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Durga Das Vs. the Collector and Others

Durga Das vs The Collector and Others

Type Court Judgment Court Supreme Court of India Decided Aug 07, 1996
~3 min read
https://sooperkanoon.com/case/664557

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Citation
Court
Supreme Court of India
Judge
Decided On
Case Number
Civil Appeal No. 664 of 1985
Subject
Property

Case Summary

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

- Section 7: [Dr. Arijit Pasayat, D.K. Jain & Dr. Mukundakam Sharma,JJ] Taking illegal gratification - Mock enquiry conducted by accused Police Inspector against complainant and amount demanded from him for settlement of matter - Accused knew consequences of taking bribe - No explanation, however, came from accused ...

Key legal issue
Property

Parties & Advocates

Appellant / Petitioner

Durga Das

Advocate S.L. Aneja and; K.L. Taneja, Advs.

Respondent

The Collector and Others

Advocate K.R. Nagaraja, Adv.

Legal References

Reported In
AIR1996SC2786; 1996(6)SCALE199; (1996)5SCC618; [1996]Supp4SCR370

Court's Analysis

Prior History
From the Judgment and Order dated 4-5-1984 of the Himachal Pradesh High Court in R.F.A. No. 24 of 1984--

Excerpt

- section 7: [dr. arijit pasayat, d.k. jain & dr. mukundakam sharma,jj] taking illegal gratification - mock enquiry conducted by accused police inspector against complainant and amount demanded from him for settlement of matter - accused knew consequences of taking bribe - no explanation, however, came from accused - defence plea that phenolphthalein test of both hands of accused was positive though he took money in his left hand and was holding so when members of trap party entered room held, defence plea is not tenable as possibility of accused counting money with help of right hand could not be ruled out. conviction of accused is liable to be sustained. .....in respect of subject matter of acquisition as tenant. the reference court and the high court recorded as a fact that the appellant is not a tenant and, therefore, is not entitled to the share in the compensation as a tenant. the undisputed facts are that 14 canals 18 marlas of land belonged to the family consisting of kishori lal, kewal krishan and koushalya. their sister, kishori lal and koushalya sold their respective suitable shares. kewal krishan also sold his specified share to the appellant. it would appear that in the revenue records the name of the appellant has been entered as a qualifying tenant by reason of sale when the land to an extent of land admeasuring one canal, 5 marlas; 2 canals, 3 marlas belonged to vijay kumar were acquired by the government. the appellant laid claim as a tenant in respect thereof. the courts below held that since he purchased a specified share from kewal krishan he cannot be considered to be as a tenant in respect of in other lands and, therefore, is not entitled to the compensation. we find that the view taken by the high court is in conformity with law. mutation entries do not confer any title to the property. it is only an entry for collection of the land revenue from the person in possession. the title to the property should be on the basis of the title they acquired to the land and not by mutation entries. admittedly, the appellant has purchased some lands from kewal krishan one of the brothers of the family to the extent of his specified share. no lease deed was executed in respect of other lands. in these circumstances, the appellant cannot be treated to be a tenant of vijay kumar to claim compensation on the basis of this title as a tenant. 3. the court below is directed to pay over the amount to vijay kumar and if the amount is withdrawn by the appellant, bank guarantee should be encashed and the balance amount would be paid over to the appellant. if the amount was not withdrawn the bank guarantee given by.....

Full Judgment

1. Counsel for the appellant states that the office report dated July 16, 1996 has been complied with.

2. This appeal by special leave arises from the judgment of the High Court of Himachal Pradesh, Shimla made in M.F.A. No, 24/84 on May 5, 1984. The only question is : whether the appellant is a tenant in occupation of the land? He claimed that he was entitled to compensation in respect of subject matter of acquisition as tenant. The reference Court and the High Court recorded as a fact that the appellant is not a tenant and, therefore, is not entitled to the share in the compensation as a tenant. The undisputed facts are that 14 canals 18 marlas of land belonged to the family consisting of Kishori Lal, Kewal Krishan and Koushalya. their sister, Kishori Lal and Koushalya sold their respective suitable shares. Kewal Krishan also sold his specified share to the appellant. It would appear that in the revenue records the name of the appellant has been entered as a qualifying tenant by reason of sale when the land to an extent of land admeasuring one canal, 5 marlas; 2 canals, 3 marlas belonged to Vijay Kumar were acquired by the Government. The appellant laid claim as a tenant in respect thereof. The courts below held that since he purchased a specified share from Kewal Krishan he cannot be considered to be as a tenant in respect of in other lands and, therefore, is not entitled to the compensation. We find that the view taken by the High Court is in conformity with law. Mutation entries do not confer any title to the property. It is only an entry for collection of the land revenue from the person in possession. The title to the property should be on the basis of the title they acquired to the land and not by mutation entries. Admittedly, the appellant has purchased some lands from Kewal Krishan one of the brothers of the family to the extent of his specified share. No lease deed was executed in respect of other lands. In these circumstances, the appellant cannot be treated to be a tenant of Vijay Kumar to claim compensation on the basis of this title as a tenant.

3. The Court below is directed to pay over the amount to Vijay Kumar and if the amount is withdrawn by the appellant, Bank guarantee should be encashed and the balance amount would be paid over to the appellant. If the amount was not withdrawn the bank guarantee given by the appellant is directed to be discharged.

4. The appeal is accordingly dismissed. No costs.

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