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Supreme Court of India

State Of Madhya Pradesh vs Shiv Kunwarbai Etc on 20 April, 1971

Equivalent citations: 1971 AIR 1477, 1971 SCR 407, AIR 1971 SUPREME COURT 1477, 1971 JABLJ 935, 1972 MPLJ 284, 1971 RENCR 477

Author: G.K. Mitter

Bench: G.K. Mitter, S.M. Sikri, K.S. Hegde, A.N. Grover, P. Jaganmohan Reddy

           PETITIONER:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SHIV KUNWARBAI ETC.

DATE OF JUDGMENT20/04/1971

BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
BENCH:
MITTER, G.K.
SIKRI, S.M. (CJ)
HEGDE, K.S.
GROVER, A.N.
REDDY, P. JAGANMOHAN

CITATION:
 1971 AIR 1477		  1971 SCR  407


ACT:
Madhya Pradsh Government Premises (Eviction) Act, 1952,	 ss.
3 and 4-Eviction can be only from Government premises-Former
ruler of Indian State claiming certain properties to be	 his
private property-Acceptance of his claim in respect of	some
of  these  properties does not mean that the  properties  in
respect	 of  which the claim has not  been  accepted  become
property of Government.



HEADNOTE:
The ruler of the erstwhile State of Jhabua granted jagirs to
N  and R. The Jagirs were forfeited in 1943.  On March.	 30,
1948  the Ruler made an order purporting to declare a  large
number of immovable properties, including certain houses  in
the  occupation of N and R as his private proper. ties.	  On
April  1,  1948 the Ruler made another order  purporting  to
grant  to N and R the right to continue to occupy  the	said
houses	during	their life time without any right  to  sell,
mortgage or create any charge thereon.	On June 29, 1948 the
State  of Jhabua merged in the State of Madhya Bharat.	 The
Government  of the State of Madhya Bharat did not  recognise
the claim  of  the erstwhile Ruler of Jhabua  to  all  the
properties  claimed by him as his private  properties.	 The
properties in the occupation of N and R were among those not
recognised as the Ruler's private property.  The  possession
of  N on the properties in her occupation was not  disturbed
in  her lifetime.  On April 30, 1962 the Executive  Engineer
District Dhar, submitted an application under s. 3 read with
s.  4 of the Madhya Pradesh Government	Premises  (Eviction)
Act,  1952  for	 the eviction of  R  and  the  successor-in-
interest  of N from the properties respectively occupied  by
them.  Orders of eviction made by the Sub-Divisional Officer
were  upheld  by the Collector in the appeals  filed  before
him.   The  high Court however allowed	the  writ  petitions
filed by N's successors in interest and by R and quashed the
orders	of  eviction  against them.   The  State  of  Madhya
Pradesh appealed.
HELD: The appeal must be dismissed,
The  evidence  showed that some only of the  properties	 set
forth  the declaration of April, 1, 1948 and claimed by	 the
Ruler  as  private property "were accepted as  such  by	 the
Government  of	Madhya	Bharat: there was  no  finding	with
regard	to the others that they appertained to the Ruler  as
distinct  from his private properties.	In order to  succeed
the,  appellant	 had to show that the  properties  had	been
confiscated  by the Ex-ruler and had ceased to belong  to  N
and R. [410E-G].
As the properties originally belonged to N and R there	must
be  some evidence of the displacement of their title  before
the  Eviction  Act could be made applicable  to	 them.	 The
order  of  April 1, 1948 passed by the Ruler  could  not  be
interpreted as an order of confiscation.  It was not  proved
that the ownership of the properties had passed to the Ruler
and thereafter first to the State of Madhya Bharat and	then
to the State of Madhya Pradesh [410G-H]
408
In   order   to	 enable	 Government  to	  take	 Proceedings
successfully  under  either s. 3 or 4 of the  Act,  it	must
satisfy	 the  Court  that the premises	in  respect  whereof
action	was  taken was Government premises.   As  the  State
'ailed to establish this fact the question of eviction under
the Act could never arise. [411E].



