended by the appellant. In the alternative, it was prayed that if the effect of the Abolition Act is that the Abkari rights also vest in the Government, then the law itself is invalid inasmuch as the Abkari rights which are property have been taken away contrary to the provisions of Art. 31 (2) of the Constitution without payment of compensation. It was further submitted that as the Abolition Act is not an agrarian reform, it did not get the protection of Art. 31-A of the Constitution. In any case, the original Abolition Act, namely, The Hyderabad Abolition of Inams Act 8 of 1955 was enacted prior to the Seventh Amendment of the Constitution which came into force on November 1, 1956. Accordingly on a construction of the relevant entries in List II and List III the Hyderabad Legislature lacked legislative competence to enact the statute. All these submissions, as has been noticed already, were rejected by both the Courts. It may however be mentioned that when the appeal against the judgment of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was pending in this Court, the Andhra Pradesh Legislature passed the Andhra Pradesh (Telangana Area) Abolition of Inams Act 9 of 1967 repealing the earlier Abolition Act 8 of 1955 as amended by Act 10 of 1956 and vesting all the inams in the Government from July 20, 1955. A writ petition (W. P. No. 78 of 1969) was filed in this Court challenging the validity of Act 9 of 1967. During the pendency of these proceedings in this Court, several writ petitions were also filed in the High Court of Andhra Pradesh challenging the validity of Act 9 of 1967. That Court by its judgment dated March 31, 1970 held all the provisions of Act 9 of 1967 to be invalid and accordingly struck down the entire Act. The state however did not appeal against the said judgment. It may also be mentioned that the State of Andhra Pradesh published a notification on October 20, 1973 under Section 1(3)(b) of the Abolition Act by which all the provisions of that Act and in particular the sections relating to compensation, namely, Sections 12, 13, 14 and 16 were enforced from November 1, 1973. It is stated before us that in view of this position, the appellant withdrew his writ petition No. 78 of 1969 which was dismissed as infructuous so that the present appeal is the only one that has now to be considered.
7. The learned advocate for the appellant has urged that the effect of striking down Act 9 of 1967 by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh was not to revive Act 8 of 1955 as amended by Act 10 of 1956 which being dead could not be revived. Accordingly the vesting of the inams in the Government under the repealed Acts 8 of 1955 and 10 of 1956 has no legal validity. Secondly, it is contended that even assuming that Act 8 of 1955 and Act 10 of 1956 are revived, these Acts are constitutionally invalid on two grounds urged before the High Court, namely (i) for want of legislative competence; and (ii) as the law takes away property without compensation it conflicts with the provisions of Article 31 (2) of the Constitution and is therefore invalid. Thirdly, on a proper construction of Section 12 of the Abolition Act it would appear that there is no provision made for payment of compensation for taking away the Abkari rights of the appellant inasmuch as the compensation that has been provided for under the Act is in respect of the lands and not the Abkari rights. The law also does not get the protection of Article 31A of the Constitution as the abolition of Abkari rights is not in futherance of agrarian reforms. Alternatively, it was contended that upon a proper construction of the provisions of Act 8 of 1955, the Abkari rights of the appellant were not affected inasmuch as by the definition of the term Inam what was vested was the land or the rights arising from the land and not the righs which are acquired and granted de hors of any rights in land.
