Bombay Land Revenue Code
Bombay Land Revenue Code
Bombay Land Revenue Code
m<OU
ft-
166635
>m
THE BOMBAY
of 1879)
ALL AMENDMENTS, EXPLANATORY NOTES, EXHAUSTIVE ANNOTATIONS AND GOVERNMENT RESOLUTIONS UPTO DATE AND FULL INDEX
AND
WITH
Explanatory
(Hh*
>
notes
1st
June 1934:,
At-'l*
reJu'!n<) fo
and A
x
/,/>/
<>/'
Cmirt
fcr,
BT
D. G.
KHANDEK A
PUBLISHER, FOONA
LAW
THIRD EDITION
All Rights reserved
Prkifcd and published by B. Q. KHANDEKA.R at hia LAW 1317, Kasba Poth, Poona Oitv
PRnrnwo
FOONA..
1934.
Price Rs. 5
CONTENTS
1.
of 1819)
and
2.
3.
The Revenue Jurisdiction Act (X of 1876). The Survey Settlement Act The Revenue Recovery Act
(I
(I
of 1865) of 1890)
4.
5.
6. 7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
I of 1880)
1879
CONTENTS
SEOEION
SECTION
CHAPTER
1.
I.
13.
PRELIMINARY.
his duties
14.
2.
3.
may depute
15.
16.
perform certain of his duties. Mamlatdar or Mahalkari in case of temporary vacancy. Stipendiary Patel and Village Accountant to be appointed where no hereditary Patel or Village-Accountant exists. Saving the rights of holders
of alienated villages. Village-Accountant to keep such records as he may be re-
Occupant, Occupancy, To occupy land, Occupation, Alienated, Village, Revenue year, year, Joint holders, joint-occupants, Land records, Certified copy, Certified extract.
17.
18.
CHAPTER II.
19. 20.
quired to keep by Collector: and to prepare public writings Survey Officers; their duties and powers. Combination of offices. Certain officers' appointments
to be notified.
Chief controlling authority in revenue-matters. Extent of territories under the Commissioners. The territories under a Commissioner to be a division.
Acting appointments.
21. 23.
Establishments.
Seals.
CHAPTER
III.
5.
OF THE SECURITY TO BE FURNISHED BY CERTAIN REVENUE OFFICERS AND THE LIABILITY OF PRINCIPALS AND SURETIES.
23.
6. 7.
what
24.
25.
furnish shall officers security, and to what amount. Fresh or additional security.
Demands
etc.,
for
Government may
money, papers,
in
to
be
made known
he
9.
fail
the Col-
10.
11.
12*
Their duties and powers. Collector of the district in case of temporary vacancy. The Mamalatdar; his appoint-
26.
duce them. Provided that no person shall be kept in confinement for more than a month* Public moneys may also be recovered us arrears of revenue;
ment.
ii
SECTION
Persons in possession ofpubmoneys, etc v bound to give
Surety to be liable in the same
SECTION
CHAPTER
V.
lic
them np.
27.
manner as principal.
Extent of liability.
Sureties not liable
to
OF LAND AND LAND REVENUE. 31. All public roads, etc. and all lands which are not the property of
others,
7
belong
to
impri-
sonment,
28.
if
An
penalty be paid.
or
38.
officer
surety in jail
se-
curity, obtain his release. Liability of surety not affected by death of principal or by his taking a different appoint-
39.
ment.
Liability of heirs
officer.
of deceased
80.
How
surety
may withdraw
liability.
from further
CHAPTER IV.
Concession of Government rights to trees in case of settlements completed before the passing of this Act. Ditto, in case of settlements completed after the passing of this Act. Ditto in case of land taken up after completion of settlement. 41. Government trees and forests.
42. 43.
40.
Not to trade. Not to purchase at public sale. Not to oe concerned in the revenue.
44.
Not
make private use of or property. money public Not to make or receive undue
to
32.
whom
or other purposes. All land liable to pay revenue unless specially exempted. And special exemption may in case oi necessity oe overruled for a time.
revenue
whose mon-
46.
47.
48.
thly salary exceeds Rs. 260 to be fined, etc., only by order of the Governor in Council. All such orders to be made in 83.
to exceed two months' pay; how recovered. 35. Appeals.
36.
49.
An
officer's liability to
crimi-
50.
Manner of assessment and alteration of assessment. Prohibition of use of land for certain purposes. Commuted assessment of land indirectly taxed to the State; and of land liable to occasional assessment. Superior holder may recover
commuted assessment
Inferior holder.
from
jDiseed.
51.
Excess of assessment
may
be
CONTENTS
SECTION
laid
52.
SECTION
on
land
inadequately
it.
Assessment by
fixed.
whom
to
be
Proviso,
53. 54.
Register of alienated lands. /Settlement of assessment to be made with the holder directly
Occupancy when not liable to process of Civil Court; the Court to give effect to Collector's certificate.
from Government.
55. 56.
Rates for the use of water. Land revenue to be a paramount charge on the land. 57. Forefeited holdings may be taken possession of and otherwise disposed.
Receipts.
(Repealed). Intestate occupancy or holding to be sold. 73. Occupancy to be transferable and heritable. 73A Power to restrict right of
72.
.
71.
transfer.
74.
58. 59.
Relinquishment.
75.
76.
CHAPTER
VI.
Relinquishment of land described in paragraph 1 of section 49. Relinquishment of land described in section 51. Right of way to relinquished land. Saving of operation of section 74 in certain cases.
(Repealed)
.
79.
79A
land.
80.
ing in Government. 64. Temporary right to alluvial lands of small extent. 6,1 Uses to which occupant of land for purposes of agriculture may put his land.
To prevent forfeiture of occupancy, certain persons other than the occupant may pay the land revenue. Collector may assist such persons in recovering the revenue from other parties liable
therefor.
Procedure
if
Proviso.
(Repealed)
82.
ment.
66.
land
CHAPTER VII.
OF SUPERIOR AND INFERIOR
HOLDERS.
83.
Tenant
67.
68.
responsible to occutenant.
Amount
of rent
payable by
on terms. Occupant's
ditional. Proviso.
69.
Annual tenancy
on the 31st March.
terminates
OONTBNTS
SBOTION
Consequences
such order.
following
on
96.
Crop-share fixed by custom or agreement. Meaning of assessment. Bind excluded. 85. Recovery of superior holders'
dues.
86.
Survey officer may require, by general notice or by summons, suitable service from
holders of land, etc. Assistance to be given by and others in the holders
97.
measurement or
of lands.
98.
less
classification
Exception.
99. (Repealed.) 100. Officer in charge of a survey to fix assessments. Regard to be had ta proviso to section 52.
made.
Assistance
Proviso.
101.
88.
made not
le-
&9.
90.
Government. But may be fixed, with or without modification, by the Governor in Council for a term
of years. 103. Introduction of settlements. 104. Excess assessment not to be levied in the year in which a settlement is introsurvey
91.
When
compulsory
process
shall cease.
to
if
resigned that
93*
vious year's arrears. Holder of commission not to enforce any unusual or excessive
demand.
,for
land revenue.
106.
so doing. M. But holder of commission may eitabligb his right to enhanced wit in Civil Court. 94A. Becovig; ** revenue demand
?ena|ty
SEOTIOV
108. Preparation of statistical and fiscal rdoords109, 110. (Repeated.) 111. Revenue management of villages or estates not belonging
SECTION
:
I)fes(ffipfeioB
Of boundary marks
124. Collector to
to
ment
112.
marks
boundary*
CHAPTER
by
126.
X.
towns and
fixed.
numbers
127.
into
117.
Act XI of 1852 and Bombay Acts II and VII of 1863 how far applicable to lands in
such
sites.
affected.
129.
MARkS. Determination of villageboundaries boundaries may be Village settled by agreement Procedure in case of disagree-
Right to exemption to be determined by the Collector. 130. Occupancy price payable, in addition to assessment in cer-
131.
ment
119.
or
Determination
daries
dispute
of
field
boun-
tain cases. Survey of lands in such sites how to be conducted. Proviso. 132. In certain cases a surveyfee to be charged.
133.
120. Settlement
of boundary disputs by arbition When award may be remitted for re-consideration If arbitration fail, survey officer to settle dispute Effect of the settlement of a
121.
Sanad to be granted without extra charge. Proviso. 134. Assessment of lands hither, to used for purpose of agriculture only used for other purposes l'.5\ (Repealed).
boundary
122. Construction
requisition
V*
CONTENTS
SECTION
village or share of a village Powers of manager, and disposal of surplus profits
SECTION
Entries in register of Mutations how to be certified. Tenancies. 135E. Obligation to famish information. 135F. Penalty for neglect to afford information 135G. Requisition of assistance in preparation of maps. 135H. Certified copy of record to be annexed to plaint or application. 1351. Refusal of assistance under section 87. 135J. Presumption of correctness of entries in record of rights
managemens of a
145.
146.
Precautionary measures to be relinquished on security being furnished Government to determine the dates, etc., on which land revenue shall be paypayable
Arrear. Defaulters.
Liabilities incurred by default Certified account to be evidence as to arrears Collectors may realize each other's demands
147.
148.
149.
and register of mutations. 135K. Certified copies. 185L. Bar of suits and exclusion of Chapter XIII. Appeal
150.
151.
recovery
of
CHAPTER XI
152.
may
153.
all
The
the revenue of the land be levied at any time during the re-
155.
140.
By whom
moveable property
141.
Imprisonment
in Civil Jail
Defaulters not to be detained in custody longer than debtors may be detained by the Civil Court Power of arrest by whom to be exersised Power to attach defaulter's
village, and take management
100.
it
142.
the removal thereof, or place watchmen over it Collector's orders under last made section how to be
158.
150.
known
Penalty for disobedience of order Reaping, etc., not to be unduly deferred
144.
under
to re-
143.
incumbrances
Powers of manager
CONTENTS
SECTION
161.
162.
vii
SECTION
183.
Application of proceeds of
sale.
Expenses of
culated
184.
sale
how
cal-
163.
to vest in
Govnot redeemed
185.
But
all
stayed given Or on
165.
186
amount
demanded
187.
property disposed of
how
of
to be
provisions
this
166. 167.
Sale by
whom
Time when
to be sale
made
Postponement of
168.
made may be
Chapter
Sureties liable as revenuedefaulters On resumption of a farm no payments made to contractor in advance to be
sale
169. 170.
171.
Sale of perishable articles When sale may be stayed Sales of moveable property when liable to confirmation Mode of payment for moveable property when sale is
CHAPTER
188.
XII
of revenue
172.
189.
Power
to
173.
by
property
174. 175.
190.
to be
Summons
Purchase-money when
paid
Effect of default
170.
177. 178.
179.
180.
181.
18S.
Liability of purchaser for loss by re-sale Notification before re-sale Application to set aside sale Order confirming or setting aside sale Refund of deposit or purchase-money when sale set aside On confirmation of sale purchaser to be put in possession Certificate of purchase Bar of suit against certified
191.
192.
to be in writing, signed and sealed ; how to be served. Service in district other than that of issuer. Mode of serving notices. Notice not void for error
193
Procedure for procuring attendence of witnesses. Mode of taking evidence in informal inquiries. Taking evidence given in
English. Translation to be on record Writing and explanation of
decisions.
194
195
196.
Summary
inquiries
how
to
in-
be conducted.
Formal and
quiries to be
purchasers.
summary
deemed judi-
cial proceedings.
till
OGStKBNfS
SECTION
SECTION
tad
.107.
108.
,
.207.
Provision
etc., how to be obtained Arrest of a defaulter to be made upon a warrant. 200. Power of revenue officer to enter upon any lands or premises for purposes of measurement, etc.
Notice to parties
208.
accompany
209.
210.
199.
Power to suspend execution of order of subordinate officers 211. Power of the Governor in Council and of certain revenue officers to call for and examine records and proceedings of subordinate officers And to pass orders thereupon 212. Rules as to decisions or orders
expressly
Proviso.
201.
202.
<
Collector how to proceed in order to evict any person wrongfully in possession of land
made
final
CHAPTER XIV.
MISCELLANEOUS.
records open
213.
CHAPTER XIII.
203.
to
ms
204.
superior
Extracts and copies shall be given 214. Rules 215. Penalty for breach of rules
216.
Appeal when to lie to the Governor in Council 205* Periods within which appeals must be brought. 206. Admission of appeal after
period of limitation
Chapters VIII to
applicable to
lages
how
far
vil-
alienated
217. Holders
of land in alienated
villages
SCHEDULES
LAND REVENUE
CODE, 1879
HISTORICAL RECORD
Ooi>
HISTORICAL RECORD
(Concluded)
THE
Code, 1879
[a].
[17th
My
1879
1st
June 19S3
An Aot
relating to
Revenue
WHEREAS
Preamble.
it
expedient
to
consolidate
relating to
Revenue
officers,
and
to the assess-
ment and recovery of Land Revenue, and other matters connected with the Land Revenue Administration
is
to
;
it
CHAPTER
PBEUMINABY
.1-
U>]
title.
(1)
This
Act
may
be cited as
Short
cl. (6),
of
Bom. Act
district
V of 1879
of
the
as.
Kolaba
which the Ktati Settlement Act, 1880, extends and cl. (/), and 162 of the Act are subject to modi;
fication
when applied to any such village (see Bom. Act I of 1880, The rales and orders under sections 213 and 214 do not apply
cl.
as.
to
(2), 23,
25 to 27 inclusive, 38
38 to 40, 44, 60 to 67, 76, 82, 85, 109, 110, 116, 127 to 136, 163, 216 and of 1879 do not apply to any estate in the disof Bom. Act (all inclusive) Panch Mahals to which the Gujerat tricts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends and ss. 3 cl. (1), 46,54, 79Acl. (a), 88, 89,94, 111,
217
(/), 160, 162, 214 of the Act, and the words "occupant," "registered occupant" and "occupancy" throughout the Act, are subject to modification when applied to any such estate (see Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
113, 147, 150
cl.
NOTE.
Act,
IV
of 1913,
of
s.
84.
Mahals
[b]
(see
b.
the
Panch
It
Sub-section (1) of
s.
1.
was
(l)t
Save as otherwise provided by Chapter XA, this Act extends to the whole of the Presidency
of Bombay, except the City of Bombay, Aden and the Scheduled District of the Mehwassi Chiefs' villages as defined in the Scheduled Districts Act, 1874.
[b]
(3)
1
to the City
'
ReBombay, subject to the modification that the expression venue-officer' means every officer of any rank whatsoever appointed under section 5 or 6 of the Bombay City Land Revenue Act,
of
1876, and employed in or about the business of the land revenue in the City of Bombay, or of the surveys, assessment, accounts or records connected therewith, instead of as defined in clause (1) of section 3 of this Act.
Akalkot
tricts in
this
to the
G.,
is a taxing enactment, and mast be construed strictly in favour of the subject (Secretary of State v. Laldas, 12 Bom. L. B. 16, s c. 34 Bom. 239).
1879, Pt. I. p. 966) and to the DisB, dated 30th June 1904).
"
the
Scheduled Districts."
:
the
Scheduled Districts in
Sind.
Aden,
Mehwasi Chiefs: The Parvi of Kathi Walvi of Gaohalli. 4. The Parvi of Nal 5. Wassawa of Ohikhli. 2. 3. The Parvi of Singpur The Parvi of Nawalpur. 6. Notes. There is nothing in this Code which entitles a person, who gets a
villages belonging to the following
1.
The
sanad at the city survey on his ex parts application, to turn out a person in possession of the land, unless he shows that he haa a better title (Trimbak v. Damu, 27 Bom. L. B. 656).
The proceeds of all fees levied under this Act for permission to remove sand or to quarry are to be credited to the Local Fund constituted by the Bombay Local Boards Act, 1923 (Bom. Act VI of 1923) s. 75.
2.
IV of
1913,
Act,
in
s.
5.
In this
:
Interpretation clause,
thing
text
repugnant
[a]
by
Bom.
Act IV of 19J3,s.4(2).
[b]
the paragraph
This sub-section was substituted by Bom. Act IV of 1913. s. 4 (3), for 3, added by Bom. Act I of 1910, First Schedule, Part II, Serial
No.
2.
*NOTE
by Bom. Act
The
IV
1 ]
PRELIMINARY
"revenue officer" means every officer of any rank whatsoever appointed under any of the provisions of this Act, and employed in or about the revenue officer;" business of the land revenue or of the surveys, assessment, accounts or records connected therewith [a] and for the purposes of sections 25 and 26 includes a village-officer appointed or officiating under any of the provisions of the Bombay Hereditary Offices Act or the Matadars Act, 1887 [a];
(1)
in the districts of
when applied to any estate or Mahals to which the Broach Panch Ahmedabad, Kaira, VI of ss. 1 and 33). Bom Act Act extends Talukdars' 1838, (Vide Gujerat
Note.
This section
is
subject to modification
Revenue
Officers.
Watandar
not Revenue
officers
watan lapses, then Government succeed to the watan and the officer appointed by them wmld be a watandar for the purpose of ss. 85 and 94 A. But when a watan is commutted, it has not yet been Talatis are executive and not ministerial officers decided that the analogy holds.
under sub-section (1) of this section.
If a
R. 459
(a) (G.
A
of State,
Forest
officer is
not a revenue
officer
Narayan
v.
Secretary
20
Bom
803).
The District Inspector of Land Records is a revenue officer and can issue summonses for evidence or documents, but the Superintendent is a survey officer
:
officers,
but Circle
Inspectors are
not.
The
District Inspector of Land Records his power to order measurement on the application of parties and to levy feas for it. Both Superintendent of Land Records and District Inspector of Land Records can levy fees U'ider s. 135-F (Anderson's
p. 8).
"survey
officer-,"
"survey officer" means an officer appointed under, or in the manner provided by, section 18 [/;]
(2)
;
f3)
{Definition
of" Collector^ \
Jlepeakd by Bom.
Act
IV
of
1913,
s.
6 (ai
of land, and things attached to the earth, or permanently fasten" land >" ed to anything attached to the earth, and also shares in, or charges on, the revenue or rent of villages, or other defined portions of territory ; (5) ''estate" means any interest in lands and the aggregate of such interests vested in a person or aggregate "estate;" p ers ons capable of holding the atne ;
(4)
to
arise out
a]
IV
[b]
Words
are omitted.
OSAP. f
number" means a
area
"swvey number;"
portion of land of which the and assessment fa] are separately entere(^ un(j er an indicative number in the [6]
(7) [d] "sub-division of a survey number'* means a portion of a survey number of which the area and "sub-division of a surassessment are separately entered in the land vey number ;" records under an indicative number subordinate to that of the survey number of which it
is
a portion [d] ; (8) [0] "chavdi" means, in any village in which there is no chavdi, such place as the Collector may direct " <v,havdi; 8 k a |i k e Deemed to be the chavdi for the purposes of this Act ;
Chaydi.
(9) "building site" means a portion of land held for building purposes, whether any building be actually "building site;" erected thereupon or not, and includes the open ground or court-yard enclosed by, or adjacent to, any building erected thereupon ;
erection, whether of earth, material, and also any hedge, "boundary-mark-," r^j Unp l 0u ghed ridgo, Or [/*] strip of. graund, or other object whether natural or artificial, set up, employed or specified by a survey officer, or other revenue officer having autho-
( 10)
'
(11) [g\ "to hold land/' or to be a Hand-holder" or "holder" of land means to be lawfully in possession of "to hold land" "landl an d whether such possession is actual or ^ holder' "holder;" not .' "Bolder." The term "holder" as defined in this clause, is wide enough to include even a tenant who has entered into possession under an occupant. Mere
1
user by rice lands tenants of adjoining waste land with the leave and permission of Inamdar does not make them holders of warkas lands (Nanabhai v. Collector of
Kai
a,
34 Bom. 686).
fa] This word wasTubatituted by Bom. AcT^Tv^T 1913, s. 6 (6), for the words "other particulars." for the 6j These words were substituted by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 6 (6), [J words "survey records." Words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s 6 (5), are omitted. [e\ [d] This definition was substituted for the definition of "recognised share of a survey number" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 6 (c). \\ This definition was added by Bom. Act IV of 1913 s. 6 (d). [f-J\ These words were substituted for the original word by Bom. Act VI of
1901,8.2. \g] This definition was substituted for the original or "landholder" and "holding" by Bom, Act IV of 1V13,
definitions
s.
of "holder"
(*).
gjso,
PBELIMINA&Y
The rights oi tenants of rice lands over adjoining waste land of their superior holder are, by custom in theThana District, confined to the use of portions of the waste for obtaining the manure without which the rice lands could not be cultivated or the assessment on the rice land earned
r.
Govind, 36
Bom.
315).
Before a person can claim the benefit of a. 217 post, he must be shown to be a "holder" within the meaning of this sub-clause (Ibid).
[a] (12)
"holding;"
lan(j
heW by
a landholder entitled to [6] (13) "superior holder" means receive rent or land revenue from other landsuperior holder holders (hereinafter called inferior holders"),
;
whether he
is
or land-revenue, or any part thereof, to Government : provided that where land has been granted free of rent or land revenue, subject to the right of
a Jagirdar,
entered as such in the land records, such or holder shall, with reference to the grantee, be Jagirdar, Inamdar deemed to be the superior holder of land so granted by him and the grantee shall, with reference to the grantor, be deemed to be the inferior holder of such land and for the purposes of section 8 of the
name
is
authorizedly
Bombay
Local Funds Act, 1869, shall, notwithstanding anything hereinafter contained in the definition of the word "tenant," be deemed to be the tenant of such grantor.
Note
1923).
Act (Bom.
Act
VI
of
"Superior holder.
dars, Jagirdar s
"We
and other holders from Government of alienated lands who have themselves made grants of portions of their lands for the maintenance of cadets and other similar purposes. These grants are made subject to resumption in certain and if they are made free of contingencies, such as failure of lineal male heirs,
liability to
pay rent or land revenue, the grantors have been held not to be the of such lands (vide Gordhanlal v. Darbar Shri Surajmalji, 6 Bom. holders superior As the grantors have a reversionary interest in the land, it is desirable 604). that the grantors should be included within the definition of superior holders
(Report of the Select Committee).
receiving rent or land revenue from cultivators in his inam for the same. A knot a superior holder not accountable to Government village holder accountable to Governreceiving assessment from a dharekari is a superior ment for the same. A village accountant receiving assessment from a cultivator
An inamdar
is
is
cannot
be
said
to be
superior
Bom
Act IV
of 1913,
s.
(*).
definitions
s*
of
"superior
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
6 (/).
holder, because he is not a holder and has no interest in the land of which he collects the assessment (DandoJtar's Law of Land Tenures, Vol I, pp. 4243). Where it appeared that defendants were liable to pay the assessment and local
fond to the plaintiff, who held a sanad under the ttuma ary Settlement Act, J6t3, the lower Court came to the conclusion that the relationship of landlord and tenant was not created between the parties, it was held that the plaintiff wab a
superior holder within the meaning of this s^b-clause and that the defendants were in law the tenants of the plaintiff, whatever the nature of their holding might have been (Surshangi Naran, 2 Bom. L. B. 855).
The Talukadari Settlement Officer may, with reference to a person holding from him, be deemed to be a "superior holder" within the
v.
Gordhandas
Mohanlal,
33
"inferior holder. The expression wider including the expression landlord. The terms superior holder, and inferior holder have reference only to payment of rent or land revenue, whereas the terms landlord and tenant have reference only to the origin of the tenant has to pay to his landlord and is thus an inferior holder. right to hold. In addition to this fact he derives his right to hold from the man whom he pays or from his predecessor. Every tenant is an inferior holder, but every inferior bolder is not necessarily a tenant [Dandekar's Law of Land Tenures, Vol. I p. 43).
"superior holder"
is
"
[a] (14)
"tenant 7 "
"tenant" means a lessee, whether holding under an instrument or under an oral agreement, and
includes a mortgagee of a tenant's rights 'with but does not include a lessee possession ;
;
"
^ ^^
t<
occupan
Difference
fies
means a holder in actual possession of unalienated land, other than a tenant : provided that where the holder in actual possession is a tenant, the landlord or superior landbe, shall be deemed to be the occupant ;
'Holder' eigni-
a person holding any land alienated or unalienated, whereas 'occupant' means a holder of unalienated land.
-occupancy-
Occupancy.
of (17) "occupancy' means a portion P l an d held by an occupant ; The term "occupancy" is subject to modification when ap[6]
plied to any estate in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars* Act, 1888, extends (See Bom.
and Panch
Act
1888,
as.
and 83).
definitions
8.
VI
oi
[a]
These
Ad
IV
of 1913,
[b]
6 (/) and
(h).
Act IV of 1913,8 6
These definitions were substituted for clauses (16), (17) and (18) by
Bom
PBELIMINABY
a]
or
f 18J
fiegg
^ke
p0fise6sio ^ o|
occupation-,"
(jg)
(20) "alienated" means transferred in so far as the rights of Government to payment of the rent or land
"alienated;
partially,
"Alienated".
property in the
sub-clause,
soil,
Though
still
the grant of a land to an inamdar was of the entire within the meaning of thi*
and the defendants were entered in the settlement register as khatadars and who cultivated the lands and paid to the plaintiff only a sum equivalent to the annual assessment; were entitled to the rights of occupants in unalienated villages by virtue of s. 217 post (Dadoo 9. Dinkar, 43 Bom 77).
u
(21)
ftn(j
ft jj
"village;
^
;
or city
"revenue year,- -year-
ftnd exdusive of? fa July of one calendar year until, and inclusive of, the thirty-first July in the next calendar year ; (23) [Definition of "section." ]- Repealed by Bom. Act Hi of
(22) meftn
period
j^
thirty-first
1886, Sch. B.
(24) [Definition of 1886, Sch. B.
[b]
"this chapter"]
oj
(25) the term "joint holders" or "joint occupants" means "holders or occupants who hold land as co"Joint holders/' "Joint sharers, whether as co-sharers in a family unoccupants;" divided according to Hindu law or otherwise, and whose shares are not divided by metes and bounds ; and where land is held by joint holders or joint occupants, ''holder" or "occupant," as the case may be, means all of the joint holders or joint occupants ;
Occupants.
" land records;"
s.
3 (17) supra.
(26) "land records" means records [b] maintained under the provisions of, or for the purposes of, this Act ;
[6]
(27)
"certified
"Certified copy."
copy" or "certified extract" means a copy or extract, as the case may be, certified in the manner prescribed by section 76 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872 ;
by
Bom. Act IV
[I]
These definitions were substituted for clauses (16,) (17) and (18) of 19 18, B* 6 (h). These definitions were added by Bom. Act. IV of 1913 a. 6 (/).
a]
OHA*. II
Section 76 of the Indian Evidence Aot Certified copy Every public officer having the custody of a public document, which any person has a right to inspect, shall give that person, on demand a copy of it on payment of the legal fees therefor, together with a certificate written at tbo foot of such copy that it is a true copy of such document or part thereof, as the case may be, and such certificate shall be dated and subscribed by such officer with his name and his official title; and shall be sealed whenever such officer is authorised by law to make use of a seal; a nd such copies so certified shall be called certified copies (Me sec. 76 of the Evidence Act).
[a]
(23)
In Siad the word "Mukhtyarkar" shall be deemed word "Mamlatdar'' wherever it occurs in
IV of
1913,
s.
(j).
CHAPTER
The ch
!
II.
ef controlling authority
in
all
in the Commissioner, subject to the Governor in Conncil. There shall be one or more Commissioners as the Governor in Council, subject to the orders of the GovernExtent of territories ment f j d d j rect d th (Jovernor ~ Oommisunder the n M -^
vested
Council shall prescribe what territories are to be under the control of each, whether generally or for any specific purpose, and may from time to time alter the limits of such territories, all orders made on this behalf
sioners,
m
.
j.
division.
each
Commissioner
rn
this
Act the
territories
comprised
in the Province of Sind shall be deemed to form a division and the Commissioner in Sind shall be deemed to be the Commissioner of
"Whether generally or for any specific purpose." These words were inserted with the object of enabling one Revenue Commissioner to undertake
certain special duties within the territorial limits of another (Report of the
Select
Committee). are three Divisional Commissioners, at present Commissioner in Sind, each in charge of a division, there being three These divisions are (1) the Northern Dividivisions in the Presidency proper.
besides the
[aj
Commissioners.-There
Words
repealed by
Aot
XVI
[bb
IV
of 1913,
7,
SJBCII.
4*7
sion, (2)
The Southern
0. D.
Division.
These divisions
N. D.
8.
D.
Ahmedabad
Broach Kaira Fanch Mahals
Surat
Belgaon. Bijapur.
Poona
Satara
Bholapur,
Thana
The
Districts in Sind are :-(!) Karachi, (2) Dadu, Nawabsbah, (7) Thar Parkar and
(3)
(8)
Hyderabad,
Upper Sind
shall be appointed by the Governor in Council, and shall exercise the powers and discharge the duties conferred and imposed on a Commissioner under this Act, or under any other law for the time being in force, and so far as is consistent therewith all such other powers or duties of appeal, superintendence and control within their respective divisions, and over the officers subordinate to them as may from time to time be prescribed by Government.
5.
The Commissioners
"_
"Each Commissioner shall have such number of assistants as the Governor in Council may from time to Assistants to Oommistime sanction, their made
*6.
810ner8 -
appointment being by the Governor in Council. Assistants so appointed shall perform such duties as the
they
are
whom
direct.
respectively
There are
subordinate,
two Assistants
the
may
to each
Assistants to Commissioners.
Divisional Commissioner
one in charge of the English branch and of the Vernacular branch of the office. charge
7.
other in
into districts.
Each division, under the control of the Commissioner, shall be divided into such [a] districts with Division to be divided suc h limits as may from time to time be
Governor
prescribed by a duly published order in Council.
of
the
A
Ss
district to
consist
of talukas
m
as
direct.
comprising V
ent Gotnr
And each such district shall consist of /, i u k as aa(j eac h taluka shall consiit guch of such [a] mahals and villages, as may from time to time be prescribed in a duly published order of the Governor in Council, (b) _
[a\
[b]
Words Words
repealed by
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
s.
8, are omitted.
XVI
of 1895, are
omitted.
10
[CHAP.
Division
are as
The number
lows
:
of Mahals,
The Mahals
0.
in
fol*
N. D.
D.
S,D.
Mandangad
[Vide Sathe's L. R. Code, 4th
8.
ed.,
p. 13.]
The Governor
in Council shall appoint in each district ar officer who shall be the Collector [a] and whc
sh an
be subordinate to the
Commissioner
of
his
may exercise, throughout powers and discharge all the duties, conferred and imposed on a Collector or an Assistant 01 Deputy Collector by this Act, or any other law for the time being in force, and in all matters not specially provided for by law shall act according to the instructions of Government. The Governor in Council may appoint to each district so y. many Assistant Collectors and so many Deputy
district, all the
his division
and
Collectors
as
Collectors.
may
be
deem expedient
the
the order of their appointment. All such Assistant and Deputy Collector! To be subordinate to and all osher officers employed in the land reCollector. venue administration of the district shall be subordinate to the Collector. Personal Assistants. The Collectors of Poona, Satara and Thana are
each given a personal Assistant (G. ft quoted in Sathe's Land Revenue Code,
N\
4th
1903, R. D.
14).
10.
Their duties
Subject to the general orders of Government, a Collector may place any of his assistants or deputies in and powers, charge of the revenue administration of one or more of the talukas in his district, or may
repealed by Act
himwlf
ft\
Words
XVI
SBOB. 8-10
11
Any
Deputy
Collector thus placed in charge shall, 1 Chapter XIII [a], perform a ! the duties
and exercise all the powers conferred upon a Collector [6j by this Act or any other law at the time being in force, so far as regards the
taluka or talukas in his charge. Provided that the Collector may, whenever he may deem fit, direct any such Assistant or Deputy not to perform certain duties or exercise certain powers, and may reserve the same to himself or assign them to any other Assistant or Deputy Subordinate to him.
To such
Assistant or
Deputy Collector
as
it
may
not be
possishall,
ble or expedient to place in charge of talukas the under the general orders of Government, assign
Collector
such pacticular
are
duties
Any
and powers as he may from time to time see fit. other law at the time being in force." ihese words
not limited to laws relating to land revenue, but include all acts of the Government of Bombay in which a contrary intention does not appear (Entry No. 15 of
B. No. 5941, dated 26th August 1902, quoted in Sathe's Land Revenue Code 4th ed. p. 14). The language of a section in an enactment, if plain and unambiguous, must be construed in its natural sense. The words "or any other law at
G-.
the time being in force" in this section should not be restricted to laws or acts ejusdem jeneris to the Code but include in the Mamlatdars Courts Act (Kesha*
v.
Powers
tive
Of Collector.
powers in the first place to the Collector a few to the Commissioner. tions, it reserves
under
s.
While the Laud Revenue Oode gives all execu(who signs sanads for most alienaThe Collector fixes irrigation rates
55 within the
maximum
Officers
appeals from
s
Survey
sanctioned by Government. The Collector hears below grade of Superintendent of Survey under
37 (2), and read with section 203, this also gives him appellate power in respect The Collector can make reducof section 50 A of the District Municipal Act. tions for diluvion, and may postpone instalments but only with the Commissioner's
sanction.
He may
transfer
s.
Government land
to
other Departments
and make
all
assignments under
38 of Act
IV
of 1905.
While
ment
employment of permanent
:
establish-
make all appointments to sanctioned posts on the district Head Accountants and he may in certain cases create and Mamlatdars staff, except and fill temporary appointments. The most important of these cases is in respect
can (section 21) he
of the staff of Circle Inspectors, peons and labourers for partition and sub-division measurement work, and for repairing boundary marks when the cost is irre-
The
not
reference to higher authority, and the exceeding Rs. 100 in each case without of no defect system or procedure requiring Government Commissioner provided orders is disclosed and there has been no serious negligence which might require action can write off without limit irrecoverable dues for boundary
disciplinary
mark
repairs (sections
122-23) and
all
tagai
without limit
"~
la)
\b\
Words Words
repealed by
repealed by
Bom. Act
Act
XVI
[0&AJP,
and irrecoverable value of stores or public money ap to a limit of Rg. 500 and; unserviceable dead-stock to any amount, sending an annual statement to the ACCO an tan t General. The last power was extended to the Collector by G. E. No. 5941
of 1902.
Generally speaking all powers of the Collector under the Land Revenue Code or any other law are also exercised under 3. 10 by the Assistant or Deputy Ool" lector in respect of the talukas in his charge. But the Collector may always reberve any power he thinks fit. In particular, Government have dir ected that
powers under Rules 81 and 82 should not ordinarily be delegated. There should be no "unnecessary" reservation. The power of arrest is to be exercised only when
The Assistant or Deputy has certain powers specially delegated. contracts and leases under Home Department Kesolation 7119-11 of
of
He may fine watani village sanads for tree planting in open sites in villages. revenue officers and (in Ahmedabad) appoints, punishes, and dismisses mu khis and
police
patels
(subject
to
the
control
of
villages.
The Collector will delegate by name the power to write venne upto Rs. 25 (G. R. No. 6042 of 3-4-1923).
off
re-
To
dele-
gated (G. R. No. 5941 of 1902 (Anderson's L. R. Rules, ed. of 1930, ppA-5). The powers conferred upon the Collector under the Bom. Irrigation Act are to be exercised by an Assistant Collector according to this section (Naivazali Shah Pir Ali Gohar Shah v. Rustomali Shah, 14 S. L. R. 53).
from performing his duties, or vacates his office or le'aves* his reason any Collector of the disrank district or dies his Assistant of highest & , '. trict m case of tempo. j. n in the district shall, unless other propresent rary vacancy. vision has been made by Government, succeed and shall be held to be Collector [a] his to office, temporarily under this Act until the Cjllector resumes charge of his district, or until the Governor in Council appoints a successor to the foimer Collector and such successor takes charge of his appointment.
11,
If the Collector is disabled
for
principal office ia different from that of an Collector, and who is an Assistant Collector for special purposes only, shall not be deemed to ba an Assistant for the purposes of this section.
An officer whose
Assistant
Notes. In Sind the Collector temporarily succeeded is called a Mukhtyarkar. The powers and duties of a Collector m\y not be conferred by a Collector on any Assistant or Deputy Collector who has not passed the Depart mental Examination according to the higher standard. This order does not refer to Deputy the 10th April Collectors appointed before the issue of the Government order of
1869, directing Deputy Collectors to undergo Departmental Examinations (B. G t G. 1868, Pt. I, p. 1196). The chief officer entrusted with the local revenue ad12. ministration of a taluka shall be called a The Mamlatdar his He shall be appointed by the Mamlatdar. appointment. Comm'sfeioner of the division in which his
;
taluka
[a]
is
situated.
of 1895 are omitted,
Words
repealed by
Act
XVI
BEOS. 11-12]
18
such as may be expressly imor conferred posed upon him by this Act, or other for law the time being in force, by any
or as may be imposed upon, or delegated to, Collector under the general or special orders of Govern-
The
code
provides
to
that
may
delegate
him.
But these delegations must be made "under the general or special orders of Government" and also they must be made in all cases by name and not merely in virtue of the office held. Therefore, it is desirable that a printed form should be
used by every Collector as follows To Mr. A. B.
:
''Whereas you have been appointed to be (or to do duty temporarily a) Mamlatdar (Mahalkari) of you are hereby authorized during the tenure of that
office to exercise the
following powers
(Here print the powers below detailed,) whatever powers reelect to reserve).
Collector of
The
out
delegated are
these
[a]
Words
repealed by Act
XVI
14
UHAP.
BEOS. 12-lft]
15
powers
Summary
of
inferior
village
servants
permit
11.
catting
of trees
in
[R.
5295
(22)
to
the
Mamlatdar
the
Collector
can
which
will then bo
Prant
Officer.
ed.
Chitnises to
Collectors
are graded with Mamlatdars (G. R. No. 8881, dated 23rd December 1891, R. D., and Q. R. No. 249, F.D., dated 26th March 1929). See also JoglekaSs Supplement
to his
Land Revenue
13.
may appear necessary to the Governor in Council, ihe Collector may [a] appoint to a The Mahalkari; taluka one or more Mahalkaris [a] ; and, of to the orders Government and of subject the Commissioner, the Collector may [b] assign to a Mahalkari [/>] within his local limits such of the duties and powers of a Mamlatdar as he may from time to time see fit, and may
his duties
Whenever
from time to time direct whether the Mahalkari's immediate superior shall, for the purpos3s.of section 203 (V], be deemed to be the Mamlatdar or the Assistant or Deputy Collector, or the Collector in charge of the taluka ; [d] when a defined portion of a taluka is placed in charge of a Mahalkari, such portion shall be called a mahal. [rf] Delegation Of power to Mahalkari. In delegating to a Mahalkari, the Collector will probably reserve more powers, and he will aho specify
a l so
whether the Mahalkari
is
and powers.
to be considered the
latdar or of the Assistant Collector for tho purposes of section 203 (appeals, etc.). The Collector can also appoint a Mahalkari and assign certain powers to him
local limits of his mahal (R. 0824-14), but the necessity of such appointment shall be reported to Government (sec 13). In such a case he will be practically a Deputy Mamlatdar within the taluka, exercising such power
as
may be
an Aval Karkun"
Record of Rights. (6). Survey Mamlatdars are appointed by the Commissioner of Survey (R. 11316) but their powers are those of revenue officers under Chapter (Record of
;
XA
officers
under
sec.
18.
[aa] These words were substituted by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 9 (1), for the words "appoint a Mahalkari to be in charge of a defined portion of a taluka."
[bb]
the
words
[e\
'assign to
IV
of
1913,
s.
9 (1), for
Words
repealed by Bom. Act 111 of 1886 are omitted. These words were added by Bom* Act IV of 1923, s. 9
(1),
16
OHA*. II
Mahalkari may perform the clerical work of preparing the Irrigation Record of Eights, but cannot be appointed a Oanal Officer under s. 76 (1) of the of 1918). Irrigation Act, Bom. Act VI of 1879 (Vide G. B. No. 7418 An Extra Aval Karkun is frequently treated as such a Mahalkari. He has
power
to try Assistance (sec. 86) (R. 8616-91) and Possessory suits (under section 3 of the Mamlatdars' Courts Act) (B. 72-00, 8269-06). The powers of a Mamlatdar's First or Aval Karkun are regulated by sec. 14. and He has been given power to sign notices of demand under sec. 162
specially
may
and (73-11] and to receive if wrongly charged [B. 5295 (72) fees up to a rajinamas under sec. 74 (R. 1743-89,7428-05). He can also levy maximum of Bs. 15 in each case under sec 135 (F) (B. 7623-9-4-24 and 13-4-24). An Aval Karkun can exercise in the absence of the Mamlatdar any powers speciremit the fees
fically
Rules 54, 67-69, 74 (2), 96, given by the rules (7 ) to Mamlatdars [see substitute appointed under sec. 1 5 can DOW exercise powers 108 and 188]. under the Mamlatdars' Courtis Act by sec. 3 as amended by Act 31 of 1906 (I.
L. R. 25
Bom 318, 36 Bom. 277), B. 8507-07 gave the Aval Karkun power to which is now raised to Bs. 100 by Bs try rent suits up to a 11 1 it of Bs. 50 208-21. [N] The Collector may also delegate the power to selected Treasury
:
Head Kirkune. B. (L
0.)
54122-9-23.
"Powers of Collector under section 154, Land Revenue Code, can be delegated An Extra Aval to an Extra Aval Karkun either by name or by designation Karkun is not a Mamlatdar or a MahUki ri within the meaning of section 12 or
section 13 of the
Land Revenue Code. The powers of a Collector under section 156 cannot be delegated to Mm." (B. 6315-28 of 17th November 1930). (Anderson's L. R. Rules, ed. of 1930, p. 8).
Superior Of Mahalkari.
Assistant or
DepLty
Collector
in
charge of
the talukas was declared to be the immediate superior of the Mahalkari (G.R.R.D. No. 4258, dated 1st May 1906).
competent to a Mamlatdar or Mahalkari, subject to such general orders as may from time to Mamlatdar or Mahaltime be passed by the Commissioner or by kari may depute sub^e Collector, to employ any of his subordi69 to perform and nate. portion of his miniso f his" terial duties : provided that all acts and orders of his subordinates when so employed shall be liable to revision and confirmation by such Mamlatdar or Mahalkari [a]. 15. If a Mamlatdar or Mahalkari is disabled from performing
14.
It shall be
cen
dSS
his duties, or for any reason vacates his office, Qr kaves hifi taluka Or ma k alj or dieSj such subordinate as may be designated by orders to be issued from time to time on this behalf
by the Collector shall succeed temporarily to the said Mamlatdar's or Mahalkari's office and shall be held to be the Mamlatdar or Mahalkari under this Act until the Mamlatdar or Mahalkari resumes charge of his taluka or naahal, or until such time as a suecessor is duly appointed
[a]
and takes charge oi his appointment. Words r^ealodl>y~Act~XVI of 1895 and Bom. Act IV oi 1913, B.
(2)
0re omitted.
BIOS. 14-18
17
dar. A Karkun taking temporary charge of the office during the absence of the Mamlatdar on casual leave ia nob a revenue officer ordinarily exercising the powers of a Mamlatdar. He is an officer exercising on an extraordinary occasion some
such powers under this section (Ningapa
v.
Substitute designated under this seotion not competent to exercise powers Of Mamlatdar. A substitute designated under this sec. tion can now exercise the powejs conferred by the Mamlatdars Act, 1876, as amended by Bom. Act II of 1906, on a Mamlatdar to whose office hehaa temporarily succeeded (Deorao
v.
B ).
See also 36
Bom,
277.
16.
Sti
In villages where no hereditary Patel or Village AccountaDt ex * sts ifc sha ^ ^e lawful for the Collector, 11 endiar Patel and under the general orders of Government and Accountant*^
>
^
appoint a stipendiary Patel or a Village Accountant who shall perform respectively all the duties of here6X19 8t ditary Patels or Village Accountants as hereinafter prescribed in this Act or in any other law for the time being in force, and shall hold their situations under the rules in force with regard to subordinate revenue-officers.
of the
Commissioner,
to
Nothing
. .
ho?dTo f
Iag e8 .
d vif-
to affect any subsisting rights of holders of alienated villages or other..in respect of the appointment of Patels and Village Accountants in any alienated or
other villages.
17.
Village
Subject to the general orders of Government and of the Commissioner, the Collector shall prescribe Accountant to f rom time to time what registers, accounts
the Collector
Accountant
5
[a].
