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ishu Vs. State of U.P. and ors.

ishu vs State of U.P. and ors.

Disposition Petition dismissed Court Allahabad Decided Jan 08, 2003
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/449339

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Citation
Court
Allahabad High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
C.M.W.P. No. 194 of 2003
Subject
Civil
Disposition
Petition dismissed

Case Summary

AI-generated summary - not the official court judgment text.

Civil - mutation proceeding - Article 226 of Constitution of India and Sections 33, 34, 35, 39 and 40A of U. P. Land Revenue Act, 1901 - dispute relating to mutation proceeding - petitioner alleged that authorities have not appraised the evidence - writ petition impugn Orders passed in mutation proceedings not maint...

Key legal issue
Civil
Outcome / disposition
Petition dismissed
Acts & sections
Constitution of India - Article 226; Uttar Pradesh Land Revenue Act, 1901 - Sections 33, 34, 35, 38, 40, 40A, 41 and 54

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

ishu

Advocate H.P. Mishra, Adv.

Respondent

State of U.P. and ors.

Advocate S.C.

Legal References

Acts
Constitution of India - Article 226; Uttar Pradesh Land Revenue Act, 1901 - Sections 33, 34, 35, 38, 40, 40A, 41 and 54
Reported In
2003(1)AWC774

Excerpt

.....schools (conditions of service) regulations act, 1978 [act no. 3/1978]. sections 9 & 2(21): jurisdiction of school tribunal whether a school run by cantonment board is not a recognised school within the meaning of section 2(21)? - held, the act is enacted to regulate recruitments and conditions of employees in certain private schools and provisions of the act shall apply to all private schools in the state whether receiving any grant-in-aid from the state government or not. private school is defined in section 2(2) of the act as a recognised school established or administered by a management other than the government or a local authority. recognised means recognised by director, the divisional board or state board. thus as far as the first part of the definition of being recognised is concerned, it includes, as stated above, four directors, the divisional boards and four state boards. the second part of this definition which comes after the comma refers to any officer authorised by director or by any of such boards. the question to be examined is whether school run by the cantonment board could be said to be one run by any such boards. a private school has to be recognised by the state or the divisional board or by any officer authorised in that behalf. when this phrase namely: recognised by any officer authorised by the director or by any such boards, is included in the latter part of section 2(21), such boards will be of the level of the state board or the divisional board. the boards referred to in the definition of the word recognised means the boards which deal with education at levels other than that of the level at which primary schools are operating. thus for being recognised, the school has to be recognised by the board and therefore, it has to be operating at a higher level i.e., secondary level. section 2(21) of the act defines the term recognised. the last clause therein is by any of such boards. the term such is defined in oxford dictionary as..........ratio flowing from decisions in jaipal v. board of revenue and others, air 1957 all 205 ; lekh raj and anr. v. board of revenue and ors. 1981 rd 18 ; bahori lal and ors. v. board of revenue and ors., 1984 rd 374 ; brahma deo and ors. v. board of revenue and anr., 1986 rd 302 and ram narain and ors. v. d.d.c. and ors., 1990 rd 20. 4. section 40a of the u. p. land revenue act may also be referred to bolster up the aforestated view. for convenience sake section 40a is abstracted below : 'saving as to title suits.--no order passed under section 33, section 35, section 39, section 40, section 41 or section 54 shall bar any suit in a competent court for relief on the basis of a right in a holding.' 5. the quintessence of the decisions cited above and the provisions of section 40a boils down for the view that orders emanating from proceedings having complexion of summary proceedings and arising out of sections 33, 34, 39, 40, 41 and 54 of the act shall not bar any suit in a competent court for the adjudication of a right of a person. 6. in the above conspectus, petition is dismissed on grounds of alternative remedy of suit. 7. before parting, it may be observed by way of clarification that petitioner would be at liberty to institute a suit in a court of competent jurisdiction (civil or revenue) for obviation of his grievances and for establishing his rights and title, if any. it needs hardly be said that in case any question of limitation comes into play, petitioner shall be entitled to claim benefit of section 14 of the indian limitation act for the period the impugned proceedings lingered for decision in the forum other than the court of competent jurisdiction (civil or revenue).

Full Judgment

ORDER

S.N. Srivastava, J.

1. This petition arises out of the proceedings under Section 33/39 of the U. P. Land Revenue Act. It would transpire from the record that a minor dispute relating to correction/mutation in the revenue record, escalated in proceedings which travelled upto the stage of Commissioner and resulted in passing of the orders impugned in this petition including the orders passed by appellate as well as revisional authorities. The main plank of the grievance of the petitioner is that the authorities have not appraised the evidence and consequently merits of the case in its proper perspective.

2. I have heard learned counsel for the petitioner and also the learned counsel representing the opposite parties. Since elaborate arguments have been canvassed at the very threshold, I feel, that the petition should be decided in limine.

3. The law is well-settled that orders passed by the revenue authorities in proceedings under Sections 33, 34. 35 and 39 of the Land Revenue Act wear the badge of an order stemming from summary proceedings and by this reckoning, the petition impugning orders passed in proceedings under Sections 33, 34, 35 and 39 of the Land Revenue Act is not maintainable. The view I am taking receives reinforcement from the ratio flowing from decisions in Jaipal v. Board of Revenue and others, AIR 1957 All 205 ; Lekh Raj and Anr. v. Board of Revenue and Ors. 1981 RD 18 ; Bahori Lal and Ors. v. Board of Revenue and Ors., 1984 RD 374 ; Brahma Deo and Ors. v. Board of Revenue and Anr., 1986 RD 302 and Ram Narain and Ors. v. D.D.C. and Ors., 1990 RD 20.

4. Section 40A of the U. P. Land Revenue Act may also be referred to bolster up the aforestated view. For convenience sake Section 40A is abstracted below :

'Saving as to title suits.--No order passed under Section 33, Section 35, Section 39, Section 40, Section 41 or Section 54 shall bar any suit in a competent court for relief on the basis of a right in a holding.'

5. The quintessence of the decisions cited above and the provisions of Section 40A boils down for the view that orders emanating from proceedings having complexion of summary proceedings and arising out of Sections 33, 34, 39, 40, 41 and 54 of the Act shall not bar any suit in a competent court for the adjudication of a right of a person.

6. In the above conspectus, petition is dismissed on grounds of alternative remedy of suit.

7. Before parting, it may be observed by way of clarification that petitioner would be at liberty to institute a suit in a court of competent jurisdiction (Civil or Revenue) for obviation of his grievances and for establishing his rights and title, if any. It needs hardly be said that in case any question of limitation comes into play, petitioner shall be entitled to claim benefit of Section 14 of the Indian Limitation Act for the period the impugned proceedings lingered for decision in the forum other than the court of competent jurisdiction (civil or revenue).

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