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 1164 and 1165 of 1967.

Appeals from the judgment and order dated December 1, 1965 of the Madhya Pradesh High Court, Indore Bench in Misc. Petition Nos. 18 and 19 of 1964.

M. S. K. Sastri, M. N. Shroff for I. N. Shroff, for the appellant (in both the appeals).

B. R. L. lyengar, R. A. Gupta and K. B. Rohatgi, for the respondent (in C. As. No. 1164 of 1967).

P. C. Bhartari, J. B. Dadachanji, O. C. Mathur and Ravinder Narain, for the respondent (in C. A. No. 1165 of 1967).

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Mitter, J,-The State of Madhya Pradesh has come up in appeal to this Court from two orders of the State High Court allowing two writ petitions filed by the two respondents herein for quashing the orders of eviction made against them under Section 3 of the Madhya Pradesh Government Premises (Eviction) Act.

The facts in Civil Appeal No. 1164 of 1967 are as follows. Many years back, a former Ruler of the Indian State of Jhabua in Central India had given a jagir to his mistress, Paswanji Smt. Navratanbai. Navratanbai had either purchased or constructed two houses on College Marg. According to the Writ Petition fled in the High Court the acquisition was out of her private funds. 'his was not however admitted in the return to the petition. The successor of the former Ruler Dilipsingh purported to forfeit the jagir in the year 1943. The order of forfeiture is not on record but is sought to be borne out by an order dated 1st April, 1948, evidently made in anticipation of the merger of the State in the Union of Madhya Bharat which took place on June 29, 1948. The order addressed to Paswanji Navratanbai ran :

"In September 1943 your jagir was confiscated to the State and you were granted Rs. 100 per month by way of allowance vide Parwana No. 1735 dated 23-9-1943 and this amount was being paid to you on behalf of the Huzur from the civil list because such types of allowances etc. are paid from it. But now as new arrangements are being 409 made regarding the states of Malwa and there is likelihood of reduction in the percentage of the civil list, therefore, the aforesaid monthly allowance shall henceforth be paid to you every month from State, Treasury from generation to generation.
You may reside in the two big houses of Khasgi during your lifetime in which you are residing at present. After your lifetime both these houses shall be taken in possession of the Huzur. You shall have no right to sell or mortgage or create any charge on these houses."

There is another Huzur order on record dated 30th March, 1948 purporting to declare a large number of immovable properties as the private property of the Ruler and the ruling family. Among the properties set out at the foot of the order are mentioned :

"6. (e) All houses which are occupied by Bapu Ram singh.
(f) All houses which are in the occupancy of Navratanbai".

When the question of settling the list of private properties of the Rulers of the integrating Estates in Madhya Bharat came up before the Government of India, the Political and External Department of the Madhya Bharat Secretariat passed an order recording a ;decision regarding the settlement of private properties of the State of Jhabua. The memorandum dated July 25, 1949 of the Madhya Bharat Secretariat, Political and External Department, shows that each department concerned had to take action for handing over all the property to the Ruler concerned and to see that no property out of the properties belonging to the Ruler and/or the State before the formation of Madhya Bharat was left with the Ruler excepting the properties in the enclosed list. The relevant list,, for the Ruler of Jhabua did not include the properties occupied either by Bapu Ramsingh or Paswanji Navratanbai. Paswanji Navratanbai protested against the inclusion of her houses in the list of private properties made out by the Ruler of Jhabua and addressed a memorandum to the Raj Pramukh of Madhya Bharat Union for amendment of the inventory submitted by the said Ruler. No steps appear to have been taken to evict Navratanbai from the said premises in her lifetime. On 30th April 1962 the Executive Engineer District Dhar, submitted an application under Section 3 read with Section 4 of the Madhya Pradesh Government Premises (Eviction) Act, 1952 for eviction of the respondents in Appeal No. 1164 of 1967 from the two properties formerly belonging to Navratanbai before the. Sub Divisional Officer Jhabua, Constituted the competent authority under the Act. An order of eviction made 410 by the Sub Divisional Officer was upheld in appeal to the, Collector. Shivkunwarbai, widow of late Bapu Gordhansinghji son of Navratanbai filed a writ petition in the High Court for quashing. the said order. Appeal No. 1164/1967 is from the said order.

