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[Cites 15, Cited by 64]

Supreme Court of India

Amrit Bhikaji Kale & Ors vs Kashinath Janardhan Trade & Anr on 11 May, 1983

Equivalent citations: 1983 SCR (3) 237, 1983 SCC (3) 437, AIR 1983 SUPREME COURT 643, 1983 UJ (SC) 473, (1983) 2 SCWR 283, (1983) GUJ LH 900, (1983) MAH LJ 711, 1983 (3) SCC 437

Author: D.A. Desai

Bench: D.A. Desai, Misra Rangnath

           PETITIONER:
AMRIT BHIKAJI KALE & ORS.

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
KASHINATH JANARDHAN TRADE & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT11/05/1983

BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
BENCH:
DESAI, D.A.
MISRA RANGNATH

CITATION:
 1983 SCR  (3) 237	  1983 SCC  (3) 437
 1983 SCALE  (1)632


ACT:
     Bombay  Tenancy   and  Agricultural  Lands	 Act,  1948,
Section 32. scope of-Legal effects of (i) a will executed by
the landlord  in his  life time	 after the tenant became the
"deemed purchaser"  and hence the land-owner on 1.4.1957 and
(ii)  the  proceedings	taken  on  The	basis  of  the	will
including mutation  of the name of the legatee, postponement
of sales  under Sections  32F and  32G, entertainment of the
suit by the Tenancy Aval Karkoon filed under Sections 14 and
29 of  the Art,	 the dispossession.  Of the deemed purchaser
and the further sale by the recorded owner.
     Estoppel by  conduct-Whether  a  statement	 made  by  a
tenant, who  has become	 a deemed  purchaser under  The Act,
under the  mistake or  ignorance of  such a fact, before the
Tenancy Tribunal,  agreeing for	 the delivery  of possession
amount to estoppel.



