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[Cites 9, Cited by 11]

Supreme Court of India

Smt. Kasturi (Dead) By L.Rs vs Gaon Sabha on 27 July, 1989

Equivalent citations: 1989 SCR (3) 591, 1989 SCC (4) 55, AIRONLINE 1989 SC 121, 1989 (4) SCC 55, (1989) 39 DLT 58, (1989) 3 JT 228 (SC), (1990) 1 LANDLR 33, (1990) 2 LANDLR 33, 1990 UJ(SC) 1 11

Author: Misra Rangnath

Bench: Misra Rangnath, Kuldip Singh

           PETITIONER:
SMT. KASTURI (DEAD) BY L.RS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
GAON SABHA

DATE OF JUDGMENT27/07/1989

BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
BENCH:
MISRA RANGNATH
KULDIP SINGH (J)

CITATION:
 1989 SCR  (3) 591	  1989 SCC  (4)	 55
 JT 1989 (3)   228	  1989 SCALE  (2)77


ACT:
    Delhi  Land Reforms Act, 1954.' Section 3(13), 11,	154.
185 'Land'--When  vest in gaon sabha -civil suit-Dicleartion
of bhumidhari right--Whether maintainable.
       Statutory Interpretation.' External aid--Word defined
in  another statute containing different meaning--Not to  be
relied upon.
Words & Phrases: 'Land'--'Garden'--'Grove'--Meaning of.



HEADNOTE:
    The appellant-plaintiff sued for declaration that inclu-
sion  of  the disputed property in the land records  of	 the
respondent-Gaon Sabha on the basis that it had vested  under
the  provisions of the Delhi Land and Reforms Act, 1954	 was
wrong,	void  and without jurisdiction, and  for  a  further
declaration  that she was entitled to bhumidhari  rights  in
the property under section 11 of the Act. In paragraph	4(d)
of  the	 plaint, it was pleaded that the suit land  was	 not
'land'	and was not banjar (waste) and did not	come  within
section 154(1)(i) to (vii) of the Act and, therefore,  there
was  no	 vesting in law. The proprietor,  according  to	 the
plaintiff,  grew fuel wood and partly used the	property  as
ghatwars and used the stones for building purposes.
    The	 suit was decreed in the trial court, and  the	said
decree	was affirmed in appeal, but at the instance  of	 the
respondent-defendant  No.  --Gaon Sabha, the High  Court  in
second	appeal reversed the decrees of the courts below	 and
dismissed the suit.
    The	 High Court found that the property came within	 the
definition  of 'land' and, therefore, was subjected  to	 the
legal  incidence of the statutory provisions. In  regard  to
the  relief  of bhumidhari rights, it held that	 the  plain-
tiffs' suit was not maintainable.
Dismissing the appeal this Court,
    HELD:  The definition of 'land' in section 3(13) of	 the
Delhi  Land Reforms Act, 1954 is wide. A land on which	fuel
wood is grown would
592
constitute groveland. In view of the inclusive definition of
'land',	 the  finding  of the High Court  that	the  dispute
property  constituted  land  cannot be	said  to  be  wrong.
[594C-D]
      Nemi  Chand v. Financial Commissioner, Punjab &  Anr.,
AIR  1964  (51) Punjab 373; Rajinder Prashad & Anr.  v.	 The
Punjab State &	Ors., AIR 1966 (53) Punjab 185; Munshi Ram &
Ors. v. Financial Commissioner, Haryana & Ors., [1979] 1 SCC
471; Haiti v. Sunder Singh, [1971] 2 SCR 163 referred to.
      It is impermissible to rely-on definitions  containing
meanings different from the definition under the Delhi	Land
Reforms	 Act, 1954 for a proper resolution of  the  dispute.
[595A]
      The  High Court therefore came to the correct  conclu-
sion  when  it held that the disputed  property	 Constituted
'land' under the Act, and became liable to vest in the	Gaon
Sabha under the Act. [595B]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 351 of 1974.

From the Judgment and Order dated 23.2.1973 of the Delhi High Court in R.S.A. No. 69 of 1968.

Rajinder Sachar, Sr. Ad v. and K.C. Dua for the Appellants. N.S. Das Bahal and D.N. Puri for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by RANGANATH MISRA, J. This appeal is by special leave and the sole legal representative of the original plaintiff is in appeal.

The plaintiff sued for declaration that inclusion of the disputed property in the land records of the respondent Gaon Sabha on the basis that it had vested under the provi- sions of the Delhi Land Reforms Act, 1954, (hereinafter referred to as 'the Act') was wrong, void and without juris- diction and for a further declaration that she was entitled to bhumidhari rights in the property under section 11 of the Act. Her suit was decreed in the trial court and the said decree was affirmed in appeal but at the instance of defend- ant no. 1, Gaon Sabha, the High Court in second appeal reversed the decrees of the courts below and dismissed the suit.