It shall be
the
duty of the Village Accountant to prepare, whenever called upon by the Patel of his village, or by any superior Revenue or Police officer of the taluka or district to do so, all writings connected with the concerns of the
for the use of
village
For the purposes of Chapters VIII, IX and X Governor in Council may appoint such
Officers
:
Survey
A9
ma y
rom time
shall
to time
Such
\a\
f.M
officers
be
Words repealed by Act XVI of 1895 are omitted. Words repealed by Bom. Act III of 1886 are omitted,
18
[Oiup. II
sioner of Survey,"
ment
Officers"
"Superintendent of Survey," "Survey Settleand "Assistant" or otherwise as may seem requisite, subordinated the one to the other in such order as the
direct.
their
Subject to the orders of the Governor in Council, the officers so appointed are vested with the cognizance of duties and powers. a u matters connected with survey and settle-
ment, and shall exercise all such powers and perform all such duties as may be prescribed by this or any other law for the time being in force. 19. It shall be lawful for the Governor in Council to appoint one and the same person, being otherwise
competent according to law, to any two or more of the offices provided for in this chapter, or to confer upon an officer of one denomination all or any of the powers or duties of any other officer or officers within
certain local limits or otherwise as may seem expedient. Note. The Mamlatdar of Poona City ia authorised to exercise the powers of a Mamlatdar in the Haveli Taluka of the Poona District for the purposes of as. 86 and 87 of the Oode (B. GL G-. 1898, Pt. I, p. 1058).
Certain officers' appointments to be notifled *
Combination of
offices,
duly notified.
Any
officer
appointed
Acting appointments,
for any such officer same powers and perform the same duties as might be performed or
to act temporarily
officer
exercised by the
for
whom
214,
the
he
is
so
appointed to act.
21.
the apestablish-
Establishmcnts.
made by
those officers respectively, viz: the Commissioners, the Collectors, the Commissioner of Survey, the Superintendent of Survey,
the Survey Settlement Officer. of all members of the establishments of all other officers mentioned in the foregoing sections of this chapter shall be made in their respective departments by the Collector and the Superintendent of Survey : provided that it shall be lawful for them to delegate such portion of this power as they may deem fit to any subordinate officer, but subject to the retention of a right of
The appointment
may
be
made by such
subordinate
ff]
officers.
repealed by
Words
Bom. Act IV of 19 1 3,
s.
10 ; are omitted,
SBOS. 19-J3
10
Note.
cords.
From 1907
Commissioner who
Staff of
the functions of the Survey Department have been enis also the Director of Land Re-
the
Director
consists
of
three
Superinten-
dents, one for each Division, a District Inspector or District and a staff of Circle Inspectors (vide para.
No.
OO XXVII, new series (Sathe's Land Revenue Code, 4th ed., p. 20). 22. The Governor in Council shall from time to time by notification prescribe what revenue officers shall use a seal, and what size and description of seal shall be used by each of such
SEALS TO BE USED BY RKVENUE OFFICERS
(1)
(1) (2)
officers, [a].
The
officers
seals, ris
(3)
(4)
Assistant Collectors
(5)
(6)
Deputy Collectors (including Treasury Officers of the Deputy Collectors Grade), and Superintendents of Land Records and Agriculture Mamlatdar 3
;
;
(7)
Mahalkaris
(8)
Mukhtyarkars (Sind) Huzur Treasurers (Central Division), (S, D.) and (N. D.); (9) City Survey Officers (N. D.) (10) Magistrate of Bandra invested with pawers under Act III of 1876 (11) (now Act II of 1906);
; ;
(12)
District Inspectors of
in the Northern,
Assistants in charge,
Offices,
Agricultural Depart-
Northern Division
the
when apand
(2)
of
following dimensions
(a)
named
(b)
at serial
numbers (1)
Saals of brass, capper or guninebal (whichever may be the most durable material) of which the diameter should be IA inches for the
officers
named
at serial
(o)
numbers (4) and (5) hereinbefore mentioned may be the most dura;
officers
material) of which the diameter should be one inch only for the named at serial numbers (6) to (13) hereinbefore mentioned;
and
(3)
that pending the preparation of the abovementioned seals, the seals hitherto used shall continue to be used by such of the officers herein,
I,
pp.
1161,
p. 820).
fa]
Words
repealed by
Bom. Act
20
OHAP. Ill
Metal seals.
seals
may be
all
and for
^. suggestion was made thfct for the purposes of s. 22, metal used for merely sealing purposes, is to be e., when wax impressed, other purposes rubber seals may be used. The present practice of
.
all
12-192) quoted
CHAPTER
23.
It shall
III
be lawful for government to direct that such revenue officers as it deems fit shall, previously d to ent " Q S "Ron their office, furnish security wtaTSSrlwi Trto suc " amount as (jovernment may in each and to nish security,
what amount.
deem expedient, either by deposit of Government-paper duly endorsed, accompanied by a power to sell, or in the form contained in Schedule
case
B. [a].
The amount for which such security shall be furnished may be varied, from time to time, by order of Government, which shall also determine the number of sureties to be required when security is taken in the form of Schedule B. Security. The revenue officers hereinbelow mentioned shall previously
to entering upon their office furnish security,
according to this
section,
to
the
following amounts
1.
3*
Head Accountants
First
...
...
...
...
6,000
6,000
2.
3.
4.
6.
... ... ... Mamlatdars ... ... ... Karkuns to Mamlatdars ... Special Head Karkuns for payment of Military pensions... Treasury Nagdi Karkuns (to Mamlatdars and Mihalkaris).
... ... Mahalkari with Treasury ... ... First Karkun to Mahalkari with treasury ... Shroff Karkuns to Mahalkari of Kohistan and Keti Bandar ... ... Mahalkari without treasury ...
3,000
1,000
500
3,000 1.000 1,000
6.
7.
8.
9.
600
80,000
20,000
10.
11. 12.
13.
Treasurer at
Poona
...
...
...
...
Treasurer at Kanara, Kolaba and Ratnagiri ... All other Treasurers ...
First
...
40,000
i >00 o
Karkuns
to
Treasurers of Kanara,
Kolaba and
...
%
14.
...
...
..
2,000
2,000
15. 16.
Second Karkun to Poona Treasurer ... ... Karkuns other than any of the foregoing employed in Huzur Mamlatdars' or Mahalknri's offices on shroffs
work...
...
...
...
...
...
1,000
17*
Karkuns
for
payment of Military
...
pensions...
...
500
1,000
18.
[a]
...
Words
of 1886 are
20.
2j
19
20.
&ECUBlTt TO
Tapedars in Sind
fcE
*'XJBNIb&D BY JUvENUE-OFtflCEfc
&i
Rs.
...
...
...
...
1,000
Stipendiary Patels 01 Village Accountants appointed under sec. 16, and Japtidars appointed by the Collector to manage attached Khoti villages ... ...
copying, comparing, search and inspection fees and of bhatta and permanent advances and take charge of moneys depoeited
for those purposes in
200
21.
the registers of
Revenue Courts
...
... ...
... ...
22.
23.
...
200 200
1,000
Accountant in the
office of the
Commissioner in Sind
,..
...
24.
200
specified in Nos. 3 and 16 the amount of security to be furnished may be raised by the Commissioner to such amount not in exceeding five thousand rupees as he thinks fit : and in No. 20, he may
exempt Khoti villages. "One Government servant should not be allowed to stand as surety for another for the purposes of section 23, Land Revenue Code. 77 (R. 6064-28 of 1st Novemspecial cases,
c. g.,
ber 1930).
1916 all powers of Government 23 are delegated to the Commissioner in Sind under Act of 1868. "In Sind a Government servant serving in one d epartment should be permitted to stand surety for a Government servant serving in another department, provided, in the case of Hindus, that they are not members of the same joint family. Retired Government servants and servants of local bodies should not be 2.
After the issue of Resolution No. 4418 of
sec.
under
debarred from standing sureties for Government servants/ 7 (G. R., R. D. No. 6084-28 of 2-12-31).
When any person is Security to be furnished be for e entering on appointment. appointed to any office specified in the Order, whatever may be the probable duration of his tenure thereof, he shall, before entering thereon, furnish security to the
amount
case,
specified or to such smaller amount as the co Hector may, in the particular deem reasonable and sufficient. Number of sureties. Where he executes a bond, the number of sureties shall be ono or more, at his option, if the amount of does not exceed one feecnrity thousand rupees; and otherwise shall be not less than two. Duties of heads oj offices in respect of securities. Heads of offices in which (1)
any officer required to furnish security is serving will be held responsible for seeing that the necessary security is duly furnished, and that it is good and sufficient both at the time it is first furnished and thereafter, until it is no longer required.
For this purpose heads of offices shall carefully scrutinize the security and (2) satisfy themselves as to its sufficiency both when it is first offered and also once a
officer
year after it has been accepted, and if they deem it insufficient, shall require the concerned to furnish additional or fresh security. (3; Care must be taken that no one person is accepted as surety on behalf of
officers officers, whether such belong to the or department or not. (4) No Karkun should ordinarily have in his custody more than the amount for which he has given security; surplus should be placed in the treasury. tegister of securities to le lijt ly Cclhcttr. -(') 1 be Collector shall keep a
same
office
unit IK 1}
ml iffcu
ii>
big difctikt in
accordance
5?itt
**
[ OHAJP.
Ill
Order 13 for scrutiny by the Commissioner daring his tour, and shall submit annually to the Commissioner, on 1st October, a certificate that all such securities are
good and
(3)
sufficient,
This register shall contain such particulars ai the Commissioner may to time direct. column must be added in all cases in which to record immediately on receipt of notices of withdrawal (sec. 39) of a surety,
from time
(3)
perty
is
For the purposes of sec. 31 (2) an annual declaration of all landed proAnderson's L. R. Code Rules, 1921 (1st ed. of required from all officers
24.
Fresh or
security.
The
of
Survey may,
at
additional
any time after security has beon given by a revenue officer subordinate to him, if it appear to him that the security taken is unsatisfactory,
the officer is transferred require?, or for other sufficient reason, demand fresh or additional security and in case of the officer failing to give such security within one monto after its being required of him may suspend or dismiss him : provided always that no greater security shill be demanded than is required by the orders of Government under the last preceding section.
if
or
to an office for
is
25.
The
Demands
Collector or the Superintendent of Survey or any other officer deputed by the Collector or for money, Superintendent of Survey for this purpose
alli " al1 case8 in may have a <t on any revenue omcer or on any person claim formerly employed as such in his department or district for public money or papers or otlnr Government property, by writing under his official seal, if ho use one, and signa-
K'i^rhingrS:
W* ^
person concerned.
ture, require the money, or the particular papers or property detained, to be delivered either immediately to the person bearing the
at
such place
as
not discharge
the
Who may
and
he directed, , ,
\
may J
or
cause
,
,
-
him
.^i
to be
appre-
sums
:
delivers
up the papers or
Provided that no person shall be detained in confinement by virtue of any sucn warrant for a longer L.init to Confinement. perio(j than Qne ca l endar m0nth
.
Revenue
officers
Officers.
For
the
purposes
ss.
of
ss.
25 and 26
only
village
Officers issuing
warrant,
see
warrants under
25 and 26
For form of
to
Schedule 0.
ss,
entitled
issue
warrants under
25 and 26,
Sacs. 24-27J
23
26.
The
Collector of his
own
or
motion,
if
person
is
and
arrears of revenue
;
di strict >
.
Superintendent of Survey, if *uch officer or person is or was serving in the survey department in his district, may also take proceedings to recover any public moneys due by him in the same manner and subject to the same rules as are laid down in this Act for the recovery of arrears of land revenue from defaulters, and, for the purpose of recovering
,
,
4be1d7o
covery
of
n
e-
papers
or
property.
public papers or other property appertaining Government may issue a search warrant anc exercise all such powers with lespect thereto as maybe lawfully exercised by a Magistrate under the provisions of Chapter
to
*
It shall be the
bound
to
give
information of
same
i7.
*
to the Collector.
The surety
liable in
Surety to be
tne
same
manner
as
or sureties of such officer or other person as is aforesaid, who may enter into a bond, in o g chedu l e fi, shall be liable to be tfa f
principal.
*.
,,'
-,
same manner as his or their principal is liable to be proceeded against, in case of default, and notwithstanding such principal may be so proceeded against :
provided always that in any
Extent of
liability.
case
of
failure to
discharge
ro
than
is sufficient
to
make good any sum of money due to Government Qr to pr0( juce any property of Government of ascertained value no greater sum cover any loss or damage which the Govern-
the principal, shall be actually sustain by the default of recovered from the surety or sureties as the amount which may be due from such surety or sureties under the terms of the securitybond executed by him or them :
ment may
nPa?r
shall in no provided also that the said surety or sureties case be liable to imprisonment in default of Sureties not liable to pr0(j u cino; public papers or property, if he or P the they pay into the Government treasury in named the of or such whole penalty part the bond as may be demanded,
And
V of
1898.
24
CODE, 1879
OHAP. IV
If an officer or other person as aforesaid, or his surety or sureties against whom a demand is made,
sufficient
the
if
officer or
surety
that
may
29.
and countermand the sale of any property have been attached, and restore it to the owner.
The
of
be affected
by the death of a
Liability
surety
men ^
.
not affected
by
death
fae hel(j
..
.
hen
fe
.
d
.
s" a"
continue so long as
the
pointment.
pies
any situation in which security is required under section 23, and until his bond is
principal
cancelled.
The
heirs of a
of
deceased officer shall be liable by suit in the Civil Court for any claims which Government may have against the deceased, in the game way as the y WOU 1 J b Q 0r s i ilar claims
(
made by an
30.
individual.
Any
surety, whether under a separate or joint bond, may withdraw from his suretyship at any time on
ftating
in writing, to the officer to
whom
withdraw
shall cease after sixty days from the date on which he gives such writing as to all demands upon his principal concerning
his principal
may
be-
come chargeable
have become
after the expiration of such period of sixty days> but shall not cease as to any demands for wnich his principal may
liable
before
the expiration of
may
CHAPTER
OF CEBTAIN ACTS PROHIBITED
31.
_,
IV
No
revenue
.....
Prohibited acts.
officer shall, except with the express permission of Government, or of the Collector, or Superintendent of Survery to whom he is subordinate,
,
5
directly or in
SEOB. 28-31
25
(2)
not
public
to
sale-,
purchase or bid,
purchase at
in the name of another, or or in shares with others, for any projointly w k k ic mayj un(j er the p rov i s } ons perty
own name
or
this Act or of any other law for the time being in force, be sold by order of any revenue or judicial authority in the district in which such officer is at the time employed;
the revenue}
(3) hold directly or indirectly any farm or be in any way concerned on his private account in the colnot to bo concerned in lection of payment of revenue of any kind in
the district in
which he
is
at
the
time em-
ployed
and no revenue
officer shall
(4) derive either for himself or for any other individual any profit or advantage beyond his lawful salary
8
nsfof pubUc
property
,
mo^t
Or
emolument m0 ? <f P er ty wlt " the collection or charge of which he is entrusted or connected or
;
^
,
V"
ff
not
SontS
(5J demand or receive under the colour or by the exercise of his authority as such revenue officer, or by to make or receive f J grati fi cat i on or otherwise, Or knowiogJ
*?
person
is
to
demand
-,
any sum
or
any
or conto
what he
legally entitled
demand
or receive under the provisions of this Act or of law for the time being in force.
any Other
Talatisnot
to
act as
money
lenders.
dUmis33d
(Gr,
K. No. 4120,
than hereditary.
section
should be
construed
engage given Clause (3), if strictly enforced, would prohibit them from holding any lands payto the holding of hereditary ing revenue to Government. But there is no objection their holding of lands to or accountants lands by stipendiary village absolutely that every revenue section Ihis a sale. at than requires otherwise public purchased in which he is district the in officer who holds land paying revenue to Government to hoM it, and the Collector can to continue should obtain permission employed the merits of each case, taking care that give or withhold permission according to considers that the position of a If Collector the his orders are not unduly harsh. in any case talati as a holder of land in his own village taluka or district conflicts, can have him he with the proper performance of his duty as a village accountant,
transferred (Q. B, No, 5635, dated 31st July 1883).
88
82,
CODE, 1879
[OHAP.
IV
Power
of fining, reduc-
Sn7t
ves t.
|h om
is described section for recedin <* breach ' P S of departmental rules Or discipline, or for carelessness, unfitness, neglect of duty or other
in the last
^7
misconduct;, by the authority by whom such officer is appointed; or by any authority superior to such authority ; and this power may be delegated by such first-mentioned authority, in whole or in part,
to
any subordinate officer on the same condition that the power of appointment may be delegated under section 21 :
Provided
that,
excepting Mamlatdars, no
se
rvenue
250, to be fined, &c., only by order of the Governor in Oouncil.
fficer '
wh
m0nthl y
8ala
250, shall be fined, suspended, reduced, or dismissed except by order of the Governor in
Council,
fine village officers'.
RS
^cecd"
Mamlatdars empowered to
may, under
this
The
Collector
a Mamlatdar the power of fining village officers (stipendiary as well as hereditary) subject to a right of revision and subject to any limitation, laid down by law or rule which the Collector may think fit to
section, delegate
to
impose.
There is no objection to the power being so delegated in any district in which the Collector thinks it expedient to adopt this course (G. R. No. 2116, dated 13th March 1883, and G. R. No. 4100, dated 30th May 1883). This last
G. R. was obviously intended to apply to reveuue officers only, and not to override in any way the provisions of the Village Police Act VIII of 1867, section 9 of which expressly limits tin power of fining Police Patils to First Class Magistrgtes.
If the resolution in question has been construed anywhere as empowering Mamlatdars to fine Patils for neglect of their Police duties, the practice is incorrect and
March 1893).
Collectors
village officers.
delegate to any Mahalkari in his district the power to fine officers in sums not exceeding Ra. 2 subject to the conditions in hereditary village the order (G. H. No. 5891, dated 23rd August, quoted in Sathe'a Land Revenue
authorized
to
Code, 4th
Ed
p. 31).
Maximum
specific
office for
six
misconduct.
from
office
should be awardable a3 a
punishment under
thoald be fised at
33.
When
any revenue
be
made
m writing.
passes an order for fining, reducing, suspending, or dismissing any subordinate officer, he shall record such order or cause the same to be recorded, together
officer
with the reasons therefor, in writing his signature in the language of the district or in English.
[a]
under
Words
repealci by
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
s.
SEOS. 32-86
27
34.
Fine
not
No
to
exceed
;
under the foregoing provisions shall in amount of two months' any f the O office held pay by the offender at the time Qf the commigsion of
case exceed the
now
All fines inflicted under this chapter may be recovered the officer's pay or, if
recovered.
from
be
necessary,
may
35.
a subordinate officer's order, pass an order for fining, reducing, suspending or dismissing any revenue-officer subordinate to him whose monthly salary does not exceed thirty-five rupees, or
Appeals.
whether of
any authority superior to the Collector or Superintendent any such order against a revenue officer whose monthly salary does not exceed ninety-nine rupees, no appeal shall lie against such order, except and provided always that at least one appeal shall lie against every order made, of his own motion, by any authority other th*n G overnment, for dismissing an officer whose monthly salary exceed s thirty-five rupees.
it
of Survey psss
And no appeal shall lie against any order for not exceeding one rupee.
Modification Of Order.
nature referred to in
cl.
inflicting
a fine
No
Tho
order
(1) of this
section
object is to preclude
appeals to tho
is
Commissioner when the subordinate involved gets Rs. 35orless.lt revision by Government (Modik's Land System a>id
subject to
Viallje Administration).
.......
36.
Nothing
to
^i
p
affected
any
by tlon
officer's
* or
tion not
this Act.
charged.
officer
Any
Officer
may
be
suspended
its close
may
be suspend-
may, upon
le^ltS
ed, reduced
or dismiss-
ed t
not,
28
1879
OHAP.
[a] (1)
streams, nalas, lakes and tanks, and all canals, and water-courses, and all standing and flowernment. ing water, and all lands, wherever situated, which are not the property of individuals or of aggregates of persons legally capable of holding property, and except in so far as any rights of such persons may be established in or over the same, and except as may be otherwise provided in any law for the time beinc; in force, are and are hereby declared to be, with all rights in or over the same, or appertaining thereto, the property of Government; and it shall be lawful for the Collector, subject to the orders of the Commissioner, to dispose of them in such manner as he may deem fit, or as may be authorized by general rules sanctioned by Government, subject always to the rights of way, and all other or of individuals legally subsisting. rights of the public In this secrion "high-water mark" means the Explanation. highest point reached by ordinary spring-tides at any season of
others, belong to
p rop
eX
o7 Gov-
All public roads, lanes and paths, the bridges, ditches, dikes and fences, on, or beside, the saine, the bed of the sea and of harbours and creek8 bel high-water mark, and of rivers,
the year.
here any property or any right in or over any pro(2) claimed by or on behalf of Government or by any person as perty it shall be lawful for the Collector or a survey against Government, formal after enquiry of wh ch due notice has been given, to officer, the claim. order an deciding pass
[/>]
is
Any suit instituted in any Civil Court after the exof one year from the date of any order passed [c] under piration sub-section (1) or sub-section (2), or, if one or more appeals have been made against such order within the period of limitation, then from the date of any order passed by the final appellate authority,
[b] (3)
determined according to section 204, shall be dismissed (although limitation has not been set up as a defence) if the suit is brought to set aside such order or if the relief claimed is inconsistent with such order, provided that in the case of an order under sub-section (2) the plaintiff has had due notice of such
as
order.
shall be deemed to have had due notice [6] (4J Any person this sectition if notice thereof has under or order an of enquiry been given in accordance with rules made iu this behalf by the Governor in Council.
This was originally s. 37.lt was numbered sub-section (1) of section 37 [a] by Bom. Act. XI of 1912 s. 1. These sub-sections were added by Bom. Act XI of 1012 s. 1. [b] Words repealed by Bom. Act II of 1919, second Schedule are omitted. [c]
SBO. 3?
OF L^ND AND
This section does not authorize
the Government to
Public highway.
obstruct or divert a public
187). District Municipal Act, 1901, streets vest in municipalities; i e., the ownership of the soil does not so vest, bat the surface and so much of the sub-soil as may be necessary for the purpose of
highway (Ardeshir
50 (2) of the
t
v.
Almai, 63
Bom.
Streets.
Under
s.
Bombay
the
position of
a trustee (G, K.
the
Beds of rivers.
The
as great under
Hindu
and Mahomedan laws as under the English. The property in the beds of navigable rivers as in the seashore and the bottom of the sea is reckoned amongst the
jura regalia of the crown (G. E. No, 1004, dated
p. 57).
custom of the country Government unless it has been unmistakably published (G. Bs. No3. 4239, dated 24th July 1873 and 5292, dated 22nd September 1873 quoted in Joglekar's Land Revenue Code, p. 57).
According to the
vests in
lands. Waste lands belong to the state and a permanent private right cannot be implied from the levy of a rate on a casual and desultory use of the soil (G. R. No. 2493, dated 4-5-1881, quoted inJoglekar's Land Revenue
Code,
p. 58).
Waste
Limitation.
Lands form-
ing part of a river-bed were leased by the Collector for cultivation to defendant No. 2 The plaintiff who owned lands on the bank of the river laid claim to the
lands in dispute, but his claim was negatived by the Collector under this section on July 16, 1912. The plaintiff appealed against the Collector's order, the last
The plaintiff sued, on April 6, 1913. appeal having been decided on July 16 that the suit was barred under 1914, to recover possession of the lands. Held, Art. 14 of the Limitation Act, 1908, inasmuch as the Collector's order having
;
been passed before this section was amended by Act XI of 1912, time began to run from the date of the order and not from the final order in appeal (Chhotubhai c. Secretary of State, 22 Bom. L. R. 146).
liave right to cultivate land left dry in a river their land. Where the Khots of a village claimed a right to adjoining occupy and cultivate land left dry in the river bed, as far as the middle of the bed
this section
Khots
opposite their Khoti village, it was held that they were entitled to this right, and was not a bar to such a right (Secretary of State v. Wasudeo, 31 Bom.
456).
Collector's action,
this section, purports to deal
Where
the Coll ector, acting under the povisioLS of the property of an is prima facia
individual
who has been in peaceable occupation thereof and not of Government, and passes an order with reference thereto, he is not dealing with that land In his official capacity, but is acting ultra vires (Malkajeppa t;. Secretary of State, 36
Bom. 325). Collector's power.
The
Collector acts ultra vires if
he interferes with
private land; his powers extend only to ownerless land (Secretary tak Singh, 1 S. L. R. 109).
of State
title
v.
MushGovernas
to
Government.
is
on
no presumption of
favour
of
Government even
331).
Muhammad
v,
Secretary of State, (8 S. L, R.
***'
is
IV
the
Government
All the land of the village site of a bhagdari The bhagdari tenure is a particular system of collecting the Government revenue* bhagdar can have only those village fields and the portion or the village site as
are assigned to him by the Government. He cannot claim the proprietorship of each lands as he is liable to pay rent or assessment to the Government for these
landfl
Bom.
87).
Sub-Sections
(2)
and
(3).
In
its
original
form section
37 only pro-
vided for the disposal by the Collector of Government property, and did not provide for any enquiry where there was a dispute as to whether property belonged to Government or not. This is now provided for in the new sub-sec. (2). In the new sub-section (3) the provisions oi s. 135 (which is now repealed) are included in an amplified form so as to cover all descriptions of property on which
orders may be passed under sub-section This extension is necessitated (1) or (2). by the uncertainty whether the period of limitation prescribed in Art. 14 of the first Schedule of the Limitation Act applies to cases not covered by the original section 135 (Statement of Objects and Reasons).
Appeal. An appeal against an order passed by a Collector under subsection (2) of this section cannot necessarily be instituted before a suit is filed in a Civil Court,
Subject to the general orders o Government, it shall be lawful for survey officers whilst survey opeLandsmaybeaesign- rations are under Chapter VIII proceeding r ed for special purposes, , r n r \* ^ ,, and at any other time for the [6] Collecand tor, to set apart lands the property of Government and not in the lawful occupation of any person or aggregate of persons, in unalienated villages or unaliewhen assigned shall not nated portions of villages, for free pasturage be otherwise used withfor tfae vi jj cattl for foregt reserves or
38.
.
Mi
municipal purpose ; and lands assigned specially for any such purpose shall not be otherwise [c] used without the sanction of the [6] Collector; and in the disposal of land under section 37 due regard shall be had to all such special assignments. Notes. This section gives the Collector the power of setting apart lands for
public purposes
;
for
j.
is
to
be exercised by
Survey
while survey operations are proceeding, is not thereby disturbed (Select Committee's Report). Sees. 38 to 40 (both inclusive) do not apply to any estate in the districts of
Officers,
Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach, or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Takkdars' Act, 1888, extends (See Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss, 1 and 33),
[a]
[b]
Words repealed by Act III of 1883 are omitted. " Collector" was substituted for "Commissioner" by Bom. Act
Thia word was substituted by Bom. Act
IV
of 1905,
First Schedule.
[c]
IV
of 1913,
s.
11,
for
the ori-
SJECS.
38-40
31
land set
apart
not confined to
Land which
aJ public
is none the less set apart for that purp03e, though this may hive taken place years before survey operations took place under Chapter VII of the Code (Pranlal v. Secretary of State, P. J. 1897, p. 366).
Municipalities can permit lands assigned as air spaces to be used for temporary purposes with the approval of the Collector or the local revenue officer in charge of
the city survey. Half the proceeds derived from such uee should be paid to Government (G. R. No. 125-24, dated 7-2-1925, quoted in Joy Mar' t Supplement No. 2
to his
Land Reuenue
39.
Code, p. 6).
of grazing on free pasturage lands shal* extend only to the cattle of the village or of use of villages to which such lands belong or have Regulation pas urage. ^ eea agg jg ne( j^ an(j g ^ a u ^ e re g u l a ted by rules to be from time time, either generally or in any particular instance, prescribed by the Collector with the sanction of the Commissioner. The Collector's decision in any case of dispute as to the said right of grazing shall be conclusive.
The
right
"Village cattle." -The phrase "village cattle*' does not include the cattle of any roving grazier who may choose to squat for a few months on the public ground of a village (Collector ofThana v, Bal Patcl, 2 Bom. 110).
In villages, or portions of villages, of which the original survey settlement has been completed before Concession of Governthe passing of this Act, the right of Governee 8 ment to all trees in unalienated land except 8
40.
t
by Grovernment, or by any whether by express order made at, or about, the time of such settlement, or or general order in force at tlie time of such settlennderany rule, ment, or by notification made and published at, or at any time after, such settlement, shall be deemed to have been conceded to the
ploted before the passing of this Act.
rfoaints
c om-
trees
reserved
officer,
survey
of settlements completed before the of 1865 [a] this provision shall not apply The right of Governto teak, black- wood or sandal -wood trees. ment to such trees shall not be deemed to have been conceded, except by clear and express words to that effect.
occupant. passing of
But
in the
case
I
Bombay Act
In the case of villages or portions of villages of which the original survey settlement shall be completed Ditto, in case of settle. of this Act, the right of a f te r the passing r A ~ ments completed after n ^ r * J? i j trees in unahenated land all to Government the passing of this Act. the occuto shall be deemed to be conceded pant of such land, except in so far as any such rights may be reserved by Government, or by any survey officer on behalf of
j.
this
of 1865 (except sections 37 and 38) is repealed by has been which Act, repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 2.
[a]
Bom. Act I.
s.
2 of
32
CODE, 18? 9
CHAP.
IV
Government, either expressly at or about the time o such settlement, or generally by notification made and published at any time
previous to the completion of the survey settlement of the district in which such is situate. village or portion of a
village
When
TV,.
.
permission to occupy land has been, or shall hereafter _ be, granted after the completion of the sur,
.
is situate, the village said permission shall be deemed to include the concession of the right of Government to all trees growing on that land, which not have been, or which shall not hereafter
tion of settlement.
or
portion of
may
which may not have been reserved, under any of the foregoing pro-
visions of this section, at or about the time of the original survey settlement of the said village or portion of a village. Trees. Trees belong always to the landlord, not to the tenant. But a permanent tenant, the origin of whose tenancy is lost into antiquity, is entitled to the trees. For tenant's rights to the produce of trees, see 80 All. 134 and 38
Bom.
716).
"Trees reserved,"
The accused were occupants
first
of a Survey
Number
in a village
in
which tho
survey settlement was introduced in 1865, and the revised settlement in 1889. Considerable time after the settlements, sandal- wood trees grew on the land. Those trees .having been cut and removed by the accused, without the permission
.
of Government, the accused were convicted of a breach of Rule 2 framed by Bombay Government under e. 75 cl. (c) of the Forest Act and punished under s. 76 of
Held, reversing the convictions and sentences, that under this section the right of Government was confined to reserved trees existing at the date of tho settlement and that all subsequent growth belongs to the v.
the Act.
occupant
(Emperor
Yellappa, 45
Bom.
110).
Bombay forest rights are discussed in G. B. No. 2493, Dunlop'g (Kdaba and Ratnagiri) and Karri's (Kanara) proclamations are discussed in 8 Bom. H. 0. 2 and 3 Bom. 728.
dated 4th June 1881.
Forest rights.
In
product growing on land set apart for forest reserves under section 32 of Bombay Act I of 1365 [a] or section 38 of this Act, and to all trees, brushwood, jungle or other natural product, wherever growing, except in so far as the same may be the property of individuals or of aggreof Individuals gates capable of holding property, vests in Government ; and such trees, brushwood, jungle or other natural product shall be preserved or disposed of in such manner as Government may from time to time direct.
[aj
or
right to all trees specially reserved under the provision of the last preceding section, and to Governmeat trees and all trees, brushwood, jungle or other natural
41.
The
Bom.
1 of
1865 (except
as.
37 and 38)
is
8.
repealed
5,
by
s.
2 of this
Act,
IV
of 1913,
SEOS. 41-43
S3
"Or Other natural product," These words were added with the view of protecting existing rights of Government to such products as lao, honey, gum, resin, catacha, etc. (Proceedings of the Legislative Council).
TrrOS in Pa til Inam land
ernment for
trees in Patil
No
J,,
Gov-
1893, p. 186). Note. The provisions in ss. 40 and 41 relating to trees on occupancies are based upon the principle that trees standing or growing on occupancies do not be*
of trees
Inam
land (P.
long to occupants, but belong to Government. The provisions refer to two classes reserved, and not reserved, and declare that occupants have no manner
the trees reserved by Government.
of right to
All road-side trees which have been planted and reared by, or under the orders of, or at the exRoad-side trees. Government, and all trees which have pense been planted and reared at the expense of Local Funds by the side of any road, which vests in Government, vest in Government [a]. But in the event of such trees dying, or being blown down, or being cut down by order of the Collector, the timber shall become the property of the holder of the land in which they were growing ; and the usufruct, including the loppings of such trees, shall also vest in the said holder : provided that the trees shall not be lopped except under the orders of the
[a] 42.
Collector.
43.
Any
u
person
6 ho!
who
priate
shall
appro-
from hi. holding, [c] any other of the like [c] whether product rizedly appropriated. description or not [c] which is the property of Government, shall be liable to Government for the value thereof, which shall be recoverable from him as an arrear of land revenue, in addition to any penalty to which he may be liable under the provisions of this Act for the occupation of the land or otherwise ;
natural
^
JrK
any
tree
thereof or re
oveM
stituted against
and notwithstanding any criminal proceedings which may be inhim in respect of his said appropriation of Gov-
vernment property.
The decision of the Collector as to the value of any such tree, or portion thereof, or other natural product, shall be conclusive.
"Any Other
natural product."
v.
This
expression
Secretary of State } 6
Bom. L. B. 1117).
[a
a]
Bom.
Act IV
of
1913,
s.
12
(a),
for
the
original paragraph.
[b]
The
A.ct
IV
of 1913,
s.
12
(b),
are
omitted.
IV
** 44.
OHAP,
IV
In villages or lands in which the rights of Government t0 * ha been under sec. 40 Begulation of supply ^erved 8ubJ ect tc> certain privileges of the of fire-wood and
for domestic
timber or other
$*
of
villagers
cr
certain
classes
or
fire-wood or timber for purposes, and in lands which have been set apart under section 38 for forast reserves subject to such privileges, all other cases in which such and privileges exist in respect of in^ any alienated land, the exercise of the said privileges shall bo regulated by rules to be from time to time, either generally or in any particular instance, prescribed by the Collector or by such other officer as Government may direct. In any case of dispute as to the mode or time of exercising any such privileges the decision of the Collector or of such other officer shall be conclusive.
purposes.
NotO.
AB
on
p. 1, supra.
in
Government
waste land, and of reserved trees in occupied lands, can be tried under section 76 of the Forest Act. The ruling of Koya Mavji (Or. Rg. 49, dated 6th October
1896)
is
dated 26th
May
1903,
quoted in
45.
.
purto the
poses,
and wherever
o enue Government according to the rules hereinafter enacted such as may be wholly exempted except under the provisions o any special contract with Government or any law tor the time being in force.
remits
ally exempted.
l%l
W""t
**
situate, is liable
But nothing
.
ttaHLTff
necessity be for a time.
T5
overruled
deemed to affect the power of the Legislature to direct the levy of revenue n *U nder whatever title they may be held whenever and so long as the exigencies of the State may render such levy necessary.
If*
Assessment of revenue.
Strict proof
set
up in derogation of tha inherent right of the sovereign to assess the land at his discretion ; and the facts that the lands in question were waste lands reclaimed from the sea which the inhabitants were invited to
cultivate, or that
a very small
rent has been paid for many years, do not show that the Government has forfeited its right to enhance the assessment in respect of such lands (Shapurji 9. The
Colkctor of Bombay,
Bom.
488).
Non-agricultural land whether the Sarkari or occupied Kharabo, which has not been assessed and which is excluded from settlement guarantee, is liable to be assessed from the first year, in which the occupation
Hf on-agricultural
land.
was officially discovered (G. B. No. 7058, dated Joglekar'a Supplement No. 2, p. 7).
26th September
1923, quoted in
SBC*. 44-46
85
All alluvial lands, newly-formed islands, or abandoned river-beds which vest, under any law for Liability of alluvial t k e time being in force in any hoMer of lands to land revenue. alienated land, shall be subject in respect of liability to the payment of land-revenue to the same privileges, conditions or restrictions as are applicable to the original holding in virtue of which such lands, islands or riverbeds so vest in the said holder, but no revenue shall be leviable in respect of any such lands, islands, or river-beds until or unless the area of the same exceeds half an acre and also exceeds one-tenth of the area of the said original holding.
46.
Notes.
This section
is subject to
modification
when applied
to
any estate
in the districts of
Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Talukdara' extends Gujarat Act, 1888, (Fide Bom. Act VI of 1888, as, 1 and 33). This section and the following section treat of alluvion and diluvion formed
Ihmedabad,
sa.
63
and 64.
Land Revenue Oode except in the case-law or judge-made law based upon the common law and natural equity, and some special Municipal and Fort Tr,ust enactments outside Bombay Island. Alluvion must, to
according
these ruling3.be interpreted to mean strictly graduil, slow, and imperceptible \imperceptible day by day as it occurs but of couree perceptible enough in the long run
The subject of alluvion is one of the moat references in ss. 37, 46 and 53 to 'any law for are vague ; since so far as is known, there is no such
The
(Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol. 28, p. 362) accretion by deposit of fresh soil by water upon existing riparian land (Justinian and 3 Beng. L. E. p. 525, 187jO). Band blown by the wind or a mass of shingle suddenly flung up after a storm, or
land.
new land left bare by a receding sea or a diverted river is not alluvion but derelict Nor would the deposits in a river-bed which raise their surfaces above the
hot-weather water-level be treated as alluvion in respect of a holding terminating on the upper edge of the steep bank of a river high above the deposit ; there is no physical connection bet ween them, to which the term 'accretion' would be
applic-
Achhaibar, 28 All. 647 j see also 27 All. 655). (This condition of gradual change does not attach to diluvion). The fact that a riparian holder (or even, semble, a third person) by artifice assisted the alluvion
able (Narendra
v.
to form does not affect the law. The persons to whom an alluvial had been granted were evicted in favour of the riparian hissedars
strip of frontage
of 1919).
Nor
it
forms
in situ
assessment was reduced) affect the title of present riparian holders (G. E. No. 744 of 1919). The existence of a public foot-path along the old estate boundary or anything else which puts a limit to the riparian owner's proporty would prevent the deposit of fresh soil from being an accretion, and so from being alluvial at all
(Anderson's
accept possession and pay assessment or If it is judi for*any accretion, alluvial or not, unless he wishes. unprofitable, he can decline ; though he would then run the risk of the land being allotted to some other person. In the case of alluvion there is a limit (in the case of unalienated
Land Revenue Rules, 1921, 1st The riparian holder is not obliged to
36
OHAP. IV
land) of one acre to his right of free enjoyomt and no limit of his right of occupation of alluvion subject to the payment of revenue. Conversely this seems to imply no title to exemption from revenue whoa the extension is not alluvial. In
the case of an alienated riparian holding, it has first to be decided whether the alluvion or abandoned shore or river bed, or new island, does vest legally in the
It has been held (7 Born. L. R. 872) not so to vest unless his original grant had covered the area now reformed or reappeared (since such grants are construed stmtly against the grantee). Again G. R. No. 744 of 1919 rejects the view
Inamdar.
comes Inam
that the alluvion formed in place of old diluvion, on the site of an inam grant, be: but no reasons are given and the order has not been confirmed by any
any proprietary ri^hb on the Inamdar, islands not "formed on any bank or fall under s. shore" and other alluvion not proved to voat in an laaoaiar would The Code gives no power to frame rules for 63 .......... alluvion, but only for diluvion, and does nob deal with the proprietary right bu" only with This the liability to pay land revenue (or quit rent and salami, if alienated). held by Knots section cannot apply to Khoti or Talukdari villages, because land andTalnkdars is not alienated. It might apply to Kadi in or Phut Inam lands in
legal decision. This section does not confer but simply refers us to the general hw.
New
47.
Every holder
.
in
respect
thereof
shall be entitled, subject to such rules as may be from time to time made in this behalf by J
,
the
assessment if any portion thereof, than half an acre in extent, [a] is lost by diluvion. * * * *
[c] 48.
not being
[6]
( 1)
Manner
of assessment
men k
the provisions of this Act shall be assessed, as cr 8 h a ll be deemed to have been assessed, ' , .,, ^. A the case may be, with reference to the use of
.
the land
Prohibition of use of land for certain pur-
p 08es .
(a) for the purpose of agriculture, th purp0se of building, and f r r i. ) / r (c) for a purpose other than agriculture
or building, (2) Where land assessed for use for any purpose is used for other any purpose, the assessment fixed under the provisions of this Act upon such land shall, notwithstanding that the term for which such assessment may have been fixed has not expired, be liable to be altered and fixed at a different rate by such authority and subject to such prescribe in this behalf.
rules
as the
() Where land held free of assessment on condition of being used for any purpose is used at any time for any other purpose, it shall be liable to assessment.
[
a\
[b\
[c]
IV of 1913, s. 13, are omitted. * Act IV of 1913, s. 13, is omitted. Bom. para., repealed by Ihis section was substituted by Bom. Act IV^of 1913, s. 14, for the oru
Words
The
repealed by ISo-ja Ace.
ginal section.
SECS. 47-48]
S7
The Collector or a survey officer may, subject to any made in this behalf under section 214, prohibit the use for certain purposes of any unalienated land liable to the payment of
(4)
rules
land revenue, and may summarily evict any holder who attempts to use the same for any such prohibited purpose.
uses
or
This
section
provides
only for an
altered
Where,
cultural assessment in virtue of the grant of a village is altered aasementin respect of the lands converted
(i. e. t
from agricultural
(Bomanji
the building assessment) also goes to the State, 63 Bom. 30, P. 0.).
grantee
Secretary
of
"Used." The substitution of the word "used" for the word "appropriated*' was in accordance with the ruling reported in 3i Bom. 2 39 (Secretary of State v.
Laldas).
Under
cl (3)
of
this
section
it
where mahara
for
service
and used
non-agricul-
(G. Rs. Nos. 31012 and Evidently "used for any purpose" is not the same as "assessed for a use." They could still apply the profits to remunerate their service as mahars*
this
was
But
if
in
alienated
land were
it
was held
free
Non-applioation
Villages nor to
of L. R. Rules in khoti, or talukdari The Land Revenue Rules do not lands. Talukdari villages, nor to Thana wood lards which are not
Thana WOOd
lands.
Farm
barns
buildings
(mean-
tenants,
and
his
and
cattle sheda
(41
land,
water-lifts
< Agriculture' means the ploughseparable from cultivation) are agricultural uses. Letting a few ing, sowing, tilling and reaping of some crop or produced/or profit.
trees or flowers
grow
There are some (market) for pleasure is not agriculture. for the market, wliich is cercultivated seen be can etc.,
dairy farm was held to be agricultural in G. R. No. 7307 of Storing manure is an agricultural purpose (G. R. No. 7702 of 1899). But a Co-operative dairy is non-agricultural. Oane crushing and Gul boiliDg are essantial to cane cultivation and are not non-agricultural uses (Anderson's
1917.
or assigned to a Municipality for one purpose but then leased to non-agricultural uses (such as houses or Cinema Halls) ia liable to assessment (Ibid).
Extra assessment.
from agricultural to
He was called upon non-agricultural uses by establishing a brick kiln in 1872. by the Collector to pay this time the assessment as fine for the conversion under
s.
35
the
of
on
land.
of
1865.
of
Plaintiff,
thereupon,
erected
gome huts
revision
was assessed as
agricultural.
survty which took place in 1889 the land Sometime between 1897 and 1901, plaintiff erected
4$
1879
CHAP. IV
a substantial building on the land. In 1 012 the Collector levied building fine from the plaintiff. Held, that though the levy of additional assessment under s. 35 of Bombay Act I of 1865 might have protected the plaintiff against its enhancement before the Revision Survey of 1889, still this section rendered him liable to pay extra assessment for the conversion in use which took plaoe after the date of the Revision Survey of 1889 (Muhammad, Bhai v. The Secretary of State
for India, 42
Bom.
126).
Altered assessment
pay altered assessment for
when
leviable.
An
occupant
is
not liable to
performance of an operation necessary to put the crop of that land into any ordinry marketable form 5 for anything beyond it, altered assessment h leviable (G. U No. 5321, dated 14-12-1922, quoted in Joghkar's Supplement No. 2, p. 7).
his land so long as it is used for the
In the
case of
Oo-operative
Housing Societies, "general utility" roads, t. e., all thoroughfares in the strict meaning of the term should be exempted from non-agricultural a93e3sment, while roads within private compounds are liable to assessment (Ibid, p 8.)
has been customary to levy any special or extra cess, fine, or tax, however designated, from Commuted assessment ho j der of j an j which tho h nominally
49.
\V
it
hen
wholly or partially exempt from the payment of land revenue, has by the exaction of such to the State, cess, fine or tax been indirectly taxed or when any land ordinarily, or under certain circumstances, wholly or partially exempt from assessment, and of land liable to is subject occasionally, or under particular occasional assessment. circumstances, to the payment of assessment,
?J?he
slaSr
or of any cess or tax however designated, the said assessment, cess, fine, or tax maybe commuted into an annual assessment on the land to be paid under all circumstances, but such commuted assessment thall not exceed such amount as the Commissioner shall deem to be a fair equivalent of the assessment, cess, fine or tax for which it is substituted, and shall not be in excess of the assessment to which the land would be ordinarily subject, if
in respect
thereof.