HEADNOTE:
     Section 32 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands
Act, 1948, as amended from time to time provided that on the
1st day	 of April,  1957 styled	 as the "tiller's day" every
tenant	shall  subject	to  other  provisions  of  the	next
succeeding sections  be deemed	to have	 purchased from	 his
landlord free  from all	 encumbrance subsisting	 thereon, on
the said  date the  land held  by him  as a  tenant if other
conditions of  the section  are satisfied.  By operation  of
this law,  one Janardhan,  the	father	of  the	 respondent,
became the  "deemed purchaser"	effective from April 1,1957,
of the land bearing survey No. 1052 and F measuring 16 acres
situated within	 the revenue  limits of village Sonai Taluka
Nawasa, District  Ahmednagar  which  belonged  to  Tarachand
Chopra.
     Subsequent to  this admitted  fact,  several  incidents
took place  which have led to the present appeal raising the
question of  the legal	effect of the several steps taken by
different persons;  ignorant  of  the  factum  of  Janardhan
having become  the deemed  purchaser". They are-(a) Landlord
Tarachand died	on August  12,1959, after  two and a quarter
years after  Janardhan became  the statutory purchaser; (ii)
Tarachand executed a will, before his death, bequeathing the
suit land  to Ashoklal	Gugale, a  minor; (iii)	 the revenue
authorities, who must be aware of the provisions of the Act,
wrongly mutated	 the name of Ashoklal in the revenue records
as the	landlord in  terms of the will; (iv) in spite of the
mandatory duty imposed upon the Agricultural Lands Tribunal,
under Section  32G, to issue notice to all tenants who under
section 32  are deemed	to have	 purchased  the	 lands,	 all
landlords of  such lands and all other persons interested to
appear before
238
it for	the determination  of the price of the land which is
the  subject   matter  of   compulsory	purchase,  strangely
accepted the  plea for the postponement of the inquiry under
section 32F  of	 the  Act  and	later  again  commenced	 the
proceedings in	the year  1967 and concluded the proceedings
by its order dated July 13 1967 repeating the jurisdictional
errors; (v)  in the  interregnum, Ashoklal  through his next
friend commenced  proceedings in  case No. 36 of 1967 in the
Court of  Tenancy Aval	Karkoon	 for  the  recovery  of	 the
possession;  (vi)   the	 Tenancy   Aval	 Karkoon,  not	only
entertained  the   petition,  but   also  got  recorded	 two
statements,  on	  5.10.1967,  from  Janardhan,	"the  deemed
purchaser" to the effect that he had no objection to handing
over the  possession of	 the land  to the landlord as he was
old and	 could not cultivate the land personally and another
from the  present respondent  to the same effect even though
in the life time of his father Janardhan, he had no title to
the land  involved in  the dispute, and, thereafter made the
order dated  October 6,	 1967 exacting	Janardhan  from	 the
land; (vii)  this wholly  null and  void order	enabled	 the
minor landlord	to sell	 the land  by a	 registered deed  on
November 13,  1967 to  one Haribhav  and another, the former
later transferred  his interest	 in favour  of some  of	 the
petitioners before  the High  Court; (viii)  On	 October  6,
1971, Janardhan	 moved the Tribunal under section 32F of the
Act to the effect that as the landlord Ashoklal had attained
majority he  was entitled  to purchase	the land;  (ix)	 the
Tribunal started the proceedings under section 32G and after
bringing the  present respondent on record due to the demise
of Janardhan  on November  29, 1976, went into the matter in
depth,	examined   all	previous  orders  and  came  to	 the
conclusion  that   Janardhan  having   become  the   "deemed
purchaser.' all	 subsequent. proceedings were null and void,
which  was   affirmed  by   tho	 Assistant   Collector,	 the
Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal and the High Court later; (x) a
parallel proceeding  initiated by  the	respondent  for	 the
recovery of  possession was  decided in	 his favour  by	 all
Courts including the High Court
     Dismissing the appeals by the special leave, the Court
^
     HELD: 1:1	on the tiller's day, the landlord's interest
in the	land  gets  extinguished  and  simultaneously  by  a
statutory sale	without anything  more by  the parties,	 the
extinguished title  of the landlord is kindled or created in
the tenant. That very moment landlord-tenant relationship as
understood ill	common law or Transfer of Property Act comes
to an  end, the	 link and  chain is  broken. The absent non-
cultivating landlord  ceases to	 have that ownership element
on the	land and  the cultivating  tenant, the tiller of the
soil becomes  the owner thereof. This is unquestionable, the
landlord from the date of statutory sale is only entitled to
receive the  purchase price  as determined  by the  Tribunal
under section  32G. In	other words,  landlord ceases  to be
landlord and  the tenant  becomes the  owner of the land and
