Case ID: 170

Judgment:
on No. 29 of 1953. Petition under article 32 of the Constitution of India praying that the Court of Wards	 Ajmer	 be ordered to forbear from carrying on the superintendence of the istimrari estate and other properties of the petitioner and for restoration of possession and management of the said estate and properties. J.B. Dadachanji and H. C. Sogain for the appellant. M.C. Setalvad	 A ttorney General for India	 (Bhava Datta Sharma	 with him) for the respondents. May 15. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by MAHAJAN J. This is a petition under article 32 of the Constitution seeking relief against alleged infringement of certain fundamental rights of the petitioner and arises in these circumstances. The petitioner owns an " istimrari estate" in the State of Ajmer under an istimrari sanad granted to his ancestor in the year 1875. He enjoys therein a life interest with an obligation to perform certain duties as prescribed by the Ajmer Land and Revenue Regulation (11 of 1877). The Deputy Commissioner of Ajmer	 who is the Court of Wards constituted under the Ajmer Government Wards Regulation (I of 1888)	 took over possession and assumed superintendence of the said estate on the 18th September	 1952	 purporting to act under sections 6 and 7 of the Regulation read with section 112 of the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records Act	 1950 (XLII of 1950)	 and hence this petition for a writ of mandamus or one in the nature thereof	 or for the issue 1051 of a direction to the Court of Wards for restoration of possession of the estate and for an order directing it to forbear from carrying on the superintendence of the estate. The order made by the Court of Wards on the 18th September	 1952	 is impugned as being void and of no effect whatever	 because it is alleged that the statutory provisions under which it is purported to have been made contravene the provisions of Part III of the Constitution and take away and abridge the petitioner 's rights guaranteed by article 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution. Section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 is one of a group of 7 sections in Chapter X of the Act which deals with the subject of " Compensation and Penalties ". The section prescribes penalties for habitual infringement of rights of tenants and reads thus: " If a landlord habitually infringes the rights of a tenant under this Act	 he shall	 notwithstanding anything in section 7 of the Ajmer Government Wards Regulation	 1888 (I of 1888)	 be deemed to be a "landlord who is disqualified to manage his own property " within the meaning of section 6 of the said Regulation and his property shall be liable to be taken under the superintendence of the Court of Wards ". The preceding section 110 is in these terms: "If a landholder or his agent collects from a tenant any lag or neg	 he shall be deemed to have committed an offence of extortion within the meaning of the Indian Penal Code (Act XLV of 186O) Just as section II 0 declares an illegal exaction by a landlord to be an offence under the Indian Penal Code	 in like manner	 section 112 declares a landlord who habitually infringes the rights of a tenant " a person disqualified to manage his own property " within the meaning of section 6 of Regulation I of 1888	 the consequence being that his property becomes liable to be taken over by the Court of Wards. The section is an ingenious and novel device to punish landlords who habitually infringe the rights of tenants. It authorizes 1052 the use for punitive purposes of the machinery of Regulation I of 1888 enacted to make better provision for the superintendence of Government Wards in AjmerMerwara. By force of the declaration in section 112 of the Act	 landlords who habitually infringe the rights of the tenants fall within the category of persons incapable of managing their own property and come within the ambit of section 6 of the Regulation	 which is in these terms: 		 The Court of Wards may	 with the previous sanction of the Chief Commissioner	 assume the superintendence of the property of any landholder who is disqualified to manage his own property ". The result therefore of the combined operation of sec tion 112 of Act XLII of 1950 and of the provisions of Regulation I of 1888	 is that the Court of Wards can in its own discretion and on its subjective determination	 assume the superintendence of the property of a landlord who habitually infringes the rights of his tenants. The condition precedent to such assumption of superintendence is the previous sanction of the Chief Commissioner	 the giving of which is also a matter entirely resting on his discretion. Section 27 of Regulation I of 1888 provides that " the exercise of any discretion conferred on the Court of Wards or the Chief Commissioner by this Regulation shall not be called in question in any civil court ". It was conceded by the learned Attorney General appearing for the State of Ajmere that there was nothing in the contents of either Act XLII of 1950 or Regulation I of 1888 which provided a machinery for determining the question whether a certain landlord was a person who was habitually infringing the rights of his tenants. Under Regulation I of 1888	 the assumption by the Court of Wards of the superintendence of the property of a disqualified proprietor depends merely on the subjective determination of the Deputy Commissioner or the Commissioner or of the Chief Commissioner	 and the exercise of this discretion cannot be questioned in any manner in a civil court. Act XLII of 1950 says nothing whatsoever on this subject. 