8. A few of the contentions which are not res integra may be disposed of. For instance, the contention that Act 8 of 1955 and Act 10 of 1956, even if they are revived, are constitutionally invalid as they have been enacted by a Legislature not competent to enact the same, and secondly the Abolition Act 8 of 1955 is not in furtherance of agrarian reforms. On the first contention it may be observed that this Court in B. Shankara Rao Badami v. State of Mysore, (1969) 3 SCR 1 [LQ/SC/1968/386] = (AIR 1969 SC 453 [LQ/SC/1968/386] ) pointed out that where the petitioners villages were vested in the State of Mysore under section 1(4) of the Mysore under Section 1(4) of the Mysore (Personal and Miscellaneous) Inams Abolition Act, 1954, and it was contended that the compensation provided by the Mysore Act was not the market value of the property at the time of acquisition there was a violation of Article 31 (2) and secondly the Mysore Act was beyond the legislative competence of the Mysore Legislature under Entry 36 of List II and Entry 42 of List III to the Seventh Schedule as the Entries stood before the Seventh Amendment of the Constitution, because (i) the existence of public purpose and the obligation to pay compensation are necessary concomitants of compulsory acquisition of property, and so, the term acquisition must be construed as importing by necessary implication the two conditions of public purpose and payment of adequate compensation, and (ii) the words subject to the provisions of Entry 42, List III in Entry 36 of List II reinforce the argument that a law with respect to acquisition of property made under Entry 36 should be exercised subject to the two-fold restriction as to public purpose and payment of compensation both of which are referred to in Entry 42, List III, it was held by this Court that the legislation was undertaken as part of agrarian reform which the Mysore State Legislature proposed to bring about in the State. Therefore, the impugned Mysore Act was a law providing for the acquisition by the State of any estate or of any rights therein or for the extinguishment or modification of such rights as contemplated by Article 31A and hence, the impugned Act was protected from attack in any Court on the ground that it contravened Art. 31(2). Secondly, it was also held that the entries in the Lists of the Seventh Schedule were designated to define and delimit the respective areas of legislative competence of the Union and State Legislatures and the principle of the maxim expressum facit cessere tacitum makes it inappropriate to treat the obligation to pay compensation as implict in Entry 33 of List I or Entry 36 of List II when it is separately and expressly provided for in Article 31(2). Thirdly, the words subject to the provisions of Entry 42 of List III mean no more than that any law made under Entry 36 by a State Legislature can be displaced or overriden, by the Union Legislature making a law under Entry 42 of List III. If the restrictive condition as to public purpose and payment of compensation are to be derived from those words, their absence in Entry 33 of List I leads to the unreasonable inference that Parliament can make law authorising acquisition of property without a public purpose and without a provision for compensation. The true inference is that the power to make a law, belonging both to Parliament and State Legislatures, can be exercised subject to the two restrictions not by reason of anything contained in the legislative entries but by reason of the positive provisions in Article 31(2). But as legislation falling within Article 31A cannot be called in question in a court for non-compliance with those provisions in Article 31(2) such legislation cannot be struck down as unconstitutional and void. In view of this decision, the question of lack of legislative competence was not pressed.
9. The entire case of the appellant, therefore, rests on two short submissions, namely, (1) that the striking down of Act 9 of 1967 by the High Court of Andhra Pradesh against which there has been no appeal to this Court and the withdrawal of writ petition No. 78 of 1969 filed in this Court would not receive the Abolition Act, and if they are revived, the abkari rights which are not a part of the inam rights are not touched by the provisions of the Act. Alternatively, even if the provisions of the revived Acts deal with such rights, though these rights are separate rights, compensation ought to have been provided for separately and since this has not been done the law is violative of Article 31 (2) of the Constitution.
10. On the main question whether the impugned Acts were revived by reason of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh striking down Act 9 of 1967, a perusal of that judgment would show that the Division Bench considered the question and held that as the inam lands had already vested in the Government on July 20, 1955, there was no need to abolish inams which already stood abolished long before the date when the impugned Act, namely, Act 9 of 1967, was enacted. The right to patta having been acquired, the only purpose behind the impugned Act 9 of 1967 was to deprive the inamdars of their compensation, and to deny the payment of compensation to the inamders and others who were entitled to the same under the repealed Act. After stating thus, the Division Bench further observed :
"The result of the above said analysis is that on the date when the impugned Act was made, there was neither any estate which could be abolished nor there was any necessity to effect any agrarian reform in so far as inams were concerned had already been done under the Act repealed (sic). If the Government did not choose to implement the Act for nine months and then preferred to postpone the payment of compensation or grant of patta that would hardly alter the position. The effect of the impugned Act in pith and substance is really not agrarian reform but to destroy the rights of the inamdars and others who were assured compensation under the repealed Act. Thus the Act although pretends to enact a law relating to agrarian reform in spirit and in effect it is a device to deprive the inamdars and other persons of their acquired rights under the repealed Act."