comes in  direct contact  with the state. Without any act of
transfer  inter	  vivos	 the   title  of   the	landlord  is
extinguished and  is created  simultaneously in	 the  tenant
making the  tenant the	deemed purchaser.  It is an admitted
position that  on April	 1, 1957  Tarachand was the landlord
and Janardhan was the tenant Tarachand landlord was under no
disability as  envisaged by  Section 32F. Therefore or April
1, 1957 Janardhan became deemed purchaser. [244 C-G]
239
     Sri Ram  Ram Narain  Medhi v.  State of  Bombay, [1959]
Supp. I S.C.R. 489 @ 518 followed.
     1:2. If,  in the  instant case.,  Janardhan became	 the
deemed	purchaser  on  tillers'	 day,  the  relationship  of
landlord and  tenant between Tarachand and Janardhan came to
be extinguished	 and no	 right could  be claimed  either  by
Tarachand or anyone claiming through him such as Ashoklal or
the present  purchasers on  the footing	 that they  are	 the
owners of  the land on or after April 1, 1957. [244 G-H, 245
A]
     2:1. Section 32F of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural
Lands Act,  1948, has  no application  to the  facts of	 the
ease. Section  32F postponed the date of compulsory purchase
by the	tenant where the landlord is a minor or a widow or a
person subject	to mental  or  physical	 disability  on	 the
tillers' day.  Section 32F  has an  overriding	effect	over
Section 32  as it  opens with  a  non-obstante	clause.	 The
combined effect	 of Section 32F and 32 would show that there
the landlord  is under no disability as envisaged by Section
32F the	 tenant of  such landlord  by operation of law would
become the  deemed purchaser  but where the landlord is of a
class or category as set out in section 32F such as a minor,
a widow	 or a  person subject  to  any	mental	or  physical
disability, the	 date o,  compulsory sale would be postponed
as therein  provided. Now,  if Tarachand  the  landlord	 was
under no disability and he was alive on April 1, 1957 and he
was the	 owner,	 his  tenant  Janardhan	 became	 the  deemed
purchaser. [245 A-D]
     2:2. If  Janardhan became the deemed purchaser on April
1, 1957	 all subsequent	 proceedings in	 which the  Tribunal
held that  the date  of purchase  was postponed	 because the
recorded  owner	  Ashoklal  was	  a   minor   were   without
jurisdiction. The Tribunal had absolutely no jurisdiction to
proceed on  the footing	 that date of sale was postponed. It
is neither  an incorrect order nor an erroneous order as was
sought to  be made  out but Tribunal lacked tho jurisdiction
to proceed  under section  32F because	when the proceedings
under Section  32F were	 commenced, Janardhan had long since
become	the   deemed  purchaser.  Therefore  all  subsequent
proceedings were  ab initio  void and  without jurisdiction.
[245 D-F]
     2:3. When	a Tribunal  of limited jurisdiction clutches
at a  jurisdiction by ignoring a statutory provision and its
consequences in	 law on	 the  status  of  parties  or  by  a
decision   wholly    unwarranted   with	   regard   to	 the
jurisdictional fact,  its decision  is a  nullity and can be
set up	in collateral proceeding. The Tribunal clutched at a
jurisdiction not vested in it and in such a situation it can
not be disputed that the Tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to
entertain any  proceeding purporting  to be between landlord
and tenant on the erroneous assumption that tenant was still
a  tenant  though  he  had  long  since	 become	 the  deemed
purchaser, The	tenant has  ceased to be a tenant much prior
to the	orders passed  by the Tribunal on April 24, 1961 and
July 13,  1967 holding	that the date of compulsory purchase
was postponed.	The compulsory	purchase by the operation of
law had taken place as early as April 1, 1957 and that legal
position cannot be wished away. [245 F-H, 246 A-Bl
240
     3:1 When several orders passed by different authorities
are wholly  null and  void and	hence non  est, such  orders
cannot thwart subsequent proceedings.	The nullity  can  be
set up	in subsequent  proceedings. The	 plea of estoppel by
conduct also cannot be allowed to be raised, since a measure
of agrarian  reform cannot  be permitted  to be	 defeated by
such devious means of the landlords trying to take advantage
of any	statement made	contrary to  their legally protected
interest, in  the absence  of legal  literacy  and  by	such
jugglery of  orders of low level revenue officers who hardly
knew what they were doing.
					   [246 C-H, 247 G]
     3:2. In  the  instant  case,  even	 assuming  Janardhan
relinquished his  right as  a  tenant,	even  then  Ashoklal
cannot recover	possession as  the  land  would	 be  at	 the
disposal of  the Collector  under Section  32P. Further, the
posthaste steps taken by Ashoklal and others in transferring
the lands  to several  others  speak  of  malafides  of	 the
landlord. [246E-F]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 174 of 1981.

Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order dated the 4th September, 1980 of the Bombay High Court in Writ Petition No. 2155 of 1979.

U.R. Lalit, C.B. Singh and P.H. Parekh for the Appellants.

Jitendra Sharma for the Respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by DESAI, J. Land bearing Survey No. 1052 admeasuring 16 acres situated within the revenue limits of Village Sonai Taluka Nawasa Distt. Ahmendnagar, belonged to Tarachand Chopra Janardhan, the father of the respondent was admittedly the tenant of this land on April 1, 1957. Sec. 32 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Lands Act, 1948 as amended from time to time provided that on the 1st day of April, 1957 styled as the tillers' day every tenant shall subject to other provisions of the section and the provisions of the next succeeding sections be deemed to have purchased from his landlord, free from all encumbrances subsisting thereon on the same date the land held by him as a tenant if other conditions of the section are satisfied. Thus by operation of law, Janardhan, who was the tenant of the land on the tillers' day became the deemed purchaser thereof. Landlord Tarachand died on August 12, 1959. Before his death, landlord Tarachand had executed a will and bequeathed the suit land to Ashoklal Gugale who was petitioner No. 5 before the High Court Acting upon the will of Tarachand, Ashoklal got his 241 name mutated in the revenue record in respect of suit land in his favour as owner. On the date of mutation, Ashoklal was a minor. A Sec. 32-G imposes a statutory duty on the Agricultural l ands Tribunal ('Tribunal' for short) to commence enquiry for determining the price of the land which is the subject matter of compulsory purchase. The Tribunal is required to issue notice to (a) all tenants who u/s 32 are deemed to have purchased the lands (b) all landlords of such lands and (c) all other persons interested therein to appear before it on the date specified in the notice. Pursuant to such notice when the parties appeared before the Tribunal it was claimed on behalf of landlord that Ashoklal, the recorded owner was a minor and therefore the sale was postponed u/s 32-F. The Tribunal failed to exercise jurisdiction in not noticing the obvious fact that the relevant date on which compulsory sale takes place is April 1, 1957 and on that date Tarachand Chopra the landlord was the recorded owner and he was under no disability as envisaged by sec. 32-F and therefore the sale had become effective and could not be postponed u/s 32-F. However, the Tribunal failed to exercise its jurisdiction by mis-stating an obvious irrelevant fact that as recorded owner was a minor, compulsory sale was postponed as envisaged by sec. 32-F. It appears that the Tribunal again commenced proceedings in the year 1967 u/s 32-G and concluded the proceedings by its order dated July 13, 1967 repeating the jurisdictional errors and thereby failed to exercise jurisdiction vested in it. In the meantime, minor landlord through his next friend commenced proceedings in Case No. 36 of 1967 in the court of Tenancy Avail Karkoon having jurisdiction in the area for recovery of possession from tenant Janardhan who had become a deemed purchaser, u/s 14 read with sec. 29 of the Tenancy Act Sec. 14 enables the landlord to recover possession if tenant commits default in payment of rent for certain number of years. The Tenancy Avail Karkoon entertained the petition which it had no jurisdiction because there was no subsisting relationship of landlord and tenant between Ashoklal and Janardhan as Janardhan had already become deemed purchaser on April 1, 1957. However, the Tenancy Aval Karkoon taking note of the earlier decisions of the Tribunal holding that the date of compulsory sale was postponed directed possession to be handed over to the landlord holding that the tenant had committed default in payment of rent.