1053 The contention that the provisions of section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 read with the provisions of Regulation I of 1888 infringe the fundamental right of the petitioner guaranteed by article 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution	 is	 in our opinion	 well founded and does not require any elaborate discussion. The petitioner 's right to hold the istimrari estate and his power of disposal over it stand abridged by the act of the Court of Wards authorized by these provisions. His right to manage the estate and enjoy possession thereof stands suspended indefinitely and until the time that the Court of Wards chooses to withdraw its superintendence of the property of the petitioner. During this period	 he can only receive such sums of money for his expenses as the Court of Wards decides in its discretion to allow. Thus	 the provisions of section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 clearly abridge the fundamental right of the petitioner under article 19 (1) (f) and are to that extent void. The learned Attorney General canvassed for the validity of the provisions of section 112 on three grounds. He contended that the determination of the question whether a certain landholder was a person who habitually infringed the rights of his tenants did not depend on the opinion of the Court of Wards	 but was a matter that could be agitated and canvassed in a civil court. It was said that there were no words in the section from which it could be inferred that the determination of this fact depended on the subjective determination of the Court of Wards. It was emphasized that the section had not used the familiar language "in its opinion" or words like that	 which are usually employed to indicate whether a matter depends on the subjective determination of an authority or whether it can be agitated in a civil court. This contention	 in our opinion	 is not well founded. As already pointed out	 Act XLII of 1950 has prescribed no machinery for the determination of the question whether a landlord is guilty of habitually infringing the rights of his tenants	 and rightly so	 because section II 2 of the Act is merely of a declaratory character and 1054 declares such a landlord as being under a disability and suffering from an infirmity. This declaration becomes operative and effective only when the Court of Wards in its discretion decides to assume superintendence of the property of such a proprietor. In other words	 when the Deputy Commissioner or the Commissioner or the Chief Commissioner is of the opinion that such a proprietor should be deprived of possession of his property	 this determination then operates to the prejudice of the landlord	 but he cannot challenge the exercise of the discretion by these officers in view of the provisions of section 27 of Regulation I of 1888. The result then is that by the subjective determination of the Court of Wards	 both the questions whether a particular person habitually infringes the rights of his tenants and whether his property should be taken over by the Court of Wards	 stand settled and the landlord cannot have recourse to a civil court on these questions. The learned Attorney General was not able to draw our attention to any provision in the Court of Wards Act or in Act XLII of 1950 which enabled the landlord	 held to be a habitual infringer of the rights of his tenants	 to have recourse to a civil court to test the correctness of the determination made by the Court of Wards. The provisions of Regulation of 1888 clearly indicate the contrary. Next	 it was argued that the provisions of section 112 amount to reasonable restrictions on the exercise of the right conferred by article 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution on a citizen	 and these restrictions are in the interests of the general public. In our judgment	 this. argument also is not sound. As indicated above	 the provisions of section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 are penal in nature and are intended by way of punishment of a landlord who habitually infringes the rights of his tenants. He is punished by being placed at the mercy of the Court of Wards and by being made subject to the stringent provisions of Regulation I of 1888. An enactment which prescribes a punishment or penalty for bad behaviour or for misconduct of a landlord cannot possibly be regarded as restriction on a fundamental 1055 right. Indeed	 a punishment is not a restriction. This was frankly conceded by the learned Attorney General. It is still more difficult to regard such a provision as a reasonable restriction on the fundamental right. When a law deprives a person of possession of his property for an indefinite period of time merely on the subjective determination of an executive officer	 such a law can	 on no construction of the word "reasonable" be described as coming within that expression	 because it completely negatives the fundamental right by making its enjoyment