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[Cites 17, Cited by 8]

Supreme Court of India

S. Rama Iyer vs Sundarasa Ponnapoondar on 4 February, 1966

Equivalent citations: 1966 AIR 1431, 1966 SCR (3) 474

Author: R.S. Bachawat

Bench: R.S. Bachawat, M. Hidayatullah

           PETITIONER:
S. RAMA IYER

	Vs.

RESPONDENT:
SUNDARASA PONNAPOONDAR

DATE OF JUDGMENT:
04/02/1966

BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SUBBARAO, K.
HIDAYATULLAH, M.

CITATION:
 1966 AIR 1431		  1966 SCR  (3) 474


ACT:
Madras Cultivating Tenants Protection Act, (25 of 1955),  s.
6B  and	 Code of Civil Procedure (Act 5 of  1908),  s.	115-
Decision  by  Revenue  Court  that  petitioner	was  not   a
cultivating tenant-If revisable by High Court.



HEADNOTE:
The respondent, claiming to be the cultivating tenant of the
appellant,  filed  an application before the  Revenue  Court
under ss. 3(3) of the Madras Cultivating Tenants  Protection
Act,  1955,  praying  for  a  declaration  that	 the  amount
deposited by him in the Court represented the correct amount
of rent due from him to the appellant.	The appellant denied
that the respondent was his cultivating tenant.	 The Revenue
Court  held  that  the respondent was  not  the	 appellant's
cultivating  tenant.  The High Court in a revision  petition
under  s.  6B  of  the Act read with s.	 115  of  the  Civil
Procedure  Code, held that the respondent was a	 cultivating
tenant	of  the	 appellant and	that  the  amount  deposited
represented   the  correct  amount  due	 from  him  to	 the
appellant.
In  appeal  to this Court the appellant contended  that	 the
High  Court had no jurisdiction, in revision, to  set  aside
the finding of the Revenue Court that the respondent was not
the appellant's cultivating tenant.
HELD  :	 The Revenue Court under the Act  can  exercise	 its
jurisdiction   only  if	 a  relationship  of  landlord	 and
cultivating  tenant exists between the	contending  parties.
If  its jurisdiction is challenged it must enquire into	 the
existence  of  the  preliminary fact and decide	 if  it	 has
jurisdiction.  if by an erroneous decision on a question  of
fact  or law touching its jurisdiction a  subordinate  court
assumes	 a jurisdiction not vested in it by law or fails  to
exercise a jurisdiction so vested, its decision is not final
and  is subject to the revisional jurisdiction of  the	High
Court.	Therefore, the High Court had power to enquire	into
the  correctness  of the Revenue Court's  decision,  and  on
finding	 hat the tenancy existed and that the Revenue  Court
had erroneously refused to exercise the jurisdiction  vested
in  it	by  s. 3 (3), the High Court could  set	 aside	that
decision  under S. 11 (b) of the Civil Procedure  Code	read
with s. 6B of the Act. [447 H 478 B; 478 D]



JUDGMENT:

CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 797 of 1963. Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated March 27, 1959 of the Madras High Court in C.R.P. No. 1282 of 1958.

R. Ganapathy Iyer, for the appellants.

R. Thiagarajan, for the respondent.

The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Bachawat, J. On April 24, 1958, the respondent claiming to be the cultivating tenant of the appellant in respect of certain lands in Manapparavaivattam, Nannilam Taluk deposited Rs. 462/-

475

as rent for 1367 fasli in the Revenue Court (the Court of the Revenue Divisional Officer), Tanjore under s. 3(3) of the Madras Cultivating Tenants Protection Act, 1955 (Madras Act No. 25 of 1955) and filed an application before the Court praying for a declaration that the amount deposited represented the correct amount of rent due from him. The appellant denied that the respondent was his cultivating tenant. On July 31, 1958, the Revenue Court, Tanjore held that the respondent was not a cultivating tenant of the appellant and could not claim the benefit of s. 3(3) and dismissed the application. The respondent filed a petition in revision before the Madras High Court under s. 6-B of the Act read with s. II 5 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The High Court came to the conclusion that the respondent was a cultivating tenant of the appellant and by its order dated March 27, 1959, allowed the revision petition and declared that the amount deposited by the respondent represented the correct amount due from him to the appellant. The appellant now appeals to this Court by special leave.