Mr. Lalit, learned counsel for the appellant at this stage pointed out that in the proceeding u/s 14 read with sec. 29 of the Tenancy Act, the tenant Janardan had made a Statement on October 5, 1967 242 that he had no objection to handing over possession of the land to A the land to the landlord as he was old and could not cultivate the land personally. On the same day, surprisingly the Tenancy Aval Karkoon also recorded the statement of present respondent that in the lifetime of his father Janardhan he had no title to the land involved in the dispute. It appears that the Tenancy Aval Karkoon made the order dated oct. 6, 1967 evicting Janardhan from the land on the footing that he was a tenant liable to pay rent and had committed defaults. This wholly null and void order enabled the minor landlord to sell the land by a registered deed on Nov. 13, 1967 to the petitioner No. 1 and one Haribhav and the latter in turn transferred his interest in favour of other petitioners, Misled by the two orders of the Tribunal holding that the sale was postponed Janardhan served a notice on oct. 6, 1971 as envisaged by sec. 32-F that as the landlord has attained majority he is entitled to purchase the land and that the price of land be determined. Presumably, pursuant to this notice, the Tribunal commenced proceedings under sections 32-G and 32-F of the Tenancy Act for determining the purchase price. It was contended on behalf of the petitioners transferees from Ashoklal before the Tribunal that as Janardhan has already handed over possession to Ashoklal he had no subsisting interest in the land and therefore he had no right to purchase the land u/s 32-F and that the proceedings be dropped. This contention found favour with the Tribunal which overlooked the legal position that Janardhan had become the deemed purchaser on April 1, 1957. Janardhan died on November 29, 1976 leaving respondent his son as the sole heir. After the death of Janardhan an enquiry was commenced to ascertain whether Janardhan the deceased tenant had already become the deemed purchaser on April 1, 1957 and that all the subsequent proceedings were Abington void. There were some proceedings in between u/s 84 which are hardly relevant The Tribunal went into the matter in depth, examined all proviso orders and finally reached an affirmative conclusion that on April 1, 1957 Tarachand was the recorded landlord and being under no disability and Janardhan being tenant of the land, by operation of law, Janardhan become the deemed purchaser and all subsequent proceedings were null, void and non est. The Tribunal accordingly determined the purchase price. The present petitioners after unsuccessfully appealing to the Assistant Collector and the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal u/s 76 of the Tenancy Act, reached the High Court under Article 2 27, 243 A parallel proceeding was initiated by the respondent u/s 84 of the Tenancy Act for recovery of possession which was illegally taken from him. The Assistant Collector held that occupation of the suit land by the petitioners was contrary to the provisions of law as Janardhan had already become the deemed purchaser and no title could be acquired by the petitioners from the sale by Ashoklal and therefore the respondent is entitled to recover possession. The direction was issued to hared over possession to the respondent. This order was confirmed by the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal in Revision as per its judgment dated July 16, 1973. Two petitions were moved by transferee-petitioners in the High Court of Bombay against two orders one of the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal, in a proceeding u/s 32-G and another in a proceeding u/s 84 against the present respondent. The learned Single Judge of the High Court by a common judgment dismissed bottle the petitions of the petitioners holding that as Janardhan had become the deemed purchaser on the tillers' day i. e. April 1, 1957 all subsequent proceedings u/s 32-F were ab initio void and without jurisdiction and nullity is the eyes of law. The High Court also held that the petitioners acquired no title under the purported sale by Ashoklal because Ashoklal had no title to the land have receiving the purchase price from Janardhan or his heir as determined u/s 32-G. The High Court accordingly dismissed both the petitions with costs. Hence these two appeals by special leave.

Mr. U.R. Lalit, learned counsel appearing for the appellants strenuously urged that the orders made by the Tribunal u/s 32-F and by the Tenancy Aval Karkoon in a proceeding u/s 14 read with sec. 29 of the Tenancy Act and the statement of Janardhan and the respondent would clearly show that these orders were at best erroneous but not void and cannot be ignored as nullity in subsequent proceedings.

The Tenancy Act was comprehensively amended by Amending Act IS of 1957. The amendment brought in a revolutionary measure of agrarian reforms making tiller of the soil the owner of the land. This was done to achieve the object of removing all intermediaries between tillers of the soil and the State. Sec. 32 provides that by mere operation of law, every tenant of agricultural land situated in the area to which the Act applies shall become by the operation of law, the owner thereof. He is declared to be a deemed purchaser without anything more on his part. A Constitution Bench of this 244 Court in Sri Ram Narain Medhi v. The State of Bombay(1) held that:

"the title of the landlord to the land passes immediately to the tenant on the tillers' day and there is a completed purchase or sale thereof as between the landlord and the tenant. The title of the land which was vested originally in the landlord passes to the tenant on the tillers' day and this title is defeasible only in the event of the tenant failing to appear or making a statement that he is not willing to purchase the land or commit default in payment of the price thereto as determined by the Tribunal."