50.
tax hitherto payable by an inferior holder shall be made leviable be lawful it shall f rom the superior holder, r i r for such superior holder to recover from suca inferior holder the amount of the commuted assessment fixed in lieu of such cess, fine or
cess, fine or
. i
tax,
51.
When
it
has been
Excees oi assessment
** "S2a
'
with
it.
customary to levy a larger revenue under the name of "veto" or any other desigua ti on upon any portion of land than such P0ion would ordinarily be liable to in consideration of other land being held with it
which
is
wholly or
partially
exempt from
49-53
30
on the said payment of revenue, the excess of revenue payable held wholly hitherto be the land land of upon charged may portion
or partially exempt. Veta and Ohali tenures. The
tenures
in Gujarat
are called
veta
lands which are not wholly exempt from the which payment of land revenue, and [b] on Assessment by whom the assessment has not been fixed under the to be fixed. the assessprovisions of section 102 or 106, ment of the amount to be paid as land revenue shall, subject to rules [c] made in this behalf under section 214, be fixed at the discretion of the Collector, for such period as he may [c] be authorized to prescribe, and the amounts due according to such assessment shall be levied on all such lands Provided that in the case of lands partially exempt f>om landis revenue, or the liability of which to payment of land-revenue in had be shall to or conditions restrictions, respect special subject the fixing of the assessment and the levy of the revenue to all of the said rights legally subsisting, according to the nature
[a] 52.
On
all
rights
[rf].
This section gives authority to the Collector to assess unoccupied and unallocated lands which were within the operation of an order under s. 95, but which were left unassesaed at the settlement (Statement of Objects and Reasons).
Note.
to fix effect Of this Section is to give the Collector the discretion in the is to render Code the occupants of of 217 s. and the effect the assessment
The
alienated
villages subject
to a
settlement like
the
occupants
in
unalienated
But neither section takes away any legal right which an occupancy villages. tenant tenant may have acquired independently of his bare status as an occupancy 28 liable to pay the land-revenne according to survey rates (Laxman r. Govind,
Bom.
74, at p. 80).
53.
Register
shall be kept
by the
to
Collector in such
form
time be prescribed by the Governor in Council of all lands, the alieRegister of alienated lands nation of which has been established or recognized under the provisions of any law for the time being in force ; and, when it shall be shown to the satisfaction of the Collector that any sanad granted in relation to any such alienated land has been permanently lost or destroyed, he may,
as
payment of the
fees prescribed
by the
Governor
fa]
in Council
under
person
s.
whom
4,
ginal section.
[b
j
[c]
"And" was substituted for "or" by Bom. Act IV of Words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 15, aie
The
validity of past
omitted.
[d\
s.
assessments
of 1901,
s. 5.
52
is
saved by
Bom. Act VJ
40
OODB, 1879
he
may deem
entitled to the
shall
same a
certified extract
endorsed by the Collector, to the effect that it has been issued in lieu of the sanad said to have been lost or destroyed, and shall be deemed to be as valid a proof of title as
be
the said sanad.
54.
.
Register, which
The settlement
,
aS8e
of the assessment of each portion of land, or survey number, to the land revenue, shall
toT
the holder directly
be
136,
is
from
Government.
in the districts of
is subject to modification when applied to any estate Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (See Bom. Act VI of 1888,88. 1 and 33).
Note.
55.
Kates for
The Governor
the use of
wa
er
authorize the Collector or charge of a survey, or such ot her officer as he deems fit, to fix such rates as he may from time to time deem fit to sanction, for the use, by landholders and
in Council
officer
may
the
in
which vests in Government, which no rate is leviable under the Bombay Such rates shall be liable to revision at Irrigation Act, 1879 [&]. such periods as Government shall from time to time determine, and
other persons, of water, the right to
[b]
and
in respect of
shall be recoverable as land- revenue. Notes. This is a new law authorizing the imposition; and the recovering* as land-revenue, of rates for the use of water the right ta which vests in Government
or which has been
mittee).
made
available by
Select
Com-
the
This section does not permit the Collector to levy a penalty, minimum rate sanctioned by Government.
he
can levy
"Such Other
Officer as
he deems
fit."
These words
were intro-
duced to enable Government to entrust the duty of assessing water to a canal officer or to any other special officer {Proceedings of the Bombay Legislative Council for
1877).
Maximum water
Belgium,
districts
:
Dharwar and
for
Maximum
water rates
the
following
District
Bate per
Rs.
5 5
acre.
Thana
Kolaba
Dharwar
Notifications
Sind.
In exercise of the powers given by this section, Commissioner in Sind to fix rates for the
The paragraph
/>j
is omitttd. repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, section 16, These words and figures were substituted for the original words by
of 1879.
s.
2.
Sssos.
54-56]
41
use,
by landholders and others, of water the right to which vests in Government, for the cultivation of rice on any land not assessed and entered in the Survey Registers as rice land.
2.
The amount
and
of such rate shall be sabjeot to the appro? il of Government bs notified in the office of the Mukhtyarkar of the
is
levied, is situated.
Any
make an
application in writing to the Mukhtyarkar rized to receive such application, for permission to
other officer
use
of
duly autho-
supply of he requires it for one year only or permanently ; and if any person cultivates rioe in such land without such permission* he shall be charged with double the ra*:e ha would otherwise have been required to
the
make
rice,
stating
if
tendered a
publication of these Rules or on application to take up such lands, be list of such rice lauds then being or about to ba in their occupation, and
in such
lists
except on pay-
ment
396).
All Collectors in the Presidency, other than Collectors in the Province of Bind, are authorized to fix such rates as he miy frooa time to time deem fit to sanction for the use, by landholders and other persons, of water within the limits
of their respective districts, in all cases in which the right to such water vests in Government, and no rate in respect thereof is leviable uuder the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879 (B. G. G., 1896, PL. I, p. 583).
5G.
shall make the occupancy or alienated holding, together with all rights of the occupant or holder over all trees, crop^, buildings and thing* attached to the land or permanently fastened to anything attached to the land, liable to forfeiture, whereupon the Collector may levy all sums in arrear by sale of the occupancy or alienated holding, of suuh occupancy or alienated hold[a] or may otherwise dispose this made in behalf under section 214, [c] and rules under [b] ing such occupancy or alienated holding when disposed of, whether by
the land.
pa
Arrears of land revenue due on account of land by any land-holder shall he a paramount charge on bold every part thereof, failure in
payment
of
which
*"<!
sale as aforesaid, or by restoration to the defaulter, or by transfer to another person or otherwise howsoever, shall, unless the Collector otherwise directs, be deemed to be freed from all tenures, rights, insumbranees and equities theretofore created in favour of any
Government
in
or
Words Words
c\
repealed by
Bom
A-st
VI
of 1901, section
0,
are omitted.
repealed by Bom. Act. IV of 19.3, ss. 17 aud 18 are omitted. These words were added by Bom. Act VI of 1901, s. G.
42
OHAP.
to
Notes. This section is amended as to make clear that an whom forfeited land has been restored oj transferred otherwise
have the same rights as
if
occupant than by
sale, will
he had purchased
it (Report
of the
Select
Com-
mittee).
"OpOUpant" "Occupancy." The terms 'occupant' and 'occupancy' are subject to modification when applied to any estate in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars* Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
Retrospective
effect.-
by Bom.
Act
VI
of
1901, has restrospective effect and empowers the Collector to transfer a forfeited occupancy freed from all liens, whether such occupancy was validly forfeited under the code prior to tho Amending Act or was forfeited in compliance with
the provisions of
8. S.
s.
VI
of
1901 (Gagandas
v.
Yusif,
L. R. 233).
under
s.
153 (Chitta
Bom.
486)-
grant of fallow
especially
him personally,
granted to him on restricted tenure, unless it is proved that he availed himself of his position as co-owner gand gained an advantage in derogation of the rights of others (Abdul RMmanv. Haji Mahomed, A. I. R. 1929,
where
it is
Sind, 212).
The
plaintiff's
grandfather mort-
mortgagee in possession. There was degaged fault in payment of assessment, as the result of which the prope rty was forfeited by Government under this section as it stood before its amendment in 1901. Government re-sold the property to the mortgagee in 1884, and transferred its khata
to that of the mortgagee. In 1921, the plaintiff sued to redeem the mortgage. Held, that the right to redeem was lost owing to and that before the plaintiff the forfeiture of the laud under the original section
;
revenue sale
that
were due to
the
the default of the mortgagee in not paying the assessment and of the land was sufficient to pay the assessment or that in so
income
(Abdul
me way
the mort-
gagor had put the mortgagee in funds wherewith Rehman v. "Vinayak, 29 Bom L. R 1056).
to
pay
the assessment
Forfeiture Of Ocoupanoy.
Where an occupancy
forfeited
under this
32 end 62 of the HJes section has been disposed of by the Collector undar ss. under s 214 (old rules), to a person signing a kabulyat in form B, the Collector
cannot subsequently order the occupancy to be taken from that person and restore
it
(Dharma
v.
Where
a land
vests in the
this section as originl tenure-holder under a new tenure created by Act VI of 1901, the laud vestel freefroTi ail incumb ranees and from
equities
amended by
all
The
is
previous immaterial
(Vedu Shivlal
v.
Kalu, 37
Bom. 692).
Arrears Of assessment.
legal right
When
SBOB. 53-58
43
are levied by sale, then this section, in pursuance of an obvious policy, empowers the Collector to sell "freed from all tenures, incumbrancea and rights created by the occupant or any of the predecessors in- title or in any wise subsisting as
Should the Collector otherwise dispose of the occupancy, against ?uch occupant/' and the legil relations must be determined this section affords no such protection
;
effects of
a forfeiture
and subseequities
quent acquisition of the forfeited property are subject to the control of c. Dhondi arising out of the conduit of the parties (Amolak Banechand
Bhosale, 30
Khindu
Bom. 466).
a.
Where
after
amendment of
granted personally to one of several co owners in the absence of circumstances contrary, it must be deemed to have beea granted to him individually. If another co-owner wishes to take advantage of a. 90 of the Trusts Act, he must
allege and prove that the former by availing himself of the position of a coowner, had gained an advan'age in derogition of the rights of other co-owners I. R. 1931 Sind (Uttamchand Mangkirmal v. Salamjtrai Khubchand, 27).
It fhall be lawful for the Collector, in the event of the 57. forfeiture of a holding through any default Forfeited holdings may "^ payment or other failure occasioning & such
be taken possession of and otherwise disposed
of.
.
or any law being in force, to take immediate possession of [a] such holding and to of the same by placing it in the possession of the purchaser dispose or other person entitled to hold it accord ng to the provisions of
section
} ,f
,,
'
this
Act or any other law for the time being in force. (I) Every Revenue officer and e?ery hereditary [b] 58. patel and every hereditary village accountant Keceipts. receiving payment of land-revenue shall give a written receipt for the same.
(2) Every superior holder of an alienated village or of an alienated share of a village who is entitled to recover direct from an inferior holder any sum due on account of rent or land revenue
shall give to auch inferior holder a written receipt for the same.
Every hereditary patel and hereditary accountant who in behalf of a superior holder of an alienated village or of receives, an alienated share of a village, any rent or land-revenue from an
(3)
inferior holder shall give to such inferior holder a written receipt for the same. Such receipt shall be a full discharge to such inas ferior holder for such rent or hnd-revetiue such against
A c )py of reaeipt shill in every ctse superior holder. the superior holder by such patel or accountant.
[a]
[b\
be sent
to
The words
repealed by
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
s.
17 are omitted.
II, serial
No,
8,
44
CODE, 1879
CHAP. VI
Hereditary officers to grant receipts-. The provisions of sections 68 and 59 should be made applicable to Hereditary officer* (G. R. No. 5430; dated 14th October 1880, quoted in Qathe's Land Revenue Code 4th ed., p 70).
,
presence
might receive
Code,
Of the Kulkarni, and when the former is absent, it (G. B. No. 3S45, dated 19th M*y 1833, quoted in
Land Revenue
Every
officers
to the
Dmildar
or
laanlar oa account of
laud-
quoted
in
stamped, when the SITU, in reap act of which the given, exceeds R*. 20 (G. R R D, No 2641, dated 27th March 1884, Sathe's Land Revenue Code, 4th ed p. 70).
must be
Village accountant
bound
to give receipt.
The village accountant receiving a payment of land-revenue is bound to tender a receipt for the same in some form, and if a receipt book is not produced by a rayat, the accountant has no choice bat to prepare aud tender it to the rayat
on a separate p iper (G. R.
NX
Miy
1881).
Any person convicted of a breach of the provisions of the last preceding section after summary inquiry Penalty for failure to before the Collector shall be liable to a fine grant receipts. n0fc exC3ec[j n g three times the amount received for which a receipt was not duly granted, and one-half of the fine miy, at the discretion of the Collector, be Such inquiry may at any time be paid to the informer, if any. instituted by the Collector of his own motion without any complaint being preferred to him.
59.
CHAPTER
OP TUB
Q-ftANT,
VI
L.A.5O)
USE
AtfD
RliLINaUISHMEfff OF UNALIJCNATED
[a]
Any person desirous of taking up unoccupied land which has not been alienatt d previously to entering upon occu60.
up
unoccupied
j *u
*.
rights of occupants. Sections 60 to 67 (both inclusive) do not ap ply to any estate in the districts of Ahuedabid, Kaira, Broich or Panch Mihals to which the Gujarat Talukdard' Act, 1888, extends (ISee Bom. Act VI of 1888, sa. 1 and 33).
Note.
sale Of unocsupiei lands held by Mimlatdars under a. 62 and this aection are within the scope of permission to occupy such Had* given under
Xha
B.
revise
211 as proceedings which the Commissioner has justification to call for and and to pasa such orders therein as he deema fit and no suit would He against
of
Government on account
section
[a]
that officer
exercising
his legal
powers
u nder
that
(Parapa
u.
The Secretary of
State,
J. 1891, p.
IV
of
19H,
8.
19 for the
&
45
person who shall unauthorizedly enter upon occupation of any land set apart for any 8 ecial PP<>**> or an unoccupied land which *P occupation k ft8 not been alienated, and any person who of land. uses or occupies any such land to the use or qpcupation of which by reason of any of the provisions of this Act he is not entitled or has ceased to be entitled shall, [a]
Any
wtES?
if the land which he unauthorizedly occupies forms part of an assessed survey number, pay the assessment of the entire number
for the whole period of his [b] unauthorized occupation, and if the land so occupied by him has not been assessed,
such
amount
of assessment as
shall also be liable, at the discretion of the Collector, to a fine not exceeding five rupees, or a sum equal to ten times the
and
him for one year, if such sum be have taken up the land for purposes of cultivation, and not exceeding such limit as may be fixed in rules made in this behalf under section 214, if he have [d] used it
amount
of assessment payable by
in excess of five rupees, if he
for [d]
.Collector's decision as to the amount of assessment pay* able for the land unauthorizedly occupied shall be conclusive, and
The
in determining its amount occupation for year shall be counted as for a whole year.
[0]
portion
[e]
of
be
land shall be liable to forfeiture, struction [/] erected thereon shall also, if not removed by him after such written notice as the Collector may deem reasonable, be
liable to ferfeiture,
and any crop [ /] raised on the and any building or other con-
[g]
or to
Forfeitures under this section shall be adjudged by the Collector, and any property so forfeited shall be disposed of as the Collector may direct [g] and the cost of the removal of any encroachment under this section shall be recoverable as an arrear of land revenue, [g]
by Bom* [a a] This paragraph was substituted for the original paragraph Act III of 1921, 8.2 (n). The word "unauthorized" was inserted by Bom. Act III of 1921, s. 2 (b). [b] These words were substituted by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 20, for the c] [c
original words "appropriated to". These words were substituted by
[dd\
[e
original
Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 20, for the words "appropriated to". These words were substituted for the original words by Bom. Act e]
XVI of
[ff] (99}
Words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1901, s. 7, are omitted. These words were added by Bom, Act II of 1919, First Schedule.
Coins, 1879
OHA*.
VI
33 and 39 of
Bombay Act
I of
1865.
make
penal the
previsions
and remedies
common
two cases of occupation witlnut permission and occupation of lands a special purpose. This section provides distinctly for (1) the levy of assessment, (2) fine of five rapeea or ten times the assessment, (3) eviction, and
forfeiture of crop as an alternative
(4)
cases
The
from
of
introduction of the
fine
panalty of
fine
is
up
to
a fixed
to
amount
by a multiplied assessment
made
meet
the unauthorized occupation is trifling, but fche occupation itself mischievous, as for instance, when a landholder ploughs up and incorporates in his field the strip of land dividing him from his neighbours
in
(I),
The
object of
make
it
Application Of this Section. This section applies only to roads which are the property of Government in unalienated villages or unalienated portions of villages and not to roads of alienated villages unless the right of Government, to
(G R. No. 3130, dated 12-11-1920). This section has no rastrospective effect, *. e its provisions cannot be enforced in respect of anything dono before the Oode became law on the 17th July 1879 (G. R. No. 6202, dated 1st September 1890).
the ownership of such roads has been reserved
Application of this section to cases of unauthorized occupation which commenced subsequent to this Act. The use of
the word "shall" in the first clause of this section does not restrict the application of this section to cases of unauthorized occupation which began subsequent to this Act coming into force. Although the assessment may not be leviable for a period
anterior to the date of the enactment, an occupation p. Secretary of State, P. J. 1897, p. 366).
is
a continuous act
(Pranlal
This section applies only to unauthorized occupation of any land (a) set apart for any special purpose, and (&) any unoccupied hnd which has not been alienated
(G. E. No. 3837, dated 3rd June 1890).
a suit
in the Civil Court (G. R. No. 5205, dated 25th July 1885).
ment
cultivate
in alienated Villages.
The
plaintiffs,
who were
in
the
inamdars of
their right to
declaration of
their
ownership
and of
two plots of land which (they alleged) formed part of their inam. It was contended for the defendants as to these two plots of land that the plaintiffs had no right to cultivate them, as they had been nude a part of a village site, and on that understanding they had not been numbered at the survey in 1863, and had been exempted from assessment for twenty years. It was held by the lower
Held, that this section did not apply. Appellate Court that this section applied. s. 38 and both refer only to lands the property of Government in unalienated villages or unalienated portions of villages. They do
not empower the Government to confiscate any land belonging to an inamdar and to consider it on the persona living in his villages (Vinayakrao r. Secretary of State,
23 Bom. 39).
Siio.
61-63] OF TBS
(JJ-BANT,
USE
LAN!)
4?
37
ante
all
public
roads
being the property of Government, it must be taken that the public road encroached upon by the accused is in the possession of tha Local Government officers on
road
id
is
guilty of criminal trespass, if the encroachment is made with such intent as templated in s. 441 of the Penal Code (Fakirgavda, Or. Eg. 49 of 1888).
con-
The
fine levied
under
this section
for unauthorized occupation of land by quarrying it need not, on the one hand, bo confined to the bare area of the pits nor, on the other, can it be extended to the entire area of the survey number. Occupation in the sense of the amount of area
which has deteriorated for purposes of cultivation or for quarrying is the area contemplated by the Code as being occupied (Sulleman v, Secretary of State, 30 Born. L,. R. 431).
[a]
62.*
It shall be lawful for the Collector subject rules as may from time to time be
to
such
made by
tions.
annex
in Council in this behalf, to the require payment of a price ror unahenated land or to sell the same by auction, and to such conditions to the grant as he may deem fit, before per-
the
G0 vernor
mission to occupy is given under section 60. The price (if any) paid for such land shall include the price of the Government right to all trees not specifically reserved under the provisions of section 40, and shall be recoverable as an arrear of land revenue.
Note. Even the Collector cannot in the first instance require the grantee to a pay certain amount of occupancy price against the will of thj grantee and without giving him the option to vacate the hnd and much less can the Commissioner
pass such an order
when
from
the
Secretary of State, 55
Bom.
Co-Operative Societies.
to
Land may
co-operative societies
when
5,
R. No. public purpose is to bo fulfilled (G. quoted in Joglekar's Supplement No. 2, p. 13).
a
[a] 63.*
When
that any alluvial under which vests land, any law for the time in force in Government, may with due being
it
occupant
(if
regard to the interests of the public revenue be disposed of, he shall offer the same to the land any) o the bank or shore on which such alluvial
not exceed three times
has formed.
The
As
and 63,
see
paragraph 3 of notes
of 1913,
89.
on
p. 1, supra.
[a
Bom, Act IV
21
48
I
CHAP.
Vl
the said occupant shall refuse the offer, the Collector may dispose of the land without any restrictions as to the price to be asked.
For the purposes of this section, notwithstanding anything contained in tection 3, if the bank or shore has been mortgaged with possession, the mortgagor shall be deemed to be the occupant
thereof.
Notes.
vial or water-forsaken
This section provides for the disposal of the occupancy of such allulands as under the provisions of the Code (s. 37) vests in
Government. The object of this section is to secure to the neighbouring landholder, in consideration of the river frontage he would otherwise lose, right to
purchase the occupancy of the new land at a price not exceeding annual assessment (Report of the Select Committee).
three
times
its
suit by the plaintiffs for a declaration that the order by the Collector disposing of the occupancy to the eeoond defendant was null and void and for possession of the land, on the ground that the plaintiffs being the owners of the
adjacent land and the grant being of alluvial land the grant should have been made to the plaintiff* under this section is governed by Art. 120 of the Limitation Act and not art. 144. Because assuming the land to bo alluvial, the plaintiffs cannot
get an order for recovery of possession. All that they can get is a declaration that the case fell within this section and an injunction to restrain the Collector from dealing with the land in derogation of the rights (Damodar plaintiff's
Narayctnv.
Secretary of State, 55
Bom.
447).
64.*
Tern orar
When
alluvial land
alluvSuands
extent.
area of the
disposal of
occu P ant > if an 7? of such bank Or ri ht "f small fihore sha11 be enti t led to the temporary use [0] thereof, unless or until the area of the same exceeds [b] one [4] acre. When the alluvial land exceeds the said extent, it shall be at the the Collector, subject to the provisions of the last pre-
forim on
any bank
shore,
ceeding section.
[*]
Non-riparian owner
water which he took
Right to water.
to
fields
The
plaintiff
who owned
river-
The belonging to defendants. water did not flow in a definite channel but spread over the whole of the defendant's lands till it overflowed into the Ihe defendants having plantiff's lands. obstructed the passage of water through their lands, the plaintiff sued to establish
through the paddy
bia right to the
enjoyment of the river water. Held, that the plaintiff having acquired the right and enjoyed it from time immemorial was not prevented from enforcing it by any provision of the Easements Act by virtue of s. 2 (c) of the Act (Janardhan v. Raoji, 20 Bom. L. E. 398. s. c. 42 Bom. 288).
As to the local repeal of s. 64 see para. 3 of notes on page 1 supra t Act IV of 1913, [a a 1 Words and paragraph repealed by Bom. are omitted.
[flftj This word was substituted by original words "half an."
[9]
s.
23,
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
23,
lor the
repealed by Ibid.
& RELtNau^sMBNT
OF UNALIEHITED
LIND
49
A suit to recover possession of lands forming a river bed leased by the Collector is barred, if brought after a year of the date of
the order of the Collector under
tertain the plaint.
s.
37 ante by
which the
of
Xft
v.
1912 the
of
limitation
146).
is
Secretary of State,
22
Bom
L. B.
65.
An
poses
^: pa^ft^tr of
agriculture put his land.
its
may
of the land, or
said,
[ft]
more onvenient
provements thereon for the better cultivation use for the purpose afore[/>]
But, if any occupant [c] wishes to use h j 8 holding or any part thereof fo J Qther ~7 .\ r ^ 1f the Collector's purpose [c] permission shall in the first place be applied for by the [</]
.
Procedure
if
occupant.
[e]
The
Collector,
(a)
its receipt,
acknowledgment of
and
after
:
(b)
may,
Provided that, where the Collector fails to inform the applicant of his decision on the application within a period of three months, the permission applied for shall ba deemed to have been granted ; such period shall, if the Collector sends a written acknowledgment within seven days from the date of receipt of the application, be reckoned from the date of the acknowledgment, but in any other case it shall be reckoned from the date of receipt
of the application, [e] Unless the Collector shall
direct,
in
particular
instances otherwise
no such application
made by
[-]
IV
of 1913,
9.
24
(a), for
any
repealed by
Serial
No
50
OHAP.
VI
When
_.
,,.,,
any such land is thus [a] permitted to be used for any purpose unconnected with agriculture [a], it
be lawful for the Collector, subject to the general orders of Government, to require the payment of a fine in addition to any new may be leviable under the provisions of
suc^ein^En^o
special assessment.
"
assessment
section 48.
which
The term "occupant" is subject to modification when applied Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars Act, 1888, exteuds (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, 38. 1 and 33\
Oooupant.
;o
any
Collector's permission
must be express.
This section
confers
unregistered occupants who have applied to the Collector for permission to appropriate land for certain purposes, the privilege of acting as if the application tiad been granted within three months after acknowledgment of its receipt, if no
inswer to that application has been received by the applicant. This section does not require the Collector to grant the
his
power
to refuse
in case
three months, he shall ba deemed R. No. 5893, dated 20th July 1892).
to
have granted
Petitions under this section should be received and disposed Of by Collectors only, and this duty should not be delegated to
Assistant or Dapuby
Ojlbctora or
dated
20th
July 18 92).
building S." Buildings erected for the storage of agricultural for or sheltering cattle used in the cultivation of the land as well as implements bouses occupied by occupants who themselves cultivate the survey number on which
,hey stand, or
"
Farm
;enants
who
by tenants who do the same or by servants of such occupants or are actually employed in the cultivation of the same land are held to
p.
195X
in 1907
the
building and the wood to )o removed forthwith from a graveyard of which plaintiffs had been in possession for 50 years without assessment and the order was confirmed on appeal by the
On
sued the
Secretary of State for a declaration that they were the owners of the land, for a jancellation of the order and for a permanent injunction. Held, that as the land
i.
n dispute was not ussd for the purpose of agriculture, neither this section nor 66 infra applied to the case and that in view of the long and undisturbed posses*
was
v.
Secretary
39 Bom. 494).
Application to the Collector for permission to use land for any other purpose other than agriculture is required to be made by the occupant. The Collector's permission cannot be "presumed" in any such case on the strength of in arrangement made by the applicant with that officer in a similar case in respect )f another land (G. B. No. 2310, dated 19-4-1928).
These words were substituted by Bom Act IV of 1913, s. 24 (a; for [a-fl] he original words "appropriated to any purpose unconnected with agriculture,"
51
this
does
not
follow,
from
payment of
fine
and assessment
preliminary
condition
with-
out which no agricultural land can ba appropriated for the building purposes. It is clear that thU Code contemplates appropriation both with and without permission, the fines in tho
lector of
v.
Col-
Dharwar,
Procedure
must
first
its receipt, and, secondly, may, after send a written acknawlodgonnt of due inquiry, either grant or refuse the permission applied for, provided that where the Collector fails to inform tha applicant of his decision on tho application within
a perioi of threo months the pormlsnon appliel for shall be deemed to have been granted; such period shall, if tha Collector sends a written acknowledment within seven days from the date of the receipt of the application, be recknoncd from tho date of the adunwledgment, but in any :>thjf oisc it shall bj reckoned fr^m the date of receipt of tho application (Shivp thing o. Secretary of State, 26 Bom.
L. R. 371).
66. If
*.
*.
shall be liable to be
which
field or survey number of shall also be liable occupant may to pay, in addition to the new assessment which may be leviable under the provisions of section 48 for the period during which the said Und has been so [a] used, such fine as the Collector may,
direct. subject to the general orders of Government, or tenant of any other person holding any occupant Any [ti] under or through an occupant, who shall without the [c] occupant's consent 0] use any Tenant responsible to
occupant in damages.
land for [e] any such purpose, and thereby render the said (V] occupant liable to the said [c] ocaforesaid, shall be responsible
such
Note.
lector.
[a\
priating agricultural
This section supplies an instance of resumption on account of approland to other purposes without the permission of the Col-
>m.
Ait IV of 1913,
I
a.
original
[i
word "appropriated."
b]
II, Serial
[e]
[d\
s.
No. 6, for the original words. The word "registered" was, repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 25(J;. The words "co-occupant or any' wero repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913,
1
23
(b),
[e]
IV
of 1913,
a.
OHAP.
VI
note
with regard to
the term
preceding section.
of land.
Where
a portion of land held for purples oi agriculture is used, without the permission of the Collector, for any purple other than that of agriculture, e. g., for building a residential house on" it, the fine leviable for such under this section is
user,
to the
area of
of State
v.
Section 148 post has no application to such a Abdul Husen, 29 Bom. L. H. 1350).
case (Secretary
-in order
that a person can appropriate a land to a non-agricultural purpose without incurring the ponalty of the fine provided by this section, it is necessary that he must
It is no defence to quired to bo given by the Collector by g. 65. Collector, though he received the application, omitted to send an
acknowledgment
fine
(Naivak Purushutam
Secretary oj State,
Bom. L. R.
669).
Maximum
Any
:
imposed by
but (sub-
the Collector under this section shall be fixed by him at his discretion, ject to rule 101) shall not exceed the following rates, namely
(1) In
village placed
for the
purpose of altered
81 inClass
I
tl
...
...
Us.
Jf
1,250
")
I
III
...
IV
... ...
V
(2)
f
|
same rate
proportion for
acre.
any fraction of an
be charged as
for
But now that fine is only levied as a penalty for not getting permission and and building uses the thereby evading the Collector's control over industrial severity of the fine should apparently depend on the degree of harm done and the bad example set and not upon the fiscal considerations adduced in Re3olulion 5206
of 1897
[a]
67.
Nothing
be
in
the
last
two preceding
sections
shall
prevent the granting of the permission aforega id [] on suc k terms [c] or conditions [c]
as
may be [<| prescribed by the Collector, subject to any rules made in th is behalf by the Governor in Council, [d]
[a]
[b]
As
of fection 67,
special cases"
were
repealed
by Bom. Act
IV
of
1913,
8,26.
Act VI
8,
of
1931
[dd]
IV
of 1913,
on
bet ween
Government and
fines 67-68J
53
occupant is entitled to the use and occupation of his land for the period, if any, to which his [aj Occupant's rights are tenure is limited, or if the period is unconditional, limited, or a survey settlement has been extended to the land, in perpetuity conditionally on the payment of the amounts due on account of the land revenue
68.
An
provisions of this Act, or of any any other law, for the time being in force, and on the fulfilment of any other terms [b] or con ditions [6] lawfully annexed to his [a] tenure.
for the same, according to rules made under this Act,
the
or
of
[c]
Proviso.
make
it,
any other section shall to have made unlawful for the Collector at any time to
it,
in this or
or shall be
deemed ever
grant permission to any person to occupy unalienateJ unoccupied land, for such period and on such conany ditions as he may, subject to [d] rules made by the Governor in Council in this behalf [df], prescribe, and in any such case the occupancy shall, whether a survey settlement has been extended to the land or not, be held only for the period and subject to the
conditions so prescribed.
Notes
up on
short leases and special terms which may include a restriction of transferability, whether by private contract or by attachment and sale under the orders of a Oivil
Court, notwithstanding that a survey settlement may have been xtended to those lands, while s. 73A provides for the lands into which a Survey Settlement has not
been introduced (Statement of Objects and Reasons of Bill No. IV of 1901). Tnis section does not apply to any village io the district of Ritnagiri or *ioti 3>ttlau3at the district of KoUba to wh'uh tho 4ct, 1880, extends (B)m.
Act I of 1880,
ss. 1
and 39).
Vide note under the heading ''occupant" under
s.
Occupant.
05 supra.
Oooupanoy, grant of, subject to prohibition of alienation. Where a grant of occupancy was mide to the plaintiff subject to restrictions prohibiting alienation and a few years afterwards, he made an application for
transfer of the ocoapincy to the 2nd defendant, held, that the application amounted at most to an attempt to transfer which WAS never carried into effect, that
there was no alienation and no breach of the conditions of the grant, that tho order of tho District Deputy Collector for summarily evicting the plaintiff was a in his official capacity nullity and that the Officer cannot be said to have acted
(Dhanji Jairam
r.
Bom.
920).
This word was substituted for the original word "occupancy" by Bom. [a] Act IV of 1913, 9.27. These words were inserted in section 68 by Bom. Act VI of 1901, b\ [b
.8(1).
This proviso to section G8 was added by Bom. Act VI of 1901, s. 8 (2). [d-_dj These words were substituted by Bom, Act IV of 1913, s. 27, for the original words "the orders of Government*"
[c]
CBA* VI
The right of Government to mines 69. and mineral products in all unalienated land ls and is hereby declared to be expressly
reserved:
Provided that nothing in this section shall be deemed to affect any subsisting rights of any occupant [a] of Proviso. suc h ] an(j j n respect of such mines or mineral products.
Occupant. Object of
rights of
full liberty to
this section.
Vide note under the heading "occupant" under s. 65 supra. The object of this section is to reserve the
Government
to all mines, mineral products and buried treasures with work, and search for the same, paying to the occupant only com-
Mines and mineral products. In construing the words "mines" and "mineral products" regard must be had to the fact that they occur in a statute as
Similarly regard must be fcj the purpose for which the occuThe word 'mino' ia derived from a Latin word of the lower granted. pancy ages, minare, signifying ducere, to load. It is a subterranean cavity or passage,
things reserved.
is
from which metallic ores or other from the pits from which stones only are taken, and which are callei quarries. The tertn minerals includes everything except the vegetable surface, or everything except tho mere surface, which is used for agricultural purposes.
in
the earth,
It is distinguished
(not applicable
to
G.
I. P.,
W.
...
(ii)
Surplus stone removed from quarry but not consumed (125 0. ft. reckoned as 100.) ...
Bullast, or concrete
...
...
...
(iii)
(iv) Special
stone used for pitching ; measured as ... ... arranged by the Collector
cultivated land
...
...
...
4
8
...
Sand
...
...
...
2
2
...
... ...
Kankar
in unassessed waste
...
...
4
2
(ix)
Muram
or white earth
(G. B. B, D. No. 196-B, dated 14th February 1931, cited in Modak's Bombay Land System and Village Administration.)
'
[a]
Words
repealed
Ly Bern. Akt
IV
of 1903,
8.
SEC. 69-72] OF
&
65
70
Occupancy when
an occupancy [b] is not transprevious sanction of the Collector, and such sanction has not been
ferable without the
where
effect to Collector's
Oer
tificate.
made or [rfj ordered by a Uml Court [a] or on which the Court's decree or order is
process of
founded, such occupancy [e] shall not be liable to the any Court, and such transfer shall be null and void, and
(a)
the Court, on receipt of a certificate under the hand and (b) seal of the Collector, to the effect that any such occupancy [e] is
not transferable without his previous sanction and that such sanction has not been granted, shall remove any attachment or other process placed on, or set aside any sale of, or affecting, such occupancy. [e]
is subject to modification when applied Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, as. 1 and 83).
Occupancy.
Repealed by Bom. Ad IV of 1913, s. 29. If an occupant who is either a Hindu, a Mahomedan or a Buddhist dies intestate and without known Intestate occupancy or heirs, the Collector shall dispose of his occuholding to be sold. pftncy by Sftle> su bject to the provisions of this Act, or of any other law at the time in force for the sale of forfeited occupancies in realization of the land revenue, and the law at the time in force concerning property left by Hindus,
71.
72.
Buddhists dying intestate and without known deemed to apply to the said occupancy but only to the proceeds of such sale after deducting all arrears of land revenue due by the deceased to Government and all expenses of the said
Mahomedans
or
sale.
Note. This section does not apply to any village in the districts of Ratnaand Kolaba to which the Khoti Set tit moot Act, 1880, extends (Bom. Act I of 1880, as. 1 and 39).
giri
Occupant. iride note under the heading "occupant' under s. 65 supra. Non-applioability of this section to alienated holdings.
The word 'occupant' cannot be held to include a holder of alienated land, and the Collector should not, therefore, attempt to take action under this section in the case of alienated holdings (G. B. No 3812, dated 13th May 1885).
Bom. Act IV of 1913, g. 28 (a) are omitted. [a] Words repealed by These words were substituted for the original words "the occupancy [b-b\ or interest of the occupant in the land" by Bom. Act IV of 1 913, 8. 28 (b).
Bom. Act IV
These words were substituted for the original words "the transfer" by of 1913, s. 28 (b). These words were substituted for the original words "ordered by the [d d] Court" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 28 (b). [] Words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s, 28 (c) ; are omitted.
[c-c]
56
TEE
The
JSowBAY
OHAP. VI
Proof of
title.
title,
kept for purposes of revenue, not for purposes of and the fact of a person's namo being entered in the Collector's book as
is
book
occupant of land does not necessarily of itself establish that person's title, or defeat the title of any other person (Fat ma t>. Darayasaheb, 10 Bom. 187). See also Collector of Poona v. Bhavanrao, 10 Bom. 192 ; Sanyapa v. Bhimanyotvda, 10
v.
Bapuji, 13
Bom.
75.
An
tran3TandXr
able.
shall, subject to the provicontained in section 56, and to any conditions lawfully annexed to the [c] tenure, anc* save as otherwise prescribed by law, be
occupancy
[&]
sions
deemed an
perty.
heritable
and
transferable
pro-
Note.
Vid* the
first
The term "occupancy" is subject to modification when applied to any estate in the districts of Ahmedabad, Knira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Fide Bom. Act VI of 1888, as. 1 and 33).
Occupancy.
[d]
73-A ( 1) Notwithstanding anything in the foregoing section, in any tract or village to which Goveminent may, by notification published be.
fore the introduction therein of an original survey settlement under section 103, declare the provisions of this section applicable, [e] ( ccuf arcies fhall not after the date of such Notification be transferable without the previous sanction of the Collector.
( 2)
ment
Gazette,
village
section.
Government may, by Notification in the Bombay Governfrom time to time exempt any part of such tract or or any person or class of persons frcm the operation of this
Vide note under the heading
Occupancies*
ceding section.
Amendment Aot VI
adding
this section
Of 1901.
The Amending
Act VI of 1901 by
makes
it
that the occupancy or interest of the occupant shall nob, after the declaration, be But this can only transferable without the previous sanction of the Collector.
be in a tract or village in which the original survey s:ttlement might be introduced after the passing of Bom. Act VI of 1901 and by a notification published before the introduction of the original survey
[a\
settlement.
of
Act
of
VI
of 1901,8. 10.
[6-w-JJ
original
words "the
right
occupancy" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 30. This word was substituted for the original word "occupancy" by [cj
Bom-
Act IV
[d]
[0]
of 1913,
s.
30.
Section 73
II.
by Botn. Act
IV
of 1913,
s.
31.
SEOS. 73-73AjOF
&
BELINCITJISHMENT OF
ia
UNAMENATEB IANB 57
before
the
transfer existing
occupants
Act
came
into force.
Scope. The prohibition contained in this section is not confined to a n absolute and out and oat transfer of an occupancy, but that it includes the transfer of an interest in the occupancy without the sanction of the Collector.
a share in land, held on restricted sanction of the Collector, is void and conveys no right to the
mortgage, therefore, of
v.
tenure,
without the
mortgagee (Dharam-
das Thawerdas
Note.
societies.
members
to
such land passes into the possession of a society by default of its should ba sold by auction on restricted tenure only with the. sanction of the Collector, and that such lands should pass into the possession of a person who can hold land on restricted tenure in the district R. No. A-501 9
debtor member,
it
When
(G.
dated 23-1 1-1 921, quoted in Joglekar's Supplement No. 2 Code, p. 18).
to his
Land Revenue
The effect of only to authoriz3 a particular transfer of the land and not to remove the character of restricted tenure impressed upon the land so as to render it transferable at will (Ismiil Khan Afir Azam Khan t>.
the sanction of Collector under this section
is
Official Receiver,
A.
I.
According to the
thi
terms of this
occupant is not prohibited aparl fro.n tho land with)nt the pr-vious sanction transfer of the houses with the land thereunder (and
the occupant in tho land upon stand, and sujk a transfer without sanction is prohibited by this section (Bapu Vithnl Rajput v. Secretary ofState 56 Born. 278, s.c. 34 Bom. L.
r
R. 780).
the
following
Khandeah
do.
diitrict
(Notification
do.
do.
(Notification
do.
(Notification
All Brahmins and Banias (Wanis) holding lands in the villages of the Bhirpur Taluka of the West Khandesh District (to which the provisions of this section > sub-section 1, were declared to be applicable by Government Notification^ B. D No*
1116B, dated 18th February 1002 (B. G G. 1902, Pt. I, p. 290) are exempted from the operation of this section (B. G. G, 1908, Pt. I, p 1897). Marwadis, Kshatrias, Parbhus, Kayasthas, Bohris and Parsia are exempted from the operation of el. (1) of this section in the 17 villages of the Shir pur fcnlnka mentioned in G. N. No. 1116B quoted above (G, B. B. D. No. 3875, dated 22nd
April 1909).
W
[a] 74.
CODE, 1870
OHAP.
VI
is,
resign
Government, but subject to Relinquishment. any r {^B, tenures, incumbrances or equities lawfully subsisting in favour of any person (other than Government or the occupant), by giving notice in writing to the Mamlatdar or Mahalkari before the 31st March in any year or before such other date as may from time to time be prescribed in this behalf by the Governor in Council, and such relinquishment shall have effect from the close of the current year:
in favour of
Provided that no portion of land which is less in extent than a whole survey number or sub-division of a survey number may
be relinquished, [a]
Occupant. Vide Dote under the heading 'occupant" under a. 65 supra. Notices exempted from registration. Notices, given under
flection
this
or section 76 of this Code, of relinquishment of occupancy by occupants or of alienated land by holders of such land, are exempted from registration (Vide
8.
90 (1)
(*)
Tenant remaining
The
first
and second defendants were sub-tenants of the third defendant, who had certain land which wa9 part of the inatn village of D. In 1883 the third defendant executed a Hajinama in the folio wing term?, which he gave to the receiver been appointed by the Court to manage the village :~-"Up to the present time my father and I have been cultivating the land, but the land belongs to the
who had
Inamdar. I have no title over it, and the Inawlar can give it for cultivation to any one he pleases.' Shortly after the date of this Rajinama the Inamdar gave the land to the plaintiff, who now sued to obtain it from the d efendants who had
'
remained in possession. Held, that the plaintiff was entitled to the land. The as a relinquishment of the tenancy by defendant No. 3 under this section. Held, also, that the plaintiff was entitled to sue in ejectment, although he had not been put in possession of the land (Rhutia a. Ambo, 13 Bom. 291).
Rajinama operated
Ba]inama.
Among
those
brought tinder a Survey Settlement. The Rajinama can be pro sented only to the Mamlatdar, unless the inamdar has a commission under a. 88 (0) (G. Ks. Nog. 8439, 5730 and 7045 of 1881 and 959 of 1882). Rajinam as may also be executed
before a Forest Settlement Officer (G. R. No. 1708 of 1886) and then transmitted to the Mamlatdar and before Aval Karknns when the Mtmlat dar is absent (G. R.
Rajinama and Kabulyat Rajinama ia the notice of relinquishment given by the registered occupant. It is to ba given to the Mamlatdar and Mahal, kari and when the Mamlatdar is absent from his head-quart ers, it should be given to the Aval karkun. The person in whose favour a holding is relinquished should
signify his acceptance by a written agreement with the revenue officers written acceptance is called 'Kabulayat.'
[a
-a]
The
Bom. Act IV
of 1913,
e.
32, for
th e
original section.
SKO. 74]
&
50
No
legal
presumption
It
from the passing of a rajinarna and kabalyat that a transfer of ownership intended to be effected and that, accordingly, it operates, just as if it was a sale. does not necessarily by itself amount to a transfer of the property (Rachappa
v.
Chanbasappa
A mortgagor
Registration
if
necessary.
agreed to abandon his equity of redemption and also executed a rajinama in favour of the Mamlatdar under this section and the mortHeld t(ut the rajinama combined with the kabuliyat gngee executed a kabiliyat did not transfer the title of the mortgagor to the mortgageo as a transfer of the under s 54 of the Transfer of equity of a redemption must be
registered
.
Act (Sikharam
v.
Ramchandra, 18
Bom
L.
K. 980
(note).
But
it
case of Narso v. Nagava (42 Bom. 359) that rajinamaa and kabuliyats, though in themselves documents of transfer, are fairly conclusi ve evidence that a transfer has in fact been made and as between the and mortgagee extinguish mortgagor the equity of redemption without the An inamdar can necessity of registration.
receive notices of relinquishments under this section on ly where the survey settlement has been introduced or when the powers under a. 85 post have been given to him. These notices are exempt from registration under s. 90 of the
Registration
r.
Dary Saniram
^fali f
45
Bom
898).
subject
to
abandoning Ma rights to another, subject to the payment of revenue, need not be registered under s 00 of the Registration Act (Motihhaiv. DesaMai, 41 Bom, 170).
does
not by
itself
to a transfer of property. Tao transfer can be rebutted by evidence regarding the manner in which the parties concerne d dealt with the property. Each
case, however,
its
own
facts
(Chandanmalv. Bhuskar,
22 Bom. L. R. 140).
RelinC[UishmentS.
may
bo accepted even when third parties assert rights over such land should be settled under as, 37 (2) and 79A, cases in which eviction
The
is
rights
proposed
1909).
being reported for tha orders of Government (G. R. B. D. See also Andarson'e L. R. Rules, 1st ed. of 1930, p. 73.