The striking down of Act 9 of 1967 must be construed in the light of the reasoning given by the learned Judges of the Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High Court that the Abolition Act 8 of 1955 and the Amendment Act 10 of 1956 had already achieved the result which Act 9 of 1967 was intended to achieve, and once the inams had already vested in the Government, compensation had to be paid in accordance with the terms of those laws and cannot again be re-opened by vesting the inams which had already vested as if they had not already vested in the Government. This postulates the existence of the Acts impugned before us as a ground for striking down Act 9 of 1967, so that when the High Court says that the latter Act 9 of 1967 is void it could not have intended to say that even the Acts now impugned before us did not revive. What the Court implied by declaring Act 9 of 1967 void is that it as non est and that no such law could be passed in respect of a subject matter which has already vested in the Government; see Deep Chand v. State of Uttar Pradesh 1959 Supp (2) SCC 8 = (AIR 1959 SC 648 [LQ/SC/1959/3] ). If so Act 8 of 1955 as amended by Act 10 of 1956 have been held to be in force and that compensation was to be paid in accordance therewith.
11. The decision cited by the learned Advocate for the appellant in B. N. Tiwari v. Union of India, (1965) 2 SCR 421 [LQ/SC/1964/354] = (AIR 1965 SC 1430 [LQ/SC/1964/354] ) - is inapplicable. In that case the Ministry of Home Affairs by a resolution in 1950 had declared reservation in favour of scheduled castes and tribes and had made a rule in 1952 for carry forward, whereby the unfilled reserved vacancies of a particular year would be carried forward for one year only. In 1955 the above rule was substituted by another rule providing that the unfilled reserved vacancies of a particular year would be carried forward for two years. The Court held that when the 1952 carry forward rule was substituted by another rule in 1955, the former rule ceased to exist when 1955 rule was declared unconstitutional in T. Devadasan v. Union of India, AIR 1964 SC 179 [LQ/SC/1963/204] as such there was no carry forward rule in existence in 1960. In these circumstances the question that was considered was whether the carry forward rule of 1952 could still be said to exist. This court took the view that the carry forward rule of 1952 having been substituted by the carry forward rule of 1955, the former rule clearly ceased to exist because its place was taken by the carry forward rule of 1955. Thus by promulgating the new carry forward rule of 1955, the Government of India itself cancelled the carry forward rule of 1952. Therefore, when this Court struck down the carry forward rule as modified in 1955 that did not mean that the carry forward rule of 1952 which had already ceased to exist, because the Government of India cancelled it and had substituted a modified rule in 1955 in its place, could revive.In the case before us it has attempted to do something which the Legislature could not do namely to abolish inams which did not exist and which had already vested in the Government and which the Legislature could not abolish again. In these circumstances, the repeal of an enactment, which had already been given effect was a device for depriving the inamdars whose rights had been abolished, of their right of compensation, and was accordingly struck down as stillborn, null and void, as such unconstitutional from its inception and cannot have the effect as if it had repealed the previous Acts. On this analysis the provisions of Act 8 of 1955 as amended by Act 10 of 1956 could not be held to have been repealed at all, and therefore they are in existence.