Therefore, it is unquestionably established that on the tillers' day, the landlord's interest in the land gets extinguished and simultaneously by a statutory sale without anything more by the parties, the extinguished title of the landlord is kindled or created in the tenant. That very moment landlord-tenant relationship as understood in common law or Transfer of Property Act comes to an end. The link and chain is broken. The absent non-cultivating landlord ceases to have that ownership element of the land and the cultivating tenant, the tiller of the soil becomes the owner thereof This is unquestionable. The landlord from the date of statutory sale is only entitled to receive the purchase price as determined by the Tribunal u/s 32-G. In other words, the landlord ceases to be landlord and the tenant becomes the owner of the land and comes in direct contact with the State. Without any act of transfer inter vivos the title of the landlord is extinguished and is created simultaneously in the tenant making the tenant the deemed purchaser. It is an admitted position that on April 1, 1957 Tarachand was the landlord and Janardhan was the tenant. Tarachand landlord was under no disability as envisaged by sec. 32-F. Therefore on April 1, 1957 Janardhan became deemed purchaser. and Mr. Lalit could not controvert this position.

If Janardhan became the deemed purchaser on tillers' day, the relationship of landlord and tenant between Tarachand and Janardhan came to be extinguished and no right could be claimed either by Tarachand or anyone claiming through him such as Ashoklal or the present purchasers on the footing that they are the 245 Owners of the land on or after April 1, 1957. This basic fact is A incontrovertible.

It may be mentioned that sec. 32-F has no application to the facts of this case. Section 32-F postponed the date of compulsory purchase by the tenant where the landlord is a minor or a widow or a person subject to mental or physical disability on the tillers' day. Sec. 32-F bas an overriding effect-over s. 32 as it opens with a non-obstante clause. The combined effect of sec. 32-F and 32 would show that where the landlord is under no disability as envisaged by sec. 32-F the tenant of such landlord by operation of law would become the deemed purchaser but where the landlord is of a class or category as set out in sec. 32-F such as a minor, a widow or a person subject to any mental or physical disability, the date of compulsory sale would be postponed as therein provided. Now, if Tarachand, the landlord was under no disability and he was alive on April 1, 1957 and he was the owner, his tenant Janardhan became the deemed purchaser. This conclusion, in our opinion, is unassailable.

If Janardhan became the owner on April 1, 1957 all subsequent proceedings in which the Tribunal held that the date of purchase was postponed because the recorded owner Ashoklal was a minor were without jurisdiction. The Tribunal had absolutely no jurisdiction to proceed on the footing that the date of sale was postponed. It is neither an incorrect order nor an erroneous order as was sought to be made out but Tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to proceed u/s. 32-F because when the proceedings u/s. 32-F were commenced, Janardhan had long since become the deemed purchaser. Therefore all sub- sequent proceedings were an initio void and without jurisdiction and the High Court was right in holding that orders passed therein were nullity.

The attempt to overcome this position by urging that the order was erroneous was rightly repelled by the High Court holding that the orders were null and void, proceeding on an erroneous assumption of jurisdictional fact that the recorded owner was a minor on the tillers day. When a Tribunal of limited jurisdiction clutches at a jurisdiction by ignoring a statutory provision and its consequences in law on the status of parties or by a decision wholly unwarranted, with regard to the jurisdictional fact, its decision is a nullity and can be set up in collateral proceeding. The Tribunal clutched at a jurisdiction not vested in it and in such a situation it cannot be 246 disputed that the Tribunal lacked the jurisdiction to entertain any A proceeding purporting to be between landlord and tenant on the erroneous assumption that tenant was still a tenant though he had long since become the deemed purchaser. The tenant has ceased to be a tenant much prior to the orders passed by the Tribunal on April 24, 1961 and July 13, 1967 holding that the date of compulsory purchase was postponed. The compulsory purchase by the operation of law had taken place as early as April 1, 1957 and that legal position cannot be wished away.