593

The suit was instituted on 16.8.1966. The decision of this Court in the case of Hatti v. Sunder Singh, [1971] 2 SCR 163 settled the legal position that a claim under sec- tion 11 of the Act for declaration of bhumidhari right was not maintainable in the Civil Court in view of section 185 of the Act read with Schedule I and exclusive jurisdiction for adjudication of such claims vested in the appropriate Revenue Court. This position of law is not disputed before us. In regard to the relief of bhumidhari rights the High Court had, therefore, rightly held that the plaintiff's suit was not maintainable.

The only other submission advanced on behalf of the plaintiff for our consideration is that the disputed proper- ty did not constitute 'land' as defined in section 3(13) of the Act and, therefore, the right, title and interest of the appellant as proprietor of the property was in no way af- fected by the provisions of the Act and the inclusion of the property in L.R. 2 was void, and liable to vacation. In paragraph 4(d) of the plaint, plaintiff pleaded that the suit land was not 'land' and was not banjar (waste) and did not come within section 154(1)(i) to (vii) of the Act and, therefore, there was no vesting in law. The proprietor, according to the plaintiff, grew fuel wood and partly used the property as ghatwars and used the stones for building purposes.

The High Court has found that the property came within the definition of 'land' and, therefore, was subjected to the legal incidence of the statutory provisions. Section 3(13) defines land to mean:

"land held or occupied for purposes connected with agriculture, horticulture or animal husbandry including pisciculture and poultry farming and includes--
(a) buildings appurtenant therto,
(b) village, abadis,
(c) grovelands,
(d) lands for village pasture or land covered by water and used for growing singharas and other produce or land in the bed of a river and used for casual or occasional cultivation ......"

The definition of land in the Act is wide and in paragraph 4(d) ' 594 the admitted position is fuel wood was being grown on the property. 'Horticulture', 'garden' and 'groveland' in the absence of statutory definitions, would have the common parlance meaning. 'Horticulture', as the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary indicates means:

"the cultivation of a garden."

'Garden', according to the Dictionary, means--

"an area of land, usually planted with grass, trees, flower beds, etc.; an area of land used for the cultivation of ornamental plants, herbs, fruit, vegetables, trees, etc. A grove, as the Dictionary puts it means; "A small wood.; small woodland area or plantation". A land on which fuel wood is grown would constitute groveland. In view of the inclusive definition of 'land', the finding of the High Court that the disputed property consti- tuted land cannot be said to be wrong. Reliance was placed on the decision of the Punjab High Court in Nemi Chand v. Financial Commissioner, Punjab & Anr., AIR 1964 (51) Punjab 373 where the meaning of land in Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act was under examination and the Court was called upon to decide whether banjar Jadid and banjar quadim came within the definition. For that purpose the meaning of land occurring in the Tenures Act and the Punjab Tenancy Act of 1887 was examined. The Court also referred to the definition of land in Punjab Alienation of Land Act, 1900. In the presence of a definition in the Act under consideration, we find no justification to refer to definitions in different statutes for finding out whether the disputed property was land.
Appellant's counsel also placed reliance on the decision of a Full Bench of the same High Court in the case of Ra- jinder Prasad & Anr. v. The Punjab State & Ors., AIR 1966 (53) Punjab 185. Here again the question for consideration was whether gair mumkin land was land within the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act. For the reason indicated above, we do not think that the appellant is entitled to any support from the Full Bench Judgment. Lastly, reliance was placed on :he decision of this Court in Munshi Ram & Ors. v.

Financial Commissioner, Haryana & Ors., [1979] 1 SCC 471. The Court was considering the true meaning of 'permissible area' under the Punjab Security of Land Tenures Act and for that purpose the meaning of land was being examined; whether banjar Jadid should be excluded with reference to 595 the meaning of land under the East Punjab Displaced Persons (Land Settlement) Act and the Punjab Tenancy Act was being debated before the Court. We do not think in view of the statutory definition any digration is necessary. It is impermissible to rely on definitions containing meanings different from the definition under the Act for a proper resolution of the dispute. The High Court, in our opinion, came to the correct conclusion when it held that the disput- ed property constituted land under the Act and became liable to vest in the Gaon Sabha under the Act. The judgment of the High Court, therefore, is upheld and the appeal is dis- missed. In the peculiar facts of this case, the parties are directed to bear their respective costs in this Court.

N  .V.K.					Appeal	dis-
missed.
596