Counsel for the appellant submitted that the finding of the Revenue Court that the respondent was not a cultivating tenant was a finding of fact and the High Court had no jurisdiction to set it aside on revision. On the other hand, counsel for the respondent submitted that the finding was in respect of a collateral fact upon the existence of which the jurisdiction of the Revenue Court under s. 3(3) depended and the High Court had ample power to revise the finding under s. 6-B of the Act.

Section 6-B is in these terms "The Revenue Divisional Officer shall be deemed to be a Court subordinate to the High Court for the purposes of section 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (Central) (Act 5 of 1908), and his orders shall be liable to revision by the High Court under the provisions of that section."

Section 6-B empowers the High Court to revise the decision of the Revenue Divisional Officer under s. 115 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and for the purposes of the section, the Officer is deemed to be a subordinate Court. Section 115 is in these terms :

"The High Court may call for it the record of any case which has been decided by any Court subordinate to such High Court and in which no appeal lies thereto, and if such subordinate Court appears-
(a) to have exercised a jurisdiction not vested in it by law, or
(b) to have failed to exercise: a jurisdiction so vested, or 476
(c) to have acted in the exercise of its jurisdiction illegally or with material irregularity, the High Court may make such order in the case as it thinks fit.

In the present case, no question of revision under sub-s (c) of s. 115 arises, and we are concerned only with the power of revision under sub-ss. (a) and (b) of s. 115. Sub- section (a) empowers the High Court to correct an erroneous assumption of jurisdiction; sub-s.(b) empowers it to correct an erroneous refusal of jurisdiction. The decision of the subordinate Court on all questions of law and fact not touching its jurisdiction is final and however erroneous such a decision may be, it is not revisable under sub-ss.

(a) and (b) of s. 115. On the other hand, if by an erroneous decision on a question of fact or law touching its jurisdiction, e.g., on a preliminary fact upon the existence of which its jurisdiction depends, the subordinate Court assumes a jurisdiction not vested in it by law or fails to exercise a jurisdiction so vested, its decision is not final, and is subject to review by the High Court in its revisional jurisdiction under sub-ss. (a) and (b) of s. 115. The question is, on which side of the line the present case lies, and whether the decision of the Revenue Divisional Officer that the respondent is not a cultivating tenant of the appellant is subject to review by the High Court in its revisional jurisdiction. The Revenue Divisional Officer is an inferior Court of limited Jurisdiction functioning under the Madras Cultivating Tenants Protection Act, 1955. To ascertain the limit and extent of its jurisdiction, we must examine the provisions of the Act.

