Case ID: 3407

Judgment:
Civil Appeal No. 577 of 1975. Appeal by Special Leave from the Judgment and order dated the 4 11 74 of the orissa High Court in M.A. No. 75 of 1970. G. section Pathak	 Santosh Chatterjee and G. section Chatterjee for the Appellant. Sachin Chowdhury (Respondent No. 2) and Vinoo Bhagat for the Respondent No. 1. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by SHlNGHAL J. 	 Maguni Charan Dwivedi	 the appellant	 filed a title suit in the Court of Munsif	 Sundargarh against the State of orissa	 for declaration of his title and recovery of possession of plot No. 99 meaguring 3.80 acres in khata No. 89 of village Mahulpali claiming it as his "ganju bhogra" land. The suit was decreed on October 14	 1958	 in respect of 3.45 acres. The defendant State of orissa	 did not file an appeal and the decree became final. Decree holder Dwivedi applied for its execution. The case was transferred to the court of the Subordinate Judge of Sundargarh. An objection was taken there by the Notified Area Council	 Rourkela	 respondent No. 2	 hereinafter referred to as the Council	 under sections 37 and 38 and order XXI rule 58 of the Code of Civil Procedure on the ground that it was in actual physical possession of the land. The objection application was however rejected by the execution court on March 31	 1965. The Council applied for revision or the order of rejection	 but its application was dismissed with the observation that the Council might file a regular suit for adjudication of its right if it so desired. No suit was filed by the Council and decreeholder Dwivedi filed an application on September S	 1966 for proceeding with the execution of his decree. The Council and the State then 77 made an application under section 47 of the Code of Civil Procedure stating A that the decree was not executable because the orissa Merged Territories (Village offices Abolition) Act	 1963	 hereinafter referred to as the Act	 had come into force in the area on April 1	 1966	 and the "bhogra land" in question had vested in the State free from all encumbrances. The Subordinate Judge upheld that objection and dismissed the execution application. Decree holder Dwivedi felt aggrieved	 and filed an appeal which was heard by Additional District Judge	 Sundargarh	 who held by his order dated May 2	 1970 that the decree was executable. He therefore set aside the order of the execution court	 and the State of orissa and the Council went up in appeal to the High Court. The High Court held that as the decree holder was not in actual physical possession of the land	 the tenure had vested in the State free from all encumbrances C under section 3 of the Act	 the decree was "rendered non est"	 and the Collector could not settle the land with him under section S of the Act. It therefore allowed the appeal by its impugned judgment dated November 4	 1974	 and ordered that the decree holder could not execute the decree. He applied for and obtained special leave	 and has filed the present appeal. It is not in dispute before us that the appellant held the "village office" within the meaning of section 2(j) of the Act. It is also not in dispute that it was in that capacity that he held the "bhogra land" in question by way of emoluments of his office. Moreover it is not in dispute that the appellant 's village office stood abolished in accordance with the provisions of section 3(a) of the Act. The consequences of the abolition	 have been stated in cls. (a) to (g) of section 3. It will be sufficient for us to say	 for purposes of the present controversy	 that as a result of the abolition of the office	 all incidents of the appellant 's service tenure	 e.g.	 the right to hold the "bhogra land"	 stood extinguished by virtue of the provisions of cl. (b) of section 3	 and all settlements	 sanads and all grants in pursuance of which the tenure was being held by the appellant stood cancelled under section 3(c). The right of the appellant to receive the emoluments was also deemed to have been terminated under cl. (d)	 and by virtue of cl. (f) his "bhogra land" stood resumed and "vested absolutely in the State Government free from all encumbrances. " Section 3 of the Act in fact expressly provided that this would be the result	 notwithstanding anything in any law	 usage	 settlement	 grant	 sanad or order or "in any judgment	 decree or order of a Court. " All these consequences therefore ensued with effect from April 1	 1966 when	 as has been stated	 the Act came into force in the area with which we are concerned. There can be no doubt therefore that from that date appellant Dwivedi suffered from these and the other disabilities enumerated in section 3 of the Act; the "bhogra land" in respect of which he obtained the decree dated October 14	 1958 declaring his title and upholding his right to possession	 was therefore lost to him as it vested "absolutely" in the State Government free from all encumbrances. The decree for possession also thus lost its efficacy by virtue of the express provisions of the Act referred to above	 and there is nothing wrong if the High rt has held that it was rendered incapable of execution by operation of the law. 78 Section S of the Act deals with the settlement of the resumed "bhogra land" and has been the subject matter of controversy before us. It provides as follows: "5. Settlement of Bhogra lands: (1) All Bhogra lands resumed under the provisions of this Act shall subject to the provisions of sub section (2) be settled with rights of occupancy therein on a fair and equitable rent with the holder of the Village office or with him and all those other persons	 if any	 who may be in the enjoyment of the land or any part