The facts in the other appeal i.e. 1165 of 1967 are similar to the facts just narrated. In this case the same former Ruler had granted a jagir to his son Ramsingh by his mistress Paswanji Bhagirathibai. The succeeding Ruler purported to forfeit the jagir and granted a monthly allowance of Rs. 100. An order similar to the one dated 30th March 1948 already mentioned was passed while the order of April 1, 1948 affected Ramsingh as it did Navratanbai in the other case. There was an order of eviction as in the other case followed by a writ petition to the High Court. The central question in these two appeals is, whether the State of Madhya Bharat ever became entitled to these properties in the facts and circumstances mentioned which justified its attempt to evict the respondents under the provisions of the Act of 1952. This would depend on the finding as to whether these properties were taken over by the Union of Madhya Bharat following the merger of the State of Jhabua therein in 1949. The fact that some only of the properties set forth in the declaration of 1st April 1948 and claimed by the Ruler as private property "were accepted as such" by the Government of Madhya Bharat does not lead to the inference that all the other items of property in the said declaration were taken over by an Act of State. There must be some positive evidence of such Act. It is also possible that the list had wrongly included properties belonging to citizens of the State of Jhabua about which there was no adjudication. The records only show that out of the list of properties submitted by the Ruler, a certain number of them was treated by the Government of India as being his private properties. There was no finding with regard to the others that they appertained to the Ruler as distinct from his private property. As these properties originally belonged to the predecessors-in-interest of the respondent i.e. in C. A. 1166/1967 and the respondent in C. A. 1165/1967 there must be some evidence of displacement of their title before the Eviction Act could be made applicable to them. In order to succeed in the appeals the appellant must first establish that the properties had been confiscated by the Ex-Ruler and had ceased to belong to Navratanbai or Bapu Ramsingh. The order of April 1, 1948 records the confiscation of the jagirs and does not record that the houses in the possession of Navratanbai were similarly confiscated, assuming that confiscation was possible by a mere order of this type. On the other hand, the order shows that Bai Navratanbai was to have full use of the houses for her lifetime but she was not to sell or mortgage the 411 same. The declared that after her lifetime the property would be taken possession of by the Huzur does not amount to an order of confiscation and a re-grant thereof for the donee's lifetime. If the properties remained the property of Nawatanbai after the passing of the said order of 1948 nothing was done thereafter to show that she lost her interest in the provides or that the same passed to the Union of Madhya Bharat ailed from the said Union to the State of Madhya Pradesh. When attempts are made to deprive a person of his lawful inheritance it must be shown by irreproch able evidence that the person in possession ceased to have any interest therein at a particular point of time and that by some process of law the property vested in the person seeking to eject he former lawful possessor. There is no such evidence in this case. It follows that the properties, the subject matter of the two appeals, never became the properties of the Ruler of Jhabua ownership whereof passed to the Union of Madhya Bharat and from the Union to the State of Madhya Pradesh. Section 3 of the Madhya Pradesh Premises (Eviction) Act, 1952 enables the competent authority under the Act to order inter alia that the person in un auhorised occupation lot any Government premises to vacate the same within 30 days of the date of the service of the notice in terms of the section. Section 4 empowers the competent authority to assess damages on the ground of use and occupation by any person in unauthorised occupation of any Government premises. In order to enable Government to take proceedings successfully under either of these sections, it must satisfy the Court that the premises in respect whereof action was taken was Government premises. As the State failed to establish this fact the question of eviction under the Act could never arise.

In the result, the appeals are dismissed with costs. G.C. Appeals dismissed.

412