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Maina Devi and ors. Vs. State of Jharkhand

Maina Devi and ors. vs State of Jharkhand

Disposition Application allowed Court Jharkhand Decided Sep 15, 2005
~5 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/518775

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Citation
Court
Jharkhand High Court
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
W.P.C. No. 4110 of 2005
Subject
Property;Civil
Disposition
Application allowed

Case Summary

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

- CONSTITUTION OF INDIA Article 215: [M. Karpaga Vinayagam, CJM, .Y.Eqbal & Amareshwar Sahay, R.K. Merathia, Narendra Nath Tiwari, JJ] Contempt Proceedings Review Powers of High Court Held, Article 215 of the Constitution vests the High Court with all the powers of court of record including the power to punish fo...

Key legal issue
Property;Civil
Outcome / disposition
Application allowed
Acts & sections
Land Acquisition Act - Sections 18; Succession Certificate Act, 1889 - Sections 4(1); Indian Succession Act, 1925 - Sections 214 and 214(1)

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Maina Devi and ors.

Advocate P.K. Mukhopadhaya, Adv.

Respondent

State of Jharkhand

Advocate Manjul Prasad, Adv.

Legal References

Acts
Land Acquisition Act - Sections 18; Succession Certificate Act, 1889 - Sections 4(1); Indian Succession Act, 1925 - Sections 214 and 214(1)
Cases Referred
Lal Kumari Devi and Ors. v. Fulmati Kuer and Ors.
Reported In
[2005(4)JCR214(Jhr)]

Excerpt

.....record including the power to punish for its contempt. this special jurisdiction is inherent in a court of record from the very nature of the court itself. the said special power is not subject to the procedural law either of the criminal procedure code or the contempt of courts act. the high court can deal with the matter summarily and can adopt its own procedure. however, if the high court initiates the proceeding as a court of record, principle of natural justice must be applied and the contemner should be given sufficient opportunity to know the accusation and to defend himself. in the instant case, the contemner was served with the notice to show cause. he was well aware of the accusation. he also admitted his guilt. in view thereof, contention of the contemner lawyer that he was not heard on merit of the contempt application and the impugned judgment of punishing petitioner in contempt of court is violative of principles of natural justice, is not tenable. article 215: contempt proceedings review of conviction held, it is the solemn duty of the bench and bar to maintain and uphold the majesty, authority and dignity of the courts for the sustenance and progress of democracy in our country particularly at the juncture when there are number of instances of outside attempt to disintegrate and destroy the democratic set up of our country. such conduct of a member of the bar brings the authority of the court and the administration of justice into disrespect, erodes and undermine the foundation of the judiciary by shaking faith and confidence of the people in the ability of the courts to deliver free and fair justice, it is a deliberate attempt to insult the high court and denigrate the authority and solemnity and court strongly deprecate such attempt made with biased attitude. such indiscriminate allegations against judges, who are the members of the bench, cannot be a ground for review of the impugned judgment. punishment of prohibiting appearance of..........person wants the court to proceed, upon an application made by him, to execute against a debtor of the deceased, a decree or order for the payment of his debt. exactly similar provision was made by section 4(1)(b) of the succession certificate act (act vii of 1889), before the enactment of the present indian succession act.a bench of the calcutta high court in mahomed usuf v. abdur rahim, llr 26 cal 839 (a), interpreted that section to mean that the bar to the court for proceeding with the execution applied only to an original application made by a person claiming to be entitled to the effects of a deceased person and not to the application which was originally made by the decree holder himself and was, on his death, sought to be continued by his heirs. i entirely agree with the view taken in this case.a reading of the provisions of section 214(1)(b) of the indian succession act makes it perfectly clear that it only bars the institution of execution proceedings by a person claiming on succession and does not bar the continuance of a proceedings which had been instituted by the original decree-holder. execution proceedings; having once been instituted by the original decree holder, his heirs can continue them without the production of the succession certificate irrespective of whether they are heirs by the principle of inheritance or by survivorship.'3. similar view was taken by the patna high court in a subsequent decision in the case of lakhan mahto and anr. v. state of bihar, : air1972 pat37 . in that case an application was filed by the widow of the deceased-awardee for being substituted in place of her husband and for permission to withdraw the compensation money in deposit. her prayer was refused by the court below on the ground that she did not produce the succession certificate as required under section 214 of the indian succession act. in a revision application filed by the petitioner his lordship held that the application for withdrawal of the money.....

Full Judgment

ORDER

M.Y. Eqbal, J.