thereof as his co sharers or as tenants under him or under such co sharer to the extent that each such person was in separate and actual cultivating possession of the same immediately before the appointed date. (2) The total area of such land in possession of each such person shall be subject to a reservation of a certain fraction thereof in favour of the Grama Sasan within whose limits the land is situate and the extent of such reservation shall be determined in the following manner	 namely: Land in possession Extent of reservation For the first 10 acres Nil For the next 20 acres 5 per cent For the next 70 acres 10 per cent For the next 100 acres 30 per cent For the remaining 40 per cent: Provided that the area reserved shall	 as far as practicable be in compact block or blocks of one acre or more." (Emphasis added) . It would appear that once a "bhogra land" stood resumed and vested absolutely in the State Government to the exclusion of the village officer concerned	 it was required to be "settled"	 with rights of occupancy thereunder	 with the erstwhile holder of the village office	 or with him and all those other persons	 if any	 who may be in enjoyment of the land or any Part thereof as his co sharer to the extent that each such person was in separate and actual cultivating possession of the same immediately before the date appointed for the coming into force of the Act. The settlement of the land contemplated by section 5 had therefore to be with the holder of the village office and the other persons who were enjoying it (or part of it) as his co sharers or as tenants under him or his co sharers	 but that was to be so on the condition that "each such person" namely	 the holder of the village office	 and his co sharers	 or the tenants under the holder of the office or his co sharers	 was in "separate and actual cultivating possession" of the land immediately before April 1	 .1966. There is nothing in sub section (1) of section S to justify the argument of Mr. Pathak that we should so interpret the words "each such person" as to exclude the holder of the village office from its purview. In fact the same words occur in sub section (2) of section S as well	 which deals with the question of reservation of a fraction of the "bhogra land" in favour of Grama Sasan	 and Mr. Pathak has not found it possible to argue that the land in possession of the holder of 79 the village office was immune from the liability to such fractional reservation. We have no doubt therefore that in order to be entitled to the settlement contemplated by sub section (1) of section S	 the village officer or the other persons mentioned in the sub section had to be in "separate and actual cultivating possession" immediately before the appointed date. It has also been argued by Mr. Pathak that the provisions of section 3 of the Act were subject to the provisions of section 5	 and that the High Court committee an error in losing sight of that requirement of the law. He has urged that if section 3 had been read as suggested by him	 it would have been found that	 in spite of the resumption and vesting of the "bhogra land" under section 3	 the appellant 's right to possess the "bhogra land" in question continued to subsist so long as it was not converted into a right of occupancy under sub section (1) of section 5. Counsel has gone on to argue that the appellant was therefore entitled to ignore any trespass on his possession of the "bhogra land"	 and to ask for execution of the decree for possession against the respondents as they were mere trespassers and were not co sharers or tenants within the meaning of sub section (1) of s.5. Reference in this connection has been made to Maxwell on Interpretation of Statutes	 twelfth edition	 p. 86	 where it has been stated that it is necessary to interpret the words of the statute so as to give the meaning "which best suits the scope and object of the statute. " It has been argued that grave injustice would otherwise result for	 by a mere act of trespass committed on the eve of the coming into force of the Act	 a village officer would lose the right of settlement of his "bhogra land" under sub section (1) of s.5. It has also been argued that the words "each such person" occurring in that sub section do not include the holder of the village office himself	 so that it was not necessary for him to show that he was in separate and actual cultivating possession of his "bhogra land". Reliance for this proposition has been placed on a bench decision of the High Court of Orissa in State of Orissa vs Rameswar Patabisi (Civil Revision Petition No. 257 of 1974 decided on June 27	1975) and on Meharaban Singh and others vs Naresh Singh and others(1). As will appear	 there is no force in this argument. Section 3 of the Act expressly provides for the abolition of village offices under the Act	 and the consequences of such abolition. We have made a reference to cls. (a) (b) (c) (d) and (f) of that section	 and we have no doubt that the consequences stated in the section in regard to the abolition of village offices	 the extinction of the incidents of the service tenures	 cancellation of the settlements and sanads etc. creating those office	 termination of the right to receive any emoluments for the offices	 the resumption and vesting of the "bhogra lands" free from all encumbrances ensued "with effect from and on the appointed date" and were not put off until after the settlement provided for in sub section (1) of section 5 had been made. Section 3 in fact expressly made provision for those consequences and there is no justification for the argument that they remained suspended or were put off until occupancy rights