Tribhovandas Haribhai Tamboli
v.
Gujarat Revenue Tribunal And Ors
(Supreme Court Of India)
Civil Appeal No. 2378 Of 1977 | 10-05-1991
The facts relevant to the controversy are as under
1. The appellant had taken on lease, about 55 years ago, an extent of 2 acres, 6 gunthas of agricultural lands situated in Akote village from Vishwas Rao. The Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act 67 of 1948 for short the applies to the lease. By operation of Section 32(1) the appellant became a deemed purchaser from tillers day i.e., April 1, 1957. Section 32-G provides the procedure to determine purchase price. Since the landlord was insane, the right to purchase was statutorily deferred under Section 32-F till date of its cessation or one year after death. Under Section 88(1)(b) of thecertain areas abutting Baroda Municipality were notified as being reserved for non-agricultural or industrial purpose with effect from May 2, 1958. By another notification published in the Gujarat State Gazette dated July 2, 1964, certain lands including those situated in Akote and of the appellants leasehold lands were reserved for industrial purpose. Consequently Sections 1 to 87 of the do not apply to the exempted area. While the landlord was continuing under disability, his son Vasant Rao sold the land to the respondent under registered sale deed dated August 19, 1964. By another notification under Section 88(1)(b) published in the gazette dated October 29, 1964, the government restricted the operation of the exemption to the area originally notified on May 2, 1958 i.e., Sections 1 to 87 do not apply to the lands in question. This notification was rescinded by further notification published in the gazette dated August 23, 1976. The Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands (Gujarat) Amendment Act 36 of 1965, Sections 18(1) and 18(2) thereof introduced two provisos to Section 88(1)(b) of thewhich was published in the gazette on December 29, 1965 which are relevant for purpose of the case. Section 88(1)(b) with amendments reads thus
"88. (1) Save as otherwise provided in sub-section (2), nothing in the following provisions of this Act shall apply -
(a) to lands belonging to, or held on lease from the government;
(aa) to lands held or leased by a local authority;
(b) to any area which the State Government may, from time to time, by notification in the official gazette, specify as being reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development
Provided that if after a notification in respect of any area specified in the notification is issued under this clause, whether before or after the commencement of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands (Gujarat Amendment) Act, 1965, the limits of the area so specified are enlarged on account of the addition of any other area thereto, then merely by reason of such addition, the reservation as made by the notification so issued shall not apply and shall be deemed never to have applied to the area so added, notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in any judgment, or order of any court, tribunal or any other authority
Provided further that if any land in the area so added has been transferred or acquired after the issue of notification referred to in the first proviso but before the 29th day of October 1964, such transfer or acquisition of land shall have effect as if it were made in an area to which this clause applies." *
Sub-section (2) is not relevant. Hence it is omitted
2. Vishwas Rao died in September 1965. The appellant became entitled to purchase the land on and from August 19, 1966. He filed an application before Mamlatdar to fix the price. He fixed on enquiry at Rs. 4925.65 paise which was paid by the appellant
3. In the enquiry, the respondent contended that he purchased the property from Vasantrao, son of the landlord. By operation of second proviso to Section 88(1)(b) the lands stood exempted from operation of Sections 1 to 87 of the. So the Mamlatdar had no jurisdiction to decide the price of the land. The appellant raised the contention that Vasantrao has no right to sell during the lifetime of the father, the karta of the Hindu joint family. The sale is invalid and does not bind him. He acquired statutory right of deemed purchaser and its exemption under Section 88(1)(b) does not divest his statutory right. The Mamlatdar accepted the appellants contention and allowed the petition. On appeal to the Collector and revision to the Revenue Tribunal the decision was reversed. The Division Bench of the High Court by order dated February 3, 1977 dismissed the writ petition. The appellant had leave of this Court by Article 136. Thus this appeal
4. From these admitted facts the question emerges whether the operation of the second proviso to Section 88(1)(b) has retrospective effect depriving the appellant of the statutory right of deemed purchaser. Section 88 of theempowers the government to exempt certain other lands from the purview of Sections 1 to 87 of the. The State Governments exercised their power from time to time under Section 88(1)(b) and issued notification and published in the official gazette specifying certain areas as being reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development i.e., urban development. Consequently the first proviso gets attracted which says that notwithstanding any judgment or order of any court, tribunal or any other authority under the to the contrary, once the notification was issued either before or after commencement of the Amendment Act reserving the area so added for non-agricultural or industrial development i.e. expansion for urbanisation, to the extent of the area covered under the first proviso, the provisions of Sections 1 to 87 were not applied and shall be deemed never to have been applied. The second proviso which is material for the purpose of the case further postulates that