No. 2104 of
Note.
The
and
free
however, that the talukdars of the estate paid assessment and local fund for the whole estate to Government in the form oljama. The talukdar having relinquished the said plots iu favour of the
Ib appeared, cess
Government, it was held that the Government could recover the local fuud aud the from the plaintiffs (Xathuram v. Secretary of State 32 Bom. L. K. 907.)
Notice-Exemption.
The
notice, given
under
ment of occupancy by an occupant does not require Court fee (Government of India's Notification No. 4650 at p. 807-, B. G. G. of 19ih September 1889), nor stamp duty (B. G. G., p. 1384 of 28th July 1909) and is exempt from registration It must also be written (sec. 90 (e), Act XVI of 1908). by a village Accountant
without
fee.
60
CHAP.
VI
All notices under this section shall be kept in the records of the village accountant until the expiry of one year after the end of the year in which they were given and afterwards in the record? of the Mamlatdar for at least 12 years. Entry will at once be made in the diary of mutations and certified ia duo This will ensure sufficient record (Anderson's L. R. Mannual, p. 73). course.
75.
IV of 1913,
sec/ion
33
(1).
The provisions
of
[a]
the
last
1 of section 49.
Q holders of alienated
land
provided that,
it shall not be lawful to relinquish, as aforesaid, any of land held wholly or partially exempt under the portion any circumstances described in the first paragraph of section 49 until
(a)
the commuted assessment payable in respect of such portion of land has been determined under the provisions of the said section ;
and that
any person relinquish land on which, under the circumstances described in section 51, a larger of Relinqmshment Ould Ordinar il y be reyenue U leyied than in secland described t, n L i j ^ leviable on such he shall be deemed to land, t i 0n 51 have relinquished also the land held with it which is wholly or partially exempt from payment of revenue.
(&)
if
,
.
iiji
Wot P. This section does n^t apply to any estate in the dutri<;ts of Ah:nedaKaira, Uroach or 1'anch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdura "'Act, 1838, extends (Soe Bom. Act VJ of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
bncl,
77.
Right of
If
linquished land.
any person relinquishes land, the way to which lies through other land which he retains, the way to re- right of way through the land so retained
8hall
f uture
fo\fa
of the
7g
,
Nothing o
in [6] L j section
74
[ft] L J
shall
affect
of the terms or conditions of [c] the validity other express instrument under which land is, Or bo, held from Government.
79.
any
may
lease or hereafter
IV of 1913,
79A.
s.
35.
Any
person
unauthorizedly
pes
occupying land.
a
a]
land
tions" by
Bom. Act IV
of 1913, e. 34. Clause (a) and the letter "5" repealed by Bom. Act IV of 19 13, are omitted. Bom. Act VI of 1901, s. 12. [d j Section 79A was inserted by
[c]
\bb\
These words were substituted for the original words the two last secof 1913, s. 33 (2). Ihese words were substituted for the original words "sections 75 and
s,
31,
SEO, 75-70]
61
[a] (a) to the use or occupation of which by reason of any of the provisions of this Act he is not entitled or has ceased to be entitled or
(b) [b] which is not transferable without previous sanction under section 73A or by virtue of any condition lawfully [c] annexed to the tenure [c] under the pro visions of section 62, 67 or
be summarily evicted by the Collector. This section is subject to modification when applied to any estate in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (See Bom. Act VI of 1888, SB. 1 and 33).
68,
may
Note.
Clause
(a).
Object of amendment.
The
object of
amending
cl.
(a)
by Bom. \ct III of 1921 is to provide for the eviction not only of a person whose right to occupancy has ceased under the provisions of this Act, but also of a
person whose right to occupancy has ceased under the rules or any condition of an
agreement.
Scope Of
this section.
The question
(Bha
to the
Collector by this section can bo exercised only in cases of wrongful possession. It does not extend to cases where possession is obtained under the decree of a Civil
Court. The Collector has, for the exercise of the power, to form his own opinion and decide whether in any particular case the possession is wrongful*, but there is no provision in the Code which gives finality to the Collector's order of eviction
so as to exclude the jurisdiction of a Civil Ornrt to decide that
the person evicted
Officer v.
Umia-
Bom.
72).
Notice of suit. The Collector, holding the powers of the Talukdaii Settlement Officer and acting under this section served upon the plaintiff a notice asking* him to vacate certain land which he was declared to have held illegally without any The plaintiff was also warned that, if he did not comply with the notice, right. The plaintiff sued for an injunction to restrain steps would be taken to evict him. the land. No notice of suit the Collector from taking possession summarily of He!d, that the declaration and required by s 80 of 0. P. Code, 1908, was given.
the notice were distinct acts on the part of the Collector done by him in hia and, therefore, a notice to the Collector by the plaintiff was necesmaintenance of sary under s. 80 of the 0. P. Code as a condition precedent to th
official capacity,
r.
Bhaijibhai,
M Bom. L. R
577).
was substituted
1921,8.
[i]
3.
This word was substituted for the original words "of which the occu-
panoy right" by Bom. Act IV of 1918, s. 36. These words were substituted for the original words "annexed to the [c -c] occupancy" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, 0. 36.
62
1870
CHAP VI
Summary eviction under this section can only be from Talukdari lands.
The powers
s.
of the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, to evict a person summand not to all property of rily, extends only to estate held on Talukdari tenure 19 Bom. L.R. 855). any kind of the individual Talukdar (Shankarbhai v.
33
Interference Of Collector.
(2), cl. (cc) of the
by s. 33 Gujarat Talukdars' Act, the Gollector cm interfere only where wrongful or in contravention of the provisions of the Act
Under
Bom. L. K.
378).
In order to prevent the forfeiture of an occupancy under the provisions of section 56 or of any other To prevent forfeiture aw f or the time being in force through
]
pLorTh^thaT'S
* occupant may pay land revenue.
the
[J occupant of the lan d revenue due on account thereof, it shall be lawful for any [b] person interested [6] to pay on behalf of such [ a ] occupant all sums
[c] the
non-payment by the
Collector shall
in
on due
case
receive
gi ve
the
to
same.
And
d
]
any such
section
the
[V]
Collector
Collector
may
.
under
86
may
the person who has paid the land revenue a3 aforesaid (>] aid tor the recovery V r r i r i of aa 7 portion of such land revenue [e] which
i
.
he
may
consider to
:
be
properly
payable
by
done under the provisions of this section shall affect the rights of the parties interested as the same may be
established in any guit between
such parties
s.
in a
Occupancy.
73.
Payment
An
law.
unsolicited expenditure in r aspect of the property of another, even if the purpose of its preservation, gives no lien over the property, outside
maratimo
to
a person of
of 1913,
property
belonging
[a-a]
Words
repealed by
Bom. Act IV
s.
These words were substituted for the original words [6-6] "co-occupant, tenant, mortgagee or other person interested in the continuance of the occupancy,'
7
by Pom. Act
[e-c]
IV
of 1913,
s.
37 (a).
These words were substituted for the original words by Bom. Act
IV
IV
of 1913,
s.
37
(b)
These words were substituted for the original words "such aid for the [e-e\ recovery of the proportional amounts" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 37 (c).
80-83]
68
the property
Pttndaltt,
26 Bom. 437).
81
Repealed by Bom.
.
Ad IV of 1913,
82.
s.
38.
i
ln
Governor Ml TOounci b 7 Notification in the l Bombay Government Gazette from time to time :
/^
or 74.
to suspend the operation of section 60 or (a) 74, or of both within any prescribed local area, either generally, or in respect of cultivators or occupants of a particular class or classes, and to cancel any such notification. (b)
During the period for which any notification under the above clause (a) is in force within any local area, such rules shall be substituted for the provisions of which the operation is suspended as the Commissioner shall from time to time direct.
CAHPTER
83.
VII
person
pay-
placed,
Amount
rf rent
able by tenant.
as tenant, in possession of land by another, or, in that capacity, holding, taking or retaining possession of land perinissively frQm Qr by su fj enmce Q an0ther) shall be
regarded as holding the same at the rent, or agreed upon between them or in the absence of satisfactory evidence of such agreement, at the rent payable or services renderable by the usage of the locality, or, if there be no such agreement or usage, shall be presumed to hold at such rent as, having regard to all of the circumstances of the case, shall be just and refor the services
;
sonable.
where, by reason of the antiquity of a tenancy, no satisfactory evidence of its commencement is forthDaration of tenancy. nQt any evidence of C0miog) ftnd there the period of its intended duration, if any, agreed upon betwec-n the landlord and tenant, or those under whom they respectively claim title, or any usage of the locality as to duration of such tenancy, it shall, as against the immediate landlord of the tenant, be presumed to be co-extensive with the duration of the tenure of such landlord and of those who derive title under him.
And
..
And where
Presumption
*
there
to
in
as
no satisfactory evidence of the capacity which a person in possession of land in respect of which he renders service or pays
is
sumed
9
rent to the landlord, receives, holds or retains possession of the same, it shall be prethat he is in possession as tenant.
ft*
T*B
BOMBA.Y
LAND
ftavKiroii Ooca,
W0
OHA*.
VH
in this section shall affect the right of the landlord (if he have the same either by virtue Saving clause, of a g reement) ugagQ or otherwise,), to enhance the rent payable, or services renderable by the tenant, or to evict the tenant for non-payment of the rent or nonrendition of the services, either originally fixed or respectively
Nothing contained
duly enhanced as aforesaid. "Shall as against the immediate landlord ...... of suoh landThe words "shall as against the immediate landlord of the tenant he to be co-extensive with the duration of the tenure of such landlord" presumed have a prospective and not a retrospective effect. Ihey mean that it shall be
lord.'
'
presumed that the tenancy is to last as long as the landlord's tenure may endare, but not necessarily that it was in existence when such tenure commenced. The
beginning
of the landlord's tenure does not prevent the application of this section in cases in which owing to the antiquity of a tenancy no satisfactory evidence of its commencement is forthcoming (Han v. Tuka^am, P. J. 1893, p. 3:3).
Where
Survey
introduced, this section, and not section 68, applies in determining the nature of tenancy (Kbandsrao v. Baslinga, P. J. 1889.
p. ly).
This section creates no right; it simply insists on the Courts adopting a better method of ascertaining whether in fact the right exists (Nahanchandv Modi Kekhushru, 31 Bom. 183).
-Where the plaintiff suod in ejectment, up a right as a permanent tenant, it WAS held, that the setting up of this right was a repudiation of the landlord's title, and absolved him from the obligation which would have devolved on him of giving to the defendant a notice to quit if the defendant had set up a tenancy from year to year (Baba v.
and the defendant
sets
new
is
more
if he sets up permanent tenancy j in prove antiquity of his tenure. If he succeeds, the burden is shifted to the landlord to prove the intended duration In the absence of by agreement or usage any proof, it is presumed that the tenancy is co-extensive with the tenure of the landlord (Maneldal t% Bai Amba, 45 Bom. 350).
The presumption is that a on him to prove that he is something the absence of any document, he must
Tenancy forty years Old. This section does not apply to a tenancy which commenced about forty years ago, but it applies to a tenancy with respect to rbich there is no satisfactory evidence to show the commencement as well aa
the terms of the tenancy (Lakshmanv. Vithu, 18
Bom.
22).
when
the evidence as to
its
old, there is
no
of a
tenancy at
case
will be the
Bom.
646;.
SEC. 83
Op SUPERIOB AND
IflFEBIOR
HOLDERS
65
Where the origin of the tenancy was appeared that the tenants had been in possession for nearly a hundred years prior to the suit and throughout this long period there was no demand for enhancement or attempt to eject the tenant, it was held, that under
it
they
were not
liable
plaintiff's
predecessor-in-title in
acquired
the
defendants were
They proved their possession so far back as 1812. But There wad no evidence either of they were put in possession first in that year. the commencement or of the duration of their tenancy. Held that under this section, the defendant's tenancy should be presumed to be perpetual and that it
t
v.
Sakhctram, 14
Bom. 392).
the terms of a lease did not appear to create a perpetual tenancy, there being no circumstances in the evidence from which the Court onght to infer that
Where
the intention of the parties was to create such a tenancy, lease was not a propetual lease (Ramibaisaheh Patwardhan
it
v.
was
held, that
the
Balaji,l
Bom.
701).
v.
Kalapa, 9
v.
Mhadu, P.
J. 1889,
Ancient tenancy.
can be drawn under
this
Where
is
section (Ramch'indra
Dattu,
27 Bom. L.
R
he
1258).
is
Antiquity Of tenancy. It is the tenant, who alleges that manent tenant, who in the first instance has to prove that, and if he
a per-
document which gives him a right on the land as a permanent But if ho can show that he has been ou sumption 13 that he ia an annual tenant.
the land so long that the
commencement of his tenancy cannot be ascertained, then Even although it is proved the presumption under p\ra. 2 of this section arhi-3. that the origin of the tenancy was of a later date than the lessor's tenure, still
tho presumption would ariso provide'! that tho actual date of the origin was not known. Para. 2 of this section has only to do with the point of time at which the tenancy commences. There is not a word in this section with regard to tho actual The paragraph has only to do with duration. When the terms of the tenancy.
presumption arises, then the Court must hold that tho tenancy is co-extensive with tho duration of the Jebsor's tenure. That means that the tenant cannot be But there is no presumpturned out as long as the landlord's tenure continues.
tion as to what the terms of the tenancy arc, that is
to say,
v.
Chiko, 23
Bom. L. R.
533).
it is
presumption,
not
for a stated number of necessary that the tenancy should have existed as it is not possible to lay down any one rule, and each case is to be
years,
and
decided ac-
reason cording to the facts found to exist, the presumption can arise "whenever by is of its commencement evidence no of a of the antiquity tenancy, satisfactory
forthcoming" (Narayan
v.
Itfiyhnvtndracharya, 2
Bom. L, R. 281).
a tenancy cannot be presumed to be co-extensive with the duration of the tenure of the landlord, even though its commencement cannot be
Under
this section
W
To
[OHAP. VII
period,
traced to a particular year, provided it can be traced back to a defininte *. y,, from If 30 to 1860 (Narayc.n i>. Pandurang, 24 Bom. L. R. 881).
cient that there should be
claim 4he benefit of the preumption created by tlis section it is not suffino satisfactory evidence of the commencement of the
tenancy, but the absence of that satisfactory evidence mast be by reason of the antiquity to the tenancy (Vishwanath v. Tatya, 6 Bom. L. R. 615). The saving clause of this section seems to con emplate that though the com-
there
may
and
obscurity of antiquity; by agreement to enhance rent Permanency of tenure is not inconsistent with the
right
lost in the
absence of fixity in rent. The permanency of the tenancy and the fixfcy of the rent are distinct, and the latter may be the subject of agreemant without touching the former (Raghunath r. Lakshman, 2 Bom. L. R. 93).
There is no/ need for a person who sets up a permanent tenancy to rely upon a grant ; for the second para, of this section expressly provides that when by reason -of the antiquity of a tenancy there is no evidence of its commencemant or its duration, it shall be treated as co -extensive with the duration of the landlord's
It lie^ on tin pirties, who wish to rebut the presumpfrom the antiquity of a tenancy, to establish first, that there is no evidence of the period of its intended duration and secondly, that there is no "Whore a tenant and his usage of the locality as to the duration of such tenancy ancestors had cultivated the land as far as memory could go and paid the same
tion arising
amount of rent
to his landlord
all
along,
he executed a rent note for ona year ia 1882 does not rebut the presumption of the permanency of the tenancy which arose from its antiquity (Rama Ranchhod v.
Bayad Abdul Rahim, 22 Bom. L. R. 1214). Some time between 1700 and 1850 the defendants became tenants under the Regulation XVI of 1827 made the watan lands inalienable for the plaintinffa. first time. In 1888 the defendants executed a rent nota to the plaintiff, by wWch
he agreed to vacate the land whenever called upon by the pUintiff to do so. So no of the tenants had been in occupation all along, but some others had boon out of
possession for some time and regained possession only on the execution of the rent note?. Held, that in the case of the tenants who wore in unbroken possesof the rent note did not .rebut the possession of permanency of the execution sion,
the tenancy which arose from its tenancy in the case of the other tenants, ttair possession had been broken and the origin of their present tenancies being traceable to the rent notes of a known date, the presumption under this section did not
,
arise
(Ramchandra
v.
Adveppa, 34 Born. L.
in this case.
R.
1131). 2
Bom. L. R. 93 and 22
though very old, can be shown to have originated in a specified Shidnath, 21 Bom. L. R. 226).
The position
of a
this
way by
the prohibition
Bhagdari
Act against
alienation (Ibid).
who has planted trees on his land has the right of cutThis principle has found legislative sancting down and making use of them. tion in s. 108, cl. (A), of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (Sitabai t>. Shambhn,
38 Bom. 716).
A permanent tenant
SBO.
831
Where
there
is
$7
is
no satisfactory evidence of the commencement of a tenancy it this section, bat the tenant is not a Mi rasi
The landlord has the right by usage, agreement or otherwise to enhance tenant. the rent in the case of a permanent tenant ( iryasacharyn v. "Vishnu, 44 Bom 566). The mere fact that tenancy has commenced subsequently to the commencement
in cases where,
of the landlord's tenure does not prevent the application of cl, (1) of this section, by reason of the antiquity of tha tenvacy, no satisfactory evidence
of its
commencement
it is
is
forthcoming (Ramchandra
v.
Anant, 18
Bom
433).
proved that a tenant has been in occupation of certain land for so long that one cannot ascertain the commencement of the tenancy the mere fact that during the currency of his holding he has signed a kabulyat which jpurports to be
in terms of an
Where
agreement for an annual tenancy, may not be sufficient to displace the advantage ho has obtained from his long holding, if he continues in possession for ininy years after he had signed the kibulyat, on the same rent. Each case
however, must stand entirely on its own facts. First of all, a tenant claiming to hold as a permanent tenant must establish the facts which would entitle him to the
But
it
The
effect of the
can bo rebuttjd by the landlord by the produckabulyat can, however, be destroyed by fur-
The fact of the sigaing of the kabulyat as ther evidence on the part of a tenant. merely an isolated instance in the midst of a long holding at the same rent, will not necessarily prevent the tenant from succeeding (Vijbhukhandas v. Ishvardas, 2o Bom L. R. 431).
with
f ict
commencement of a tenancy cannot be determined coupled presumption of continuation of the tenancy and coupled also with the that a permanent building hds been erected on the land as far back as memory
The
ttie
the
tenancy
is
permanent (Rukmini
v.
Under the
of tenure he
is
last
paragraph of
it
agreement, usage or otherwise that he has a right to enhance the rent. "When Las been proved that he has such a right, thun the question of the extent of the enhancement must be left to the Court as the final arbiter (Giriappa r.
Govindrao,
27 Bom. L. R. 1331). Jn the case of permanent tenants, under this section, the court allowed the ordinary landlord to enhance rent to the extent of three times the assessment.
trees,
and
consequently increased, the landlord is entitled to get rent for the fruit rent based on the assessment but he cannot claim in addition
the land
is
trees
(Ganagaram v. Ganesh, 21 Bom. L R. 1340). There is nothing in the Bhagdari Act to prevent a permanent tenant of a Bhagdar from alienating tho fruit of the trees on the laud of which he is a tenant,
in the
same way as he could alienate the crops or grass npon such land. The a Bhagdari land who is presumed to be a permanent position of a tenant of is not affected in any way by the prohibition contained this section under tenant in the Bhagdari Act against alienation (Nahanchand v. Kekhushru, 9 Bom
L.R.
60j 8.0. 31
person
of
TM BOMBIY IAND
OHA*. VII
maaeut tenant can acquire a right of fixity of rent as against the immediate holder of the watan by adverse pos369eion ; it will not prevail against next holder (Vishnu v, Tukaram, 49 Bom. 526). The plaintiff was in possession of certain vania land, for which ho paid a
fixed quit-rent or salami of Rs. 5 per year. He relied on title deeds the earliest of which was dated 1835 His father purD., and described the lanl as pasaita.
In 1885, the defendent landlord tried unsuccessfully in HJ gave in 1892 a notice to quit which
plaintiff.
However, in the yoars 1895, 1893 and 1898, the well as for an adjoining plot of
land, agreeing^ to p%y Rs. 5 as rent and to give up possession at ths end of the These rent-notes were held to have been passed under a miscultivating season.
The plaintiff hiving apprehension that they related only to the adjoining lan'l sued for a declaration of his right to hold the Hud pertinently at a fixed stl&Tii
of Rs. 5 a year, it was held (1) that the plaintiff was a permanent tenant at a fixed quit rent or salami of Rs. 5 a yeir ; (2) that the defendant was not at liberty to enhance the rent in absence of proof that he was entitled to do so by agreement,
usage or otherwise.
The onus of proving such a right to enhince tha rent lies on Tha rulings the landlord unless there are special circumstancaa to fch> contrary. of the Bombay High Oouit recognizing the usage under which a landlord can
enhance the rent of a miraai tenant have no application to wanta land in Gajarat (Juvansinyji v. Doh Chhala, 27 Bom. L.R. 8UO).
The plaintiffs, who were landlords, gave notice to defendants, who were tenants of agricultural lauds, on February 5, 1916 calling upon them to pay enTh3 defendants^raisud tha hanced rent or else to quit possession within ten days
;
plea that they were permanent tenants and claimel that they were in p3sso3sion Their names as tenants ever since the foundation of the village in 1655 A. D.
appeared in
plaintiff's
books from
1876, and in
the
earlier
coupled with other evidence they showod that as far back as 1848 the defdiidiub's ancestors \vjro cultivating tho lands. The" in ejectment, it was hild (1) thit under the circumstances tho plaintiffs having sued
specifically, yet
defendants were to ba treated as permanent tenants by virtue of the presumption arising under this section; (2) that the notice to quit was bad as contravening fcho
provisions of
for
and (3) thib the plaintiffs had failed to make out a case e. 84;*>s/j enhancement of rent (Amarwnyji v. Ranchhod, 27 Bom. L, R. 267). Where a tenancy 13 shown to have originated at soma tim;> bjtween 1758
ajid
1857, a presumption can arise, under this section, that the tenancy is permanent. The period of a century is too long and indefinite a period to constitute satisfactory evidence of the commencement of a tenancy within the meaning of this
29 Boin L. R. 274). ( Shripadbhat v, Ramz, In a suit for ejectment the defendants pleaded they wore permanent tenants, It was found that another person was the tenant in 1758, but there was no evidence as to who was in possession between 1758 and 1860. The defendants provol
section
their tenancy
ment
of the tenancy.
from 1860. Held, that the plaintiffs failed to prove the comnmceThere was neither any evidence of the period of the intended
duration of the tenancy, if any, agreed upon between the landlord and tha tenant nor any evidence of any usage of the locality as to the duration of suoh ienaacy. So the presumption of permanent tenancy arose in favour of the defendants unlor
this section
(Janardan Narayan
t>.
BEO. 85
Otf StfttB&ioR
6$
The period of 150 years is too long and indefinite to constitute satisfactory evidence of the commencement of the tenancy within the meaning of this section
'
(Kamchandra
In
v.
this case
L,
the finding of both the lower Oonrts is that defendant's ancestors were in possession of the land many years baforo 1863 wh->n the Bombay Rygulation XVI of 1827 was applied to Satara District and when watan lands were not made
inalienable in
When
Satara District, the statutory presumption of a permanent tenancy under this section can be raised (Gcvind Vithu v. Vith^l Laxtnan, 33 Bom L. R,
210).
The possession of the tenant was traced back up to 1864. The tenant mortgaged the holding and the mortgagees who subsequently brought the holding to sale and purchased it were never entered as permanent taniuts, Hild, that under the
law as then it stood, there was no prohibition of transfer of ordinary tenancy, ao the mere fact that the landlord permitted the mortgage and the sale does not
lead to an inference of permanent tenancy and with regard to this soitnn difficult to say that in the case of cultivation in 1863 the antiquity was so
as to
it
was
great
make
v.
Bhivram
the commencement of the tenancy difficult and obscure Krishna Bal Qhavan, 33 Bom. L R. 613).
(Vyinkatesh
Tenants -at-wiii
do
not deprive the Inamdar of his possession, but "permanent" or occupancy tenants do. The distiction between "permanent tenants" and Houanta-at will" is often
hard to draw when not written by written leases (18 Bom. 433 and 17 Bom. 475), but the sutil&rs of Kurla are admitted to be permanent.
grant to an inamdar may bo eithor of the Royal share of rev^nuo, or of the soil but ordinarily it is of tho former The burden rests on the description.
;
soil.
Inamdar
415).
to
show that he
is
an alienee of the
soil
(Raiya
v.
Balknshna, 29 Bom.
can enhance
A tenant
repudiating the title under which he entered, becomes liable to immediate eviction at the option of the landlord Vishnv v. Balaji, 12 Bom. 352).
Suit by tenant
recover possession of certain fields, etc., alleging that he was a permanent tenant of the defendant, having purchased the right of occupancy from previous occupants of the land. Tue lower Court held that the
plaintiff's
Owner.
to recover possession
claiming as
full
plaintiff sued to
vendors merely yearly tenants and not permanent tenants, but that the sale of thoir right to the plaintiff wag valid, and that the plaintiff had been wrongfully disposses sed by the defendant, no notice to quit having been given. Held, the plaintiff could not recover ; for his plaint and the conduct of
his case
were
amounted to a denial of his landlord's (defendant's) title. In his suit the plaintiff claims to be full owner, and he could not afterwards claim to be restured to possession on the ground that he was a yearly tenant entitled to notice to ^uit, which was not given v. Bai Motan 17 Bom.
(Lalu
Gayal
Bibi,
631).
70
[OHAP. VII
An annual
JE on""? sm
March.
tenancy shall, in the absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed to run from the end of one cultivating season to the end of the
next
sumed
be
pre-
annual tenancy shall [a] in the absence of any special agreement in writing to the contrary [a] reThree months' notice quire for its termination a notice given in by the landlord to the tenant, or by Iftti'givint; writing tenant to the landlord, at least three tlae landlord to tenant, or months before the end of the year of tenancy vice versa. at the end of which it is intimated that the Such notice may be in the form of Schedule tenancy is to cease.
E, or to the like
effect,
is
An
The
bnt the landlord's right of forfeiture arising from denial of his of the contract of tenancy, but is a right which the law implies in
If the Legislature had intended to exthe relationship of landlord and tenant. clude the right of forfeiture in cases of annual tenancies, thare would have been
v.
Au
annual tenancy to
which
Code
Gopal, 32
Bom.
78).
of 3
months.
ia
March 1887
v.
insufficient
(Bahiru
enhance the assessment for the year 1887-1888 Vinayak, P. J. 1892, p. 298).
to
Where, in the case of agricultural land, with the landlord that he would pay the amount of the annual rent every year as long as the landlord would keep the wadi (oart) with him, and would givo back tho samo when the landlord would demand it, Held, that the contract between the parties took the case out of this
the tenant entered into an
section, and that, as tho rent would not be payable uatil the end of the year, the landlord might put an end to the tenancy and demand the land at the end of any year without giving any previous notice of any particular period, but he could not demand immediate possession in the middle of a year (Bzlkrishnt v. Jashi, 19
An adverse possession of a khoti land of an occupancy tenant 150). extinguishes the right of the occ'ipaacy tenuit to actual possession but not right to relinquish his occupancy right to the kuoti who, after du3 notice under this 45 Bom. section, is entitled to eject the person in possession (Vishnu r. Rabla
Bom.
}
1001).
When
notice tO quit
iS
not necessary
Where
the tenants
agwd
by their Kabuliat to give up the land in Kartik and where no subsequent tenancy was created either by agreement or by acceptance of rent, held, that no notice to quit was requisite, that this section did not apply and that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the land immediately after Kartik (Dattatraya v. Likshman, P J* 1894, p. 218). An annual tenancy, under this section, is determined by the tenant's disclaimer of the landlord's title even where the Transfer of Property Act does not apply; and no notice to quit is necessary to determine the tenancy (Vidyavardhak Sangh 00. v. Ayyvppa, 49 Bom. 842).
"""
[a
a|
s.
2.
BEGS. 84-84A.]
Notice
Year Of cultivation.
Where a
was given in June and recited that the yeu of cultivation W3iild terminate in in October, bat the only document that was filed indicated that the year ended May, it was held that tha notice did not terminate ths teainay (Ichhtfal . Anjibai, 30 Bom. L. B. 1602).
IS invalid. The words of the particular notice given '<You are hereby given notice that within ten days from the date of receipt hereof you should pay over to us reut of ths list yeir and you should givo in writing a Kabalayat to pay rent for the lands you cultivate, failing by the
plaintiffs were:
cultivate,
and
in
default
or obtain any steps will be taken against you to take over possession from you other remedy according to law.' 7 Held, that it cannot be implied that the notice to
quit
was
and
that
it
did
not
to comply with this eection. Held, further, that though the form of notice referred in this section was not imperative, it still indicates the class of notica which the Indian Legislature had in mind, and that notice would be very much what would be required under English law and the notice in the present case was not a valid notice to quit (Amarsangji Indrasanyji r. RanchJwd Jethabhai, 27 Bom, L.B. 267).
*
81 A.
(1)
of the
Order
granting sus810119
TirrUar.
whole or any part of the land revenue payable to G overnmen t by a superior holder in respect of any land is suspended or remitted, the Color special lector, acting under the general
orders of Government, may suspend or remit, as the case may be, the payment to such superior holder of the rent or land revenue of such land by the inferior holder or holders to an amount which
is in the case of land in respect of which full assessment the of amount payable to Government, shall not exceed double the
(a)
land revenue of which the payment by such superior holder has been suspended or remitted by Government, and in the case of land in respect of which land revenue less (b) than the. full assessmnt is payable to Government, shall not exceed double the amount which, in the opinion of the^ Collector, would have been suspended or remitted by Government in favour of the had been payable to Governsuperior holder if the full assessment ment in respect of such land. In the case of land in respect of which no land revenue is (2) to Government by a superior holder, whenever from any payable cause the payment of the whole or any part of the land revenue payable to Government in respect of any other land in the same ne''gh-
bourhood has been suspended orremUted, the Collector, acting under the general or special orders of Government, may suspend or remit, as the case may be, the payment to such superior holder of the rent
or holders to an
or land revenue of the first-mentioned land by the inferior amount which shall not exceed double the
* This section was inserted by Bom. Act
holder
amount
VII
of 1914,
8.
3.
10
J/W
UHAP. VIA
which, in the opinion of the Collector, would have been suspended or remitted by Government in favour of the superior holder if the full assessment had been payable to Government in of such
respect
land.
(g)
An
(l)
Qr
^ ^
order
mb
pa3ged {(m
d
(J)
AM
gub-iectlOU U0t be
(4)
n^'Tf
llow "
any rent or land revenue of which the payment has been remitted, or be*
^^
payment has been suspended in favour of an holder or holders, the whole of the land revenue remitted
^^
or suspended in favour of such superior holder shall, without prejudice to the rights of the inferior holder or holders to recover the rent or land revenue so collected, become immediately payable by the superior holder.
No application for assistance under sections 86 and S7 entertained, no suit shall lie, and in decree of a Civil Court shall be executed, for the recovery by a superior holder of any rent or land revenue of which the payment has been remitted, or during the period of suspension of any rent or land revenue of which the payment has been in favour of an inferior
(5)
shall
be
suspended
holder or holders; but, where the payment of rent or land revenue by an inferior holder or holders has been suspended, the period during which the suspension has continued shall be excluded from the period of limitation prescribed for a suit for the recovery of such rent or land revenue.
(6)
P
Nothing
a e
in this section
;f ^J^^
by
shall make it unlawful for the superior holder to take the crop-share fixed Cu8tom or agreement in respect of any land OQ wh j ch g Q op part in the form of a share of the
^ ^^
.
^
crop.
(7)
Explanation
In respect of land which has not been assessed under the provisions of Chapter VIII or under ^ , any survey Meamng of assessment. settlement confirmed by section 112, the
.
Object of tixis
(8) Nothing in this section shall apply any land situated in the Province of Sind. section The object of this lection is to secure for
to
tenants and other inferior holders a share in the concessions granted by Gtofernment under the rales for the suspension and remission of Land Revenue. The chief difficnlty experienced in carrying out tbe pojicy of liberal and
attspensions
8 ECS, 84A,*85]
remissions
is that,
73
suspension to
the superior holder, the latter can recover the whole of the rent or land-revenue, at once from the inferior holders. This section will now remedy this defect in the
village accountant, shall receive his dues on account of rent or land -re venue from the inferior holders through such patel and accountant. Where such patel and accountant fail to recover in behalf (2) of such superior holder any sum due and payable to him on account of rent or land-revenue, such holder shall, with the presuperior vious consent of the Collector, be entitled to recover his duei
direct
holder
Act (Statement of Objects and Reasons). [a] 85. (1) Every superior holder of an alienated village or of an alienated share of a village, in which Recovery of superior there are a hereditary patel and a hereditary
s
dues.
Where any such patel or accountant has recovered any beha f of such superior holder and fails to account to him for the same, the Collector shall, on written application from the recover from sum such such holder, superior patel or accountant as
(3)
in
sum
VVhere any such superior holder demands or receives any revenue from any inferior holder otherwise than through such patel or accountant, he shall, on conviction in a summary enquiry before the Collector, be liable to a fine not exceeding three times the amount of the sum so demanded or
(4)
rent or lapd
received.
This section does not apply t, any estate in the districts of AhmedaBroach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdirs' Act, 1888, extends (Bee Bom. Act VI of 1888, SB 1 and 33).
Note,
bad, Kaira,
This sec1425,
Inamdar
(G. R. No.
Ad minis tra
Suit by superior holders to recover dues from inferior holders. This section does not bar the jurisdiction of Oivil Courts to try suits
by superior holders to recover the arrears of their duea from (Vuhvamth v. Kondaji, 42 Born. 49).
inferior
holders
Enhancement Of rent.
A
;
grant to an inamdar
may
be
either
of the
Royal share of Revenue, or of the oil but ordinarily it IB of the former descripThe burden rests on the inamdar to show that he is an alienee of the soil. tion. Where an ioamdar ia an alienee only of the land revenue, then his relations tocertain well-recognized conditions,
of the Inam, then the
|/ij
wards those who hold land within the area of the Inam grant, vary according to [f the holding was created prior to the grant
Tnia section was substituted by Bom. Act I of 1910, 1st Sch., Part 1I
tite
eerial
No, 6 for
original section,
?4
THE BOMBAY
LA.HD EUvawais
OOD, 1879
OHAP. VII
for he has no interest in the soil, in respect of which rent holding is later in its origin than the inam grant, the
lands, not
grantee of revenue, would be entitled to place tenants in possession of the sheri by virtue of any interest in the soil, bat as being entitled to make the most he can oat of them by way of revenue. The difference between the two
5
in the la*t, direct contractual relations would be inamdar and the holder. It these contractual relations are defined by an express contract of which there is evidence, then the rights of the If no such contract can be proved parties must be determined by that ooruract. then the Court must have recourse to the criteria prescribed by law for determining their rights (Rajya 0. Balkrishna, 29 Bom. 415).
Usage Of locality-Tests. In oases where enhancement of rent by an Inamdar is sought to be sanctioned by usage, the test is, whether there has beeu in any and what enhancement according to the usage of the of
locality
respect
aOOOUntant.
Talati appointed to be Kulkarni not a hereditary village A talati appointed t:> be a Kalkarni of a commuted inam village
for
the
purposes
of this
section
2,
(G.
R.
in Joglekar's
Supplement No.
19).
Superior holders
.
W&r,"b
recovery of dues
.,
from
upon written application to the be entitled to assistance, by the use of precautionary and other measures, for the recovery of rent or land-revenue payable to them by inferior holders, or by co-sharers
shall,
Collector,
in their holdings under the same rules, except that contained in section 137, snd in the same manner as prescribed in Chapter XI [a] for the realization of land -re venue by Govern-
ment:
Pr vided that su <>h application be made within the revenue year or within the year ot tenancy in which the said rent or landvenue year or within revenue became payable the year of tenancy. Applications may bo S6nt by post. A n application by a superior
jection if sent
holder for assistance for the recovery of rent under this section is not liable to reby post ,Gt B. No. 5027) dated 12t': November 1890, quoted iu Sathe's Land Revenue Code, 4fch ed v p. 162).
87 do not
make
it
compulsory on the inamdur, or his assignee, to ask for the assistance of the OolWtor to recover enhanced rent from the tenants. If the inamdar, or his assignee, had made a demand on the tenants for the enhanced rent through the hereditary
patel, or village accountant, as required
by s. 85, and they had refused, he would have at once become entitled to his ordinary civil remedy (Govindrao t>. Balu, 1ft
Bom.
tain a
586).
[a]
Words
repealed by
Bom, Act
SBCS 85-871
feiture
75
and
at all,
SMaram, P J
fc
1884, p. 68),
in a suit by a* from kuatelara, there is no necessity to pro4 of the Pension* Act (XXEII of 1891). He is not en;
charge on the lands of, but only to a money decree ag ainst, the occupant* hence, no personal decree can be passed agains t an oetupantin respect of assessment for the years previous to hh coming on the holding (Vinauak v. Lakshman, 28 Boro. 92).
Where
the
Re-
venue authorities proceed nuder this section to assist a superior holder ty recover his dues from an inferior holder and the latter, havin; exhiu-a ed his rights of
appeal under this Code
files
declaration of bis
right,
the Court
in
which the
ponding shall not grant an injunction to uuder this section (Karimdino t>. Ali Akbar, 2 8. D. 572).
suit is
restrain the
procedure
Municipality
deemed
section (Vide
166 of the
Bom
maaniag of this and the following District Municipal Act (III of 1901).
[a] 87,
(1)
On
application being made under section 86 to the Collector, he shall cause a written notice there f < be * er ved " the holder or co-sharer fixing a for into the day inquiry
.
care.
the day so fixed he shall hold a [a] <2) summary inquiry, and shall pass an order for rendering assistance to the superior holder for the recovery of such amount, if any, of rent or land re-
On
venue as appears
fully due. [a] (3) But,
A
.
,
to
him upon
him
to be
law-
appears to the Collector that the question at issue between the parties is of a complicated or difficult nature, he may in his discretion either refuse the assistance asked limited exteut only for, or, if the land to which the dispute relates has been assessed under the provisions of Chapter VI II. or
if it
tJST^Z^
..[6] any survey settlement confirmed by section 12 grant assistance to the extent only for the assessment so fixed upon the said land. [a] (4) Nothing in this section shall prevent either party from having recourse to the Civil Courts to recover Civil suit not to be f r0 the other such amount as he may deem barred to be still due to him, or to have been levied
1
from him
case
in excess of
as
the
may
be.
shall lie
[a] These sub-sections were originally paragraphs of section 87. numbered as sub-sections by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 39. [b] Words repealed by iiom. Act 111 of 188G are omitted. Tnia sub-auction was addec} by Bom. Act IV" of 1 91 3, a. 39, -)<?]
7*
KivBurtfis
(OHA*.
Vlf
mamlatdar'g
order under this section does not preclude the pubie* f hiving recourse to the Civil Court, if dissatisfied with it (Oawsh v. Mehta, 8 Bom. 188).
om
Collector's
power tO
refuse assistance.
to
sec-
re-
covery of rent or land revenue which after a sumnary enquiry he finds to be law The truth is that in these enquiries under this section the Collector fully due. exercises in a summary way the jurisdiction of a Civil Court, and like those Courts be has no authority to go behind the liability and listen to appeals ad misericordium.
Even should he do
so, the
4th paragraph of this section enables the land' hU tenant such ami a nt as the Col-
when
Even and the object of the Collector would thus be frustrated the question at issue is of a complicated or difficult nature, cl. 2 of this section assumes that there can be no such question about the survey assessment
(G, Us. Nos. 8402, dated 25th October 1884, an
1
pa ragraph of
r fusing assistance to a superior holder for the recovery of dues from his infer io holders when the questi>n at is*ue between ttu pirties appears to him to be of a complicated or difficult nature, is a discretional power and the ordinary rule in
;
appeals is not to interfere with the exercise ,by subordinate authorities, of their lawful discretion. Bat thie rule is subject to the qualification that it is the duty of
the appellate authority to see that the subordinate (G. R. No. 168, dated 8th January 1884).
exercises
a sound discretion
Rates
fixed
Of bhatta tO
Witnesses
The
rates of Ihatta to
witnesses
as
by the High Court from time tJ time are applicable in the case of enquiries made under the provisions of this Code, and the orders r egarding bhatta issued in G. R No. 880, dated 20th March 1888, are not binding (G. O. No. $610, dated
28-2-1920 quoted
in Joglekar'a
Supplement No.
2,
p. 20).
for
assistance suits.
when
required,
Collectors caii appoint temporary clerks for assistance tuir e the approval of Government, subject to the condition that the
is
with
expenditure thereof
(G
i,
date
Lawyers
(1)
(2)
(3)
Government
officers
is likely to
by
Liwyers,
(B G.
G.,
2920, Pt. V,
at
p.
&V
8^.
be lawful
for
the
Commissioner
to
any time
Oumnussioner may, by
any holder of alienated lands, conferring upon him all or any of f o uow i ag powers in respect of the lands, specified in such commission ( namely J:
to issue a
comm ission
S7-&9
0* Su^BBIOB AND
llfFEBIOE Hot*DEB
77
to demand security for the (a) payment of the land-revenue or rent due to him, and if the same be not furnished, to take such precautions as the Collector is authorised to take under sections 141 to 143 ;
(b) to attach the property of persons making default in the payment of such land revenue or rent, as aforesaid ; at which, and the in(c) to fix from time to time the times stalments in which, the land-revenue or rent due to him shall be
payable
(d)
to exercise the
;
powers of a Collector
under sections
65
and 66
to in
(e) to receive notices of relinquishment under section 74, and determine the date up to which such notices shall be received as that section provided ;
(
/'
to
take
maintenance
for survey
and repair of
officers in sec-
in the
manner provided
Provided that the powers contemplated in clauses (c) to ( /) on holders of lands to which a survey settlement has been extended under the provisions of section 216.
XTote*. This section is subject to modification when applied to any estate iti the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat
VI
of 1888,
as. 1
and 33).
\*
There
no objection
to the
powers contemplated in els. (a) and (b) of this section being conferred upon an Inamdar at once, bat, none of the powers mentioned in els. (c) tj ( / } can be conferred nntil a survey settlement has been extended to his village under s. 216 of
the
this section).
The grant
Of
commission
under
this section to
a sharakatdar
ia
not
holder
10-1-21
89.
Form
mi88lon -
of
Every such commission shall be in the form of Schedule F, and shall be liable to be withdrawn at the each compleasure of [a] the Commissioner [a] ; and a commission may, if the [6] Commissioner see fit be issued to one or more agents of a
V\fa the
first
word 'Government" by
iu
s.
40
(2).
Council
IT
of 1913,
40 ().
78
OotoB, 1879
OHAJP,
VU
in
certain oases.
any such commission attach a defaulter's make an immediate report having done so. Should e demand on account or which the attacament has been made, appear to the Collector,
"
after such
inquiry as
he
may deem
fit
to
make, to be just, he shall give orders for the sale of the property, and the sale shall be conducted agreeably to the provisions of sections 165 to 186. But if the holder of the commission is invested, under Regulation
cute his
own
him and
When
cess*
civil jurisdiction and with power to exeor his agent's decrees, the sale shall be conducted by not by the Collector and his subordinates.
compulsory pro-
91.
shall cease
him under
protest, or
security in the
holder of any such commission as aforesaid, by himself or his agents, proceeding with any comPenalty for coDtma. l pu made, Or ten80ry procegg after pa y ment r * infi compulsory pro*, j as aforesaid, or after the furnishing of dered cess. such security as aforesaid or after tender be liable on conviction in a summary inquiry before shall thereof, the Collector, to a penalty not exceeding three times the amount of the revenue sought to be recovered by such compulsory process.
And any
JP
92.
P
'
m
7o*l***tto
*~
commission
f tlie
rent of the payment current year and of the year next immediately preceding, but not to that of former years. The holder of any such commission shall not enforce a 93. demand for revenue or rent in excess of 11 Holder of what any inferior holder has paid, previ60 to the date of such demand, or of T d e ously e^ssiV usual or what he may have contracted in writing to rnand. pay. In the event of a dispute the Collector shall hold a summary inquiry and decide what is just, and the holder of a commission shall not enforce a demand for more than what is so decided to be just.
Jent airipreviouB yoar'g
arrears.
of the revenue or
u"*^
The person
against
whom any demand shall have been enforced in excess of the amount of which payment is i aw f u n y eo foreable shall be entitled to recover, on conviction of the holder of the com-
SBCB. 8U-94AJ
Op
19
mission in u
amount
sum
him
summary inquiry before the Collector, three times the of any such excessive demand by way of damages, and the so due by the holder of the commission shall be leviable from as an arrear of land revenue.