The Act came into force on September 27, 1955 and was amend- ed from time to time. Originally, the Act was temporary, recently .it, has been made permanent. The Act was passed for the protection of certain cultivating tenants from eviction. Section 2 defines, enter alia, 'cultivating tenant' and 'landlord'. 'Cultivating tenant' is a person who carries on personal cultivation on the land under a tenancy agreement, express or implied, and includes any person who continues in possession of the land after determination of the tenancy agreement and the heirs of such person. 'Landlord' means the person entitled to evict the cultivating tenant from his holding or a part of it. Section 1(1) protects the cultivating tenant from eviction at the instance of the landlord whether in execution of a decree or order of Court or otherwise. Section 3(2) sets out the grounds of eviction, and if one of these grounds is made out, the protection from eviction given by s. 3(i) is taken away. Section 3(3) enables the cultivating tenant to deposit the rent in Court. Section 3(3)(b) requires the Court to "cause notice of the deposit to be issued to the landlord and determine, after a summary enquiry, whether the amount deposited represents the correct amount of 477 rent due from the cultivating tenant". The expression "Court" in s. 3(3) means the Court which passed the decree or order for eviction, or where there is no such decree or order, the Revenue Divisional Officer. The Act also vests jurisdiction in the Revenue Divisional Officer to entertain and decide an application by the landlord for eviction of a cultivating tenant-s. 3(4), an application by cultivating tenants evicted before and after the commencement of the Act for restoration of possession-ss, 4(1) and 4(5), an appli- cation by the landlord for the resumpticin of land for personal cultivations. 4-A(1), an application by the cultivating tenant for restoration of possession from a landlord so resuming possessions. 4-A(2), applications for resumption of possession by the landlord from his cultivating tenant and by the cultivating tenant from. his sub-tenant provided the applicant was a member of the Armed- Forces-ss. 4-AA(2) and 4-AA(3). On receipt of any application, under ss. 3(4), 4(i), 4(5), 4-A(1), 4-A(2), 4- AA(2) and 4-AA(3), the Revenue Divisional Officer is required to hold a summary enquiry into the matter and pass necessary orders aftergiving a reasonable opportunity to the landlord and the tenant to make their representations. Section 4-B empowers the RevenueDivisional Officer in the case of any tenancy to impose a penalty on the landlord or the cultivating tenant forhis refusal to sign or failure to lodge a lease deed in accordancewith its provisions. Section 6 provides that no Civil Court shall, except to the extent specified in s. 3(3), have jurisdiction in respbct of any matter which the Revenue Divisional Officer is em-- powered by or under the Act to determine, or shall grant an injunction in respect of any action taken or to be taken under such power. Section 6-A req uires the Civil Court to transfer to theRevenue Divisional Officer any suit for possession or injunction in relation to any land pending before it, if it is satisfied that the defendant is a cultivating tenant. We have already noticed s. 6-B, which confers powers of revision on the High Court. Section 7 gives the State Government the power to make rules. The Act gives generous protection to cultivating tenants from eviction, and severely restricts the right of landlords to resumepossession, of their land from their cultivating tenants. In caseof disputes between the landlord and the cultivating tenant, theRevenue Divisional Officer is authorised to entertain and decideapplications by the landlord for eviction and resumption of posses-sion and by the cultivating tenant for restoration of possession and to impose penalties on the landlord or the tenant for infraction of s. 4-B. To attract the jurisdiction of the Revenue Divisional officer, there must be a dispute between a landlord and cultivating tenant. The existence of the relation of landlord and cultivating tenant between the contending parties is the essential condition for the assumption of jurisdiction by the Revenue Divisional Officer-

478

in all proceedings under the Act. The Tribunal can exercise its jurisdiction under the Act only if such relationship exists. If the jurisdiction of the Tribunal is challenged, it must enquire into the existence of the preliminary fact and decide if it has jurisdiction. But its decision on the existence of this preliminary fact is not final; such a decision is subject to review by the High Court in its revisional jurisdiction under s. 6-B. The enquiry by the Tribunal is summary, there is no provision for appeal from its decision, and the legislature could not have intended that its decision on this preliminary fact involving a question of title would be final and not subject to the overriding powers of revision by the High Court. In the present case, the Tribunal found that the respondent was not the cultivating tenant of the appellant, and on such finding declined to exercise the jurisdiction vested in it by s. 3(3) to determine the correct amount of rent due by the respondent to the appellant. The High Court had power to enquire into the correctness of this decision, and on finding that the tenancy existed and the Tribunal had erroneously refused to exercise the jurisdiction vested in it by s. 3(3), the High Court could set aside the decision under .sub-s. (b) of s. 115 of the Code read with s. 6-B of the Act. On :a review of the entire oral and documentary evidence, the High 'Court found that the respondent was the cultivating tenant of the appellant. It is not shown that this finding is erroneous. We :see no reason for interfering with the decision of the High Court. The appeal is dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.

Appeal dismissed.

479