1. The petitioners claiming themselves to be the daughters of late Badhni Ghatwarin, have challenged the order dated 11.2.2005 passed by the Land Acquisition Judge, Bokaro in L.A. Execution Case No. 9/90 whereby the learned Judge refused to allow the petitioners to continue the execution proceeding by substituting their names in place of the deceased, Budhni Ghatwarin for the recovery of the compensation amount.

2. It appears that the raiyati land belonging to late Budhni Ghatwarin was acquired for construction of Bokaro Steel Plant and a award was passed. Late Budhni Ghatwarin being dissatisfied with the amount of compensation, got the matter referred to Land Acquisition Judge under Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act for enhancement of compensation. The amount of compensation was enhanced by the Land Acquisition Judge in L.A. Case No. 12/96. The deceased, Budhni Ghatwarin levied Execution Case No. 9/90 for the recovery of the compensation amount. It is stated by the petitioners that the enhanced amount of compensation with interest has already been deposited by the respondent-State. However, during the pendency of the Execution Proceeding, the decree holder, Budhin Ghatwarin, died leaving behind the petitioners as heirs and legal representatives. The petitioners, therefore, filed a petition on 9.7.2005 for substitution of their names in place of their deceased-mother and to allow them to continue the Execution Proceeding. That has been disallowed by the execute the decree or order against the debtor for payment of his debt without bringing succession certificate. In other words, Section 214(1)(b) only bars institution of Execution Proceeding by a person on succession and does not debar the continuance of the Execution Proceeding which had already been instituted by the original decree holder. A Division Bench of the Patna High Court, in the case of Raghbuir Narain Singh v. Raj Rajeshwari Prasad Singh and Ors., : AIR1957 Pat435 , while interpreting Section 214 of the Act, has observed as under :

'The relevant provision on the question at issue is contained in Section 214(1)(b) of the Indian Succession Act, according to which a succession certificate is required to be produced if a person claiming on succession to be entitled to the effects of the deceased person wants the Court to proceed, upon an application made by him, to execute against a debtor of the deceased, a decree or order for the payment of his debt. Exactly similar provision was made by Section 4(1)(b) of the Succession Certificate Act (Act VII of 1889), before the enactment of the present Indian Succession Act.

A Bench of the Calcutta High Court in Mahomed Usuf v. Abdur Rahim, LLR 26 Cal 839 (A), interpreted that section to mean that the bar to the Court for proceeding with the execution applied only to an original application made by a person claiming to be entitled to the effects of a deceased person and not to the application which was originally made by the decree holder himself and was, on his death, sought to be continued by his heirs. I entirely agree with the view taken in this case.

A reading of the provisions of Section 214(1)(b) of the Indian Succession Act makes it perfectly clear that it only bars the institution of execution proceedings by a person claiming on succession and does not bar the continuance of a proceedings which had been instituted by the original decree-holder. Execution proceedings; having once been instituted by the original decree holder, his heirs can continue them without the production of the succession certificate irrespective of whether they are heirs by the principle of inheritance or by survivorship.'

3. Similar view was taken by the Patna High Court in a subsequent decision in the case of Lakhan Mahto and Anr. v. State of Bihar, : AIR1972 Pat37 . In that case an application was filed by the widow of the deceased-awardee for being substituted in place of her husband and for permission to withdraw the compensation money in deposit. Her prayer was refused by the Court below on the ground that she did not produce the succession certificate as required under Section 214 of the Indian Succession Act. In a revision application filed by the petitioner His Lordship held that the application for withdrawal of the money already in deposit cannot be treated as an application for execution of the award and, therefore, the Court could not have insisted the petitioner for production of succession certificate.

4. In the case of Lal Kumari Devi and Ors. v. Fulmati Kuer and Ors., reported in : AIR1965 Pat296 , their Lordship, while interpreting Section 214 of the Indian Succession Act, held that succession certificate is not necessary if the execution case has already been commenced by the original decree holder and if death takes place during the pendency of the execution case, the heirs of the original decree holder are entitled to continue the execution case without production of succession certificate.

5. As noticed above, the provisions of Section 214(1)(b) of the Act debars the Court from entertaining an application for execution of a decree or order for payment of debt by the heirs on the death of the decree holder. It does not debar the Court from proceeding with the execution proceeding by allowing the heirs and legal representatives of the deceased decree holder to continue the proceeding on the death of the decree holder. In my opinion, therefore, the Court below has not correctly appreciated the provisions of Section 214 of the Act. The impugned order, therefore, cannot be sustained in law.

6. For the aforesaid reason this application is allowed and the impugned order is set aside. The Court below is directed to allow the petitioners to continue the execution proceeding.

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