94.
Nothing in the
may
e 8 tablhh
B
mission
bis
holder of alienated
8uit in
m * Courfc
land
of
deemed from
to
instituting
prevent a a
competent jurisdiction
tor ttie purpose of establishing his claim to re-assess the lands or re-settle the revenue of
sum
any inferior holder paying less than the full which he d^ema him to be justly liable, or from levying the sum ascertained t > be due in accordance with the decree in any such suit in the manner hereinbefore mentioned*
to
payment
of
is subject to modification when applied to any estate Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vid* Bom. Act VI of 1888, as. 1 and 33). The superior holder of an alienated village or (a) 94 A (1) of an alienated share of a village, in which
Note.
This section
of
in the
districts
Recovery
npe
as revenue
f
hereditary
ho,
extended under section application ia writing to the Assistant. or Deputy Collector in charge of the taluka request that the rent or land revenue due to such superior holder may during a period named in the application be recovered as a revenue demand.
for specified period.
216,
may by
The Collector may in his discretion sanction the applica(2) tion for a period not exceeding that named by the applicant, and in such case the following provisions shall apply :
(a) Any rent or land-revenue that accrues or has accrued due to the superior holder during tbe sanctioned period or a period of
six years previous thereto shall, to an extent not exceeding the assessment fixed on the land, be recoverable under the orders of the revenue authorities as a revenue demand during the sanctioned
period.
(b) Where any proportion of the land-revenue that accrues or has accrued due to Government in respect of unalienated land in the same neighbourhood during the said sanctioned or previous period has been suspended or remitted by proper authority, the Collector may suspend or remit an equal or lesser proportion of the rent or land -revenue that accrues or fcias accrued due to the superior Any such suspension or holder, during the corresponding period. remission shall, notwithstanding anything in the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876, be binding upon the superior holder in any subsequent proceedings in any Civil Court between the superior
ia"\
IV
of 1913.
8.
41.
80
THE
Boafcu*
ORAP.
Via
and
inferior holders or their legal representatives, and any proceedings pending at the date of such suspension or remission shall abate to the exteut of any claim that may ba iaonsistent therewith; and no Civil Court shall entertain any suit against the Secretary of State or Government in respect of any such suspension or remission,
(c) Where any such suspension or remission has been granted an inferior holder, the land-revenue (if any) payable by the superior holder shall be suspended or remitted, as the case may be,
to
to a proportionate extent.
The balance of any sum recovered under clause (a) shall (d) be paid to the superior holdar after deduction of the costs, i any, of recovery and of any sum lawfully chargeable upon the sum recovered.
CHAPTER
s.42.
VIII.
OF SURVEYS, ASSESSMENT* AND SETTLEMENTS OP LAND REVENUE []. This title was substituted for the original title by Bom. Act IV of 1913 [a]
Note. The provisions of this Chapter do not apply to the maintenance of the Eeoord of Bight (Raghwendra v. Secretary of State, 28 Bom. R. 559).
lawful for the Governor in Council, whenever it may seem expedient, to direct the survey Revenue survey may l an(J i n fa Q Presidency, any any part r ed b " ith a ** settlement of the landn c i, L?o7ny <V to the record and and revenue, of preservation Presidency. part of rights connected therewith, or for any other similar purpose and such survey shall be called a revenue
95.
It shall be
lt
survey. Such survey may extend to the lands of any village, town, or city generally, or to such land only as the Governor in Council may direct; and subject to the orders of the Governor in Council it shall be lawful for the officers conducting any such survey to except from the survey settlement any land to which it may not seem expedient that such settlement should be applied.
The
Control iurveyof
control of
every such
revenue
revenue survey
shall
nor in Council
It shall be lawful for the
Officer
96.
Survey
e
S o5V:!
suitable
may
survey officer deputed to conduct or take part in any such survey, to require by general notice or by summons, the ttendaQ e o h l de nd of all
<!
.
to*
service
from
persons interested therein, in person, or by legally constituted agent duly instructed and able to answer all material questions, and the
pretence of taluka and village officers, who in their several stations and capacities are legally, or by usage, bound to perform service in
95^100
0* SuBvEva,
81
virtue of their respective offices and to require from them such assistance in the operations of the survey and such service in connection therewith, as may not be inconsistent with the position of the individual so called on,
be lawful for the survey officer to call upon all holders of land and other persons interested t0 measurement or classiby fideTand p tbe ",' " catum of tO which the survey exthe meaauremont o r \W tends by furnishing flAg-holders ; and in <'hs9ification of lands, the event of a necessity for employing hired labour for this or other similar object, incidental to survey operations, it shall be lawful to assess the cost thereof, with all contingent expenses on the lands surveyed, for collection as a revenue
It shall
97.
o^tn
demand.
98.
,
prising Jand used for purposes of agriculture *ll be made of exten! than a .ly minimum to be fixed from time to time for extent the several classes of land in each district by the Commissioner of Survey, with the sanction of Government. A record of the minima so fixed shall be kept in the Mamlatdar's office in each taluka, and shall be open to the inspection of the public at reasonable times.
TemSn S
These provisions
.
shall not apply to survey numbers which have already been made of less extent thap fche rainima 80 fixed> or which may i^ so made under the authority of the Commis-
siouer of Survey given either generally or in any particular instance in this behalf ; and any survey number separately recognized in the [a] land records [a] shall be deemed to have been authorizedly
99.
1
made whatever be
its
extent.
IV of 19tt,
made
in
s-
44.
behalf under section 214, the officer in charge of a survey shall Officer in charge of a have authority to fix the assessment for landsurvey to 6* aseeesment* rev enue at his discretion on all lands within the local operation of an order made under section 95 not wholly exempt from land revenue, and the amounts due according to such assessment shall, subject to the provisions of section 102, be levied on all such lands.
00.
this
Regard
to be
had
to
In fixing such assessment, regard shall be had to the requirements of the proviso to
8ect ion 52.
These words were substituted for the original words "survey records"
by Bom. Act
[5]
IV
of 1913,
s.
43.
Words
repealed by
Bom Act IV
*8
[CHAP. VIII
But nothing
.
in this
section
Provl80t
survey
officer aforesaid
registering
deemed to prevent the from determining and the proper full assessment on lands
shall be
wholly exempt from payment of land-revenue or on lands especially excepted under section 95 from the survey settlement, or from dividing all such lands to which the survey extends into survey numbers.
101.
The power
or
m^e'mayToriand
to assess under the preceding section shall, in the case of lands used for purposes of agriculture a ne > indude P 0wer t0 assess, l . whether directly on the land, or in the form of a rate or cess upon the means of irrigation
section 55 [A] or
any.
other
102.
under in respect of which no rate is levied [a] under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879 [6J, or in manner whatsover that may be sanctioned by
fixed by the officer in charge of a survey levied without the sanction of
It shall be
Government.
The assessment
shall not be
Government.
sanction of Government Bat may be fixed, with or without modification, by the Governor in OouQCil for a term of
eri*or
Council to
declare such
with any modifications which he may deem necessary, fixed for a term of years not exfor cee di n 6 g thirty J in the case of lands used
the purposes of agriculture alone, and not exceeding ninety-nine in the case of all other
lands.
,
.,
year8 .
This section empowers the Governor-in-Council to fix the assessment for a term of years not exceeding thirty in the case of lands used for the purposes of agriculture alone, and not exceeding thirty-nine in the case of all other land*.
Note
When
the
id
number
of yaars, the occupant can hold the land at the fixed as sesame at
the
expiry of
the period.
[c]
103.
When
the levy of the assessment fixed under sections 100 and 101 upon any land has been sane-
ments '
tioncd under section 102, and notice of the same has been given in accordance with rules made by the Governor in Council in this bethe settlement shall be deemed to have been introduced with half, respect to the lands of which the assessments have been sanctioned. Note This section is subject to modification when applied to any village
in the districts of of Eatnagiri
Introduction of settle-
the
Khoti
Settlement
Act,
Bom. Act
of 1880,
ss, 1
and 39).
s.
[W]
[c]
was substituted for "leviable" by Bom, Act VII of 1879, These words were inserted by Bom, Act VII of 1879, 8. 2.
2.
IV
of
1918,
s.
46, for
the
original section.
BEOS 101*105]
OF SUFVBYB.
BTO. o*
LAKD REVENUE
83
are laid
Two
conditions
a survey settlement, first the sanction under 9. 102 and second, the notice in accordance with the rales made by the Governor in Council. The departmental orders such as the one requiring
fresh notice
Officer
when the Government raises the rates proposed by the Settlement have not the force of legislative settlement and their non-observacce does
Gavaramsnt by
but
its
depirtanutal
rules
may
make changes
tin
Government resolutions
which are not consistent with the Oode hive not the force of
shwar Janardhan, 30
hw
(Ewperor
v. Ifore-
Bom
L. R. 1255).
In the year in the course of which a survey settlement, whether original or revised, may be intround the preceding section, the difference between the old and new assessin which a Survey Settlement is introduced ment of all lands on which the latter may be in excess of the former shall be remitted, and the revised assessment shall be levied only from the next following
104.
ttSS
year.
lt
^fJl?Z
by
In the year next following that in which any [a] original or [a] revised survey settlement has been introduced, y occupant who may be dissatisfied with e increased rate imposed by such new assessresigned that year. * ment on anv of the survey numbers [b] or sub-divisions of survey numbers [6] held by him shall, on resign-
ing such number [6] or sub-division [6] in the manner prescribed 74 [c] on or before the 51st March, receive a remis[c] section
jf ote
districts of lUtnagiri
of this section does not apply to any village in the and Kolaba to which th3 Khoti Settlement Act extends
(Bom. Act I
and
39).'
7
Occupant.
is
subject to modification
when applied
to
any estate in the district of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panoh Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss.
1
and 33).
105.
The
j?js? Aim
to limited land-revenue.
fixing of the assessment under the provisions of section 102 shall be strictly limited to the of ordi nd enue and y , ; shall not operate as a bar to the levy of any ordinary cess which it shall be lawful for the Governor in Council to impose under the provisions of
rrr
r ir
.
XVI
of 1895.
words were inserted by Bom IV of 1913, s. 47, [b-b] These words and figures were substituted for the original words aud These [c-cj figures "sections 74 and 76" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, a. 47,
84
CHAP. VIII
any law for the time being in force for purposes of local improvement, such as school?, village, and district roads, bridges, tanks, wells, accommodation for travellers, and the like, or of any rate for the use of water which may be imposed under the provisions of section 55 [a] or of the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879. [a]
106.
It shall
Government
direct
may
survey
assess-
be lawful for the Governor in Council to direct, at any time, a fresh revenue survey or any
fresh
and revision of
ment.
opera tion subsidiary thereto, but noenchance* 4.111^1 / xii ii. ncent of assessment shall take effect till the
.
j.
expiration of
10;'.
the
period
previously
fixed
a general classification of the soil of [b] Provided that when any area has been made a second time, or when any original classification of any area has been approved by the Governor in Council as final, no such classification shall be again made with a view to the revision of the assessment of such area.
Principles of revision.
The
depend en-
tirely on changes in prices, including such local changes as ment of communications and shifting of markets, although
crease or decrease in material wealth and general prosperity will be a guide as t o suitability of the old assessment (G. B. No. 7494, dated 12th October 1897. quoted in Sathe's Land-Revenue Code, 4th Ed , p. 198).
to revisions of assess-
In revising assessments of land-revenue regard shall be had to the value of land and , in the case of Conditions applicable d for tfc purposes of agr i cu lture, to |ftnd
[c]107.
e the profits of agriculture
.
Provided that if any improvement has been effected in any land during the currency of any previous settlement made under this Act, or under Bombay Act 1 of 1865, [d] by or at the cost of the holder thereof, the increase in the value of such land or in the the same, due to the said improvement, shall profit of cultivating n< t be taken into account in fixing the revised assessment thereof.
"Value of land
sic richness or quality
'.
of
land.
t,
.,
refer
to the intrin-
of
tl
value"
is
not
[a-a] These words were added by Bom. Act VII of 1879, s. 2. This proviso was substituted for the original clause by Bom. [b]
Act
IV
of
188 1*,
s. 1.
\c\
This section was substituted for the original section 107 by Bom. Act
s.
IV
of 1886,
2.
[d] Bom. Act I of 1865 (except sections 37 and 38) is repealed by of this Act which has been repealed by Bom, Act IV of 1913, P. 5.
section 2
BJEOI,
106-111
Of SURVEYS, ICTO. OF
duty of the survey
a
officer,
108.
It shall be the
of
e"
settlement
register, to be called "the settlement Register," showing the area and assessment of each survey number, [a]
with any other particulars that may be prescribed [a] and other records, in accordance with such orders as may from time to time be made on this behalf by Government. Records. The records to be prepared by the Survey Officers for future
administration are (I) the village map, (2) the settlement detailed record of each holding (botkhat) (G. R. No 4084,
register,
dated
Entry
in the
survey Settlement
The Settlement
amount of
Knot
in
respect of lands in the Kboti village, though prepared in the form of statement published at p. 584 of the "General Rules of the Revenue Department" (e'l.of 1893)
and
this section
officer
on which a survey number is held is nob fiuil under the Khoti Act (Bom. Act I of 1880 and it can be reversed or modified by a competent Court (Antaji p. Antaji
21
IV
of 1913,
s.
49.
SiwSSgVSS
lawful for the Collands thereof, at rates determined by means of a survey settlement eminent that may be or at such other fixed rates as he may deem temporarily under Government management. to be reasonable, and [l>] to grant unoccupied lands on lease [b] and otherwise to conduct the revenue management thereof under the rule* for the management of unalieaated lands, so far as such rules may be applicable, and for so long ai the said village or estate shall be under the management of Government officers : provided, however, that any written agreements relating to the land, made by the superior holder of such village or estate, shall not be affected by any pro* ceedings under this section in so far as they shall not operate to the detriment of the lawful claims of Government on the land. Note. This section is subject to modification when applied to any estate in
Keveuue managemanfc
ment
officers, it shall be
let
1^ ^
out
the
the districts of Ahmedabad, Kiira, Broach or Panch Mihals to which the Gujarat Talnkdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
[a-fl]
name
s.
These words were substituted for the original words 'together with the number 77 by Bom. Act IV of 1913
sell
48.
the occn
These words were substituted for the original words "fco b\ [ft pancy of unoccupied lands by auction" by Bom. IV of 1913, i. 60,
8*
[Oiur. VJll
A Government Officer management of a talukdar's estate has, under 9. 33 of the Gujrat Talukdars* Act, the same powers which ths Collector has in an alienated
in the temporary
village, to recover arrears of
v.
The
Collector,
made, survey settlements of land-revenue approved and confirmed under the authority c \^ n n *i n L j * t " e Governor l & Council shall be, and are
i
[a] 113.
Partition.
hereby declared to be, in force subject to the provisions of this Act. Expenses properly incurred in making partition of
estates
paying revenue to Government shall b e recoverable as a revenue demand in such proportions as the Collector may think fit from the sharers at whose request the partition is made, or from the persons interested in the partition.
Note. Vide the first note under s. Ill supra. Scale Of Bhatta (Allowance). The scale,
allowance
is
is to
:
according to which daily be allowed to persons entrusted with the partition, actually on tour
RS.A.
*.
as follows
(a)
(b)
(i)
A Government servant of tita first grade A Government servant of the second grade
Up
to Rs.
...
on pay
...
...
250
...
...
240
2 12
3
(is*)
(m)
(to)
(9)
(vi)
(c)
(t)
Above Rs. 250 up to Rs. 300 Above Rs. 300 up to Rs. 350 Above Rs. 350 up to Rs. 400 Above Rs. 400 up to Rs. 450 Above Rs. 450 up to Rs. 750
... ...
...
...
...
2 8
...
...
...
400
8
...
pay
... ...
080
12
1
1
Above Rs. 50 up to Rs. 75 (it) (m) Above Rs. 7 5 up to Rs. 100 Above Rs. 100 up to Rs. 125 (to) Above Rs. 125 up to Rs. 150 (9) (w) Above Rs. 150 up to Rs. 175 Above Rs. 175 up to R3. 199 (vij)
(d)
...
...
...
...
... ...
4
8
...
...
...
...
1 12
2
3
fourth grade
...
Deoree
the decree
is
Bombay Civil Services Mules Manual, 1932, p. 129). if a portion for partition not properly executed
fche
of
Krishnuji, 40
Bom.
118).
OiVil
nnder
s.
When
54 of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908, once effects a partition, it is not to reopen the competent to the Civil Court to entertain any application seeking 20 iiom. L R. 411 s. c. 42 Bom. 689). partition (BMmangatda v Hanmant,
[a]
IV
of
1913,
8.
51,
for
the
original section.
BEOB.
112-llYA
114.
OF SUHVEW,
ETC.
or LiND lUvEtftfU
#7
or more co-shares in a khoti estate, which a revenue survey has been Intro-
Partition
ITn^nS^^K application by /
on
sharers.
fluced, [a] or in a talukdari estate [a], conthe said estate, it shall sent to a partition ' ^ . ~of , f n be lawful for the Collector, or for any other officer duly empowered by him in this behalf,
.
.
divide the said estate into shares according to the respective rights of the co-sharers, and to allot such shares to the co-sharers: Provided that no such partition shall be made, unless : (a) all the co-sharers are agreed as to the extent of their
[&] to
respective rights in estate, and (6) the assessment of the share or shares of the sharer or sharers consenting to such partition exceeds one-half of the assessment of the entire estate.
as a
In such cases the expenses of partition shall be recovered [c] revenue demand [c] from all the co-sharers in the estate
divided.
115.
[</]
nuSSTnto^e^r
vey numbers.
Repealed by Bam. Act TV of 19 13, s. 53. When any portion of cultivable land is permitted to 116. be used under the provisions of section 65 or 67 * ? non- a gricultural purpose or when
an 7 portion
ot
land
is
specially
assigned
under section 38, or when any assessment is altered or levied on any portion of land under sub-section ( 2) or sub-section (3 ) of section 48, such portion may, with the sanction of the Collector, be made into a separate number at any time notwithstanding the provisions of section 98. Note. This section does not apply to any estate in the districts of
Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Paueh Mahahala to which tho Gojarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
117.
Bombay Act
1862 not
affected.
Nothing
in section
[e]
116
shall
of
a ff ec t the
provisions of
Bombay Act V
of
1862.
(1) Survey numbers may from time to time and at any time be divided into so many subquisition of reason.
u rights in land or for
[/]
U7A.
8 i uua%
any
other
ol These words are repealed in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, [a Broach and the Panch Mahals by Bom. Act. VI of 1888 s. 3. Words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 52, are omitted. (b) [c c] These words were substituted for the original words Bunder rule (S ) of the last preceding section" by Bora. Act IV of 1913, s. 52. [d\ This section was substituted by Bom. Act IV of 1013, s. 54, for the
7
original section,
[e\
I/]
Words
Tills section
repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 55, are omitted. was inserted by Bom. Act IV of 1913 ; 3. 56,
88
[CHAP.
iX
The division o survey numbers into sub-divisions and (2) the fixing of the assessment of the sub-divisions shall be carried out and from time to time revised in accordance with rules made by the Governor in Council in this behalf :
Provided that the total amount of the asssessment of any survey number or sub-division shall not be enhanced during any term for which such assessment may have been fixed under section 102, unles such assessment is liable to alteration under section 48.
(3) The area and assessment of such sub-divisions shall be entered in such land records as the Governor in Council may prescribe in this behalf.
[a] 117B.
If
Cab
or
on^Ih
aion.
fit
may
it
think
in the event of all such occupants refusing the same, disposed of as the Collector shall deem fit :
shall be
shall be
occupied or
until the entire survey number shall be relinquished, whichever event may first occur, the assessment of the said sub-division shall be levied from the occupants of the other sub-divisions of the sur-
vey number
in proportion to the amount of assessment due from such occupants on account of their sub-divisions. For the purposes o this section notwithstanding anything contained in section 3, if any of the other sub-divisions have been mortgaged with possession, the mortgagors shall be deemed to be
the occupants thereof. Occupant. The term occupant' is subject to modification when applied to in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach and Panch Mahals to estate any which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom, Act VI of 1888, as. 1
*
and 33;.
CHAPTER IX
THE SETTLEMENT OP BOUNDARIES AND THE CONSTRUCTION AND
^
MAINTENANCE OF BOUNDARY-MARKS
of villages situated in British territory shall be fixed* and all disputes relating thereto shall be determined by survey officers, or
118.
Tho boundaries
by
Q1C
Government
guided by the following rules
[a]
:
for
^ nominated by
who
56.
shall be
Bom
Act
IV
of 1913,
8.
SBOI. 117B-118]
Ac.,
89
"Rule
__,
When
.
.
'
m mfc
,
.alttuJb^r
.
fenated duly constituted agent, shall voluntarily agree to any given line of boundary as the to their common boundary respective villages, the officer determinthe shall ing boundary require the said parties to execute an agreement to that effect, and shall then mark off the boundary in the
his
the patels and other village officers of any two or more adjoining villages, and, in the ease of village the holder thereof or
village
settled,
boundary
unless
it
fixed in
shall
this
appear
to the said officer that the agreement has intimidation, or any other illegal means.
been
obtained
by fraud,
Rule 2.
If the patels and other village officers, and, in the case of an alienated village, the holder therecase of O f O r his duly constituted agent, do not a g ree to
villages,
preceding rule, or if it shall appear to the said officer that the agreement has been obtained by fraud, intimidation, or any other
means, or if there be any pending dispute, the said officer a survey and plan of the ground in dispute, exhibiting the land claimed by the contending parties, and all particulars relating thereto, and shall hold a formal inquiry into the claims of tUe said parties, and thereafter make an award in the case. If cither of the villages concerned be alienated, an award made by a
illegal
shall
make
survey officer shall, unless the officer making it be the Superintendent of Survey, be subject to his confirmation, and an award made by any other officer shall be subject to confirmation by such other officer as Government may nominate for the purpose.
Note.
This section
id
subject to modification
Ratnagiri nnd Kolaba to which extends (fiVfr Bom Act I of 1880, 99. 1 and 30).
in the districts of
jurisdiction Of a Civil Oourt is not ousted by s. 4 (g) of Act of 1876, in caso of a dispute as to the position of the boundary line between two survey numbers aa laid down by the survey authorities, the defendant alleging
The
that the boundary marks were changed, the plaintiffs alleging their right direction (Bala t>. Nant, P. <T. 1898, p. 41).
that
they
are
in
(/OUrt has
the Court,
id
no power
to flX boundaries.
of
When
the
assistance
of
which the ascertaining sought for the purpose is unable to point out by reason of some confusion in them, and himself plaintiff to recover possession, when thoao boundaries have been ascertained by the Court, of legal estates, it was held, that the Oourt has no power to fix the boundaries
the boundaries,
unless
some equity ia superinduced by the act of the parties circumstance of fraud or confusion (Kavasji v* Hormusji, 29 Bom, 73).
as
some
particular
M
119.
OHAP. IX
Determination of
boundaries,
the time of a survey, the boundary of a field or holding be undisputed, and its correctness be field affirmed by the village officers then present, ;t may be j ai( j down ag pointe(j out by the
holder or person in occupation, and, if disputed, or if the said holder or person in occupation he not present, it shall be fixed by the survey officer according to the [a] land record [a] and according to occupation as ascertained from the village officers and the holders of adjoining laads, or on such other evidence or information as the survey officer may be able to
procure.
any dispute arise concerning the boundary of a field or holding which has not been surveyed, or if at any time [/>J after the completion of a survey [/>] a dispute arise concerning the boundary of any survey number, [cj or sub-division of a survey number, [r] it shall be determined by the Collector, who shall be guided [d] by the land records [d] if they afford satisfactory evidence of the boundary previously fixed, and if not, by such other evidence as he may be able to procure.
Notes.
Vide the
first
If
Sections 119, 120 and 121 of tbe Oode are primarily meant for the purposes of the Survey Settlement of the boundary marks as between the Government on the one hand and the occnpancy tenants on the other ( Kanhailal v. Ismaitthai, 28 Bom, L. R. 1498).
IS 'dispute. 'The word 'dispute' in the second part of this means a dispute between two neighbouring owners and not a dispute between the Collector and the owner. Where a dispute arose between the plaintiff and the Collector as to whether the formor had cnt the trees from the Government
section
What
land in front of his land and in the course of that dispute the Collector suo motu wont into the question of boundary between the land of the plaintiff and that of his
neighbour and later on ordered the correction of ths revenue records on the
r
baaU and the plaintiff sutaequeuly sued for ths declaration of his title to certain strip of land which he had been ordered to give up by the Collector, it was held that there was no snch dispute as is necessary for the application of this section and that the question of the into plaintiff's title to the land could be
A the enquiry,
gone
120.
6
(Malkarjumppa v. Anandrao, 53 Bom. 76G). 1 the several parties concerned in a boundary dispute agree to submit the settlement thereof to an
arbitrati
t(>
that effect
it
writing,
duty
\a-a\
would otherwise be
These words were substituted for the original words "Village records"
by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 57. |i-$] These words were sub9tituted for the original words "after the survey records have been handed over to the Collector" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s, 57. [c-c] There words were inserted by Bom. Act IV of 1 913, s. 57. [d-d These words were substituted for the original words ''in the case of survey numbers by the survey records" by Bom Act IV of 1913, s. 57.
|
SECS, 119-121]
THE SBTTLEMENT
OF BOUNDARIES &c.
91
boundary
shall require the said parties to nominate a committee of not leas than three persons, within a specified time, and if within a period to be fixed by the said officer the committee so nominated or a majority of the members thereof arrive at a derision, such decision, when confirmed by the said officer, or if the said officer he a survey officer lower in rank than u Superintendent of S'irvey, by
the Superintendent of Survey, shall be final : Provided that the said officer, or the Superintendent of Survey, shall have power to remit the award, or any
o the matters referred to arbitration, to the reconsideration ot the same committee., for
any of the causes set forth in paragraph 14 of the Second Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. If the committee appointed in the manner aforesaid fail to effect a settlement of the dispute within the If arbitration fail, u spec r ifi ed it sha H be the duty of the offisettle
-
cer a f resaic
is
unless he or,
officer
<
if
the
said
-i
<Z officer
survey
lower
in
rank
than a
fit
Superintendent of Survey, the Superintendent of Survey, see extend the time, to settle the same as otherwise provided in
Act.
to
this
Para. 14 of the 2nd Schedule to the Code of Civil Procedure.The Court may remit the award or any mattjr referred to arbitration to ttre reconsideration of the same arbitrator or umpire, upon such terms as it thinks fit:
(a)
when
arbitration,
the award has left uudetermiaed any of the matters referred to or where it determines any matter not referred to arbitration, unless
determination of the
matters
is
where an objection
award
is
of
it.
Effect of
the
settle-
ment of a boundary.
12L Th * wttlement of a boundary [ under any of the foregoing provisions of this chapter saall be determinative
:
boundary
line or
marks, and
(/))
boundary
of the rights of the landholders on either side of the bounin respect of the land adjudged to appertain, cr not to fixed dary appertain, to their respective holdings. Where a boundary has been so fixed, the Collector [b] ('2)
any time summarily evict any landholder who is wrongfully any land which has been adjudged in the settlement of a boundary not to appertain to his holding or to the holding of any person through or under whom he claims.
may
at
in possession of
[a)
Bom
Act IV
of 1913,
[1]
59.
IV
of 1913,
s.
59.
92
OHAP. IX
When
v.
there
is
the
word determinative'
in this section
maaiH conclusive
(Lakshman
This section
must be read along with sections 119 and 120 of this Code. It is only when a boundary dispute arise between tbe owners o$ adjoining lands, and the Collector is
caltei
his
determination becomes
final
v.
under
Antaji,
Court (Lafahman
25 Bom. 312).
final.
In 1887 a dispute arose between plaintiffs and dcfeulant as to boundaries of certain land, being survey Nos. 88 and 87, of which the plaintiffs and the defendant
were respectively occupants under Government. In 1879 the boundaries were fixed by a revenue officer under the orders of the Collector and the pie^e of land in dispute was found to belong to the plaintiffs as oocupinta of Surrey No. 88. Subsequently the defendant having encroached upon it and dispossessed the plaintiffs the The Court of first instance awarded plaintiffs' cliioa, holdpresent suit was filed. ing that the decision by the revenue officer was conclusive as to the bound iry. The
defendant applied, and the lower Appellate Court reversed the lower Court's decree. On appeal by the plaintiffs to the High Court, held, that under the provisions of
this section the decision of the Collector as to boundaries
Valji, 10
Bom
456).
Jurisdiction Of Civil Court. This section presents no bar to the cognizance of a suit by a Civil Court, to reconsider an order passed by a Survey Officer as to the site of some of the lands which does not involve any question of
boundary
The
line between two villages (Narsangji v. Bai Achrat, 26 Bom. L.B. 1264). Civil Court has jurisdiction to entertain a suit foraettlemant of bDundiries of of the suit the boundaries hive bean deterfields, where subsequent to the filing
officers
mined by revenue
(Kanhailal
v.
hmailbhai, 28
Bom
L.R. 1498).
The
more
settlement of a boundary by the Collector under this section d:>e* no than establish where the boundary line lies, and the owners of the rosnec-
tive survey numbers are prima facij entitled to their property according to the boundary lines. But the Collector's decision does not prevent one of the disputing suit in the Civil Court on the ground that ho ha3 acquired a parties from filing a his of neighbour's survey number by adverse possession (Bhaga Mo/i'/t t>. portion
the Collector. The fixing of boundaries, by Boundaries fixed the Collector, of survey numbers under this section, has the same effect merely of nbowing what lands belong to the persona in whose names the survey numbers are
by
It does not affect the right of any one of those persons to show in a Civil Court that he has acquired a title by adverse possession against a registered
registered.
occupant (NLanak
114, foot-note). the duty of the enquiry officer, unier this section, to settle the boundary between the lands of adjoining Louse owners, which can ordinarily be by means of a line drawn on a pUn, and that line, accord-
v.
Narayan, 22 Bom.
Li
B.
is
Settlement Of boundary.
It
is determinative of the right* of the landing to the provisions of this section, But it is not determinative of holders on either side of the boundary so fixed. to exercise over thd laud beany rights which the holder of one number can claim
Sacs 121-122
SE-ITLFMENT OF BOUNDARIES
&c
93
longing to the holder of the adjoining number. This soctien does not give jurisdiction to the enquiry officer to decide, e g>, that a broad strip of land lying between
two numbers
is common to both the This section applies to adjoining owners. agricultural lands as also to the survey of land in a town (Gantsh v. Ramchandra,
*3 Bom. L. B. 1209)
It shall be
lawful for any survey officer, authorized by a Superintendent of Survey, or Settlement offi-
:;
*"
maintained or repaired [/ij, boundvillages, ary-inurks of villages or survey numbers [/>] of or sub-divisions survey numbers [A] whether cultivated or uncultivated, and to assess all charges incurred thereby on the holders or other* having an interest therein.
of survey numbers
-Pecifj
or cause to
be
constructed,
and
Iald out,
require landholders to construct, [(/] lay out, [c] or repair their boundary-marks, Requisition on land fa notification which shall be posted in the holder* to erect or re,. .,. / ,. \ chavdi or other public place in the village, to pair boundary-marks which the lands under survey belong, directing the holders of survey numbers [b] or sab-divisions (7/J, to construct, [c] lay out, maintain [c] or repair, within a specified time, the boundary-marks of their respective survey numbers [a] or subdivisions [a] and on their failure to comply with the requisition so made, the survey officer shall then construct [<?], lay out [c] or repair them and assess all charges incurred thereby as hereicbefore
officer
Such
may
maintain
provided. general notification, issued in the manner aforesaid, shall be held to be good and sufficient notice to A general notification d interest in J having n .any 7 and eufficito be good ... \ r r numbers or sub-divisions [a] j survey ent notice of requisition [a] within the limits of the lands to which the survey extends.
-,
[d]
The boundary-marks
[Description of bound-
ary marks.
shall be of such description, and shall be constructed, laid out, maintained or repaired in such manner and shall be of such
dimensions and materials as may, subject to rules [ e ] made in this behalf under section
214, be determined by the Superintendent of purvey, according to the requirements of soil and climate. Note Unless unploughed boundary strips are declared as boundary marks
by the Survey
|fl
bo
responsible
to
of 1901
[b
s.
6]
These words were substituted for the original words by Bom. Act 14 (1). There words were inserted by Bom. A.ot IV of 1913, s. 60 (a).
VI
[c-c]
[d]
Viol
[
These words were inserted by Bom. Act VI of 1901, s. 14 (2). This paragraph was substituted for the original paragraph by Bom 1901,8. 14 (3).
]
Act
Words
repealed by
s.
W
1925 quoted
OoDlfi,
1879
OHAf. IX
(G, R. No. L. 0. 1831, dated 11-9Supplement No. 2 to his Land Revenue Oode, p. 26).
shall be responsible for the maintenance and good repair of the boundary-marks of his holding, and for any charges reasonft blj incurred on account ot the same by the ary marks. revenue officers in cases of alteration, removal or disrepair. It shall be the duty of the village officers and servants to prevent the destruction or unauthorized alteration of the village boundary-insrks. Notes. This section is subject to modification when applied to any village in the Districts of Ratnagiri and Kolaba to which the Khoti Settlement Act
123.
Evc ry landholder
iJSSftftS^U
extends (Vide
Bom
Act. I of 1880,
bs.
and
9).
The charges
124.
Collector of
shall be levied
under the
provisions of
this
Oode
relating to
charge
marks
the survey settlement shall have been introduced into a district, the charge of the boundaryto havo marks shall devolve on the Collector, and it boundaryshall be h j s dut J to take measures f or t h e ir
When
ance and repair, and for powers conferred on survey officers tion 122 shall vest in him.
Ifote
M
r
-,
construction,
laying out
-,
by
sec-
villages in
Sections 122-124 relating to boundary marks apply to aft talukdari which the duty of keeping boundary marks in order devolves on land-
lords (talukdara.)
If they fail they are liable to make good reasonable expenses But a Colincurred by Revenue Officers in repairing or replacing these marks. lector as such is not a Revenue Officer for the purpose of section 124 in a taluk-
is not introduced in a talukdari village. The Ahmedabad, Kaira, Panch Mahals and Broach have aciordingly been of Survey for all talukdari villages in their districts appointed Superintendents for the purpose of enabling them to act under ss 122 and I 23 (G.R. No. 7642-*2 1,
Collectors of
dated 24-4-1928).
125.
Any
summary inquiry before the Collector, or before a survey officer, Mamlatdar or Mahalfcari, of wilfully erasing, removing or injuring a boundary-mark, shall be liable to a fine not exceeding fifty rupees
removed or injured.
One-half of every fine imposed under this section may be awarded by the officer imposing it to the informer, if any, and the Other half shall be chargeable with the cost of restoring the mark.
Boundaries and boundary-marks Jurisdiction. Boundaries and boundary marks are dealt with in Chap. IX, and penalties for injuring boundary-marks, are specially provided by this section, wiiich gives no jurisdiction to Magistrates (trappa, 13 Bom. 291).
[oj
YI
of 1901,
s.
16.
Sacs 126*128
05
CHAPTER X
OP LANDS WITHIN THE
.
SITES OF VILLAGES,
TOWNS AND
or
CITIES,
It shall be
lawful for
officer,
Yi
cities
fownf'anl
how
to be fixed.
Orderfl
for a survey Collector, under the acting general or special of Government, to determine what
the
included within the site of any village, town, or city, and to fix, and from time to time to time to vary the limits of the same, respect being had to all subsisting rights of landholders. "Site." The expression "site" occurring in this section meang "gaothan" and
lands
are
not the total periphery of
all
27th June
2, to his
127.
deemed
t<>
Land Revenue Oode, p. 26). Acts II and VII of 1863, be applicable, and to have
the
territories
a * wa y a been applicable, in
to
which they to all lands ^respectively extend, such sites. within the limits of the site of any town or city in which an inquiry into titles has been made under the provisions of Bombay Act IV of 1868 [aj which have been hitherto ordinarily used for agricultural purposes only ; but the provisions of the said Acts shall not be deemed applicable to any other lands within the limits of the site of any such town or
city.
Notefs.
districts of
Ahmed abad,
Sees. 127 to 136 (both inclusive) do not apply to any e3tate in the Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat
Talukdars' Act extends (See Bom. Act VI of 1885, ss. 1 and 33). Act XI of 1852 goes by the name of Titles to Rent-Free Lands Act, Borabay Act No. II of 1863, by the name of Exemptions from land-revenue in terrict 2T[ of 185*2 and Bom. Act VII of 186:3, Exemptions from tories subject to land-revenue in teritories not subject to Act XI of 1852.
[/?]
128.
of land-re-
which have
Existing
exemption
when
in towns and
in of
hitherto been ordinarily used for purposes of a g r i cu i lure only, situate within the sites of ^ j * u*u towus and cities in which an inquiry into titles has been made under the provisions of Bombay Act LV of 186 S, [b] shall be conx.
tinued
1st.
such lands are situated in any town or city where there has been in former years a survey which Government recognize for
If
the purpose of this section, and are shown in the maps or other records of such survey as being held wholly or partially exempt from the payment of land-revenue ;
[aj
repealed by
1,
Bom. Act IV of 1868 is repealed by section 2 of this Act, which has been Bom. Aot IV of 1913, s. 5. 3 of foot-note on p, [b-b] Aa to the local repeal of section 128, see para. [a]
13
supra.
M
2nd.
if
THK BOMBAY
LAito
OHA*.
such lands have been held wholly or partially exempt of land revenue for a period of not less than five before the years application of Bombay Act 1 of 1865, [a] or IV of 18o8 [A] to such town or city ;
if such lands, for whatever period held, have been held or wholly partially exempt from payment of land revenue under a deed uf grant or of confirmation issued by an officer whom Govern-
3rd
ment recognize
Claims to exemption under 129(1) the Ia8t P recedin S section shal1 be Determined
Collector.
after
summary
inquiry,
shall be final.
[d] (2) Any suit instituted in a Civil Court to set aside any order passed by the Collector under sub-section (1), in respect of any land situate within the site of a village, town or city, shall be dismissed (although limitation has not been set up as a defence) i it has not been instituted within one year from the date of the
order.
In towns and cities to which section 128 applies, the holders of any lands other than lauds Occupancy price payw hich have hitherto been used for purposes id o only which have been anfc] 130.
I
authorizedly occupied for a period commencing less than two years before Bombay Act I of 1865 [a] or IV of 1868 [ I ] was applied to the town or city in which the said lands are situate, shall be liable to pay [e] a price for the said lands [e] in addition to the land revenue assessed
cases.
b "Li:
W?
thereupon.
The
according
to
the
pro-
by
0.
2 of this
Bom. Act IV
of 1868 is repealed
by section 2 of
5.
this
Act,
which has
IV
of 1913,
s.
As
129 to 181,
on
p. 1, supra.
[d-dj This sab-section was added by Bom. Act XI of 1912, s. 2, which also enacted that the original section 129 should be numbered sub-section (1) oi section 129.
[e-a]
These words were snbstitoted for the original words "the price of the
IV
of 1913,
0.
61.
b;
word was
Bom, Act IV
BEOS. 129*133]
07
131.
Survey
suflh
sites
If the
of
Governor
in
in Council shall at
it
lands
to
how
be
conducted.
of the lands f or fa pUN uge(j opdinar il J y r . ... * ., ,, f , P ses * agriculture only within the site of any village, town, or city, under the provito direct
.
a survey
sions of section 95, or a fresh survey thereof under the provisions of section 106, such survey shall be conducted, and all its operations shall be regulated, according to the provisions o Chapters Provided that nothing contained in VIII and IX of this Act sections 96, 97, 101, (a] 104, or 118 thereof Proviso.
:
shall be
survey
in
any town or
city
considered
inhabitants.
[ft)
132.
When
cases
cit J conta ining more than two thougand inhabi tant8f each ho l der O f a buildingsite shall ba liable to the payment of a survey fee to be assessed by the Collector under such rules as may be prescribed in this behalf from time to time by Government, provided that the said fee shall in no case exceed fcj ten rupees for
Tn
certain
a survey is extended under the provisions of the last preceding section to the site of any
toWQ or
survey-feetobe
cbarg-
The each building site or any portion thereof held separately [t'J. the date from months six said survey-fee shall be payable within of a public notice to be given in this behalf by the Collector after the completion of the survey of the site of the town or city, or of
such part thereof as the notice shall refer
to.
Every holder of a building-site as aforesaid shall be entitled, after payment of the said survey-fee, Sanad to be granted to receive From the Collector without extra without extra charge. charge one or more sanads, in the form of
M
0)
133.
Schedule H, f/J or to the like effect [/'] conditions of his specifying by plan and description the extent and holding : Provided that if such holder do not apply for such nanad or sanads at the time of payment of the surveyP rov 80 fee or thereafter within six months from the
i
.
[a]
9.
[rtJAstothe
repeal of section
132,
see
para.
3 of
foot-note
[a]
on
1, supta.
[c<*\
[d]
s.
These words were substituted for the original words "rupees five for Bom. IV of 1913, s. OS ]a] The third paragraph of section 132 repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913,
omitted.
to the local repeal of section IS; ), see para. 3 of foot-note [a]
1
63
(#), is
[e\
As
on
p.
1,
supra*
IV
of 1913,
s.
64.
(OHAF.
date of the public notice issued by the Collector under the last preceding section, the Collector may require him to pay an additional fee not exceeding one rupee for each sanad.
on behalf of the Secretary may from time to time be lawfully empowered to execute the same. Sanad, a document Of title- An entry in the Collector's books that
of State for India in C3uncil
shall be executed
by such
officer as
a certain person
evidence of
in Schedule
title.
is
revenue does
A sanad
H,
ia itself
given under this section, after due enquiry, in the form a document of title (Ulawappa v. Gadigewa, 21 Bom.
L. B. 948).
Both
inferior as well as superior holders are entitled to get sanads in respect of building sites in city surveyed areas provided the requisite survey fees are paid. Sanads in the form appended to G. R. No, 2307-24, dated 8th June 1925, should there-
palities.
lore be granted, on application (and not otherwise), to the tenants of all municiThe same form should be used with suitable modifications in the case of other tenants (G. Bs. Nos. dated 10-8-1926 and
2307-24,
8-5-1925,
6-5-1929).
[a] 134.
If
ernment and the holder under the provisions of any law for the time being in force, be f6j used for [6] any other purposes, it shall be liable to payment of one-eighth of the rate fixed for unalienated land used for similar purposes in the same locality, in addition to the quit-rent payable under the terms of such summary settlement.
used for other purposes,
auy land within the site of any village, town, or city, hitherto ordinarily used for agricultural
v xi ^ j r\ mar y settlement has been made between GovA
i
r purposes r only,
sum-
In the absence of a
specific
condition
non-agricultural assessment, the summary settlement sanads, which must be read with section 45, do not debar Government from using
this section.
The
settled
any
is
village,
town
The
summary
is
which
is
and
used for non-agricultural purposes while it subsequently included in the gaothan area under
out-
section
126 (G.R No L. 0. 3686, dated 7-1-1931 and G, M. No. L. 0. 3686-B, dated 3-8-1931, quoted in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Revenue Code). Judi OP quit rent. Under this section judi or quit rent cannot be increased in respect of those inam lands settled under the Summary Settlement Act, which are not affected by the provisions of section 127 (G. E. No. 4 GOO, dated
3-5-1922).
135.
[a]
XI of 1912,
s.
3.
foot-note [a] on
p. I,
As
supra.
I
WJ These words
IV
by Bom. Act
of 1913 ;
65.
Saw. 134-135 B]
99
CHAPTER
Note
fore, entitled to
Chapter X-A. applies also to alienated villages* Government is, theremaintain the Record of Rights in alienated villages without the
v.
Secretary of Stat
,-,
28 Bom. L.
559).
135A.
The Governor
in Council
m^y, by notification
Gazette,
in
the
Bombay Government
chapter, or
direct
that this
any specified provisions thereof, sha ]l n0t be in f orce ia any 8p8C ified local area, or with reference to any lands or any class o villages or lands, or generally. record of rights shall be maintained in every 135B. (I) The record of rights, village and such record shall include the fol-
lowing particulars
(a)
the
names of
all
persons
(other
than
(6) the nature and extent of the respective interests of such persons and the conditions or liabilities (if any) attaching thereto;
(c)
(if
of
such
persons
(d)
Governor
in Council
may
prescribe by rules
made
in this behalf.
(2) Provided that the said particulars shall be entered in the record of rights with respect to parpetual tenancies, aid aho with respect to tenancies of any other classes to which the Governor in Council may, by notification in the Bombay Government Gazette, direct that the provision? of this section shall apply in any local area or generally.
The Record
of Rights
Its Origin.
The
subject
of
the
Record of
Bights was first mooted by the Government of India in their letter 2770-369, dated 6-12-97 and it was intended purely for Settlement purposes. In April 1898 orders to make experiments were received. The first draft was prepared by fcttr
J.