"Provided further that if any land in the area so added has been transferred or acquired after the issue of the notification referred to in the first proviso but before the 29th day of October, 1964, such transfer or acquisition of the land shall have effect as if it was made to an area to which this clause applies." *
5. What is the effect of the second proviso to the facts is the question Mr. Dutta, the learned counsel for the appellant contended that the first proviso has the effect of excluding Sections 1 to 87 of the only to those areas which were initially reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development and has no application to the land added to it by a subsequent notification though it would become part thereof. Any alienation in violation of the would not attract the operation of the second proviso. The Act is an agrarian reform which created a vested right in the tenant as a deemed purchaser with effect from tillers day which cannot be divested retrospectively. The proviso should be construed to inhere in the tenant the vested rights created under the. The withdrawal of the notification dated October 29, 1964 renders the rights of the appellant unaffected
6. It is a cardinal rule of interpretation that a proviso to a particular provision of a statute only embraces the field, which is covered by the main provision. It carves out an exception to the main provision to which it has been enacted by the proviso and to no other. The proper function of a proviso is to except and deal with a case which otherwise fall within the general language of the main enactment, and its effect is to confine to that case. Where the language of the main enactment is explicit and unambiguous, the proviso can have no repercussion on the interpretation of the main enactment, so as to exclude from it, by implication what clearly falls within its express terms. The scope of the proviso, therefore, is to carve out an exception to the main enactment and it excludes something which otherwise would have been within the rule. It has to operate in the same field and if the language of the main enactment is clear, the proviso cannot be torn apart from the main enactment nor can it be used to nullify by implication what the enactment clearly says nor set at naught the real object of the main enactment, unless the words of the proviso are such that it is its necessary effect
7. The effect of the notification issued under Section 88(1)(b) was the subject of consideration in several decisions of this Court. In Sakharam @ Bapusaheb Narayan Sanas v. Manikchand Motichand Shah ( 1962 (2) SCR 59 [LQ/SC/1961/194] : 1963 AIR(SC) 354), Sinha, C.J., held that the provisions of Section 88 are entirely prospective and apply to such lands as are described in clauses (a) to (d) of Section 88(1) from which the came into operation, namely, December 28, 1948 and are not of a confiscatory in nature so as to take away from the tenant the status of a protected tenant already accrued to him. In Mohanlal Chunilal Kothari v. Tribhovan Haribhai Tamboli ( 1963 (2) SCR 707 [LQ/SC/1962/213] : 1963 AIR(SC) 358), a Constitution Bench speaking through Sinha, C.J. held that clauses (a) to (c) of Section 88(1) applies to things as they were on the date of the commencement of the of 1948 whereas clause (d) authorised the State Government to specify certain areas as being reserved for urban non-agricultural or industrial development, by notification in the official gazette, from time to time. It was specifically provided in clauses (a) to (c) that the, from its inception, did not apply to certain areas then identified, whereas clause (d) has reference to the future. The State Government could take out of the operation of the such areas as in its opinion should be reserved for urban non-agricultural or industrial development. Clause (d) would come into operation only upon such a notification being issued by the State Government. In Sukhram case ( 1962 (2) SCR 59 [LQ/SC/1961/194] : 1963 AIR(SC) 354), this Court never intended to lay down that the provisions of clause (d) are only prospective and have no retrospective operation. Unlike Clauses (a) to (c) which are clearly prospective, clause (d) has retrospective operation in the sense that it would apply to land which would be covered by the notification to be issued by the government from time to time so as to take that land out of the operation of the of 1948, granting the protection. So far as clauses (a) to (c) are concerned, the of 1948 would not apply at all to lands covered by them, but that would not take away the rights covered by the of 1939 which was repealed by the of 1948. Therefore, it was held that by operation of Section 89(2) the rights acquired under the of 1939 would be available to the tenant
8. When a doubt was expressed of the correctness of the above views on reference, another Constitution Bench in Sidram Narsappa Kamble v. Sholapur Borough Municipality ( 1966 (1) SCR 618 [LQ/SC/1965/210] : 1966 AIR(SC) 538), held at p. 625 thus : (SCR p. 625)