were settled on the persons concerned. As has been (1) 80 stated	 sub section (1) of section S deals with the settlement of such lands	 with rights of occupancy	 with the holder of the village office or with him and the other persons	 if any	 referred to in the sub section	 but such settlement was required to be made as a result of the consequences referred to in section 3 and not otherwise. It is therefore futile to contend that the appellant did not suffer from those consequences merely because the "bhogra land" claimed by him had not been settled with rights of occupancy under sub section (1) of section 5 because it was the subject matter of the decree which had not been executed. We have gone through the decision in State of Orissa vs Rameshwar Patabisi (supra) and it has no doubt been held there that actual cultivating possession of the village officer was not necessary for purposes of sub section (1) of section S	 but	 as has been shown	 we have no doubt that the words "each such person" occurring in sub section (1) of section 5 include the holder of the village office	 so that in order to be eligible for settlement of the land with occupancy rights	 he must also be in separate and actual cultivating possession of the "bhogra land" immediately before the appointed date. It appears that the earlier bench decision to the contrary	 which is the subject matter of the present appeal	 was not brought to the notice of the Bench which decided Rameswar Patabisi 's case. We have gone through Maharabansingh 's(1) case also but that was quite a different case which was decided in accordance with the provisions of a different Act. It has next been argued by Mr. Pathak that the High Court lost sight of the provisions of section 9 of the Act which provided for submission of records and delivery of possession of other land but did not require delivery of possession of the "bhogra land" even after its resumption. The argument is however untenable because section 9 was meant to serve quite a different purpose inasmuch as it made provision for the delivery of all records maintained by the village officer in respect of the land or village held by him in relation to his office	 the rendering of all accounts appertaining to his office in respect of the dues payable by and to him	 and the delivery of possession of all abandoned and surrendered holdings etc. The section did not therefore have any bearing on the question of the vesting of the "bhogra land" absolutely in the State Government and the extinction of the right of the village officer to hold it. That had in fact been. expressly provided in those clauses of section 3 to which reference has been made by us already. As it is	 section 9 did not deal with the question of delivery of possession of the "bhogra land" and its provisions could not justify the argument that the village officer was entitled to continue his possession of the "bhogra land" under that section in spite of the fact that the land stood resumed and vested absolutely in the State Government free from all encumbrances under section 3. It may be mentioned that Mr. Pathak has argued further that as the application which had been filed by the Council under order XXI r. 58 C.P.C. had been rejected on March 31	 1965 and the Council did not file a suit to establish its right to the "bhogra land"	 the decree in favour of the appellant became final and could not be challenged for 81 any reason whatsoever	 and the High Court committed an error in A taking the view that it was rendered inexecutable merely because of the coming into force of the Act. It will be sufficient for us to say in this connection that whatever might have been the consequences of the rejection of the Council 's application under order XXI r. 58 C.P.C. and the failure to institute a suit thereafter	 those normal consequences were rendered nugatory by the express provisions of the Act to which reference has been made above. The question of executability of the decree has therefore been rightly decided with reference to the Act. It may be mentioned that in a given case there may be no "bhogra land" to be settled with a village officer	 or a village officer may feel aggrieved on the ground that the Act provides for the acquisition of property by the State	 but we find that provision has been made in the Act for the payment of solatium or compensation under sections 8 and 10 in such cases and it cannot be said that they have been left without a remedy. For the reasons mentioned above	 we find no force in the arguments which have been advanced on behalf of the appellant. It however appears to us that there is justification for the other argument of Mr. Pathak that there was really no occasion for the High Court to express the view that the appellant "had no possession of the land" so as to claim its settlement under section 5(1) of the Act	 and that the Collector could not settle the land with him. As is obvious	 that was clearly a matter for the authorities concerned to examine and decide under section 5 and it was	 at any rate	 outside the purview of the question relating to the executability of the decree which was the subject matter of the appeal in the High Court. While therefore the appeal fails and is dismissed	 the observation of the High Court that the decree holder had no possession of the land and the Collector could not settle the land with him	 is set aside	 and it is left to the authorities concerned to examine the question of settlement of the land under section 5(1). The appellant may rely on such matters as may be open applellant the law. In the circumstances of this case	 we leave the parties to pay and bear their own costs.