W. P. Muir Mackenzie, and the experiments were carried out in 1899 by Messrs. A. B. Forde, F. B. Young, H, B. Sathe. The first Act was passed in 1903 (IV of 1903% but this was repealed and incorporated in the Land Revenue
Code of 1913. Ihe Record has now also becom9 the basis of the accounts pay land revenue and abo of the audit of alienations of land The first Act extended to all lands except those excluded by G. Rs. Nos. 3653 of 1904. It was extended to all Bharakati villages in G.R. No. 2568
lity to
:
of liabi-
revenue.
263 and
of 1909,
expired, except
tbose in Ratnagiri by G.
for
non-agricultural
All revenue
IV
of 1913,
a,
66.
100
OSAP.
X-A
OUB Municipalities by several notifications. AH whole vanta villagees, and vanta blocks in Government villages, were excluded by GK R. No. 5668 of 1911. Bab in
settled are
now
decided not to be
"Talukdari
Estates" and, therefore, come under the Resord of Eights Act (G. R. No. 3180 of 1920). There is a special form for Kolaba khoti villages and some modifications
for bhagdari and narvadari villages. It has not been applied to tiiukdari villages where the Settlement Register, which is s sort of Record of Rights, is prepared ;
and not applied to Ratnagiri khoti villages (G R. 399 of 1919). It was extended to the surveyed cities of Ahmednagar, Barsi, Gadag and Godhra (G,R. No. 684 of 1916) without any obligation upon the Municipality and to all other city-surveyed areas by G. R. 6108 of 1917, except those cities surveyed lous; a~o, which were in need of revision survey before the Aot can be applied (Ahmedabad City
proper, Surat, Broach, Rander, Bulsar, Habli, Dharwar, Bijapur aud cities in These cities have now been resarveyed. In pursuance of that policy cl. 5 8ind). of G.R. 263 of 190 4 is amended : whenever a village, town or city site is sur.
X- is applied and sec. 135B is applied to all veyed under sec. 131, Chapter no register of tenancies is separately maintenancies for 21 years and upwards tained (G. R. 13565 of 1918) (Anderson's L. R. Rules, &d, of 1930, p. 9G).
:
Introduction of Record of Rights in Inam villages.- The Record of Rights can be introduced in any inam village whether it ia surveyed or of the Inamdar (H. 0. R. Dharwar Suit No. 54 of 1922 not, without the consent and First Appeal No. 350 of 1924, quoted in Joglekar's Supplement No. 2, p. 29). Application Of the Section. Section 135 B (2) refers to tenancies of the Record of Rights. existing at the time of introduction
135C.
Any
person acquiring,
Acquisition of rights
to be reported.
by succession, survivorship, inheritance, partition, purchase, mortgage, gift, lease or otherwise, any right as holder, occu-
pant< Owner5 mortgagee, landlord or tenant of the land, or assignee of the rent or revenue in writing his acquisition of such thereof, shall report orally or accountant within three months from the date right to the village of such acquisition, and the said village accountant shall at once
the receipt of such report to the give a written acknowledment of it : making person Provided that where the person acquiring the right is a minor or otherwise is disqualified, his guardian or other person having charge of his property shall make the report to the village account-
ant
provided further that any person acquiring a right by virtue of a registered document shall be exempted from the obligation to accountant. report to the village The rights mentioned above include a mort L EMpLanndion without possession, but do not include an easement or a charge <*age not amounting to a mortgage of the kind specified in section 100 of the Transfer of Propery Act, 1882.
A person in whose favour a mortgage is disExplanation IL charged or extinguished, or lease determines, acquires a right within
the meaning of this section*
Sad. Id50~l&5i>]
Sections
OF
THfc ttBcoBb OF
to
&IGH?S
which come
101
into being
new
tenancies
Record of Eights. In b oth eases the tenencies to be entered in the Record of Bights must either be perpetual or notified under s. 135-B Tenancies which are not perpetual or not ao notified should be entered in (2). the Register of tenancies as prescribed in No. 113 of the Land Revenue Rules
after the introduction of the
Joglekar's
the
not
report under this section regarding stamp under the Oourt Fees
Slips
Act
to Joglekar's
135D.
(1)
The
register
cases.
section 135-C and shall also therein respecting the acquisition or any right of the kind mentioned in [a] the first para-
graph [a] of section 135-C which he has reason to believe to have taken place and of which a report has not been made to him under
the said section. (2) Whenever a village accountant makes an entry register of mutations he shall at the same time post up plete copy of the entry in a conspicuous place in the
in the a com*
chavdi,
and
shall give written intimation to all persons appearing from the record of r.ights or register of mutations to be interested in the
whom
(3; Should aay objection to an entry made under sub-section I) in the register of mutations be made either orally or in writing to the village accountant, it shall be the duty of the village accountant to enter the particulars of the objection in a register of disputed
(
cases.
(4) Orders disposing of objections entered iu the register of disputed cases shall be recorded in the register of mutations by such officers and in such manner as may be prescribed by rules made by the Governor in Council in this behalf.
The transfer of entries from the register of mutations to (b) the record of rights shall be effected subject to such rules as may be made by the Governor in Council in this behalf : provided that an entry in the register of mutations shall not be transferred to the record of rights until such entry has been duly certified. (6) Entries in the register of mutations shall be tested and if found correct, or after correction as the case be certified by a revenue officer f raok n * l wer * n ^ at f a Mamlatdar s certified. first karkun.
7? f *f
fc
[a-rij
figure "sub-
jection (1)" by
Bom. Act
101 (7)
fas
dojCBi*
LA*D
OHAP.
X-A
The
Tenancies.
provisions of this section shall apply in respect of perpetual tenancies and also in respect of any tenancies mentioned in a notification under sub-section (2) of section 135B, but the pro-
visions of this section shall not apply in respect of other tenancies, which shall be entered in a register of tenancies in such manner and under such procedure as the Governor in Council may prescribe by rules made in this behalf.
of
(c)
rights
8.
195
(1)
of the Or. P. 0. (Emperor v. Narayan, 39 Bom. 310). ChaVdi. Where there is no Ohavdi in a village, the Collector should for purposes of section 135-D (2), direct under s. 3 (8) what place should be doomed
to
Slips to Joglekar's
in
Correction
135E.
( 1)
Any
be bound, on the requisition of any revenue accountant engaged in compiling or revising the record or register, to furnish or produce for his inspection, within one month from the date of such requisition, all such information or documents needed for the correct compilation or revision thereof as may be within his knowledge or in his possession or power.
officer or village
person whose rights, interests or liabilities are required to be, or have been entered in an y record or register under this chapter shall
revenue officer or village accountant to whom any in(2) formation is furnished or before whom any document is produced in accordance with a requisition under sub-section (1) shall at once give a written acknowledgment thereof to the person furnishing or producing the same and shall endorse on any such document a note under his signature, stating the fact of its production and the date
thereof.
135F.
Any
person neglecting to make the report required by section 13bC, or furnish the information or to produce the documents required by section 135E within the prescribed period shall be liable, at the discretion of the Collector, to be
which
shall
be
Note.
Inspectors of in each case
Land
miximum
of Its. 1 5
(G. R. No. 7628, dated 9th April 1924, and 13th April 1924;
2, p, 30).
behalf by th
Governor in Council
BEO. 136B-135H
103
(a) any revenue officer or village accountant may for the purpose of preparing or revising any map or plan required for or in connection with any record or register under this chapter exercise any of the powers of a survey officer under sections 96 and 97, except the power of assessing the cost of hired labour under section
97, and
(6) any revenue officer of a rank not lower than that of an Assistant or Deputy Collector or of a survey officer may assess the cost of the preparation or revision of such map or plan aad all con-
supervi-
and such
135H.
Certiiied
(1)
The
plaintiff or applicant in
as hereinafter defined
cord
e d in
.
,.
s"a^
to
which
,
chapter applies .. T
l
tenancies
to
relavant
to
any cause produce such certified copy within a by the Court or conciliator, and if such certifie i copy is not so annexed or produced 'the plaint or application shall be rejecte.l, but the rejec(2)
If the plaintiff or applicant fills 8
>
>
for
tion thereof shall not of its own force preclude the presentation of a fresh plaint in respect of the same cause of action or of a fresh application in respect of the same subject-matter, with a certified
copy annexed.
(3) After the disposal of any case in which a certified copy of any such entry has been recorded, the C >urt shall communicate to the Collector any error appearing in such entry and any alceration therein that may be required by reason of the decree or order, and a copy of such communication shall be kept with the record. The
ance
Collector shall in such case cause the entry to be corrected in accordwith the decree or decision of the Court, so far as it adjudi-
cates
upon any right required to be entered in the record of rights, The provisions of register of inutatious or register of tenancies. this sab-section shall apply also to an appellate or revisional Court: provided that, in the case of an appellate or revisional decree or
order passed by the High Court or the Court of the Judicial Commissioner of Sind, the communication shall be made by the Court from which the appeal lay or the record was called for. (4) In this section
(a) "suit" means a suit to which the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, or of the Mamlatdars' Courts ; Act, 1906,
apply
fb) 14
"application" mean
an application-
104
(t)
18? 9
OHAP.
(ii) for the filing of an agreement stating a case for the nion of the Court under the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 ;
opi-
(Hi) for the filing of an agreement to refer to arbitration under paragraph 17 of the Second Schedule to the said (/ode an award under paragraph SO of the (it)) for the filing of said Schedule
; ;
(v)
to a conciliator
under section 39 of the Dekkhan Agricul1879 ; of any other kind to which the Governor in Council may,
by
notification in the
5
Bombay Government
Gazette^
direct
that
this
(c) an application shall be deemed to relate to land if the decree or other matter, with respect to which the application is made, relates to land ;
(d) a suit, decree or other matter relating to land shall, without prejudice to the generality of the expression, be deemed to include a suit> decree or other matter relating to the rent or tenancy
Of land.
tO plaint.
Where,
plaintiff omits 10 annex to his plaint a certified copy of the entry in the Record of Rights, as provided in this section, bat the Court passes a decree, it is not
open to the Appellate Court to reject the plaint in appaal merely on the ground of the omission hat it should give an opportunity to the plaintiff to produce the
;
entry within a fixed time (Giri/abai v. Hemraj, 45 Bom. 1339). Where in a suit relating to land, the extract from the Record of
this section is not
produced quired by appeal the point about absence of the extract is uot presssed in arguments, it is not proper to reject the suit only on that ground, but the Court can well exercise
its discretion in
in the
trial Court,
in
appeal.
Where
the
extract
of
from the Record of Rights is once so put in, no application for review ment based on the ground of the absence of the extract can be entertained 9. Wthal, 23 Bom L, R. 745 s. c. 46 Bom, 345).
;
judg(Ganexh
Certified copies of entries and their extracts exempt from Court fee Stamps. Certified copies of entries in Record of Rights and applications for such copies when required in filing in Court under this section are exempt from Court fee stamps. Certified copies of extracts from entries in Record of Bights when attached to applications
for the
execution
of
Civil
Court
decrees are also exempt from Court Fee Stamps (G. N. No. 590, dated quoted in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Revenue Oode).
16-9-1921
1351.
Refusal of under section
Notwithstanding anything in section 87, the Collector shall refuse assistance to any superior holder assistance under the said section, if his claim to such 87. assistance is not supported by an entry or
entries duly
made
in the
record
of
rights,
1851-186]
105
entry Jn the record of rights and a certified entry in the register of mutations shall be preBum, o j irrts^mption of correct^ u * xi j ed fco be true ontil the ness of entries in recontrary is proved or a ne cord-of rights and reentry is lawfully substituted therefor.
*.
135 J.
An
*.
gister of mutations.
Retrospective effect. This section is not retrospective with respect to the entries for the purpose of determining the right? of the parties which were till after 1913 innocuous (Hathinmj v Kuber Jetha, 44 Bom. 214).
Entries in record Of rights.
-Under
this
section
cord of rights shall be presumed to be correct, and, in the absence of any other evidence, a Civil Court is obliged to be guided by any facts so entered in the record of rights (Anandibai 9 Narain> 17 Bom L R, 49).
135K.
Certified
Application for certified copies of entries in the record of rights, the register of mutations and copies. the reg ; 8ter O f tenancies may be made to, and such copies may be given by, the village ac-
countant, Mihalkari or Mamlatdar. Application for copy of entry exempt from Court fee Stamp. Applications made to village officers for copies of entries in the Record of Rights are exempt from Court fee Stamps (Gr. N. No. 590, dated 16-9-1921, quoted in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Revenue Code). 185L. (1) No suit shall lie against the Secretary of State or Government or any officer of Government in Bar of suits and exoluof a claim to have an entry made in
()f reg i 8ter t h at J B maintained under this chapter, or to have any such entry omitted or amended, and the provisions of Chapter XIII shall not apply to any decision or order under this chapter.
respect
any record
(2)
The
and the particulars thereof revised, by such officers and in such manner and to such extent and subject to such appeal as the Governor in Council may from time to time by rules prescribe in this behalf.
-
A PPeal
correctness of the entries in the record of rights and register of mutations shall be inquired into
Revenue
CHAPTER XI
OP
[a]
Tiia
136.
Liability for
payment of the land-revenue, land-revenue, due in including Joint occupants and joint holders who are prirespect of the land. marily liable under this section shall be jointly and severally liable. of [a\ This section was substituted for the original section by Bom. Act IV
for the
all
venue
DEMANDS the case of unalienated land the occupant, In (1) and in the case of alienated land the superior land reholder, shall be primarily liable to Govern-
ment
arrears of
1913,
g>,
67.
106
THE BOMBAY
LAJTO
[OHAP. 3TI
(2) In case of default by any person who is primarily liable this section, the land revenue, including arrears as aforesaid, shall be recoverable from any person in posssession o the land :
under
provided that where such person is a tenant, the amount recoverable from him shall not exceed the demands of the year in which the recovery is made :
provided further that, when land-revenue is recovered under from any person who is not primarily liable for the which sati,e, sucn person shall be allowed credit for any payments he may have duly made to the person who is primarily liable, and shall be entitled to ciedit, for the amount recovered from him, in account with the person wh is primarily liable. Note. This section i: subject to modification when applied to auy village
this section
)
tends (Vide
Bom. Act I
of 1880,
and 39).
Occupant. 'occupant' is subject to modification when applied to any estate in the Districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gajarat Talokdars' Act extends (Vtd9 Bom. Act VI of 1883, as. 1 and
33).
The term
137.
The claim
^%ZZZ
all others.
of Government to any moneys recoverable under the provisions of this chapter shall hav rec nce over ' f her debt demand ? P <t or claim whatsoever, whether in respect of
'
'
mortgage, judgment decree, execution, or attachment, or otherwise h >wsoever, against any land or the holder
thereof.
This
section
in
no way
respect are re-
extends the right of f rf jituro and sale to taoso lanis of the defaulter in of which no land revenue U duo. Although arrears of abkiri licence fees
coverable as land revenue und^r
s.
34 of thj 4bkiri
Ab,
Hence a sale by are n^t due upon tiny specific Ian I owned by the abkari renter. G-overnment of the land of th-3 renter for recovery of abkari revenue is a sale
subject to any prior mortgtge on the land (Ahmed Fdaji Menghraj, 267 8 L. B. 390). In this case 7 Mad. 434, 28 and 26 Mad. 230 were followed.
EH mail
v.
Parmanand
Mad
420, 25
Mad
572
138.
The
liability
of
land-revenue for the current year of land used for agricultural purposes, if not otherwise discharged, & ' shall be recoverable, in
preference to all other claims, from of the land subject to the same.
lf
.
,1
the
crop
how
to be credited.
Land revenu e
the
first arrears of past years, if any. instalment, should be credited against the demand of the current year and the balance, if any, against t^e arrears of previous years (G-. 11. No. 5387-28, dated
instalment should be credited against Revenue recovered on or after the date of the
SEOB, 137-141
ETC.
107
1B9.
The land-revenue
on or
day of
'
the
bJw ar"*ime
during
year.
the
revenue
which ifc is due but e **Pt precautionap y measures are deemed necessary under the provisions of sections 140 to 144, payment will be required only on the dates to be fixed
the crop of any land or
^
.
When
same
h
is
sold,
r'
rciotr;:s
until
re-
be prevented
<v P"
other
heth
K? bllc
any portion of the mortgaged or otherwise disposed by order of a Civ H <*>* , , authority or by private agree-
venue paid.
may
prevent
its
the land until the demands for the current year in respect of the said land have bee~i paid, whether the date fixed for the payment of the same under the provisions hereinafter contained, has yet arrived or not. But in no case shall a crop or any portion of the which
moved from
being re-
same,
has been sold, mortgaged or otherwise disposed of, be detained on account of more than the demands of the year in which the detention
is
made.
in this section and the
following
do not authorise the detention of anything but the crops of the land or the seizure of the crop or any other goods after removal from the land* (Gangaram v. Dinkar 37 Bom. 642).
k5^ra
tor
on any land liable to the until a notice in reaped payment writing has first been given to himself or to some other officer to b3 named by him, in this behalf, and such notice has been returned endorsed with an acknowledgment of its receipt ;
(/>)
may prevent the reaping of the crop, or (a) to require that the crop growing of land-revenue shall not be
141. It shall be lawful for the Collector, order to secure the payment of the landrevenue by enforcement of the hen of Government On the crop
to direct that
no such crop shall be removed from the laud on which it has been reaped, or from aD y pl ace i n which it may have been
or of
some
deposit-
(c)
to cause
watchmen
it.
place
watchmen over
to be placed over any such crop to prevent the unlawful reaping or removal of the game, and to realize the amount required for the remuneration of the said watchmen, at
such rate not exceeding the rate of pay received by the peons on his establishment as he may deem fit, as an arrear of land revenue due in respect of the land to which such crop belongs.
[a]
of
IVM3,
08
CODE, 1879
CHAP.
XI
under either clause (a) or clause the last preceding section may be issued *<> o land paying lwUe g ne revenue to Government in a village or to inbe made known. dividual holders merely. If the order be general, it shall be made known by public proclamation to be made by beat of drum in the village and by affixing a copy of the order in the cbavdi or some other public buildiag in the village. If it be to individual holders, a notice thereof shall be served on each holder concerned.
Collector's orders
(b) of
The
,
..
aJfcSEtoS:^
"%
!*
shall disobey any such order after the same has been so proclaimed, or a notice thereof has for disPenalty been served upon him, or who shall, within obedience of order. tfae of the IndiaQ p eQal C()de? abet the disobedience of any such order, shall be liable, on conviction after a summary inquiry by the Collector, to a fine not exceeding double the amount of the land revenue due on the land to which the crop belongs in respect of which the offence
Any
person
who
^j^
is
committed.
Removal of crops, though removal prohibited, does not become theft. If a person removes his wheat, the removal of which is prohivicted of
and over which watchmen have been placed under t. 141, ha cannot be contheffc under a. 379 of the Penal 0>de, but cau ba dealt with -under this section (Daya Karson, I Bom. L R. 515).
bited
Fine under this section is no arrear of land revenue of any OCOUpanoy A fine imposed on a person under thia section for disobedience of
an order passed under section 141 is not an arrear of land revenue in respect of any occupancy, and therefore forfeiture of the offender's land under s. 153 for recovery of the fine is not lawful. The ruling quoted in 15 Bom. 67 under a. 1H7
/wsjdoes not apply fo such a fine (Gr. R N-J. 5 >OS-28, dib3d in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Revenue Code).
31-10-1950 quoted
Collector shall not defer the crop, nor reaping o prolong its deposit unduly, so as to damage Reaping, &c, not to the produce ; and if within two months after be unduly deferred. the crQp hag faeen deposited the reveuue due
the crop
143.
The
and proceed
to be releas-
to realize the
Crop when
e
'
has not been discharged, he shall either release revenue in any other manner authorized by this chapfter or take such portion thereof as he may deem fit, for sale under
the provisions of this
chapter applicable
to
sales of
the revenue
due and
If
of all
144.
Temporaiy
that
other there is
atttaeh-
land
revenue
ST^irKTS
a village.
of any holding consisting of * n entire reject village or of a share of a village will not be paid as it falls due, he may cause
in
Wable
&508, 142-147
Off
SJT<5.
100
the village or share of a village to be attached and taken under the management of himself or any agent whom he appoints for that purpose. The provisions of section 160 shall apply to any village or share of a village so attached, and all surplus Powers of manager, tfa d attached beyond the COSt j fit * and disposal of surplus v ^ u j ^ i j includf 8UC k attachment and management, profits. ing the payments of the land revenue and the cost of the introduction of a revenue survey, if the same be introduced under the provisions of section 111, shall be kept in deposit for the eventaal benefit of the person or persons entitled to the same, or paid to the said person or persons from time to time as the Collector [a] may direct.
*.
Plaintiff held
village,
who paid
the
Government
assess-
ment for the village in a fixed lump sum. The village was attached by the Go" vernment for non-payment of the jama by the talakar under this section. Held> that the Government had the right to levy the assessment on the lauds of the
plaintiff to tile village, for, the
affect tho right of the
talukdar
v.
did not
Government
(Tulla
The Collector
Kaira, 43
Bom.
6.
145.
the last
five
r^^JittS
relinquished if the person meaPrecautionary primarily responsible for the payment of reveuue or any person who would be responsible tor the sarno if default were made furnished. by the person primarily responsible shall pay the costs, if any, lawfully incurred by the Collector up to the time of such relinquishment, and shall furnish security satisfactory to the Collector for the payment of the revenue, at the time at which, or
in the instalments, if any, in
which
it is
payable under
the
provi-
146.
Government
V\tT tevenu
shall be payable.
n
e
Arrear.
it is recovered under the provisions of the foregoing sections ] 40 to 14^ gfcall be payable at such times in such instalments to such persons and at such places as ma 7 from time to time be determined by the orders of Government. 147. Any sum not so paid becomes arrear of land revenue, and the an thereupon
Defaulter.
persons responsible for it, whether under the provisions of section 136 or of any other section,
become defaulters.
to
subject to modification when applied in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals
Note.
This section
is
to
VI
of 1888. ss.
IV
119
[a] 148.
168
OHAP.
XI
'"^"^
by defaoH
on the arrears, if any, of former years, as may be authorized according to a scale to be fixed from time to time under the orders of the Governor in Council, and further to proceed to levy at once the entire balance of land revenue due by the defaulter for the current year :
Provided that no such charge shall be imposed on any instalment, the payment of which has been suspended by order of Government, in respect of the period during which the payment remained suspended. Applicability . This section applies only in case of default of the payment of land revenue within the prescribed time and not for default of rent. The fact that the Talukdari Settlement Officer was during the period of his management vested with certain powers of the Collector under this Code did not
facto or necessarily make rent land revenue and the imposition of the penalty invalid (Secretary of State -. Gordhandas Mohanlal, 32 Bom. L. B. 815).
ipso
was
Maximum
amount
maximum penalty not exceeding \ of the penalty. of land revenue over-due should be fixed and resort had to the provisions
of this section in the case of the rayat who is known to be able to pay bat wilThe penalty imposed may be remitted if the officer imposfully delays to do so.
ing
it afterwards finds that tbe rayat was not able to pay puncually (Q-. R. No. 6485, dated 27th March l883 quoted in Sathe's Land Revenue Oode 4th
;
ed., p.
243).
Interest Or penalty
149.
only in
cases
Certified account
January 18^4). statement of account, certified by the Collector or by an Assistant or Deputy Collector, shall, for
to to
be
evidence
as
arrears,
Ae , pur p r 08 e 8 of this chapter, be conclusive r r Av evidence ot the existence of the arrear of the amount of land revenue due, and of the per. ,
.
/.
son
Collectors
statement, it shall be lawful for the Collector of one district to proceed to recover the demands of the Collector of any
this
other district under the provisions of chapter as if the demand arose in his
certified
if
own
district.
Bombay may
Process for
of arrears.
be proceeded upon as
certified
Act
150. An arrear of land revenue recovered by the following processes :
may
be
[a]
This section was substituted for the original section by Bom. Act
69.
IV
of
1913,
8,
148-152
fere.
ill
(a) by serving a written notice of demand on the defaulter under section 1*2 ;
respect of
by forfeiture of the occcapancy or alienated holding in which the arrear is doe under section 153 ; f c) by distraint and 8<*le of the defaulter's moveable property under section 154 ;
(b)
(ejh
by
;
sec-
tion 155
(e) bv arrest and imprisonment of the defaulter under sections 157 and 158;
(/)
in
the
case
of alienated
or shares of villages under sections 15i) to 163. Notes- 01 \b) of this section does not apply to any village in the districts of Ratnagiri. and K >laba to which the Khoti Settlement Act extends (Vide Bom. Aot I of 1880, ss. 1 and 39).
This section
tricts of
is
subject to modification
when applied
to
any estate
in the dis-
Ahinedibad. Kiira, Broach or Panch Mahah to which tho Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, as. I and 33).
^n
arrear
of
land-re-
With recovered by the several processes rncutiouel in this section. r iega d to tho process of sale of the default jr'a i nouveaole property other than the
maybe
is
due,
it
the sale
is
subject to
all
inmimbrances, or tenures or ajienatiocs effected by the occupant before the aale. The sale is just like the sale in execution of a money decree of a judgment? debtor s immoveable property and the purchaser acquires only wh\t the occnpmt la this ci->e the rights of could have honestly disposed of on the date of the sale. iucumbrancers are not touched (Sea Venkatesh v Uka! Pai, 15 Bom. 67). The
surplus after deducting the expense* of ths sale and the arrears due shall ba to the occupant whose property is th'is sold, as required by j. 183 post.
paid
151.
The
how
Revenue demands
former years
eoverable.
said processes may be employed for the recovery of an ears of former years as well as of the
of
re-
current year but the preferences gi^en by 10* * sections 137 and Io8 shall apply only to demands for the current year :
.
JIOL.II
1^1
Provided that any process commenced in the current year shall be entitled to the said perferences, notwithstanding that it may not be fully executed within that year.
152.
notice of
When
demand may be
issued
notice
issue.
of
de-
mand may
11*
TriB BoMfiAt
tiAfrto
OHi*.
shall
XI
be
by what
such notices
Not6S
.Fees of notice under this section, the costs of arrest under sec. 158
and expenses of sale under s. 183 leviable under the existing rules are doubled (G B. tfo. 7828, dated, 25-6-1923, quoted in Joglekar's Supplement No 2, p. 31). F'-es are levied even when the notice is unserved (G. Bs. Nos. 954 of 1896, an 1> 94 of 1898).
I
Inamdara, even
1886).
if
(G-.
B. No. 2901 of
notice
Notice Of demand
der this section
is
issue of a
unis
not compulsory before any other kind of coercive undertaken (G. N. No. 6557, dated 16-1-1931).
this section
process
Notice Of demand When to be served. may be served through the postal agency.
is
notice of
since
demand under
diffi-
But
practical
culty
likely to arise if a notice sent by registered post is refused, the issue of a registered notice in such cases should bo supplemented by the procedure pre-
Oode
oi affixing a
copy of the
notice
to
some con-
spicuous place on tha land to whioh the notice refers (G. B, No. 5638-28, dated 16-9-1930, quoted in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Bevenue Oode). of notice Of demand. For form of notice of demand to be
Form
153.
The
Collector
may
declare the
holding in
to Govl an d-revenue is due, to be forfeited ,. n A ernment, and sell or otherwise dispose of the same under the provisions of sections 56 and
,
.
if
any,
to the de-
account
Proviso.
(a) tion and written notices of the intended declaration in the manner prescribed by sections 165 and 166 for sales of immoveable property,
Provided that the Collector shall not [a] declare any such occupancy or alienated holding to be forfeited unless previously thereto he shall have issued a proclama-
and
(b) until after the expiration of at least fifteen days from the latest date on which any of the said notices shall have been affixed
as required
by section 166.
giri
8s. 1
This section does not apply to any village in the districts of Batnaand Kolaba to which the Knot! Settlement Act extends (Bom. Act I of 1880
Note.
and 39).
Proviso.
This proviso provides against the possibility of an occupancy or and disposed of without the fact coming
who might
80 and 81
VI
of 1901,
a.
16.
Sac* J 58 -154]
ETC.
113
Occupancy or alienated holding- cannot be alienated for recovery Of arrears Of local fund cess. Although local fond cess U recoverable as an arrear of land revenue, it is not land revenue which is due in respect of an occupancy or alienated holding. Therefore an occupancy or alienated holding cannot be forfeited for recovery of arrears of local fund cess (G. R.
No. 5673-28, dated 28 -8-1 9 30 quoted in Correction Slips to Joglekar's Land Revenne Code),
Mere sale does not extinguish inoumbranoes. It cannot be assumed that the Collector has declared under this section the holding to be forfeited from the mere fact that that would be the legal consequence of failure
to
pay assessment.
does
not extin-
guish existing incnmbrances (Gotind v Bhiwa, P. J. i895, p 70). Order Of forfeiture is illegal When a talukdari village
When
is
159 of the Code for arrears of land-revenue, so long as the attachment subsists, an order of forfeiture, under this section, is illegal (Samaldas
s.
attached under
v.
Secretary of State, 16
Bom. 455).
declaration
of forfeiture
under this section of the interests of a lessee not holding under a permanent lease followed by a sale, but by an order transferring possession of the holding to the the lessor under s. 57, has not the effect of defeating prior incumbrauces created by
v. Piirshvttam, 22 Bom, 309). a registered occupant's tenancy is forfeited under s. 56 ante, and that forfeiture is not followed by sale of the occupancy the per(the Collector allowing son actually in possession to be registered as occupant on his arrears all paying up
lessee in
When
Government revenue due on the land), the lease by which the person actually in possession was holding from the former registered occupant is not destroyed by the forfeiture and the lessee is still under to his landlord v.
of
liability
(Ganparshibai
Timmaya, 24 Bom.
default of
34).
sale,
sale of
a holding for
sale
to the
there
has been no declaration of forfeiture by the Collector. The declaration is not so essentially a necessary preliminary of a sale that without it the sale ia illegal and
invalid.
The
is
_.
154.
The
Collector
may
also
cause the
d
property.
movable
Such
distraints
be
made by such
officers or class
of
officers as the
Commissioner under the orders of Government may from time to time direct. be made by Taluka karkuns, Kulkarnis,
that they should be executed only by persons In special cases, however, the Collectors and their assistants may direct the warrant to any person whom they may consider competent to execute it (G. B. No, 7858, dated 23rd December 1881, quoted in Bathe's Land
ed., p.
lw
distraint.
Era
BOMBAJT
CHAP.
XI
mar delegate the powers exercised by them under da r 3 and Mahalkaris (G. R. No. 5954, dated 31st August 1891, quoted in Bathe's Land Kevenue Code, tth ed., p. 254). Defaulter's Property. This section will apply only if the distrained
The
Collectors
t
Mam la
property
is
who
effects
the moveable property of the defaulter and the onus is on a seizure to prove it (Gavgaram v. Dinkar, 37 Bom. 592).
the
officer
chattels
Distraint Of Chattels hOW effected. A seizure may be either actual or constructive. It is not necessary
.
for
distraint
of
that
the
goods
must be actually touched or handled (Emperor v Lnltu Waghvi, 43 Bom. 550). An attachment of account books by an Seizure Of account books officer acting under this section is illegal, and the officer is liable to damages for
doing qo (Daluchand
t>.
GulaM*
18
Bom.
R. 323).
and particularly currency notes moveable and be distrained and sold (Emperor liable to sale) may property (being So also ornaments (18 Bom L. R 323). 9. Gulabrni, 83 I. 0. 899).
section cash
Under thU
155.
The
Collector
moveable property.
title and interany immoveable propprty other th*n the land on which the arrear
nnv alo
dljfl
to be
^^
of a
not.
attached
the
and cannot, therefore, be transferred to a Oo-operative .Society for of it-? dues under section 59 (2) ot the Bombay Oo-operativa Societies Act, 1925. A Oooparative Society should in such cases offer an aderecovery
In special
quate bid and purchase the right, fctle and interest of the duf mltur in the property. cases, however, in order to set an eximple, the Collector may in the ab-
sence of outside bidders transfer the rig':t, title and interest of thu defaulter in immoveable property to co-operative society on a purely nominal bi(* (G-. Rs.
quoted in
Correction
156.
the Civil
The
Collector's decision as to
what uropsrty
is
so
entitled
to
Exemption
(Act
The proviso
to Section
(a) the necessary wearing apparel, his wife and children, judgment-debtor,
cooking vessels, beds and bei ling of the and such personal ornaments as, in accord;
ance with religious usage, cannot be parted with by any woman of artizans, and, where the jndguent-debtor is an agriculturist, his (b) tools of husbandry and such cattle and seed-grain as may, in the opinion of implements
the Court, he accessory to enable him to earn his livelihood, as such, and such of agricultural produce or of any class of agricultural produce as may portion
Sacs.
155456
&o.
115
fol-
(re special
houses and other buildings (with the materials ani the sites
thereof
and
for
their
enjoyment) be-
() a mere right to sue for damages ( f) any right of personal service (g) stipends and gratuities allowed to pensioners of the Government, or payable out of any service family pension fund notified in the Gazette of India by the Governor General in Council in this behalf, and political pensions
;
;
any public officer or of any servant of a railway company or local authority while absent from duty the salary or allowances equal to salary of any such public officer or ser(t)
;
vant as
(t)
is
salary
does
not
exceed forty
rupees
monthly
() forty rupees monthly, where the salary exceeds not exceed eighty rupees monthly and of the salary in any other case (n't) one moiety
; ;
,-
forty
rupees
and does
(/ ) the piy and allowances of persons to whom the Indian Articles of War (V of 1869) apply derived from any fund to (/c) all compulsory deposits and other sums in or which the Provident Funds Act (iXof 1807), for the time being applies in so far
as they are declared hy the said Act not to be liible to attachment (/) the wage? of labourers and domestic servants whether payable
;
in
money
or in kind
other merely contingent (OT) an expectancy of succession by survivorship or or possible right or interest (n) a right to future maintenance the Indian Councils (o) any allowance declared by any law passed under Acts, 1861 and 1892, to be exempt frcoi liability to attachment or sale in execu; ;
and where the judgment-debtor is a person :iable for the payment of landrevenue, any moveable property which, under any law for the time being applicable to him, is exempt from sale for the recovery of an arrear of such revenue. The particulars mentioned in clauses, (g), (A), ({), (/), (/) and Explanation. from attachment or ?alo whether before or after they are (0) are exempt
tion of a decree
(/>)
;
actually
payable .
and other buildings (with themateri&ls and the sites thereof and the lands immediately appurtenant thereto and necessary for their enjoyment) from attachment or sale in execution of decrees for rent of any such house
to
in section 60 shall be
deemed
Agricultural produce
not exempted
from attachment
Under
No kind of agricultural produce has been exempted from C. P. Code attachment under section 61 of the Oivil Procedure Code.
11$
[OHAF XI
cl.
and other buildings belonging to, and occupied by, agriculturists" used in a. 266, (c) (now s. 60 (c) of tbe new Oode of 1908) of the Civil Procedure Code, is intended to exempt from attachment and sale the house dwelt in by an agriculturist as such and the farm e. buildings appended to such dwelling
(Radhokrishna
an arrear becomes due, the defaulter ke Crested and detained in custody for A f i * a A A etentlon ten in the office of the Collector or of a days of defadte r Mamlatdar or Mahalkari, unless the revenue due together with the penalty or interest and the costs of arrest and of notice of demand, if any, have issued and the cost of his subsistence during detention, is sooner paid.
after
157.
At any time
ma y
If,
T
.
..
j^r
on any
not paid, then, or if the Collector deem fit earlier day, he may be sent by the Collector with a warrant, in the form of Schedule C, for imprison ment in the civil jail of
is
the district
shall be detain-
SC^nMito^
be detained by the Civil Court.
imprisonment for a longer period than the time liraited b y la * in the case o the execution of a decree of a Civil Court for a
was
indebted
to the
Govt. on account of unpaid instalments of a foreign liquor licence, but the stock of wines was already pledged to P. Bank. Held, that Govt. had priority over P.
Bank as pledgee. This section was applicable to this case although the priority of Govt. as flta ted in this section is over any claim against any land or holder thereof (People's Bank of Northern India t>, Shahani Brothers, A. I. R. 1930
Sind 185).
Period Of detention.
civil
is
prison in
Where
the decree
for the
pay-
ment of a sum of money exceeding fifty rupees, for a period of six months, and of (I) in any other case, for a period of six weeks (Civil Procedure Oode (Act V
1908),
s.
58
(1)).
Agriculturist debtor
this Section.
when
agriculturist debtor against whom action is being taken under s. 59 (1) (6) of the Co-operative Societies Act may be arrested and detained nndei this section. He cannot claim protection under s. 21 of the D. A. R. Act
An
(G-.
Correction Slips
to
Joglekar's
Power
whom
to be exercised.
the sanction of the Governor in Council, from time to time, declare the or Q \ Mn fa wfaftt O ff^ n officers, C0nferre(j by secti(m Q{ mfty
^^
8x08. 157-461
OF IBB REALIZATION
o*
JdAtit)
REKDNUE, ETC.
117
be exercised, and also fix the costs of arrest and the amount of subsistence-money to be paid by Government to any defaulter under detention or imprisonment.
159.
If the holding, in respect of which an arrear is due, consists of an entire village, or of a share of
"
to
,iSagt
Si
"* the of an y o the other processes before specified is deemed inexpedient, the Collector may, with the previous sanction of the Commissioner, cause such
a village >
"^r
management
purpose.
village or share of a village to be attached and taken under the of himself or any agent whom he appoints for that
160.
The
f 8 UC
lands of any village or share of a village so attached shall revert to Government unaffected by the cts of the superior holder or of an of the
sharers, or
by any charges or
y>
liabilities
sub-
sisting against such lands, or against such as are. interested therein, so far as the or sharers holder superior public revenue is concerned, but without prejudice in other respects to the rights of individuals ; and the Collector or the agent so appointed shall be entitled to
Powers of manager.
attached,
and to receive
to
all
accruing therefrom
the
exclusion of the superior holder or any of the sharers thereof, until the Collector restores the said superior holder to the management
thereof.
is subject to modification when applied to any estate in Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, extends (Vide Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1 and 33).
Note.
This section
the districts of
demand more
and had, under s. 144 of this Code, attached the management village G. Held, that the plaintiffs as tenants of the Thakor were liable to pay the Collector the stipulated rent only and that this section does not entitle him to deof his estate
mand more
of
A Watandar Khot is
r.
bat lands which are alienated by the tenant without obtaining his consent, although the Khot'A lands have been attached by Government under this Oode
(Purushottam
Qanpati, 50
Bom.
306).
161.
All surplus profits of the lands attached, beyond the cost of such attachment and management inof
""
cludiD g the nt o the current u p;yr cost of the introduction of a revenue and the survey, if the same be introduced under the
"
ft$
Tate
[OHAP.
XI
provisions of section 111 [a] shall be applied in defray ing the said
arrear.
162.
.
The
n
so
holder on the said superior holder's making an application to the Collector for that purpose at any time within twelve years from the first of August next after the attachment :
if at the time that such application the arrear has been liquidated ; is
aSSK
village or share of a village so attached shall be released from attachment, and the manageaent thereof sha11 be ^stored to the superior
made
be
it
or
if
shall shall
may
The
Collector shall
f
SUrplU8
make over to the superior holder the surplus receipts, if any, which have accrued in t ie y ear in whicli his ^Plication for restora! tion of the village or share of a village is
made
but such surplus receipts,
disposal of Government.
after
if
defraying all arrears and costs ; any, of previous years shall be at the
160.
Notes.
Vide note
is
under
s.
This section
tricts of
subject to modification
when applied
to
any village
in tho dis-
Bom.
Eatnagiri and Kolaba to which the Khoti Settlement Act extends (Vide Act I of i880. as. 1 and 39).
Khot's right to profits for one year when Khoti village under Government attachment. The position of a Khot, in the Tillages
Bombay Khoti Act (I of 1880) has been extended, is that of a and in the event of attachment of his village his rights in respect superior holder, oi Khoti profits, on his resuming the management of the village, would be regulated Under this section the village, or share of a village so of this section. el
to which the
(1) attached, shall be released from attachment, and the management thereof shall be restored to the superior holder on the said superior holder's making an application
by
to the Collector for that purpose at any time within twelve years from 1st August next after the attachment. The Collector shall make over to the superior holder the surplus receipts, if any, which have accrued in the year in which his application for restoration of the village, or share of a village, is made, after defraying
all
arrears and costs-, but such surplus receipts, if any, of previous years shall be at the disposal of Government. But this rule does not hold good where the village attached is one in the Kolaba district to which the Khoti Settlement Ace (I of
Khots (Bhikaji
[<*]
1880) has not been extended, unless the Knots t>. Nizam, 8 Bom. 525).
therein
are Sanadi
or Vatandar
Words
repealed by
SEOS. 162-165
OF
ETC.
110
vil-
163.
Village
If
&c.,
**. the *PPlf "V to pay the balance, superior shall fail holder if any, years. still due by him within the prescribed period by the Collector in this behalf, the said village or portion of a village shall thenceforward vest in Government free from all incumbrances created by the superior holder or any of the sharers or any of his or their predecessor s-in- title, or in any wise subsisting as against such superior holder or any of the sharers, but without prejudice to the rights of the [aj persons in actual possession of the land [aj.
lage or portion of a village so attached with\ n fa e 8a i<j period of twelve years, or if, after
**!;
Note*
the estate in
(he
districts
of
Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talnkdars' Act, 1888, extends (See Bom. Act VI of 1888, as. 1 and 33).
defaulter detained in custody, or imprisoned, shall forthwith be set at liberty, and the execution f * P rOCe88 fihall > at ? time be fiU yed > be stay'ei oa *ke defaulter's giving before the Collector being given or other person nominated by him for the purpose, or if the defaulter is in jail, before the officer in charge of such jail, security in the form of Schedule D, satisfactory to the Collector,' or to such other person or officer.
164.
Any
TZuriS
,
>
person against whom proceedings are taken under this cbapter may pay the amount claimed or on amount demand. un(j er protefit to the officer taking guch pro . ed being paid under j 3 i_ ^x? j ceedings, and upon such payment the proceedprotest ings shall be stayed.
And any
moveable or immoveable proordered under the provisions of this perty Procedure in effecting chapter, the Collector shall issue a proclama8ales tion, in the vernacular language of the district, of the intended sale, specifying the time and place of sale, and in the case of moveable property whether the sale is subject to confirmation or not, and, when land paying revenue to Government is to be sold, the revenue assessed upon it, together with any other particulars he may think necessary.
165.
sale of either
is
*
When any
shall be made by beat of drum at the head quarters of the taluka, and in the village in Proclamation of sales, which the immoveable property is situate, if the sale be of immoveable property ; if the sale be of moveable property the proclamation shall be made in the
Such proclamation
of the aoil" by
words "a/itual occupants [a-a] These words were substituted for the original Bom. Act IV of 191 8, s. 70,
16
[O^Av.
XI
was
seized,
of the intended sale of immoveable property, and of the time and place thereof, Notification of sales, shall be affixed in each of the following places, viz., the office of the Collector of the district, the office of Mamlatdar or Mahalkari of the taluka or mahal in which the immoveable property is situate, the chavdi or some other public building in the village in which it is situate, and the de-
166.
written notice
faulter's dwelling place. In the case of moveable property, the written notice shall be affixed in the Matnlatdar's or Mahalkari's office, and in the chavdi
The Collector may also cause notice of any sale whether of moveable or immoveable property to be published in any other manner that he may deem fit.
Sale by
f
167. Sales shall be made by auction by such persons as the Collector may direct. No such sale shall take place on a Sunday or other general holiday recognized by Government,. nor until Time when sale may a f te r the expiration of at least thirty days in
'
whom
to be
the
case
of
days in the case of moveable property, from the latest date on which any of the said notices shall have been affixed as required by the last preceding section. The sale mav from time to time be post* Po 8 fcpon em ent of eale.
.
...
'
163.
Nothing in the
so ld
last three sections applies to the sale of Such articles shall be perishable articles.
*"
least possible
delay,
in accordance
time to time be made by the Collector either generally or specially in that behalf. 169. If the defaulter, or any person on his behalf, pay the arrear in respect of which the property is to W.hen sale may be be sold and all other charges legally due by 8 ay him nt any time before the day fixed for the sale to the person appointed under section 146 to receive payment of the land revenue due, or to the officer appointed to conduct the sale or if he furnish security under section 164, the sale shall be stayed.
may from
may pay
arrears __ Under
of
this
which tbe
BBCS. 166*174
land
is
dfec.
191
arrears
(GK
to be sold at
The
paid
after the
day
to
the
defaulter
H. No.
6130, dated 20th November 1880, quoted in Sathe'a Land-Revenue Code, 4th ed.,
p. 212).
1 70.
.
y%
as
wbTtablo
Sales of perishable articles shall be at once finally coneluded by the officer conducting such sales. Pr AH other sales of moveable property shall be
,
to'
confirmation.
finally
such
sales,
may be directed in orders to be made by the Collector either In the case of sales made generally or specially in that behalf. subject to confirmation, the Collector shall direct by whom such sales may be confirmed.