"Now there is no doubt that Section 88 when it lays down inter alia that nothing in the foregoing provisions of the 1948 Act shall apply to lands held on lease from a local authority, it is an express provision which takes out such leases from the purview of Sections 1 to 87 of the 1948 Act. One of the provisions therefore which must be treated as non-existent where lands given on lease by a local authority is in Section 31 ... but the effect of the express provision contained in Section 88(1)(a) clearly is that Section 31 must be treated as non-existent so far as lands held on lease from a local authority are concerned and in effect therefore Section 88(1)(a) must be held to say that there will be no protection under the 1948 Act for protected tenants under the 1939 Act so far as lands held on lease from a local authority are concerned ... In view of this express provision contained in Section 88(1)(a), the appellant cannot claim the benefit of Section 31; nor can it be said that his interest as protected tenant is saved by Section 89(2)(b). This is our opinion is the plain effect of the provisions contained in Section 31, Section 88 and Section 89(2)(b) of the 1948 Act." *
9. In Parvati v. Fatehsinhrao Pratapsinhrao Gaikwad ( 1986 (4) SCR 319 : 1986 (3) SCR 793 [LQ/SC/1986/328] ), the facts were that the government issued a notification on May 21, 1958 under Section 88(1)(b) of the 1948 Act reserving the land within the municipal limits of the city of Baroda for non-agricultural and industrial development. The appellants husband had taken possession of certain lands situated in the city of Baroda on lease from the respondent-trustee. The respondent laid the suit against the appellant for recovery of arrears of rent. The defence was that the suit was not maintainable. Dealing with the effect of the notification issued under Section 88(1)(b), this Court held that the notification had retrospective operation and subject to certain exceptions provided in sub-section (2) of Section 88 all rights, title, obligations etc. accrued or acquired under the said Act ceased to exist. Therefore, Section 89(2)(b) was inapplicable to protect such right, title or interest, acquired under the except as provided in Section 89- A owing to express provision made in Section 88 of the. Accordingly it was held that the civil court was legally competent to determine the reasonable rent payable by the tenant. In Navinchandra Ramanlal v. Kalidas Bhudarbai ( 1979 (4) SCC 75 [LQ/SC/1979/147] ), this Court was to consider a case that the notification under Section 88(1)(b) was issued on May 30, 1959 by which date the tenant acquired the statutory right of a deemed purchaser with effect from April 1, 1957. This Court held that the tenant cannot be divested of his deemed purchase by a subsequent notification issued thereunder. It would be seen that the effect of the second proviso was not considered therein
10. The above interpretation would equally apply to the interpretation of the notification issued under the proviso to Section 88(1)(b) adding to the area reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development. Its effect is that notwithstanding any judgment or order of any court or tribunal or any other authority, the provisions of Sections 1 to 87 shall not apply and shall be deemed never to have applied to such added area as well. If any land in the newly added area has been transferred or acquired between the date of the notification issued under first proviso and October 29, 1964, such transfer or acquisition of land shall have the effect as if it was made in an area to which the main part of the proviso and Section 88(1)(b) would apply. The necessary consequence would be that the provision of Sections 1 to 87 shall not apply and shall be deemed never to have applied to such added area. It is implicit that such transfer or acquisition made, to bring within the net of second proviso, must be valid and bona fide one and not colourable, fraudulent, fictitious or nominal. The legislature appears to relieve hardship to the bona fide purchasers. The title acquired by such transfer is not affected by the provisions of the. The legislature advisedly used the words acquired or transferred
11. The respondents own case is that Vishwas Rao, karta of the Hindu joint family was under disability due to lunacy. The tenant acquired statutory right as deemed purchaser under Section 32. The Act, by necessary implication, divests the landlord of his right to alienate the land held by the tenant. The statutory right to purchase the land under Section 32 as deemed purchaser was postponed by operation of Section 32-F of thetill the cessation of the disability or one year after the death of the landlord. In such situation can the son during the lifetime of the father, have right to sell the same property to the respondents, and whether such a sale made on August 19, 1964 to the respondents was valid and binds the appellant
12. In Raghavachariars Hindu Law Principles and Precedents (8th edn., 1987 in Section 275 at p. 239) stated thus