depend on the mere pleasure and discretion of the executive	 the citizen affected having no right to have recourse for establishing the contrary in a civil court. Section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 cannot therefore be held valid as coming within the scope of article 19 (5) of the Constitution. Lastly	 it was contended by the learned AttorneyGeneral that section 112 was valid by reason of the curative provisions of article 31 A of the Constitution. That article validates laws which would otherwise contravene the fundamental right in article 31(2) of the Constitution	 but its operation is restricted to laws providing for acquisition of estates etc. It runs as follows: " Notwithstanding anything in the foregoing provi sions of this Part	 no law providing for the acquisition by the State of any estate or of any rights therein or for the extinguishment or modification of any such rights shall be deemed to be void on the ground that it is inconsistent with or takes away or abridges any of the rights conferred by any provisions of this Part. . Section II 2 of Act XLII of 1950	 intended to regulate the rights of landlords and tenants	 is obviously not a law providing for " the acquisition by the State " of the estates of the landlords	 or of any rights in those estates. It is also not a law providing for the extinguishment or modification of any such rights. The learned Attorney General laid emphasis on the word modification " used in article 31 A	 That word in 1056 the context of the article only means a modification of the proprietary right of a citizen like an extinguishment of that right and can not include within its ambit a mere suspension of the right of management of estate for a time	 definite or indefinite. Historically speaking	 article 31 A which has relation to article 31(2) of the Constitution	 has no relevancy whatsoever to the law enacted in section 112 of the Act XLII of 1950. For the reasons given above	 we are of the opinion that the law enacted in section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 is not saved either by clause (5) of article 19 or by article 31 A of the Constitution. It manifestly infringes the fundamental right of the petitioner guaranteed by article 19 (1) (f) of the Constitution. That being so	 the petitioner is entitled to a direction that possession of his estate be restored to him. We accordingly direct the Court of Wards	 Ajmer Merwara	 constituted under the Ajmer Government Wards Regulation	 I of 1888	 to forbear from carrying on superin tendence of the petitioner 's istimrari estate and the other properties taken possession of	 and to restore their possession to the petitioner. The petitioner will have the costs of this petition. Petition allowed. Agent for the petitioner : I. N. Shroff.

Summary:
Section 112 of the Ajmer Tenancy and Land Records Act (XLII of 1.950) provided that "if a landlord habitually infringes the rights of a tenant under this Act	 he shall	 notwithstanding any thing in section 7 of the Ajmer Government Wards Regulation	 1888 (I of 1888) be deemed to be a 'landlord who is disqualified to manage his own property ' within the meaning of section 6 of the said Regulation and his property shall be liable to be taken under the superintendence of the Court of Wards. " Section 6 of Regulation I of 1888 provided that the Court of Wards may	 with the previous sanction of the Chief Commissioner	 assume the superintendence of the property of any landholder who is disqualified to manage his property. The petitioner	 whose estate was taken over by the Court of Wards under the above mentioned provisions of law	 applied for relief under article 32 of the Constitution for restoration of his estate and other appropriate reliefs: Held	 (1) that the result of the combined operation of section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 and the provisions of sections 6 and 7 of Regulation I of 1888 was that the Court of Wards could in its own discretion and on its subjective determination assume the superintendence of the property of a landlord who habitually infringed the rights of his tenants	 and the exercise of the discretion of the Court of Wards cannot be questioned in a civil court; section 112 of Act XLII of 1950 read with the provisions of Regulation I of 1888 therefore infringed the fundamental rights of the petitioner guaranteed by article 19 (1) of the Constitution and was to that extent void; (ii) the provisions of section 112 cannot be regarded as a " reasonable" restriction imposed in the interests of the general public on the exercise of the right conferred by article 19 (1) (f)	 because they completely negatived the right by making its enjoyment depend on the mere discretion of the executive; 136 1050 (iii)that section 112 was not validated by article 31 A of the Constitution as it was not "a law providing for the acquisition by the State of any estate or of any rights therein or for the extinction or modification of any such rights" within the meaning of article 31 A. The word "modification" in the context of article 31 A only means a modfication of the proprietary right of a citizen like an extinguishment of that right and cannot include within its ambit a mere suspension of the right of management of the estate for a time	 definite or indefinite.