Summary:
In the execution proceedings to satisfy a decree dated 14 10 1958 for title and recovery of possession of certain "ganju Bhogra lands" obtained by the appellant against the State	 the Notified Area Council. Rourkela claimed the suit lands by an application u/o XXI Rule 58 r/w sections 37 and 38 Code of Civil Procedure. The said application was rejected. A revision against it was also dismissed with the observation that the council was free to file a regular suit for adjudication of its rights. When the appellant took out a fresh application for execution u/s 47 of the Code` of Civil Procedure	 the Council which never filed any suit	 and the respondent State which never appealed against the original decree	 opposed the execution application on the ground that the decree became infructuous by virtue of section 3 of the orissa Merged Territories (Village offices Abolition) Act	 1963. The Executing court upheld the objection and dismissed the execution petitition. On appeal the Additional District Judge	 by his order dated 2 5 1970	 held that the decree was executable resulting in a second appeal to the High court by the respondent State. The High Court allowed the appeal by its order dated 4 11 1974 holding that as the decree holder was not in actual physical possession of the land	 the tenure has vested in the State free from all encumbrances u/s 3 of the Act and the decree was rendered "non est". Dismissing the appeal by special leave	 the Court	 ^ HELD: (1) As a result of the abolition of the village office under section 3 of the OMTA	 all incidents of the appellant 's service tenure	 e.g.	 the right to hold the "bhogra land" stood extinguished by virtue of the provision of clause (b) of section 3	 and ail settlements	 sanads and all grants in pursuance of which the tenure was being held by the appellant	 stood cancelled under section 3(c). The right of the appellant to receive emoluments was also deemed to have been terminated under Cl. (d) and by virtue of Cl. (f)	 his bhogra land stood resumed and "vested absolutely" in the State free from all encumbrances. Section 3 of the Act	 in fact	 expressly provided that this would be the result	 notwithstanding anything in law	 usage	 settlement	 grant	 sanad	 order or "in any judgment	 decree or order of a court. " All these consequences ensued with effect from April 1	 1966 the date of coming into force of the orissa Merged territories (Village offices Abolition) Act	 1963. From that date	 the appellant suffered from these and other disabilities enumerated in section 3 of the Act	 the "bhogra land" in respect of which he obtained the decree dated October 14	 1958 declaring his title and upholding his right to possession was	 therefore	 lost to him as it vested "absolutely" in the State Government free from all encumbrances. The decree for possession also thus lost its efficacy by virtue of the express provisions of the Act and there is nothing wrong in holding that the decree was rendered incapable of execution by operation of law. [77 D H] (2) Under sec. 5 of orissa Merged Territoies ((Village offices Abolition) Act	 1963	 once a "bhogra land" stood resumed and vested absolutely in the State Government to the exclusion of the village officer concerned	 it was required to be "settled" with rights of occupancy thereunder. The settlement of the land contemplated by sec. S had to be with the holder of the village office and the other persons who were enjoying it (or part of it) and as his co sharers	 as tenants under him or his co sharers	 but that was to be so on the condition 76 that "each such person	 namely	 the holder of the village office and his cosharers or the tenants under the holder of the office or his co sharers was in separate and actual cultivating possession" of the land immediately before April	 1966. The words "each such person" occurring in sub section I of Sec. 5 include the holder of the village office so that in order to be eligible for settlement of the land with occupancy rights	 he must also be in separate and cultivating possession of the "bhogra land" immediately before April 1	 1966. There is nothing in sub section I of Sec. 5 to justify the argument that the interpretation of the words "each such person" should be such as to exclude the holder of v the village office from its purview. [78 E	 F H] State of orissa vs Rameswar Patabisi (Civil Revision Petition No. 257 of 1974) decided on 27 6 1975 (orissa High Court) over ruled; Meharabansingh and Ors. vs Nareshaingh and ors. (held not applicable). (3) The provisions of sec. 9 do not justify the argument that the village officer was entitled to continue his possession of the "bhogra land" under that section in spite of the fact that the land. stood resumed and vested absolutely in the State Government free from all encumbrances. [80 E] (4) The normal consequences arising out of the rejection of the application under o. XXI	 r. 58	 Civil Procedure Code and the failure to institute the suit thereafter	 were rendered nugatory by the express provisions of section 3 of the orissa Merged Territories (Village offices Abolition) Act	 1963. The question of executability of the decree did not arise. [81 A B] [The Court left open to the authorities concerned to examine the question of settlement of the land under section 5(1) of the orissa Merged Territories (Village Dr offices Abolition) Act	 1963	 with liberty to the village officer to rely upon such matters as may be available according to law.]