"So long as the joint family remains undivided, the senior member of the family is entitled to manage the family properties, and the father, and in his absence, the next seniormost male member of the family, as its manager provided he is not incapacitated from acting as such by illness or other sufficient cause. The fathers right to be the manager of the family is a survival of the patria potestas and he is in all cases, naturally, and in the case of minor sons necessarily the manager of the joint family property. In the absence of the father, or if he resigns, the management of the family property devolves upon the eldest male member of the family provided he is not wanting in the necessary capacity to manage it." *
13. Regarding the management of the joint family property or business or other interests in a Hindu joint family, the karta of the Hindu joint family is a primus inter pares. The managership of the joint family property goes to a person by birth and is regulated by seniority and the karta or the manager occupies a position superior to that of the other members. A junior member cannot, therefore, deal with the joint family property as manager so long as the karta is available except where the karta relinquishes his right expressly or by necessary implication or in the absence of the manager in exceptional and extraordinary circumstances such as distress or calamity affecting the whole family and for supporting the family or in the absence of the father whose whereabouts were not known or who was away in remote place due to compelling circumstances and that his return within the reasonable time was unlikely or not anticipated. No such circumstances are available here to attract the facts of the case
14. Vasantrao, the vendor, son of the karta of the Hindu joint family per se has no right to sell the property in question as manager so long as the father was alive. When father was under disability due to lunacy, an order from the court under Indian Lunacy Act 4 of 1912 was to be obtained to manage the joint family property. No proceedings were taken under Sections 39, 43 and 45 of the Indian Lunacy Act to have the inquisition made by a competent District Court to declare him as insane and to have him appointed as manager of the joint family. In P. K. Gobindan Nair v. P. Narayanan Nair ( 1912 (23) MLJ 706 [LQ/MadHC/1912/499] : 17 IC 473), a Division Bench of the Madras High Court held that a guardian cannot be appointed as manager under the Guardian and Wards Act on an adjudication of karnavan of an undivided Malabar tarwad as a lunatic removing the karnavan as a member due to lunacy. In A. Ramacharlu v. Archakam Ananthacharlu 1955 AIR(AP) 261 : 1955 Andh WR 576), a Division Bench consisting of Subba Rao, C.J. and Satyanarayana Raju, J. (as they were) considered the question of appointment of a son as the manager of the Mitakshara family whose father was alleged to be a lunatic. Subba Rao, C.J., speaking for the bench, held that in view of the finding that the karta, though was mentally not sound, but was capable to manage the property, the application for appointment of a son as manager of the joint family property was not be ordered. Since Vasantrao did not obtain any order from the competent court under the Lunacy Act to have him appointed as manager of the joint family to alienate the property, the sale is per se illegal. The sale, therefore, appears to be to defeat the statutory right of the appellant. The rigour of the second proviso to Section 88(1)(b) is thus inapplicable. Thereby the right and interest as a deemed purchaser acquired by the appellant has not been affected by a subsequent notification issued under Section 88(1)(b). The High Court, therefore, committed manifest error in holding that the appellant is not entitled to the relief. The appeal is accordingly allowed and the orders of the High Court, the Tribunal and District Collector are set aside and that of the Mamlatdar is confirmed, but in the circumstances parties are directed to bear their own costs.
Advocates List
For
For Petitioner
- Shekhar Naphade
- Mahesh Agrawal
- Tarun Dua
For Respondent
- S. Vani
- B. Sunita Rao
- Sushil Kumar Pathak
Bench List
HON'BLE JUSTICE K. RAMASWAMY
HON'BLE JUSTICE KULDIP SINGH
Eq Citation
[1991] 2 SCR 802
(1991) 2 GLR 1331
(1991) 3 SCC 442
AIR 1991 SC 1538
1991 GLH (2) 24
JT 1991 (2) SC 604
1991 (2) UJ 337
1991 (1) SCALE 958
LQ/SC/1991/288
HeadNote
88(1)(b) adding to the area reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development — Effect of — Held, second proviso to S. 88(1)(b) proviso is not a proviso to the proviso but to S. 88(1)(b) — It is a cardinal rule of interpretation that a proviso to a particular provision of a statute only embraces the field, which is covered by the main provision — It carves out an exception to the main provision to which it has been enacted by the proviso and to no other — Proper function of a proviso is to except and deal with a case which otherwise fall within the general language of the main enactment, and its effect is to confine to that case — Where the language of the main enactment is explicit and unambiguous, the proviso can have no repercussion on the interpretation of the main enactment, so as to exclude from it, by implication what clearly falls within its express terms — The above interpretation would equally apply to the interpretation of the notification issued under the proviso to S. 88(1)(b) adding to the area reserved for non-agricultural or industrial development — Its effect is that notwithstanding any judgment or order of any court or tribunal or any other authority, the provisions of Ss. 1 to 87 shall not apply and shall be deemed never to have applied to such added area as well.