12. The question that now remains is whether Act 8 of 1955 as amended by Act 10 of 1956 abolishes the Abkari rights also, and if so, whether the compensation provided in the aforesaid Act includes those rights also. On the first question Section 2(1) (c) of the Abolition Act defines inam as meaning land held under a gift or a grant made by the Nizam or by any Jagirdar, holder of a Samsthan or other competent grantor and continued or confirmed by virtue of a muntakhab or other title deed, with or without the condition of service and coupled with the remission of the whole or part of the land revenue thereon and entered as such in the village records and includes - (1) arasi makhta, arasi agrahar and sari inam; and (ii) lands held as inam by virtue of long possession and entered as inam in the village records. "Inamdar" under Section 2(1) (d) of the Abolition Act means a person holding an inam or a share therein, either for his own benefit or in trust and includes the successor-in-interest of an inamdar etc. Under sub-section (2) of Section 2 words and expressions used in this Act (Abolition Act 8 of 1955) but not defined therein shall have the meaning assigned to them in the Land Revenue Act, 1317, Fasli, the Hyderabad Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1950, and the Hyderabad Atiyat Enquiries Act, 1952 and the rules thereunder. The provisions whereunder the inam has been abolished in so far as they are relevant in this case, are sub-section (1) of Sections 3 which provides that notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any usge, settlement, contract, grant, sanad, order or other instrument, Act, regulation, rules or order having the force of law and notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of a Civil, Revenue or Atiyat Court, and with effect from the date of vesting, all inams to which this Act is made applicable under sub-section (2) of Section 1 of this Act shall be deemed to have been abolished and shall vest in the State. Clauses (a), (b), (c) and (d) of sub-section (2) of Section 3 of the Abolition Act which are also material are as follows :
"Section 3(2). Save as expressly provided by or under the provisions of this Act and with effect from the date of vesting, the following consequences shall ensure, namely :
(a) the provisions of Land Revenue Act, 1317 Falsi relating to inams, and the provisions of the Hydrabad Atiyat Enquiries Act, 1952, and other enactments, rules, and regulations and circulars in force in respect of Atiyat grants shall, to the extent, they are repugnant to the provisions of this Act, not apply and the provisions of the Land Revenue Act, 1317 Falsi, relating to unalienated lands for purposes of land revenue, shall apply to the said inams :
(b) all rights, title and interest vesting in the inamdar, kabis-e-kadim, permanent tenant, protected tenant and non-protected tenant in respect of the inam land, other than the interests expressly saved by or under provisions of this Act and including those in all communal lands, cultivated and uncultivated lands (whether assessed or not), waste lands, pasture lands, forests, mines and minerals, quarries, rivers and streams, tanks and irrigation works fisheries and ferries, shall cease and be vested absolutely in the State free from all encumbrances :
(c) all such inam lands shall be liable to payment of land revenue;
(d) all rents and land revenue including cesses and royalties, accruing in respect of such inam lands, on or after the date of vesting, shall be payable to the State and not to the inamdar, and any payment made in contravention of this cause shall not be valid."
Under Section 4 of the Abolition Act every inamdar shall, with effect from the date of vesting, be entitled to be registered as an occupant of all inam lands other than those specified in clauses (a), (b) and (c) of that Section. Similarly under Section 5 every Kabiz-e-kadim shall, with effect from the date of vesting, be entitled to be registered as an occupant in respect of such inam lands in his possession which were under his personal cultivation and which, together with any lands he separately owns and cultivates personally are equal to four and a half times family holding. Under sub-section (2) of Section 4 the kabiz-e-kadim shall be entitled to compensation from the Government as provided for under the Abolition Act in respect of Inam lands, in his possession in excess of the limit specified in sub-section (1) whether cultivated or not. Section 12 of the Abolition Act provides for determination of compensation payable to the inamdar and provides thus :
"The compensation payable to the inamdar for the inams abolished under Section 3 shall be the aggregate of the sums specified below : -
(i) in respect of inam lands registered in the name of the inamdar and kabiz-e-kadim under Sections 4 and 5, a sum equal to twenty times the difference between land revenue and judi or quit-rent;
(ii) in respect of income accruing to the inamdar from the lands registered in the names of his permanent tenant, protected tenant and non-protected tenant a sum equal to sixty per cent of the premium charged as the case may be, under Sections 6, 7 and 8."
13. Section 2 (1-b) of the Andhra Pradesh Land Revenue Act 8 of 1317 fasli defines land as including all kinds of benefits pertaining to land, or things attached to the earth, or permanently fastened to things attached to the earth and also includes shares in, or charges on, the revenue or rent which are or may be levied on villages, or other defined areas.
14.A combined reading of the provisions of the Abolition Act with the Andhra Pradesh Land Revenue Act shows that the Legislature had by abolishing inams intended to abolish all rights vested in the inam lands which had been granted to the inamdar.