Mr. Lalit, however, contended that the statement of Janardhan in the proceeding u/s 14 read with sec. 29 of the Tenancy Act stating that he had become old and was unable to cultivate the land and he is willing to hand over possession would estop the respondent from contending to the contrary. It was further urged that respondent himself was present on the date on which Janardhan gave his statement on October S, 1967 and he concurred with the statement of Janardhan. We are not unaware of the landed gentry exercising such influence over the tenants that in the absence of legal literacy they may make any statement contrary to their legally protected interest. A measure of agrarian reform cannot be permitted to be defeated by such devious means of the landlords. However apart from ignorance of his position assuming that Janardhan relinquished his right as tenant, landlord Ashoklal was nontheless not entitled to recover possession because, when Janardhan, the deemed purchaser agreed to hand over possession subject to the provision of sec. IS, the land would be at the disposal of Collector under sec. 32 P. Landlord even in such a situation is not entitled to be restored to possession without bringing his case under sec. 15 which appears not to be the case of landlord. And look at the bona fides of the landlord. Ashoklal as soon as he managed to obtain wholly void order for possession, managed to transfer the lands to the petitioners within a span of less than 2 weeks. It would thus appear that even Ashoklal and his next friend must be presumably aware of the void character of the order and therefore posthaste with a view to thwarting any further legal proceeding and confuse Janardhan, Ashoklal through his next friend managed to transfer the land to the petitioners and let the petitioners fight the deemed purchaser. A measure whereby tenant was to be made the owner of the land cannot be permitted to be defeated by such jugglery of orders by low-level revenue officers who hardly knew what they were doing. Look at the lack of knowledge of law of the Tribunal. While overlooking the relevant date, and it took into account the subsequent date which was wholly irrelevant and impermissible. Though 247 landlord Tarachand had died much after 1.4.1957 in proceeding u/s 32-G minor Ashoklal whose name was mutated on death of A Tarachand, the authority declared the sale having been postponed even though statute had already operated and sale taken place. Can a statutory Tribunal charged with a duty to implement the law betray such total lack of knowledge so as to be counter-productive ? Same is the case with the decision of Tenancy Aval Karkoon. A proceeding u/s 14 read with sec. 29 of the Tenancy Act, started on the footing that the relationship of landlord and tenant subsisted should have been thrown out at the threshold because a decade back the then tenant Janardhan had become the deemed purchaser. Therefore these orders were wholly null and void and hence non est and cannot thwart subsequent proceedings. The nullity can be set up in subsequent proceedings.

Janardhan was deprived of his possession by an order which had no legal sanction. He was deprived of possession on the footing that he was a tenant ignoring and overlooking the statutory event that he had become the owner. Even when the Legislature passed such a revolutionary measure its knowledge was not transmitted to the persons for whose benefit the measure was enacted and there was no awakening to one's right. Undoubtedly, a communication gap and for want of legal literacy Janardhan was taken on a joy ride and was illegally made to part with possession. Subsequently everyone realised the blunder committed by them and therefore when the proceedings started on the notice given by Janardhan, the Tribunal determined the price. Appeal of the petitioners to Assistant Collector failed, revision petition to the Maharashtra Revenue Tribunal at the instance of the petitioners failed so also the writ petition u/s 227 of the petitioners failed. All authorities concurrently held that Janardhan had become the owner and the Tribunal was right in determining the price.

The authority u/s 84 held that petitioners were not entitled to retain possession as their occupation was contrary to the provisions of the Tenancy Act and they had acquired no title to the land by the purported sale by Ashoklal. The direction for restoring possession to Janardhan was rightly given. A revision petition and a writ petition to the High Court at the instance of the petitioners failed.

248

We find that the High Court was right in rejecting both the A petitions. These were all the contentions in this appeal and as we find no merit in it, the appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.

When this Court issued notice, appellants were directed to deposit Rs. 1500 for costs of respondent. Respondent came here in rags and urged that he was too poor to engage a counsel. We therefore direct that the amount of Rs. 1500 deposited in this Court by appellants be paid to respondent.

We record our appreciation of assistance to the Court by Mr. Jitendra Sharma who appeared amicus curie at the request made by the Court while granting special leave. He should withdraw the amount and take all steps to pay the same to the respondent.

S.R.					   Appeal dismissed.
249