171.
_.
_
.
When
_
the sale
JS5." 7rT;S;
when
sale i*
is finally concluded by the officer conducting the same, the price of every lot shall paid for at the time of sale, or as soon
concluded
at once.
after as the said officer shall direct, and in default of such payment the property shall
forthwith be
payment of the purchase-money the grant a receipt for the same, and the against all persons whomsoever.
172.
shall
become absolute
as
When
the sale
is
JySTw
sale is
subject to confirmation.
is subject to confirmation, the party who declared to be the purchaser shall be retwenty-five 1 uired to de ***topj. Per centum on the amount of his bid, and in default of such deposit the property shall
Pf
The again put up and said. paid by the purchaser before sunset of the day after he is informed of the sale having been confirmed, or, if the said day be a Sunday or other authorized holiday, then before sunset of the first office day after such day. On payment of such full amount of the purchase-money, the purchaser shall be granted a receipt for the same, and the sale shill become absolute as against all persons whomsover.
forthwith be
full
amount of puchase-money
shall be
Moveable property.
(Qoeind
v.
Bhiwa, P. J. 1895,
p. 70).
173.
In
all
cases of sale of
imraoveable
who
Deposit by purchaser
is
declared to be
r/e^epr^erty
requ i re(j to deposit immediately twenty-five centum on the amount of his bid, and in P default of such deposit the property shall
forthwith be again put up and sold. 174. The full amount of purchase-money shall be paid by the purchaser before sunset of the fifteenth Purchase money when day from that on which the sale of the unto be paid, moveable property took place, or, if the said
151*
THB
BOXBA.Y
197 9
OflAF
XI
fifteenth
sunset of the
day be a Sunday or other authorized holiday, then before first office day after such fifteenth day. How to calculate fifteen da^s When is the deposit to be
paid. The period of 15 days for the payment of the balance of purchase-money should be counted from the date of the conclusion of the sale by the Mamlatdar.
The payment of a deposit of twenty-five per cent, to the Karkun before the conclusion of the sale IB an irregularity (G. R. No. 80 9, dated 4th February 1898,
quoted in Bathe's
ed., p.
264).
In default of payment within the prescribed period of the full amount of purchase-money, whether Effect of default, of movea bl e or immoveable property, the deposit, after defraying thereout the expenses of the sale, shall b e forefeited to Government, and the property shall be re-sold, and the defaulting purchaser shall forfeit all claim to the property or to any part of the sum for which it may be sub175.
sequently sold. If the proceeds of the sale, which is eventually made, 176. be less than the price bid by such defaulting Liability of purchaser purchaser, the difference shall be recoverable for loss by re-sale. f rom him by the Collector as an arrear of land revenue.
177.
Every
the first sale, shall, except when such re-sale takes place forthwith, be made after the issue of a fresh notice in the manner prescribed for
original sales. At any time within thirty days from the date of the sale 178. of immoveable property application may be * "* P made to the Collector to set aside the sale on
asit saJe?
ing
it
tion,
otherwise provided in the next following secon the ground of any such irreguor mistake unless the applicant proves to the satisfaction of larity, the Collector that he has sustained substantial injury by reason
but except as
no
thereof.
If the application be allowed, the Collector shall sale, and direct a fresh one.
set
aside
the
179.
On
Order confirming
jetting aside sale.
such application as is mentioned in Fading section has been made, or . 8tlc ^ application has been made and rejected, the Collector shall make an order confirming
SBW. 176-152
the sale
ale
:
OP
Tffss
its-
provided that, if he shall have reason to think that the ought to be set aside notwithstanding that no such application has been made, or on grounds other than those alleged in any application which has been made and rejected, he may, after recording
his reasons in writing, set aside the sale.
180.
.
Whenever
. ,
.
is set aside,
pnSsteT when
sale set aside.
the sale of any property is not confirmed, or the purchaser shall be entitled to <* b hi d *P<** <* purchase^
money,
as the case
may
be.
After a sale of any occupancy or alienated holding has been confirmed, in manner aforesaid, the n shall put the person declared to be Collator a ale pu! the purchaser into possession of the land [a] in possession. and shall cause his name to be entered in the land records as [b] occupant or holder in lieu of that of the [b]
181.
-
pu"h^ot
Certificate of purchase.
him
a certificate to
he
hfts
purcha8ed
Ae
c]
and
to
which the
certificate refers.
Occupancy: The term 'occupancy' is subject to modification when applied to any estate in the Districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach or Panch Mahals to which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act extends (see Bom. Act VI of 1888, ss. 1
and 33).
Certificate of sale.
well as those granted by the Revenue Officers are liable to 16, 8ch. 1, of the Stamp Act (G.R. No. 3009, dated 15th
by the Civil Courts as stamp duty under Art. June 1880, quoted in
Every Revenue Officer granting a certificate of sale to the purchaser of immoveable property sold by public auction shall send a copy of the certificate to the registering officer within the local limits of whose jurisdiction the whole or
shall
any part of the property comprised file tfce copy in his Book No.
1908).
in the certificate is
1
situate,
and such
officer
of
the Registration
XVI of
Act,
182.
The
name
of
the
to be
person
the
de-
sale
8nd 8uit in * urt against the certified purchaser on the ground that the purchase was made on behalf of another person not the certified purchaser, though by agreement the name of the certified purchaser was used, shall be dismissed.
"
"7
b^
actual Civil
ids repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 71, are omitted. [bb] 1 hese words were substituted for the original words "revenue records" s. 71. by Bom. Act IV of for the words ''occupancy or alienated boldwas tnbbtituted word This fcj
[aj
Wo
im,
IV
of 1913,
s.
71,
1*4
Tan
BOICBAV
CHAP. XI
certified purchaser. The provisions of this and s. 317 (nows. 66) of the Civil Procedure Oode are to be construed strictly, and they do not bar a suit where the plaintiff, although originally a
section
Yishnv, 5
ceAf ST
this chapter has become absolute, and when any sale of " Pr immoveable property has been confirmed, the proceeds of the sale shall be applied to defraying the expenses of the sale and to the payment of any arrears due by the defaulter at the date of the confirmation of such sale, aad recoverable as an arrear of land
.
183.
When any
under
revenue,
and the surplus (if any) shall be paid to the person whose property has been sold. .The expenses of the sale shall be estimated at such rates and
^wff*
calculated.
1
according to such rules as may from time to time be sanctioned by J the Commissioner under , f ~ the orders of Government.
,
said surplus shall not, except under an order of a Civil Court, be payable to any creditor of Surplus not to be paid the person whose property has been sold, unto creditors,
except der order of Oonrt.
84.
The
Claims Of Creditors.
sale-proceeds under faulter's credit and
s.
the
is
183, the excess, if any, must be treated a 3 a 8 urn to the declaimable by his creditors (GvR. No. 5,730, dated 27th Octo-
ed.,
269),
[a] 185.
.
Notwithstanding
.
Certified
the 136, person named in the certificate of title as ghaU not be HaUe for } and revenue purchaBer *, A i i i dae * n respect of the land for any period previous to the date of the sale.
anything
in
section
186.
If
any claim
shall be set up by a third person to moveable property attached under the provisions of thig chapter the Collector shall admit or reject i i i , ? his claim on a summary inquiry held after
f
reasonable notice. If the claim be admitted wholly or partly, the property shall be dealt with accordingly. Except, in so far as it is admitted, the property shall be sold and the title of the purchaser shall be good (or all purposes, aud the
as hereinbefore directed. proceeds shall be disposable to Mamlatdars and Mahalkaris, Th< of powers Delegation Collectors are authorized to delegate the powers exercised by them under this section to Mamlatdars and Mahalkaries when the adoption of such a coarse may 1 appear to them desirable (Gr.R. No. 8785, dated 9th November 1882, quoted in Sabhe'ft Land Revenue Oode, 4th ed., p. 270),
[a]
Act IV of
1913;
I.
8X00.188 -1&7 J
OF
tHiffi
ftjSAUZA'jKO* OF IiAND
RZVENUU, fed,
187. All
TbTpr:;i:
o! this chapter.
d forfeitures, and .11 ce.se., profits from land, emoluments, fees, charges, penalties, fines, and costs payable or leviable under this
Act or under any Act or Regulation hereby repealed, or under iany Act for the time being in force relating to land revenue ; and all moneys due by any contractor for the farm of customsduties, or of any other duty, or tax, or of any other item of revenue whatsoever and all specific pecuniary penalties to which any such contractor renders hi-nself liable under the terms of his
all sums declared by this or by any other Act or Regulation at the time being in force [a] or by any contract with the Secretary of State for India in Council [a] to be leviable as an assessment, or as a revenue demand, or as an arrear of land revenue; shall be levied under the foregoing provisions of this chapter
[b]
and
be,
all
may
any of Act or of any Act or as Subtle* liable Regulation hereby repealed, or for any such revenue defaulters contractor as aforesaid for any sum of money shall on failure to pay the amount or any portion thereof for which they may have become liable under the terms of their security-bond, be liable to be proceeded against under the provisions of this chapter as revenue-defaulters and
persons
the
And
shall, so
far
as
sureties under
this
[d]
all
the foregoing provisions of this chapter shall, so far as be applicable to such persons [d].
may
be,
Ou
trcoXrtn
[0]
resumption n
of
vance to be admitted.
of the resumption of aforesaid, no person shall be entitled to credit for any payment, which &e H*ay have made to the contractor in anticij9
And
in the event
pation-
And any
arr
in
person
who
has received
The recovery
a9
free grant of
of free
money
for
?e"te
misuse.
cr
ol
repay ~ Bom. Act IV" of 1905, First ScJ^uieT [b-b] These were added by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 73 (1). [c] The words inserted by Bom Act I of 1920, s. 2, hare been repealed ^peaiea br oy Bom. Act VII of 1925, Schedule. These words added Bom. Act IV of s. 73 [d-d by 1918, (2). [e] This paragraph was- added by Bom; Act IV of 1913, B. 73
[a-a] These words were inserted by
1
pose, subject to the proviso that he shall rethe same on failure to observe any of the conditions of the grant, shall, on failure to observe any such condition and to
^nd
(3),
116
CHAP.
XH
the aaid
feke
Government, be liable to be proceeded against under this chapter as a revenue-defaulter ; and all the of provisions foregoing provisions of this chapter shall, so far as may be, be apto
um
plicable to such person. The effect Of this Section is to moke the provisions of as. 153 and and also those of 9. 155, applicable to sales for the recovery of charges assess66, ed under s. 122 in connection with boundary marks. Such charges may be recovered either by forfeiture or the occupancy in respect of which the arrear is due , pr by sale of the defaulter's immoveable property other than the land on which
fehe
arrear
is
due.
is
freed
from
all
incnmbranoes
not
In the
of incumbrances are
touched (Venkatosh
67).
CHAPTER XIL
PBOCEDUE OF REVENUE OFFICERS.
188. In all official acts and proceedings a revenue officer shall, in the absence of any express provision of law Subordination of reto the contrary, be subject as to the place, venue officers. t j mej an(j mftnner o f performing his duties to the direction and control of the officer to
whom
he
is
subordinate.
189.
Every revenue
to summon any attendance whose he considers necesperson sary either to be examined as a party or to give evidence as a witness, or to produce documents for the purposes of any inquiry which such officer is legally empowered to make. A summons to produce documents may be for the production of certain specified documents, or for the production of all documents of a certain description in the possession of the person summoned. All persons so summoned shall be bound to attend, either in
ts
officer not lower in rank than a Mamlatdar's first karkun, or an Assistant Superintendent of Survey, in their respective r departr
t_
parson or by an authorized agent, as such officer may direct : provided that exemptions under [aj sections 132 and 133 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 [a] shall be applicable to requisitions for attendance under this section ;
and all persons so summoned shall be bound to state the truth upon any subject respecting which they are examined or make
statements, and to produce such documents
required.
summon
is
making
(a-a| These words were substituted for the original words "sections 640 and 641 of the Code of OivU Procedure" by Bom, Act IV of 1911, 74,
-102]
JBooiGtotJttE
OF REVENUE OFFIOBES
A.
3
12?
failure
enquiries about the appointment of a patel for an inara village. attend in obedience to such a summons is not an offence under
to
174
of the
v.
190.
Every summons
1
in
which
wiSTV-, "^
sealed
;
an * iged by the officer taring it Je and ??" if he have a seal shall also bear his seal :
and
how
shall be served
it
to
gome } t to found> by ftffixing a copy o spicuous part of his usual residence. If his usual residence be in another district, the summons may be sent by post to the Collector of that dis,. e ln served in actrict, who 9 hall cause it to be othe r Tha n i cordance the with issuer. preceding clause of this
to be served.
the person
summoned,
or,
if
he cannot be
^^
m
.
section.
191,
Mode
notlce8 '
pressly provided,
serving
tendering or delivering a copy thereof to the person on whom it is to be served or to his agent, if he have any ;
or by affixing a copy thereof to some the land, if any, to which such notice refers.
conspicuous place on
or error
such notice shall be deemed void on account of any error in the name or designation of any person renot Notice void ferred to therein, unless when such error has
*
No
Civil Procedure, 1^08, for parties applying for summons for witnesses- [a] Procedure for procuring attendance of witnesses. Tha procedure for parties applying for summonses for witnesses is given in Order XVI of 1908), which runs thus of the Code of Civil Procedure (Act
witnesses.
L'rf
"1.
At any time
may
obtain,
as it appoints in this plication to the Court or to snob jfficer to persons whose attendance is required to give evidence.
2.
behalf,
on apsummonses
granted
for a
summons
su-nann*
is
and within a period to be fixed, pay into Court such a sum of money as appears to the Oourt to be sufficient to defray the travelling and other expenses of the person summoned in passing to and from the Oonrt in which he is required to attend,
"Code of
Civil
17
BoilBAt
3,
Ciur. Ill
The
summons, if
tendered to the person summoned, can be served personally. attendance of a person to give evidence shall
it
specify the time and place at which he is required te attend. 9. Service shall in all cases be made a sufficient time before the time specified iu the summons for the attendance of the person summoned, to allow him a reasonable time for preparation and for travelling to the place at which his attendanca
is
XVI
of the 0. P. Oode.
holding
officer
summary enquiry
to be
deemed a
Civil
Court.
or any authority holding a summary enquiry under the provisions of this Oode is a Oivil Oourt for the purposes of such enquiry, and such Court nuy direct by whom the costs of party are to be piid whether by himself
The
o by any other party to the enquiry and whether in whole or in what part Such costs cxn be levied under th<j provision* of Chapter XI or proportion*. pf the Oode (G. R. No. 4*68, dated lOch Jaly U82, quoted in bathe's Land-
ed., p.
276).
formal inquiries the evidence shall be taken down in frM iu writing, in the language in ordiu , f .. * the district, by, or in the presence y uw dentTin and hearing and under the personal superinquires, tendence and direction of, the officer making the investigation or inquiry, and shall be signed by him.
193.
,
In
all
2Sf
In cases in which the evidence is not taken down in full in writing by the officer making the inquiry, he shall, as the examination of each witness proceeds, make a memorandum of the substance of what such witness deposes ; and such memorandum shall be written and signed by such officer with his own hand, and shall form part of the record. If such officer is prevented from making a memorandum as above required, he shall record the reason of his inability to do so.
When
m
,.
.
the evidence
.
is
it
down
**3%JSSZ
to be
given in English, such officer may take in that language with his own hand, authenticated translation of the same
in
on record.
in
e language
trict shall
be
made and
record.
194.
Every
decision, after a formal inquiry, shall be written by the officer passing the same in his own
hand-writing, and shall contain a full statement of the grounds on which it is passed.
inquiries the presiding officer shall himself,
as
195.
In
summary
any such inquiry proceeds, record a minute of the proceedings in his own hand in EngUgh Qr j n h j g i an uage o| tfae distr j ct> e _ ^ bracing the material averments made by the
103-108
Ml
decision
and the reasons for the same : Provided that it shall at any time be lawful for such officer to conduct an inquiry directed by this Act to be summary under all,
or any, of the rules applicable to a formal inquiry, if he deem fit. 196. formal or summary inquiry under this Act shall be
deemed to bo a * judicial proceeding" within th meaning O f se ctions 193, 219 and 228 of T/-IT 11 /* * l ^ e Indian Penal Code, and the office of any
,TT^
authority holding a formal or summary inquiry shall be deemed a Civil Court for the purposes of such inquiry.
decision,
whether in a
inquiry, shall be in public, and the part i es or t k e j r authorized agents shall have due notice to attend.
formal or
summary
inquiry which this Act does not require to be either formal or summary, or which any revenue Ordinary inquiries how officer may on any occasion, deem to be necesto be conducted. tQ make? ; n execat ioQ of hlS lawf ui duties, shall be conducted according to such rules applicable thereto, whether general or special, as may have been prescribed by the Governor in Council, or an authority superior to the officer conducting such inquiry, and, except in so far as controlled by such rules, according to the discretion of the officer in such way as may seem best calculated for the ascertainment of all essential facts and the furtherance of the public good. Absence Of judicial proceeding. Where the entry in the revenue
197.
An
registers
was dne
to
it
within
the
of the .Register BO as description of errors in s. 109 of tie Code, tUe reottficitiou both the parties was not made after to bring it in accord with thj order hearing
It was a case in which the Bjrenue officer concerned contrary to natural justice was authorized under this section to dispense with any judicial or quasi-judicial inquiry (Vasudto v. (rovind, 36 Bom. 315).
Jating to
iu
Revenue (JOUrt. A Mamlatdar holding an enquiry reRecord of Bights, under Chap XII of this Code, is a revenue Court withthe meaning of s. 196 (1) (c) of the Criminal Procedure Code (Emperor 9.
Mamlatdar
198.
In
all cases in
Copies
and
1
transfet0
which a formal or summary inquiry is made, authenticated copies and translations of (] ec j s j orj8 orders, and the reasons therefor,
of exhibits, shall
SwiS'
"d
be
furnished
to
the
and original documents used as eriparties, them or to the dence shall be restored to persons who produced made for the due on them under being application persons claiming
1*0
same, subject to such charges for copying, etc., as may, from time to time, be authorized by Government. Scale Of OOpying fees. The following is the statement showing the
1
rales for
copying
fees :-
1917,
quoted in Joglekar'a
Laud
199.
Whenever
it
is
provided
by
this
Act that a
de-
may
upon
be arrested,
a
warrant
issued,
by any
officer
competent
to direct such
person's arrest.
200.
It shall be
of
lawful for any revenue officer at any time, and from time to time, to enter, when necessary, for the purooses of measurement, fixing, or inspecting boundaries, classification of soil or assessment, or for any other purpose connected with the lawful exercise of his office under the provisions of this Act, or of any
Power
lands or
revenue
officer to .enter
upon any
purposes
ment,
etc.
other law for the time being }Q force relating to land revenue, any lands or premises, whether belonging to Government or to private individuals, and whether fully assessed to the land revenue or partifrom the same : Provided always that no ally or wholly exempt building used as a human dwelling shall be proyiBO entered, unless with the consent of the occupier thereof, without a notice having been erved at the said building not less than seven days before such entry ; and provided also that, in the cues of buildings of all de-
scriptions,
due regard shall be paid to the social and religious prejudices of the occupiers.
BBOS. 199-202]
1$1
*
ri dare whafc shall
fr
>
.,
JKrSri,
any person
10
deemed to be the language in p ordinary use in any district. 202. Whenever it is provided by this or by any other Act for the' tioae beiJg ia
8
wrongfully
in possession of land.
may or shall evict in possession of land such eviction shall be made in the
Collector
following
manner,
viz
by serving a notice on the person or persons in possession requiring them within such time as may appear reasonable after receipt of the said notice to vacate the land, and, if such notice is not obeyed, by removing or deputing a subordinate to remove any person who may refuse to vacate the same 9 and, if the officer removing any such person shall be resisted or obstructed by any person, the Collector shall hold a summary inquiry into the facts of the case, and if satisfied that the resistance or obstruction was without any just cause, and that such resistance and obstruction still continue, may, without prejudice to any proceedings to which such parson may be liable under any law for the time being in force for the punishment of such resistance or obstruction, issue a warrant tor the arrest of the said person, and on his appearance commit him to close custody in the office of the Collector or of any Mamlatdar or Mahalkari, or send him with a warrant, in the form of Schedule I, for in the
imprisonment
civil
be necessary to
ance.
exceeding thiry days, as may prevent the contiaumce of such obstruction or resist-
such period n
>t
The right to hold Pasaita land rent as the services of patehhip were rendered by the same person but the only effect of the creation of the office of patelship was to take away exemption to pay rent and not to put an end to tha right of possession. So long as he paid the assessment to the Government, the Government have no right to evict him (Bhavan Morcrr v. Secretary of State, 45 Bom.
free
894).
along In November 1907, the Talukdari Settlement Officer sent a notice to the plaintiff under this section calling upon him to vacate the and evicted him under a land in question ; 79-1 ante as amended by a. 33 of the Gujarat Talukdars' Aot. The plaintiff sued to recover possession of the landHeld, that the plaintiff was entitled to succeed ; for he had been in adverse pos. session claiming title as an inoumbranoer for more than twelve years since the
mortgagee's possession.
officer. portion of the Talukdari estate was granted by the original Talukdar to a cadet of his family as jwai. The grantee mortgaged one of such lands with possession to the plaintiff's father on April 10, 1889. In 1891, the mortgagor died and in 1895 the mortgagee died but the land mortgaged remained all in
1 31
1879
p,
OHAP. lilt
Rikfatdat, 15
Bom. L, B.
CHAPTER XI LI
APPEALS AND REVISION
In the absence of any express provision of this Act, or ^ an ^ * aw ^ or e ^ me S * n f rce to tl> e A al to H f COn tr ar y> an a PPeal sha11 lie from an 7 anyonler passed decision or order passed by a revenue revenue officer to his officer under this Act, or superior. other law for any the time being in force, to that officer's immediate superior, whether such decision or order may itself have been passed on appeal fro n a subordinate officer's decision or order
203.
^m
b*
or not.
to appeals under the Becord of Bights. Applications for compassionate allowances from discharged Revenue Officers are treated as "appeals" (G. B. No. 4997 of 1908).
Appeal.
In dealing with Civil Court Darkhasts, the Collector is not subject to appeals or revision by the Commissioner, but only by the Court. The Collector canto, not set aside a darkhast sale, but can confirm or refuse to confirm it (G. B. No.
2172 of 1915).
Decision Or Order.
assessment
is
notice
of
demand by a Mamlatdar
to
pay
not a 'decision or order' within the meaning of this section or the folv.
Secretary of St-ite, 46
Order Of Collector.
of the Bom. Irrigation Act falls against such order lies to the Commissioner iu ttind (Secretary of State das7 6S. B.241).
Bom. 811). order made by the Collector under section 23 within the purview of this section and an appeal
An
c.
Jtram-
ferred to
Orders passed by Collector in execution Proceedings transhim under s. 3-0, (!. P. C- Under thU section the Bevenue
are- vested with the appellate power in respect of orders passed by Collector in execution proceedings transferred to him under R. 682). s. 320 of the 0. F. Code, 1882 (.l/rt/ir/Wj?' v Thakurdas, 7 Bom.
.
in
Government
is likely to
officers
may
allow
G. G.
1920, Pt.
is
valid,
dia.
merely ancillary to the order and no suit for possession without appossession that order is maintainable having regard to s. 11. Where, howpealiag against the order of forteitnre is invalid, the plaintiff is not bound to appeal thereever,
from and
is
Secretary of Sta*e, 53
Sees.
Bom. 165).
empower a Oommis-
Commissioner's powers.
gioner to take action in appeal or
Collector;
revision
all
who under
s.
8 performs
regards any orders passed l>y a his duties in subordination to the Com mi aas
19*
dated 20th
sioner of the Division (Q. B. P. W. D. 83 I. quoted in Bathe's L, B. Code, 4th ed., p, 282).
W.
934,
June 1897,
appeal shall He to the Governor in Council from any decision or order passed by a Commissioner or by Survey Commissioner, except in the ca.e of any decision or order passed by such officer on appeal from a decision or order itself recorded in appeal by any officer subordinate to him. 204. appeal shall be brought after the expiration of sixty days if the decision or order complained of Periods within which h ave Deen pa^rf by an officer inferior in rank appeals mast be brought ft or a Superintendent of Survey in their respective departments ; nor after the expiration of ninety days in any other case.
205.
An
No
^^^
ID computing the above periods, the time required to preoare a copy of the decision or order appealed against shall be excluded. 206. Any appeal under this chapter may be admitted after the period of limitation prescribed therefor, . A ,
. .
tf
ti on>
pS"
No
S-
" hen the *PP elIant *<*** *e officer or the Governor in Council to whom he appeals, that he had sufficient cause for not presenting the
this
section
Whenever
,
a af
rip^/all, ^
the last day of any period provided in this chapter for the presentation of an appeal falls
a S nda y. kolufc, -cognized by Government, the day next following the close OL the holiday shall be deemed to be such last
a Sunday or a holiday.
day.
Copy
of order to acoom-
Every petition of appeal shall be accompanied by the decision or order appealed again8t or by an authenticated copy of the
same.
208.
authority may [1J [for reasons to be recorded in writing [l] either annul, reverse, Powers of appellate modify or confirm the decision or order of authority. subordinate officer appealed against, or he may direct the subordinate officer to make &uch further investigation or to take such additional evidence as he may think necessary, or he may himself take such additional evidence.
appellate
209.
The
[2 [Provided that it shall not be necessary for the authority to record reasons in writing
>
appellate
"
fl
[2]
These words were inserted by Bom. Act III of 1935, B. 2. (1) This proTieo was added by Bom Act III of 1082, 2. (9)
,
Xlll
fa)
when an
appeal
is
dismissed summarily, or
is
(A) when the decision or order appealed from sion or order recorded in appeal, or
itself a deci-
is
made
to the
Governor
in
Council under
when an appeal
Note.
it is
ordinate
officer.
210. In any case in which an appeal the appellate authority may, pending decision of the appeal, direct the execution of the decision or order of the subordinate
.
officer to
be suspended.
211.
Power
The Governor
in Council
officer,
not
of the GoverCouncil and of certain revenue officers to call for and examine
nor in
inferior in rank to [a] an Assistant or Deputy Collector [a] or a Superintendent of Survey, 5 ve their respect departments, ' may r J call for
,
.
and examine the record of any inquiry or the proceedings of any subordinate revenue officer,
for the purpose of satisfying himself as to the legality or propriety of any decision or order
jj
of such officer.
The following officers may in the same manner call for and examine the proceedings of any officer subordinate to them in any matter in which neither a formal nor a summary inquiry has been a Mamlatdar, a Mahalkari, an [c] Assistant held, namely \jb] Superintendent of Survey, and an Assistant Settlement Officer.
If, in
any
case, it shall appear to the Governor in Council, or to such officer aforesaid, that any decision or
orders
and
to
pass
thereupon.
order or proceedings so called for should be modified, annulled or reversed, he may pass such order thereon as he deems fit :
Provided that an Assistant of Deputy Collector shall not [d] himself pass such order in any matter in which a formal inquiry has been held, but shall submit the record with his opinion to the Collector, who shall pass such order thereon as he may deem fit.
[a-a] These words were
substituted
for
the
original
word "Collector" by
Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 76 (a). Words repealed by Bom. Act IV.;of 1913, s. 76 (ft), are omitted, [b] "An" was substituted for "and" by Act XVI of 1895. [c|
Soope.
modify, annul
entitles the
There
or
is
the
Commiwioner mtut
wer-e
Commissioner to pass an order which is reversal of the Collector's order and does not entitle
Where
originally
the
from occupancy price and assessment, a subsequent order by the Commissioner directing to pay the the plaintiff an occupancy price and assessment without giving option of vacating the land is no modification of the original order but a new order which
certain landa
to
plaintiff free
Krishwji v Secretary of State, 55 Bom. 165). reference to duality' in this section refers to 'finality* under this Code, for there are no words excluding the juriadio ion of the Civil Courts in the sections of the Act framed to that end (Dattutraya c. Secretary of
"Finality."
The
State, 31
Bom.
U R.
1235).
Limitation.
No
period of limitation
is
prescribed
for the
exercise
o*
Where
a lease of certain
had expired in 1913 and in pursuance of a Government Resolution the Collector held an enquiry and ordered that the tenants should get an occuDeputy pancy tenure on paying a certain assessment, bub the said order was reversed by the Collector on revision after three yeirs, it was held, in a suit questioning the
time and validity of the order, that the Collector had the power to interfere at any that his order was valid in law. Hdd, also, that rights held under the tenant were also extinguished by reason of the Collector's order (Ibid).
sale
of
such unoccupied lands held by Mamlatdars under s. 62, and permission to occupy lands gived under s. 60 are within the scope of this section aa proceedings which the Commissioner has jurisdiction to call for and revise and to pass such orders thereon as he deems fit, and no suit would lie against Government on account of
that officer exercising his legal powers under the section (Par apt of State, P. J. 1891, p. 30).
v.
The Secretary
it is
212.
Wherever
in this
Act
declar-
no expression shall bo deemed to mean taat order. or decision such lies from appeal The Governor in Council alone shall be competent to modify, annul, or reverse any such decision or order under the provisions
made
final.
orer
CHAPTER XIV
MISCELLANEOUS.
213.
Subject to such rules and the payment of such the Governor in Council may from
fees
as
time to
and ti?e prescribe in this behalf, all n..p [] land records [a] shall be open to the
inspection of the public at reasonable hours. a-ol These words were substituted for the original words "survey record* and 1J village accounts and land registers" by Bom* Act IV of 1913, s. 77.
copies shall be given.
i
ISA
THE
BoMhAJr
OnA*,
XIV
and certified extracts from [a] the same [a] or certified copies thereof shall be given to all persons applying for the L same. Land records. The term 'Land records' is defined in a. 8 (26). Ordinary correspondence being an interchange of views between Government Officers ^ and Specially such correspondence and opinions aa are referred to in s. 139 (6),
and the barnishis or registers of such correspondence are not land records as there defined, and copies thereof are veiy rarely given under rule 139. Survey records
and vaccination records are included bat not the Records of the Alienation Office. Petitions of parties would not be documents maintained under the provisions of or for the purposes of the Act (Sec. 3) (-6), nor are tiuy records of the proceedings of any public
officer,
and,
therefore, fall
entirely into
the
optional class
are
(Anderson).
Survey records.
available under this sostion
Survey records are open to inspection and copies Aludomal v. Ali, 58. L. R. 49). (
(b) 214.
Bules
-
(1)
The Governor
in Council
may, by notification
published in the Bombay Government Gazette, make rules not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, to
carry out
the
purposes
and objects thereof and for the guidance of all persons in matters connected with the enforcement of this Act or in cases not expressly provided for therein. In particular, and without prejudice to the generality of (2)
the foregoing power, such rules may be made (a) regulating the appointment of revenue exercise by them of their powers and duties ;
officers 'and
the
(b/ regulating the assessment of land to tha land the alteration and revision of such assessment and the
revenue and
recovery
of
land revenue
(c)
enquiries
(d) prescribing the purposes for which unalienated land liable to trie payment of land-revenue may or may not be used, and regulating the grant of permission to use agricultural land for non-
agricultural purposes ; (e) regulating the disposal of land and other property
in
vesting
Government
(
f) regulating the disposal of forfeited land ; conditions on which, and the [(/) prescribing the terms and periods for which, unoccupied unalienated land may be granted ;
(h) fixing section 61;
the
maximum amount
of
fine leviable
under
re
gisters
[a-a\ These words were substituted for the original and accounts" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 77.
[b\
Bom. Act IV
oi
3, s, 78,
SEOI. 114-216]
(i)
MiaoELLANEoui
137
of landregulating the conduct of surveys and settlements 103 be under section notice to the given revenue, and prescribing before the introduction of a settlement ;
(j)
sions
tion
regulating the division of survey numbers into sub-diviand the fixing of the assessment of sub-divisions under sec-
117A;
laying out, maintenance and
of the (/) regulating tha compilation, maintenance and revision record of rights and the registers of mutations, disputed cases and tenancies and prescribing the forms in which they are to be compiled and the officers by whom the said records and registers are to
(m) regulating the exercise by village accjuntant* and revenue officers of the powers of a survey oScer and the assessment of costs and expenses under section 135G ; (n) prescribing the mode, form and manner in which appeals under Chapter Xlil shall be drawn up and presented ;
(0} prescribing the records, registers, accounts, maps and plans to be maintained for the purposes of this Act and the manner and forms in -which they shall be prepared and maintained.
(3)
The power
to
make
section
shall be sub-
previous publication.
lawful for the
[a] 215.
It shall be
Governor in Council, in
making any rule under section 214, to prescribe that any person committing a breach of the same shall on conviction by a Magistrate
be punished with imprisonment for a term not exceeding one month or with fine not exceeding five hundred rupees, or with both, in addition to any other consequences that would ensue from such breach.
Chapters VIII to
x
to
[b]
216
yill to
to shall be applicable rr
of an alie(a) all unlienated lands situated within the limits nated village ; a definite share (b) unalienated shares of villages of which defined by metes and bounds is alienated
;
[a]
Bom. Act IV
Aet
of
1913,
s.
[5]
XV
of
1929, a,*.
W
(c)
RJSVJSJIUE
CODE, 1879
GHAP.
XIV
certain
alienated villages the holders o( which are entitled to a of which the excess above such
otherwise provided in section 111 and in this said Chapters shall be applied to any section, other alienated village except for the purposes of fixing its boundaries and of determining any disputes relating thereto, unless the extension of the provision is authorised by the Commissioner acting on the writtten application of the sole holder, or, if there be more than one holder, of the holder or holders representing in the aggregate not less than one-half of the total interests in the village If any share of the village is in respect of its alienated revenue. unalienated the prescribed proportion of one-half shall be reckoned as if the village were wholly alienated, Government being considered as the holder in respect of the unalienated share.
no provision of the
(3) In any case in which action under sub-section (2) is taken lawfully by the Commissioner on the application of some only of the holders of the village, any covenant or agreement relative to the extension of the said Chapters or incidental thereto, entered into by such holders shall also be binding on the remaining holders of the village in respect of their shares in the revenue of the village as if such covenant or agreement had been entered into by them.
(4) All survey settlements heretofore introduced in alienated villages shall be valid as if they had been introduced in accordance with the provisions of this seation.
This section doe? not extend to the estate io the districts of Ahinjdaor Panch Mahals io which the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, Broach Kaira, bad, extends ( Vide Bom Act VI of 188*. as. 1 and 33).
Note
mamool
rates.
Where
the plaintiff
inamdar got a decree for the mamool rates for the years 1888-1890 in the year 1892 against the defendant's knots and where Survey Settlement was introduced in the village in 18*5-1*86 and where he filed a suit in 1917 for thoae does for the
years 191ft and 1916, it was held, that though the proper construction to be placed on this section was not strictly speaking r*is judicuta, still on the principle of
9ta*e decisis the previous construction should be
adhered to
(Sitaram
a.
Lax man,
45 Bom. 1260).
in
an unalienated
fall
free,
do not
with*
Settlement, extension Of An application under this secbe made by tion lor the extension of revenue settlement to an alienated village
Revenue
is
cm
entrusted with the full powers of the managmement of the same, even jbhpugh he does not potstss the whole of tbe lands belonging to the village
a holder who
9.
(Gopikabai
SBC. 217]
MiaoxiLANxoTra
217.
When
a survey settlement has been introduced under the provisions of the last section or of any aliei aw or t h e time being in force, into an alieQated vi ,, age) the hoHerg Q( ft such settlement extends shall have the same
rights and be affected by the same responsibilities in respect of the lands in their occupation as [a] holders of land [a] in unalienated villages have, or are affected by, under the provisions of this Act, and all the provisions of this Ac relating to [a] holders of land in unalienated villages [a\ \b] shall be applicable, so far as may be, to them.
r
under the preceding 3ection. This section embraces not only registered oc-
cupants of land la unalienated villages but also the holders of lands in alienated villages with the same rights and responsibilities in respect of those lands. The
words in
may
first
part (Nanabhai
Retrospective effect. As the amendment does not say that apply only to villages settled after 1913, it docs not save any rights In other words, the amendment has retrospective effect, prior to 1913,
should
acquired
An inamdar, to whom the a village as well as its other pecuniary interests is entitled even after a Survey Settlement had been introduced to raise the rents of the permanent tenants oven when such permanent tenancies
rights in the
soil in
commenced before
s. c.
the alienation
r.
is a grantee of the soil and not merely of the Royal not at liberty after the introduction of the Survey Settlement into his village to enhance the rent of his mirasdar tenant beyond the amount of the land-revenue dues. A kadim inamdar who is a grantee by akadim grant of
who
has consented to
village is
or
acquiesced
in
equally precluded by this section, from enhancing the rent of the inirasdar tenant beyond the amount of the land-revenue dues (Pandu p. Ramchandra, 22 Bom. L. R. 665).
Contractual rights.
The provisions of
this section
do not
affect
con-
tractual rights arising before the introduction of the survey. In alienated villages, it is competent to Government to eater into contractual relationship with tenants
or occupants.
village,
They might acquire fixity of tenure and fixity of rent. In an ancient where the alienee has entered i nto a contract with his tenants granting
not only fixity of tenure but also fixity of rent, the provisions of this section do not enable such alienee to avoid his contractual liability and enforce against hie permanent tenants the payment of assessment levied on occupancy land (Saryaprao
Oanpatrao
0.
Sidhanath, 27
Bom, L.
64.')).
[a-a]
Bom. Act IV
[b]
80
(a).
Words
repealed by
3.
80
(6)
are omitted
140
CODE, 1870
[CbUp.
XIV
Permanent tenant
Liability to
pay enhanoed
rent.
A per-
son holding lands in an alienated village a3 a parounent tenant under s. 83 ante becomes, on the introduction of tha survey settlement into the village, entitled to the rights and affected with the responsibilities of a holder in an alienated
village,
by virtue of this section. He remains whit he ever was, a tenant, and does not become an occupant. He is liable, therefore, to pay enhanced rent to hie landlord (Kondi Ramjiv. Vithalrao, 50 Bom. 155). Survey Settlement. Suivey Settlement was extended to an alienated village on the application of the inamdar under Bombay Act (I of 1863). The period of the settlement expired in 1888 and the inamdar recovered from 1895
higher assessment than that allowed under
sioner objected in 1910 and the
the Survey Settlement. The Commisinamdar sued to establish his right to charge
section
applied,
higher assessment. Held, that the inamdar had no such right since this when a survey Settlement had been introduced into an alienated
village
1865) and when the period of the Settlement had expired after the Code oam3 into force (Dhondo Vasudev v. The Secretary of State, 44 Bom. 110).
(I of
Bombay Act
Holder.
shown
to be a "holder"
Before a person can claim the benefit of this section, he must be within the meaning of s. 8 (11) of tbis Code v.
(Vasudeo
of
Hak^
are grants
made
prior to
the
grant
a
v.
Indoorai,
State
218,
Nothing in
Construction of this
this Act, which applies in terms to una?ienated land or to the holders of unalienated i an d only, shall be deemed to affect alienated land, or the rights of holders of alienated
iumption
shall be
such land, and no preto arise either in favour, or to the preholder of alienated land from any provision of tbis
deemed
SCHEDULE A
Repealed by
Bom. Act IV of
1913, section 81
SCHEDULE B
FORM OF BOND TO BE BE QUIRED UKDER
SECTION 23
WHEREAS
inhabitant of
1,
have been appointed to the office of and have been called upon to furnish security under the piovisions of section 23 of tbe Land-Revenue Code for the doe discharge of the trusts of the said
office,
or of any other
all
office to
which I
may
be hereafter
appointed,
moneys, papers and other property which shall come into my bind myself to possession or control by reason of any sach office, I hereby pay to the Secretary of State for India in Council, the amount of any loss or defalcation in my accounts, and to deliver up any papers or other property within such time, and to such person a? shall be demanded by the person at the head of
due account of
demand
to be
in
writing and
to be
left
at
my
my*
or place of residence, and in case of my making default therein I bind self to forfeit to the Secretary of State for India in Council the sum of
Rupees'
herein contained nor the security [a] Provided always that nothing hereby given shall be deemed to limit my liability in respect of the matters aforesaid to the forfeiture of the said sum of rupees only, and that should that sum be
insufficient to recoup the Secretary of State for India in
loss or
Council in full for any damage sustained by him in respect of tbe matters aforesaid I agree to pay to him on demand such further sum as shall be deemed by the person at the head of the said office necessary in addition to the said sum to cover such loss or
FOBM OF SECURITY
TO BE SUBJOINED TO THE
Wx
hereby declare ourselves sureties for the abovesaid
that he shall do and perform all that be has above undertaken to do and perform, and in case of hia making default therein we hereby bind ourselves to forfeit to the Secretary of State for India in Oonucil
[6]
the
Bum
of
rupees, in
has
bound himself, or such smaller [b] sum as shall be deemed sufficient by the to cover any loss or damage which the Government may sustain by reason of each
default.
Dated
(Signature). ^ was added by Bom. Act IV of 1^0 5, First Schedule. f W] Tbeee words were substituted for the original word "such" bv 7 Bom Act IV of 19106, First Schedule.
[a] Thift proviso
fins
SCHEDULE
OF WABBANT TO BE ISSUKD BY THE COLLECTOR UNDEB SBOTXOK 25 OB 167
Seal
To
187 day of ordered by to (here state the substance of the demand made) ; and wnereas the said B. has neglected to comply with the said order, and it has, therefore, been directed, under the provisions of section of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, that he be imprisoned in the Civil Jail until he obey the said order or until he obtain his wdischarge under the provisions of section 25 or 28 (or fton 157 or 164 as the ease be) of the said Cide ; yon are hereby required to
JAIL AT
may
receive the said A. B. into the Jail under your charge and to carry the aforesaid order into execution according to law.
Dated
this
day of
(
187
Signature of Collector)).
SCHEDULE D
FORM OF BOND TO BE BBQUIRBD UNDER SECTION 28 OR WHEREAS I,
have been ordered by
to (here state the nature of the demand) and whereas I dispute the right oi the said to make the said order, I hereby bind myself to file a suit within to fifteen days from the date of this bond in the District Court of contest the justice of the demand, and do agree that in the event of a decree being passed against me I will fulfil the same and will pay all amounts including coats and interests, that may be due by me, or that if I fail to institute a suit as afore-
164
when required, pay the above-mentioned amount of Rupees (or will deliver up the above-mentioned papers or property, (as the ease may be), and in the case of making default therein, I hereby bind myself to forfeit to the
said, I will,
my
sum
of
Rupees
(Signature)
Dated
FORM
OF SECURITY TO BE SUBJOINED TO
WE
hereby declare ourselves securities for the above said that he shall do and perform all that he has above undertaken to do and perform, and in case of his making default therein we hereby bind ourelve0 to forfeit to the Secretary of State for India in Council the sum of
Rupees.
Dated
(Signature)
SCHEDULE E
(
See
section
84
FORM
A.B:
TENANT TO QUIT
To
I do hereby give yon notice that I do intend to enter upon, and take possession tenant under me, and Of tbe land (here gitt thi detcription) which you now hold
SCHEDULES
you
are, therefore, required to quit
ua
same at the
187
(Signed)
.
0. D.
Dated
this
day of
187
II,
HIS
To
O.D.
do hereby give you notice that I shall quit and deliver up to you, at the end of this current year terminating on the of 187 the land ( here give the Ascription ) which I hold from you
I
,
(Signed) A, B.
Dated
this
day of
187
SCHEDULE F
FOBM OF COMMISSION TO BE ISSUED TO A HOLDER OF ALIHNVTED LANDS OF VILLAGES OR His AGENT, UNDER SECTION 89
Seal
The [a] Commissioner, by virtue of the powers vested in him by the Bombay Land Revenue Code, is pleased to confer on you Jagirdar, $*c., or Agent, $*c, an in (or in respect of) the villages and the case may fo), power to lands specified in this Commission, in the manner prescribed in (or in section
;
The
villages
:
and lands over which the power thus conferred upon you extends
(Here enter
the description)
are as follows
is
pleasure
and subject
(Signed).
Commissioner.
SCHEDULE H
(
[b]
)
See
section
133
SITES
Royal
Arms
To
THE SECRETARY OF STATE IN COUNCIL. WHEREAS His Excellency the Governor of Bombay
to the settlement of the land revenue,
in Council,
with a view
preservation of proprietary and other rights connected with the soil has under the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, directed a survey of the lands within the and ordered the necessary inquiries conof nected therewith to be made, this sanad is issued under section 133 of the said Code to the effect that There is a certain plot of ground occupied by you in the in of division of the register No.
of
word was substituted for the original words '-Governor in Council Bom. Act IV of 1913, e. 82, by Bombay" if no Schedule G. [b] There
[a-a] This
144
the
map marked
No.
leading from
the road
abfttt
, containing about the square yards, and of the following shape and
following dimensions :You are hereby confirmed in U] the said occupancy ]a] exempt from all land land revenue (or subject to the payment of Rupees per annum to the
revenue).
of yonr tenure are such that your occupancy is both transferable and will be continued by the British Government, without any obbe itl lawful jection or question as to title, to whatsoever shall from time to time colder (subject only to the condition of the payment annually of the above laid revenue according to the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code or of any other law for the time being in force, and to the liability to have the said rate of assessment revised at the expiration of a term of years reckoned from and thereafter at successive periods of the years in with the provisions of the law and to ihe for
The terms
and
heritable,
compliance time and manner of payment of the said assessment, and to the liability of forfeiture of the said occupancy and of all rights and interests connected therewith in case of your failure to pay the said assess-
from time
ment
as required
by law).
on behalf of the Secretary of State for India in Council by order of the Governor in Council of Bombay, by and under the hand and seal of one thousand eight hundred this day of and A. D.