The right to tap or derive benefit from trees standing on the lands is a right appurtenant to the lands because a thing attached to the land is itself a part of the land and is immovable property. Haque Malkana which is the right in trees is therefore a right appurtenant to the land so that when any inam land vests in the Government the right to tap tress standing on the land also vests in the Government. There cannot be any separation of these rights when the tree is still part of the land. There can be no doubt that no publication of the notification under sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the Abolition Act all inams were abolished and vested in the State. The inams which were so abolished and vested in the State include in it all rights, title and interest in the inams by virtue of Clause (b) of sub-section (2) of Section 3 of the Abolition Act. Such rights as are intended to be saved are those that are saved by the express provisions contained in the Abolition Act. It is, therefore, clear that all rights, title and interest vesting in the Inamdar would include the Abkari rights in the tress. This conclusion of ours is supported by the definition land in Section 2 (1-b) of the Andhra Pradesh Land Revenue Act which has to be imported into the definition of inam land and which includes any rights in or over such property or benefits accruing from the land or things attached to the land and will also include shares in the charges on the revenue or rent.
15. This Court had in State of Bihar v, Rameshwar Pratap Narain Singh, (1962) 2 SCR 382 [LQ/SC/1961/212] = (AIR 1961 SC 1649 [LQ/SC/1961/212] ) while dealing with the validity of the Bihar Land Reforms Amendment Act of 1959 considered the question whether the right of a proprietor of an estate to hold a mela on his own land was a right in the estate, and held that "the right to hold a Mela has always been considered in this country to be an interest in land, an interest which the owner of the land can transfer to another along with the land or without the land. There can be no doubt therefore that the right of the proprietor of an estate to hold a Mela on his own land is right in the "estate being appurtenant to his ownership of the land." Under sub-section (1) of Section 3 of the Abolition Act vesting of the inams is notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of a Civil, Revenue or Atiyat Court. In other words, notwithstanding anything in the Muntakhab all the inams to which the Abolition Act is made applicable shall be deemed to have been abolished and shall vest in the State with effect from the date of vesting.
16. We have noticed already that the inam granted to the appellant under the Muntakhab is with "all sources of income" i.e. Ba-Hama-Abwab which rights are not granted independently of the Maktha or inam land but are granted as part of the inam land so that when inam land vests, the rights which the inamdar had in the land including Hama Abwab i.e. Abkari rights also vest in the State. On this conclusion it is clear the the Abkari rights being part of the inam and having vested in the State, the compensation that is payable under Section 12 of the Abolition Act is inclusive of the Abkari rights. As the abolition of inams is a legislation intended to give effect to agrarian reforms by making the land available to persons who have no lands, compensation provided for under S. 12 cannot be challenged. The scheme of compensation under the Abolition Act is that four and a half times the family holding is to be retained by the inamdar and in respect of the rest of it a patta is given to the tenants which even with respect to them, along with any lands they own and cultivate personally, be equal to four and a half times the family holding. If after providing for these two items there remains any balance left the Government is required to pay compensation whether to the inamdar or to the tenants who have excess of land in their possession.
17. In any view of the matter we think that the judgment of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh cannot be assailed. We accordingly dismiss the appeal with costs.
18. Appeal dismissed.
Advocates List
For the Appearing Parties M.N. Phadke, A.G. Menezes, J.B. Dadachanji, O.C. Mathur, Ravinder Narain, P. Ram Reddy, A.V.V. Nair, Advocates.
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE P. JAGANMOHAN REDDY
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE H.R. KHANNA
Eq Citation
(1974) 2 SCC 376
[1975] 1 SCR 429
AIR 1974 SC 1480
1974 (6) UJ 433
LQ/SC/1974/179
HeadNote
Landlord & Tenant — Compensation — Abkari rights — Inams abolished under Hyderabad Inams Abolition Act, 1955 — On the expiry of the protected tenancy on the date of vesting of the inam lands in the Government under the Hyderabad Act, any right the appellant had to the 'Hama Abwab' consisting of Sendhi shops, tree tax, and 'Haque Malikana' which was a part of the 'Makta' or inam land granted to him, had also been extinguished and was incapable of being revived in the absence of any provision to that effect in the Act — No right to separate compensation for items of right taken away, but as a whole — In absence of any provision for compensation for Abkari right under the Act, challenge that Act is in violation of Art. 31(2) of the Constitution repelled — Hyderabad Inams (Abolition) Act (VIII of 1955), Ss. 3, 4, 5, 12 — Hyderabad Land Revenue Act (VIII of 1317 Fasli), S. 2(1-b) — Constitution of India, Art. 31. (Paras 7, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18)