This sanad
is executed
(Signed).
SCHEDULE
FORM
To
OF
WARRANT
TO BE ISSUED
has resisted (or obstructed) 0. B. in the said B) from (or himseif, that is, in the taluka, and certain land in the village of whereas it is necessary, in order to prevent the continuance of such obstruction (or You are hereby required resistance), to commit the said A. B. to close custody ; under the provisions of section 202 oi the Bombay Land Revenue Code to receive the said A. B. into the Jail under your ^charge, and there to keep him in safe custody for days.
removing E. F.
Bated
this
day of
187
(Signature of Collector).
[a-oj
These words were substituted for the original words "the occupancy of of 1913, s. 88. ground" by Bom. Act IV
Rules, 1921
)
1921
In exercise of the powers conferred by sections '213 and 214 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1870 (Bombay V of 1879), and of all other powers enabling him in this behalf, and in'supersession of Government Notifications in the Revenue Department No. 7368 dated the 6th December 1881, No. 8356 dated the 27th November 1003, No. 5223 dated the 28th June 1905, and No. 5641 dated the 5th June
No. B>-205.
Council
1907, and all notifications [1] amending the same, is pleased to make the following rules
1
the
Governor in
CHAFFER
1.
INTRODUCTORY.
1. Short title and extent of application. These rules may be called the Land Revenue Rules(L92i). Rules 7 to 10 inclusive, 21 clause (2), 23, 25 to 27 inclusive, 38 and 70 shall not apply to Sind.
A.Kh<,ti
880 (the Khotl Settleit is ex"no be shall Rule made hereafter applies, applicable, unless be directed in such it shall in or that some Rule, applicable" pressly Rule, subsequent [sea 40 (d)]. Of the present Rules those which are not applicable are 15-16; 20-23;
(i)
tl:e
To
ment Act)
30-33,41-53; 73-74; 84; 02-98; 103-117; 119-127; 134-115. All the rest of the Rules are applied. Rules 72 (b) and 133 apply with the modifications. But rules 31-57 must be applied to Government lands, which do not include gaothan in which pardi lands are to bo assessed 983-96, 7068-13), within the Khoti
(R
village limits.
Khot
is
land.
But he has
(I.
L. R. 31
Bjm, 4^6).
which are
BTaMdari.
(i)
Under
Act
VI
of 1888 certain
sections of the
to
These Chapters
of the
Rules are:
Those relating to City Survey (in Chap. 11119); alluvion (X); the disposal of land (VII) and assignments for public purposes (XI); grazing (IX); fines for unauthorized uses and occupations (XIV); rights to trees (VIII); the Record of permissions and altered assessments for N. A uses (XIII and XIV); Rights
(XV);
and
all
is
disposed of by Government;
new
inalienable
law as
to collec-
all
THE BOMBAY
Bat Talukdari Want as
JJA*D
(chiefly in
VII
estates
in virtue (ti) The Code has been applied in certain Native States, presumably of a decree of the Ruler, . g., ia Akalkot (P. 5728-79), Jath (P. 5730-79). When a new set of rules is finally confirmed, it is desirable that any State adopting them
should notify the fact and republish the rules with the modifications the State administration.
2.
approved by
pugnant
(a)
there
is
anything re-
Code.
(4)
in Sind
"Mukhtyarsection 74 of
kar."
"Public Document" has the same (<?) the Indian Evidence Act I of 1874.
(d)
meaning
as in
"Chavdi"
CHAPTER
II.
CHAPTER
III.
REVENUE SURVEYS
Survey and assessment of agricultural land. Survey numbers and sub-divisions. (1) Every holding not less in area than the minimum fixed under section 98 shall be separately measured, classified, assessed and defined by boundary marks, and entered in the land records as a survey number. (2) Every holding of which the area is less than such minimum shall be separately measured, classified, and assessed and entered in the land records as a sub-division of that survey number in which it is directed to be comprised ; it may also be separately demarcated if the Commissioner of Survey so directs, provided that the said Commissioner may require the persons interested in such holding to prepay the costs, or such portion of the costs as he thinks fit, of so defining the
3.
holding.
in a
Record of measurements. All measurements shall be recorded book or embodied in a plane table map kept in such form as shall be prepcribed by the Commissioner of Survey for each survey. The said books or maps shall be preserved as a record of the survey.
4.
5. Test of measurements. The original measurements ftiade by the subordinate survey officers employed for the purpose shall be tested by the officers in charge of measuring establishments in such manner and to such extent as the Commissioner of Survey shall deem
sufficient.
6. Village maps. Village maps shall be prepared under the orders of the Commissioner of Survey showing each survey number and its boundary marks.
RULES
7. For the purposes of assessment all Classification of Land. land shall be classed with respect to its productive qualities. The number of classes and their relative value reckoned in annas shall be fixed under the orders of the Commissioner of Survey with reference to the circumstances of the different tracts of country to which the survey extends and to the nature of the cultivation. 8. Field-books. Every classer shall keep a field-book and record therein the particulars of his classification of each survey number and sub-division and the reasons which led him to place it in the particular class to which in his estimation it should be deemed to belong. Such field-books shall be preserved as permanent records of the survey.
test of the original classification Test of classification. the subordinate officers employed for this purpose shall be taken by the officers in charge of classing establishments, in such manner and to such extent as may be directed by the Commissioner of
9.
made by
Survey.
JO. Assessment. When rates of assessment have been sanctioned by Government, the assessment to be imposed on each survey number or sub-division shall be determined according to the relative classification value of the land comprised therein.
10-A. All agricultural assessments (or judi) shall be calculated out to the nearest pie at the rate (per acre or otherwise) sanctioned upon the area chargeable and rounded off in the following manner
:
the assessment (or Judi) does not exceed one rupee the nearest half anna shall be taken neglecting 3 pies and under and counting 4 pies and 5 pies as pies, in case of all districts, except the Konkan and below-ghat talukasof Kanara, where the nearest 3 pies shall be charged. For example, in the Thana, Kolaba, Ratnagiri districts and the below-ghat talukas of
(a)
When
Kanara
an assessment of Re. 0-10-4 shall be taken as Re. 0-10-3 an assessment of Re. 0-10-5 shall be taken as Re. 0-10-6 an assessment of Re. 0-0-2 shall be taken as Re. 0-0-3.
Elsewhere
;
;
an assessment of Re. 0-8-3 shall be taken as Re. 0-8-0 an assessment of Re. 0-9-4 shall be taken as Re. 0-9-G.
(b)
exceeds one tupee the nearest anna shall be taken in all cases, neglecting 6 pies and under and counting 7 to 11 pies as one anna, for example an assessment of Rs. 1-3-G shall be taken as Rs. 1-3-0 ;
an assessment of Rs.
Provided that
1-3-7 shall be
(I) when the calculation results in the sum total of the new assessments (or Judi) of all sub-divisions of a survey number being greater or less than the whole assessment (or Judi) of that number, the difference shall be equitably distributed over the sub-divisions by deduction or addition in the largest shares, so as to make the total equal to the assessment (or Judi) on the survey number ;
1879.
(2) Subject to proviso (1), the assessment of a sub-division shall in no case be'lees than a pie and every fraction of a pie shall be considered as one pie, the addition being counterbalanced by deduction in the assessment of any of the other sub-divisions of the same survey number in an equitable manner.
assessment (or Judi) on a survey number or subnumber shall be less than 3 pies in the Thana, Kolaba and Batnagiri Districts and in the below-ghat talukas of the Kanara District, or less than 6 pies elsewhere, but this provision shall be subject to the condition that the total of the assessments of all the sub-divisions of a survey number shall not exceed the assessment (or Judi) of that survey number. Where this condition cannot be fulfilled, any assessment of less than 3 pies or 6 pies, as the case may be, may be retained subject to proviso (2).
(3)
No new
division of a survey
Note.
This rale does not apply to Sind which has another but equivalent
method.
(1) Any survey number or sub-division of a be amalgamated with any other coterminous survey number with the sanction of the Collector and upon the application of the holder, whenever all the parcels of land proposed for amalgamation are held by the same holder upon the same tenure.
11.
Amalgamation
survey number
may
(2) Any sub-division may be amalgamated without prior sanction with any coterminous sub-division of the same survey number held by the same holder upon the same tenure. (3) When such amalgamation is effected, the two or more portions of land shall become one entry in the land records, bearing the same distinguishing number as the first in series of the amalgamated numbers. Any boundary marks placed between the amalgamated holdings shall be removed and the village map corrected accordingly. 12. (1) Rales 3 to 11, unless otherApplication of rules 3 to 11. wise directed by Government, shall be observed in the conduct of revenue surveys of lands used, or which may be used, for the purposes of
:
agriculture.
Matters of detail not provided for in the (2) Form and details. foregoing rules shall be determined in each survey in accordance with such general or special orders as the Commissioner of Survey, acting under the general control of Government, may, from time' to time,
issue*
Survey and assessment of non-agricultural land. Non-agricultural land not to be classified in accordance with (1) Laod of any of the kinds specified in sub-rule (2) foregoing rules. shall be measured and mapped in accordance with rules 3 to inclusive, but shall not be classified or assessed in accordance with rules
13.
7 to 10.
(2)
(a) occupied unalienated lands, which are situated within an area in which a survey under rules 3 to 11 is in progress and which are
used for any non-agricultural purposes ; (b) unoccupied unalienated lands, situated withio any such area, which are deemed to be likely to be more in demand for building or
industrial purposes than for agriculture ; and (c) all lands to which a survey is extended under section 131.
RULES
14. Assessment of non-agricultural land. The Collector on receipt of a schedule of the lands referred to in rule 13 (2) shall assess them at the same rates and for the same period as if he were altering an has been agricultural assessment under whichever of Rules SI to 85 applied to the locality.
Provided that land wholly or partially exempt from assessment under the proviso to section 52 or under section 128 or otherwise shall
not, so far as
And
it is so exempt, be assessed. also provided that land held under unexpired leases shall beliable to the rate of assessment in force for the locality only
leases.
14-A (1) All non-agricultural assessments, rents and fines leviable under rules 43, 47, 49, 51, 8083, 92, 93, and 99103 shall be
calculated out to the nearest pie at the rate (per acre or otherwise) sanctioned upon the area chargeable but any sum so calculated thatto 2 annas ; (i) is less than two annas, shall be raised is exact not an exceeds and two multiple of two annas, annas, (ii)
:
shall be rounded off, upwards or downwards, and when equidistant upwards, to the nearest multiple of two annas e. ^/,, an assessment (fine or rent) of one anna and 3 pies will be charged as two annas an assessment (fine or rent) of 2 annas and 11 pies will be charged as two annas an assessment (fine or rent) of 3 annas will be charged as four annas an assessment (fine or rent) of Rs. 8-9-5 will be charged as Rs.
;
8-10-0
(fine or rent)
(fine or rent) of
8-12-0.
15. Maintenance of records. -For all lands which have in the past been surveyed or assessed, or which shall be hereafter surveyed or settied under the provisions of the Code and these rules, it shall be the duty of the Director of Land Records or clerical error (1) to cause to be corrected any arithmetical
whenever discovered
(2) to
cause to ba incorporated punctually in the land records all of survey changes in boundaries, areas, tenures and assessments either numbers or of their sub-divisions which are made under orders of rules or any competent authority as defined in the Code and these other Act Provided that where the assessment of any survey number has been fixed a declaration under section 102, such assessment shall
:
by not be raised upon the discovery of any mistake in classification until the term of such declaration expires.
If ote.
sees. 109, 110,
Rule 15 which embodies existing practice also partly replaces old which are in part also superseded by the Record of Eights.
16. Detailed instructions and forms shall be drawn up and maintained by the Director of Land Records, subject to the orders and
approval of Government from time to time for the proper carrying out of Bole 15.
Introduction of settlements of land revenue. of guarantee. Notifications of Settlements and of period (1) Where the assessments have received the sanction of Government under section 102, a notification shall be published in the district or portion of the district to which the Settlement extends in form A, if such district or portion of the district is situate in the BomA, if it is situate in bay Presidency excluding Sind or in form Sind, as the case may be, and when the Governor in Council has, under section 102, declared such assessments, with any modifications which he may deem necessary, fixed for a term of years, such declaration shall be notified in the official Gazette.
17.
a Settlement is introduced into a part of a taluka of settled the guarantee will be restricted to the unepired portion of the period for which the assessments in the already settled part of the taluka were fixed. Note. When the term of a settlement expires, but no action is taken, that
(2)
Where
settlement continues Integrally, and cannot be applied to some lands and not to others (B. 784 92, 1397-12); and this holds good for Inam villages also (I. L. R.
44 Bom. 110).
No* ice of sanction and announcement of assessments. (1) The 18. notice required by section 103 shall be given by beat of drum in the village for which the assessments have been sanctioned and a written notice shall be posted in the chavdi or some other public place in the
village.
(2) Such notice shall be given by or under the orders of the officer in charge of the survey, referred to in section 100, or the Collector. (3) Persons affected by the assessments who do not attend at the time and place specified in the notice shall be subject to the same
liabilities as if they
had attended. Survey Fees in Towns and Cities. 19. Survey fees in towns and cities. (1) Where a survey is extended to the site of a town or city, the survey fees payable under section
132 shall ordinarily be so fixed that the total sum payable in respect of such site shall cover the cost of the survey and preparation of the Record of Rights thereof. (2) In fixing the fees for each building site or aoy portion thereof held separately the Collector shall have regard to the provision of subrule (1) and to the position, value (or rental), and area of such building site or portion thereof, but such fee shall not exceed ten rupees.
CHAPTER
IV.
SUB-DIVISION OF SURVEY NUMBERS. Before field operations a notice shall be 20. Notices to be issued. issued by the Maralatdar and posted in the village chavdi and proclaimed by beat of drum, stating that the sub-divisions of survey numbers in the village are about to be measured according as they have been divided by the holders, and daily notices shall be given as far as possible specifying the numbers or parts of numbers which are to be measured next day and warning landholders to be present.
is a process oarred out by the Land Records Department. made by the Collector under Civil Court deoree cannot be revised by that Oonrt (11 Bom. 662; 15 Bom. 627). 21. Boundaries to be laid down. (I) When there is no dispute the boundary of each sub-division shall be laid down according to the statements of the holders.
Notes.
This
Partitions
is any dispute, the boundary to which the dispute measured and mapped in accordance with the claims of both disputants, and the dispute entered in the register of disputed After the dispute has been settled under sections 37 and cases. 119-120, or Rule 108 as the case may be, the map shall be corrected accordingly and the areas finally entered into the land records, 22. Fees. The fees to be recovered for making subdivisions in cases to which section 135G (4) applies shall, unless Government in any case otherwise direct, be such as will cover the entire cost of measuring, assessing and mapping the subdivision; they shall be assessed
(2)
Where
there
relates shall be
by the Collector.
23. Assessment. The proportionate assessment of subdivisions to the land revenue settled upon the survey number shall be calculated subject to the proviso to section 117 (2) according to the relative classification value of the several parts of the survey number as directed in rule 10. Detailed instructions shall be prescribed by the Commissioner of Survey subject to the approval of Government, and may provide for the rounding off' of fractions of annas.
K, 0. and no survey settlement is introduced L. R. 0. 123-24 cannot be applied, R. 3613-88. But in Talukdari villages (including Udhad Jamabandi) when surveyed under section 4 of the Gujarat Talukdars Act, B. M. can be maintained by
appointing the Collector a Superintendent of Survey for the purposes of Sec. 122.
(R. 7642-2024-4-28).
These
rules
villages
Collector
obligations
imposed by
25.
sec.
(2)
struc*
Discontinuous marks (3) Conical earthen mounds or cairns (buruz) of loose stones. (4) Pillars of cut stone, or brick or rubble-stone masonry. (5) Prismatic or rectangular earthen mounds.
(6)
(7)
for
special
localities
and
sanctioned by the Collector or Survey Officer, such as teak posts in the marine marshes on the Gujarat coasts. Maintenance of boundary strips. (1) Boundary strips or ridges 26. shall not be ploughed up or otherwise injured by cultivation.
(2)
1^-
feet.
...
9 inches.
On
the frontier lines between British India and Baroda 3 ft. (on the British side of the exact pillar-to-pillar demarca-
This strip shall also be kept free from tree-growth, any young plant being destroyed at inspection time. Provided that where the boundaries of such lands are well defined by banks, (i) the like, the actual width of the strip covered by such or hedges, bank, hedge, or the like, shall be sufficient for the purpose of
this rule
;
the boundary of a survey number also forms the or Foreign State, the minimum width prescribed native of a boundary above shall be maintained for the portion of the boundary strip on the British side ; and defined at the time of (lit) where village boundaries have been lines double of the whole of the intermarks, boundary survey by mediate strip shall be maintained as a boundary strip.
(')
where
What boundary marks to be considered out of repair and how to The following boundary marks shall be considered put of repair and shall be repaired in the manner prescribed for each kind
27.
be repaired.
as follows:
(a)
etc.), if it
deviates
more than three feet from the true straight line of the boundary. Mode of repair either the deviation shall be rectified or the continuous mark not being a boundary strip must be replaced or supplemented by discontinuous marks. 2i feet in height and (b) Any conical mound or cairn less than Mode of repair raise it to 3 feet in 6 feet in diameter at the base. height and 6 feet in width at the base.
(c) Any rectangular mound less than 2 feet high, or less than Mode of repair the mound 5 feet long and 4 feet wide at the base. shall be raised to full dimensions, that is, 2' feet high, 6 feet long and 5 feet wide at the base.
(rf) Any mound, conical or rectangular, within 4 feet of which earth has been dug for repairs, when such excavation has affected tin Mode of repair stability of the mark or allows water to lodge. the excavation shall be filled up.
pillar (i) less than 1 foot square or 2\ feet in depth, broken down, or (iii) rising less than 4 or more than 9 inches clear above the adjacent ground level. Mode of repair (i) replace by one of proper dimensions, (ii) rebuild, (iii) raise the pillar or clear away or make up the ground. (/) Any stone less than 2 feet long and 6 inches thick. Mode of repair a stone of proper size shall be substituted. (g) Any stone out of the ground, or buried less than two-thirds of its length and loose. Mode of repair the stone shall be replaced or
() Any
(ii)
fixed firmly.
considerably out of proper position or so repaired as to indicate a materially incorrect line of boundary. Mode of repair the mark shall be correctly placed. (1) Any mark overgrown or surrounded by vegetation of any kind so as not to be easily visible. Mode of repair the vegetation shall be cleared away until the mark is easily visible.
(ft)
Any mark
or
erected
(j ) Any sarbandh, or continuous embankment less than 2 feet high and 4 feet wide at the bottom. Mode of repair the sarbandh shall be made full 2 feet high and 4 feet wide at the bottom throughout, unless the occupant prefers the substitution of authorized discontinuous marks. Any hedge or other continuous mark which by reason of want (/:) of continuity or disrepair fails to define the boundary. Mode of repair the necessary renewals shall be made or ether authorised
marks substituted.
( / ) "Any boundary strip or ridge which has been ploughed up or otherwise obliterated or the dimensions of which are less than those prescribed by Rule 26. Mode of repair the landholder shall be ordered to restore the strip or ridge within a prescribed period by leaving it unploughed and undisturbed on his failure to comply he may be prosecuted under section 125. (m) Missing marks. Mode of repair new marks shall be erected.
;
in
kept in repair, another kind of authorised mark may be substituted. Where even that is impracticable the direction of the boundary must be fixed by a pair of discontinuous marks erected at an adequate diseither both on the same tance back from the abandoned position side, or one on each opposite side thereof.
;
Proviso as to marks liable to injury from Jlooding. Provided that any case where a boundary mark cannot, owing to Hooding of a nala, or river, the breaking away of the bank, or other causes, be
Determination of responsibility for maintenance. (1) The reson a comof marks the for landholders several boundary ponsibility mon boundary lies on the holder of the survey number which is numerically lowest.
28.
(2) Sub-rule (1) is subject to the proviso that when any survey is unoccupied or assigned for public or Government purposes the responsibility for repair of the marks on its periphery will pass
number
to the landholder
Repairs will be
Government expenses only when the marks in disrepair lie between survey numbers each of which has no holder except Government.
made
at
L.B.-2
14
CODE, 1870
each (3) Within each survey number the holder or holders of sub-division are responsible for the marks if any have been prescribed on the periphery of that sub-division to the same extent as they would be responsible if 'sub-division were read instead of 'survey number in sub-rules (1) and (2). more (4) A mark which is on the common boundary of two or villages must be repaired by the holder of the land in the village which is under restoration when the marks are found out of repair.
' 7
CHAPTER
20.
VI.
be held.
than ten (J) A copy of the notice shall also be served not less days before the enquiry on all persons who are known or believed to have made any claim to the subject-matter of the enquiry, and every such notice shall be served in the manner provided in section 190 for
the service of a summons.
Notice of decision (2) (a) Written notice in form C of any order passed under section 37, specifying briefly the subject-matter, contents and date of the Older passed, shall be served in the manner to in specified in clause (6) of sub-rule (1) upon the persons referred that clause.
:
(b) Such written notice shall also fied in clause (a) of sub-rule (1).
be affixed in
the places
speci-
officer
this still leaves upon the (i) The minimum legal notice is 10 days holding the enquiry an obligation to give longer notice, and to allow adjournments, when the case is complicated and cannot be adequately presented in so
Notes.
ehort a time
(it)
The
notice
must
officer
cannot hold an enquiry without also debiring the attendance of parties 80 he baa intrinsically power to summon these (sec. 189). witnesses.
CHAPTER
VII.
Which
(a) The right of Government to mines and mineral products reserved by section 69 shall not be disposed of without the sanction of Government, and in all grants of land the right to mines and mineral products and full liberty of access for the purpose of working and searching for the same shall be deemed to be reserved unless Government direct to the contrary and unless such right and liberty are expressly granted,
is
11
(i) No land situate within port limits shall be disposed of without the written concurrence of the Collector of Salt Revenue and without the reservation as to the tree-growth provided for in Rule 58 (d).
(c) In all grants and disposals of land the right of occupation and use only subject to the provisions of the Code shall be granted and not the proprietary right of Government in the soil itself.
:
31. Land may not be granted free of land revenue sanction of Government except as hereinafter provided.
without the
Gifts of the possession and the revenue. Limits of revenue-free grants for different purposes. (1) Land may be given free of price and free of revenue, whether in perpetuity or for a terra, for any purpose hereinbelow mentioned by the authorities and to the extent specified in this table
3 J.
4
Provided that the land in Proviso as to land near railway stations. the neighbourhood of railway stations shall not be granted for dharoiashalas under head (2) in the'table unless when erected they are to be in the charge of the Local Board or Municipality concerned.
(2)
Such
made
in
form D.
to any 33. (1) When it is clear that such a sale is preferable other course on grounds of obvious convenience to Government no less than to the parties concerned
:
revenue-free (a) any land wherever situate, of which the estimated value does not exceed one hundred rupees, and land included in (b) with the previous sanction of Government, any a village site of which the estimated revenue-free value does not exceed
five
hundred rupees
be sold revenue-free by the
Collector
to
may
a private
person for a
private purpose,
14
1879
In the case of such grants an agreement in form F shall (2) ordinarily be taken from the person intending to become the occupant.
When the land is granted on impartible tenure an agree*(4) in Form F (1), and, when it is also granted on inalienable
be taken
tenure, an agreement in Form I (1), shall ordinarily the person intending to become the occupant. * (01. (4) was added by R. 4702/24 111 of 12-3-1931.)
from
The declaration below the agreement shall be subscribed by (5) at least one respectable witness and by the patel and village accountant of the village in which the land is situate.
Note*
(a)
(I)}
The meaning
terpretation, but
some
roads,
*to
alluvion, etc., can only be usefully taken up by one person who bid at all (if there were persons who wished to obstruct him) or
might refuse
might
get.
it
for
practically nothing (for want of competition) if an auction were held. cases the Collector fixes a fair price such as might be got at auction if
In such
circum-
38. Survey number not already assessed to be assessed before it is disposedof. Where any survey number disposed of under rule 37 has not already been assessed, it shall be assessed by the Collector (after reference to the Superintendent of Land Records) at the rates placed on similar soils in the same or neighbouring villages; and the asessment so fixed shall hold good for the period for which the current Settlement for the village in which the land is situated has been guaranteed, and shall be liable thereafter to revision at every general settlement of the said village.
Where survey numbers may be given at reduced assessment. appears that the bringing of any survey number under cultivation or its reclamation for other purposes will be attended with large expense, or where for other special reasons it seems desirable, it shall be lawful for the Collector (with the previous sanction of the Commissioner, in cases where the assessment on the land included in the total grant exceeds one hundred rupees) to grant the survey number revenue free or at a reduced assessment for a certain term, or revenue-free for a certain term and at a reduced assessment for a further term, and to annex such special conditions as the outlay or other reasons aforesaid may seem to him to warrant, and to cancel the grant or levy full assessment on breach of these conditions.
39.
Where
it
ETTLES
Explanation.
16
ment
or,
Assessment on the land means fche assessment fixed at the settlewhere no such assessment has been fixed, the assessment determined in
accordance with the procedure prescribed in Rule 38 (G. R. No. 745-28 of 7-2-29).
Provided that, on the expiry of the said term or terras, the survey shall be liable to full assessment under the rules then in force for lands to which a settlement for agricultural use has been extended
number
or
which are assessed for other uses. (2) Form Gl may generally be used in cases under
40.
this rule.
Grants of salt-marsh lands for reclamations. Salt land or land occasionally overflowed by salt-water, which is not required or likely to be required for salt manufacture, may, after consultation with the Commissioner of Salt, be leased for purposes of reclamation by the Collector, subject to the confirmation of the Commissioner, on the following maximum terms, and with such modifications in particular
cases as
(a)
may
be deemed
fit
first
ten years
(5) rent at the rate of four annas per acre shall be levied for the next twenty years on the whole area leased, whether reclaimed or not; (c) after the expiry of 30 years the lease shall be continued in the case of re-claimed lands at the rate at which they would be assessed to
land revenue from time to time if they were subjected to survey settlement; and in the case of unreclaimed lands, if any, at the average rate of the reclaimed lands (Notification No. 372-B. of 17th April 1923);
(d) any portion of the land used from the payment of rent
;
exempt
the reclamation is not carried on with due diligence within or if half the area is not reclaimed so as to be in a state fit for use for at the end often years, and the whole agricultural purposes at the end of twenty years, or if any land once reclaimed as aforesaid is not maintained in a state fit for use for agricultural purposes, the lease shall be liable to cancellation at the: discretion of the Collector ;
(e)
if
two years,
Provided that the lessee shall be at liberty during the first ten years to relinquish any area which he cannot reclaim. (/) if the land reclaimed is used for any non-agricultural purpose, its rent shall be liable to be revised according to the rates under whichever of rules 81 to 85 has been applied to the locality notwithstanding that any of periods specified above may not have expired ;
(g)
41.
of a river and not included in a survey number shall, save as otherwise provided in sections 46 and 64, ordinarily be leased annually by auction to the highest bidder for the term of one year or such further period as the The accepted bid shall be deemed to be the land Collector thinks fit. revenue chargeable on such land. But in Sind the Collector may grant it for cultivation to those holders who have lost land by erosion.
Form G2 may generally be used in cases under this Landin beds of river. Land situated in the bed
rule.
Note.
of 1885).
Grant of land for non-agricultural purposes. 42. Disposal of land for building and other purposes. Unoccupied land required or suitable for building sites or other non-agricultural
mimnnA
sVia.ll
snit,ahlf>
nlots
16
THE BOMBAY
LAN!)
by auction to the highest bidder whenever the Collector is of opinion that there is a demand for land for any such purpose; but the Collector may, in his discretion, dispose of such land by private arrangement, either upon payment of a price fixed by him, or without charge, as he
deems
fit.
Note,
No
ing sites and no permission should be given under sec. concurrence of the Bailway. If there is any difference
sioner will decide it (G. B. No.
waste land near Hallway stations should ba disposed of for build65 for such use without
of
opinion,
the
Commis-
4606 of 1899).
(1)
Save in special cases in Government otherwise directs, or in localities falling under rule 44, land for building sites shall be granted in accordance with the following provisions
^
43.
(a)
sions of the
The land shall be granted in perpetuity subject to the provifirst paragraph of section 68, and shall be transferable.
(b) Where the land has already been assessed for agriculture, the assessment shall be altered under whichever of rules 81 to 85 has been applied to the locality. (c) Where the land has not been assessed the Collector shall fix the assessment in accordance with the principles laid down for alteration of assessment in rules $1 to 86 and the provisions of the said
may
be, apply.
(d) All such assessments shall be fixed for the period specified in Rule 87 (a) and may be commuted when they do not exceed one rupee in accordance with the provisions of rule 88.
(2) In the case of such grants an agreement in form F or form H, as the Collector may deem fit, shall ordinarily be taken from the person intending lo become the occupant, and in the case of land in development schemes undertaken by Government in the Bombay Suburban District an agreement shall be taken in form HH.
(3)
When
the land
is
specified in
form
I shall be
the
clause
(4) The declaration below the agreement shall be subscribed by at least one respectable witness and by the patel and village accountant of the village in which the land is situate.
Note.
in any
way
This provision relates only to the terms of the tenure, and does not authorize free grants or charitably reduced assessments which fall
43- A. Terms on which land intendedfor future building sites may be temporarily disposed of. Unoccupied lands which are eventually intended for building sites within the Bombay Suburban District or any other area, to which Government notification in the
force in the locality, or at a ground rent which may in special r localities be fixed with the sanction of the Commissioner.
may by Bombay Governmenf Gazette, extend this rule but of which the immediate disfor the said posal purpose appears to the Collector to be undesirable, may be let under written leases in a form approved by Government for short terms not exceeding in any case seven years at a ground rent equal to double the standard rate of non-agricultural assessment in
cases
1?
Government may
In hill stations and such other localities as direct land shall not be granted for building except on such conditions as are considered desirable regarding the style of building, the period for construction and the observance of municipal or sanitary regulations. Such conditions should be embodied in the
hill
44.
In
stations.
instrument (Form H). 45. Establishment of entirely newullage new village sice is established, or an addition
site, the disposal of the lots therein shall rules 42, 43 or 44 as may be applicable.
is
46.
Substitution of a
site
is
village
J,
mined for any from each occupant before he into the occupation of any lot.
site for an old one. Where a new village in lieu of a former one which it is deterreason to abandon, ao agreement shall be taken in form
new
established,
is
47. Conditions of grant of land for non-agricultural purposes other than building sites and alteration of assessment. Where unoccupied land is granted for non agricultural purposes other than building sites, the Collector shall annex such conditions to the grant as may be directed by Government or, in the absence of any order of Government, may annex such conditions thereto as he thinks fit, subject to the control of the Commissioner; and where the land lias already been assessed for the purpose of agriculture, the assessment of such land shall, in the absence of any order of Government to the contrary, be altered in accordance with the provisions of rules 81 to 85. Where it has not been assessed, its assessment shall be fixed by the Collector, as far as may be in accordance with the principles laid down for alteration of assessment in the said rules.
der,
other town or city to which Government may by notification in the and nothing in rules 81 to 85 shall official Gazette extend this rule apply to any agricultural land lying within the same sites, but to which a City Survey cannot by law extend.
:
The granting of such lands for building sites, and the granting of permission to use such lands (when assessed for agricultural use) fcr non-agricultural purposes, shall be regulated by the following rules 49 to 52.
accused
encroached on a part
culti-
own
field
yuted
it j
4^w^s
18
18 7
to pay a fine under rule 111 cl.(2) (a). Held, that as the land encroached npoii by the accused did not fall under the prohibition contained in this rule, the conTictton
was
Yadu,
Bom. L. E.
161).
Disposal of strips of land adjacent to existing building sites. Whenever the holder of a building site desires to acquire any small to his strip of ground belonging to Government which is adjacent site and which could not reasonably be disposed of by the Collector as a separate site, the Collector may, if he thinks fit and notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained in rule 33, sell such the strip to the said holder on the same tenure on which he holds said site, and on payment of ground rent or assessment at the same
49.
rate, if any.
50. Mode in which other lands may be disposed of. (1) Any unoccupied land to which rule 49 does not apply and which is not assigned for special purposes may be granted to such person as the Collector deems fit either for purposes of agriculture only or for other purposes. (2) Lands to be ordinarily sold by auction. Any such land shall ordinarily be sold by auction to the highest bidder ; but the Collector may in his discretion sell the same by private agreement. 51. Terms on which building sites may be disposed of. (1) Unoccupied land shall be granted for building sites and permission under section 65 to use for non-agricultural purposes lands occupied and assessed for agriculture shall be given by an instrument in a form approved by Government, for terms expiring on the date fixed in this behalf by Government for each city or town, at a rent or altered assessment, as the case may be, of two pies per square yard per annum, or such other rate as Government may prescribe for any particular
site or portion thereof.
(2) (a) Terms on which land intended for future building sites may be temporarily disposed of. Unoccupied lands which are eventually intended for building sites, but of which the immediate disposal for
the said purpose appears to the Collector to be undesirable, may be let under written leases in a form approved by Government for short terms not exceeding in any case seven years at a ground rent of not
than one anna per square yard per annum. (b) Unoccupied lands under clause (a) shall ordinarily, subject to the provisions of the said clause, be let by auction to the highest bidder; but the Collector may in his discretion let any such land by private agreement (G. R. R. D No. 5189/28 dated 13-1-33). 52. Terms on which lands may be disposed of for agricultural purposes only. Unoccupied lands may be leased for purposes of agriculture for terms of one year. An agreement in form F, with such modification as may be necessary, shall be taken from every person who is to become an occupant of land under this rule, and the provisions of
less
,
applicable to
every
53. Unoccupied building sites, etc., within municipal limits to be distinguished from lands forming part of public streets (1) In municipal districts, building sites and plots of open ground, which have not been dedicated to public use or already transferred to the
RULES
10
meaning of sub-section
are hereby declared to be specially reserved by Government within the (2) of section 50 of the Bombay District Municipal Act, 1901. This reservation does not apply to small pieces of ground lying between the houses and the road-way in an irregular street or road of varying width, which should be recognized as forming jsart of the street and vesting in the municipality unless private individuals have rights thereto. But separate vacant sites between houses do not vest in the municipality even though they are unenclosed unless they have been transferred to the municipality by Government.
occupy under section 60. The permission in writing to be given by a Mamlatdar under section 60 to enable an intending occupant to enter upon occupation shall be in
Exceptional cases. land of to which foregoing rules are inapplicable. Disposal Unalienated land to which none of the foregoing rules is applicable and concerning which no other rules have been framed by Government, shall be disposed of in such manner for such period and subject to such special conditions, if any, as the Collector, subject to the control of the Commissioner, deems fit.
The forms appended to these rules shall be 56. Special forms. used where applicable, but where a grant is made on special terms and none of such forms is suitable and a special form has not been sanctioned, the orders of Government shall be obtained regarding the form to be used* 57. Records. The document evidencing a grant shall be drawn in duplicate and one copy, which shall bo retained by the Government officer concerned or by Government, shall be signed by the grantee,
CHAPTER
VIII.
ment
(b)
(c) trees,
teak, blackwood, and sandalwood ; the produce of which has hitherto been
:
disposed
of by
Government
Provided that whenever any land is disposed of after the first introduction of a settlement of land revenue, such trees shall also be disposed of under section 62 (d) any trees specially reserved in the terms of the grant of the land.
;
59.
plaoee of
Special reservations* Trees in groves, trees round temples or encampment declared to be such by the Collector, and trees
86
other than teak, blackwood or sandalwood, which for any reason at shall be are of special value or utitity specially reserved the settlement and entries to that effect made in the settlement records.
60. Disposal of trees on occupied lands. (1) Subject to the provisions of rule 63 the disposal of trees on land occupied or being given out for occupation shall be regulated by the following sub-rules
:
(2) Of the trees to which the rights of Government are reserved, such number or kinds as Government may from time to time direct
will be at the disposal of the Forest Department. Lists shall be kept of all occupied numbers, over the trees in which the Forest Department has any control or lien ; the clearing of these numbers by the Forest Department shall be arranged in concert with the Collector, and ever}' number when cleared shall be recorded as exempt from all interference in the future on the part of the Forest Department. la districts, where there is no Forest Officer, these functions will be discharged by the Collector alone.
who may
All other reserved trees shall be in charge of the Collector dispose of the same or of their produce as he may deem fit, subject to the general rules for the disposal of Government property. (4) In talukas in which the demarcation of forests has been completed, wheo any unoccupied land containing jungle or valuable trees which have not been included in any forest reserve is granted to any person for cultivation, the Collector may offer the trees, or such of the If such person agrees to partrees as he may see fit, to the occupant. chase the same, the value shall be recovered from him by the Collector and credited as land revenue. If the occupant refuses to buy under this sub-rule or sub-rule (3) then the Forest Department should clear the land of trees.
(3)
(5) In talukas in which the demarcation of forest reserves has not been completed, the Collector miy, if lie thinks fit, consult the Conservator of Forests before any land containing jungle or valuable trees is granted and if any such land is granted to any person the provisions of sub-rule (4) shall apply ; in no case shall land be granted which is likely to be required for forests.
;
(6) In Sind the clearance of reserved trees under sub-rule (1), and of trees not accepted by the new occupant under sub-rulte (4) shall be effected by the Collector.
Note.
In 22 Bom. L. B. 884,
This
is
it is
;
held
that
'trees
reseved'
means
trees
settlement
may
afterwards
grow.
When
61. Whenever the right to unreserved trees in any land is at the disposal of Government simultaneously with such land all such trees shall invariably be disposed of to the same person who acquires the holding and not to any other person.
62.
When
been once disposed of to the occupant, or when have been once cut and removed either (#) at the grant of the land, or
the right of Government to the trees in a holding has all the reserved trees
RULES
(4) after such grant, or (c) in Sind, at any time before such grant, or
&1
(d) elsewhere than in Sind, within five years before such grant,
Government will have no further claim to trees which may afterwards grow in the holding, or which may spring up from the old roots or
stumps, so long as the land continues in occupation.
districts from rules
Exception of reserved trei& in varkas and beta lands in certain 60-62. (1) Nothing in rules 60 to 62 inclusive shall be deemed to apply to varkas lands in the districts of Thana, Kolaba and Ratnagiri, and beta lands in the district of Kanara, or to any land in the Dindori Taluka or the Peth Taluka of the Na&ik District or to any land on the banks of streams and nalas in the Godhra Taluka of the Panch Mahals District, or to any riverside jarabul trees growing in occupied lands on the banks of the rivers Mula, Pravara, Mhais and Mhalungi in the Parner, Rahuri, Sangaranfcr and Akola Talukas of the Ahmednagar District or (pending the completion of the acquisition of all occupied lands within the sanctioned demarca-, tion limits of the forest in the Haveli, Purandhar and Junnar Talukas and the Ambegaon Petha of Poona District) to any teak trees in such unalienated land.
63.
;
(2) In the said lands the trees on which the rights of Government are reserved shall be available for cuttings to be made from time to time by or under the orders of the Forest Department, in consultation with the Collector.
(3)
The
sale of
any such
confer
from the root or stump of the tree FO cut. The reservation of the rights of Government over the trees will extend
no right
tb the after-growth
CHAPTER
IX.
period of years.
(2) Where any such trees are sold under section 41, the sale shall be by auction or otherwise as the Collector may direct.
65. Grazing and other similar produce to be ordinarily disposed of (I) The grazing or other by sale for periods not exceeding Jive years. produce 01 all unoccupied land vesting in Government whether a survey settlement extends to such land or not, and whether the same is assessed or not and of all land reserved for grass or for specially grazing (except land assigned to villages for free pasturage), may be sold by public auction or otherwise, as the Collector deems fit, year by year, or for any term not exceeding five years, either field by field or in tracts, and at such time as the Collector shall determine.
Provided that the purchasers' rights over such land shall entirely cease on the dates respectively fixed in the following table, unless, under special circumstances, the Collector deems it necessary to alter the time so fixed J--
CODE, 1879
66. Disposal of earth, stone, etc., by the Collector. (I) The Collector may, at his discretion, sell by public auction or otherwise dispose of the right to remove earth, stone, kankar, sand, rmiram, or any other material which is the property of Government for such period .and in such quantities and on such terms as he thinks fit Provided that such sale or other disposal shall be made subject to the privileges conceded by rules 67 to 70 inclusive. (2) The rate charged by the Collector under this rule, when the right in question is not put up for sale by public auction, may be either a lump sum, or so much per cubic foot of excavation, or in the case of a Railway Company requiring land for excavating ballast, so much per mile of the railway line for which ballast is obtained,
:
fit.
Note.
etc
,
It i&
important to note that in occupied lands charges for quarrying* Stone ind Mineral and Sand fees from Government land"
'
hut are altered assessments under L. R. 0. sections 48 and 65. Such altered assess-
ment
is
(II.
10424/17
R. 5i28/-
82 IV.
67. Removal of earth, stone, etc,, by villagers for their own use wittiout fee with permission of the revenue patel. (1) With the previous permission in writing of the revenue patel, or where there is no such
patel of the Mamlatdar or (in Sind) of the Tapedar, but without payment of fees (a) any potter or maker of bricks or tiles may, for the purposes of his trade, (b) any person may, for his domestic ot agricultural purposes, remove earth, stone, kankar, sand, muram or other material from the bed of the sea or from the beds of creeks, rivers and nalas or from any unassessed waste land not assigned for special purposes within the limits of the village in which he resides or in which the land for the benefit of which the materials are required is situated.
(2) Nothing in this rule applies to any case falling under rule 69, and where it appears to the revenue patel or Tapedar that any case in which application is made to him under this rule falls under rule
69 he shall refer the application to the Mamlatdar for orders. 68. With the previous permission in writing of the Mamlatdar but without payment of fee, any person may, for the purpose of building a well, remove stone from any of the sources specified in sub-rule (1) of rule 67 if those sources are within the limits of the taluka in
which he
69.
is
resides.
Excavation.
(1)
likely to
damge
or
destroy
In any case where excavation of the soil any valuable building or any land
the
for any special or public purpose or any boundary mark, of the Mamlatdar to any such removal shall be previous sanction required and he shall refuse permission to the extent necessary to prevent such damage or destruction.
Ports. No patel or Mamlatdar may permit any removal (2) under rule 67 or 68 from land within port limits, or on the banks or shore of any port, without the written concurrence of the Collector of Salt Revenue, and under %uch conditions, if any, as he may impose.
In any case where it appears to the Mamlatdar Bricks, etc. (b) that the trade carried on by any potter or maker of bricks or tiles is sufficiently extensive and lucrative to render such a charge fair and equitable, he may grant permission only on payment of fees at such rates as may be prescribed by the Collector in this behalf under
rule 66.
(4) In such cases or localities as he thinks fit, the Collector may prohibit the Mamlatdar, the Tapedar or the revenue patel from giving permission without obtaining his previous sanction ; and in any such case all applications for permission shall be referred to the Mamlatdar for the Collector's order.
Where the revenue patel or Tapedar refuses permission when (5) the same is applied for under rule 67 or does not refer the application to the Mamlatdar under sub-rule ( 4 ) ao appeal shall lie to the
Mamlatdar.
70. Removal of earth, etc., from village (an/ts. Any person may, with! he sanction of the revenue patel, take free of all charge from village tanks as much earth, stone, kankar, sand, muram or other material as he requires provided that no stones shall be removed that may have fallen from the banks of built tanks, and that no excavation shall be made within 10 cubits of the foot of the embankment of any such tank.
:
DISPOSAL OF
70-A. No person shall without the previous permission of the Collector in writing make use of any water of a river, stream or nala which is the property of Government, for the purpose of irrigating by a budki or a pumping plant land other than that subject to the existing nala-chad.
'0-B. The Collector may grant permission for the use of the water of a river, stream or nala which is the property of Government and for which no water-rate is levied under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879, for the purpose of irrigating by a budki or a pumping plant land other than that subject to the existing nala-chad, on payment of such water-rate as he may deem fit, but not exceeding the rate per annum per acre which may have been fixed for the locality by Government for occasional irrigation by Pats under section 55 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, or where no such special rate has been fixed,
the maximum Patasthal rate sanctioned in the current settlement for the group in which the village in which the land in question is situate may have been included. Provided that in precarious tracts irrigation
$4
CODE, 1879
by budkit or pumping plant shall be exempt from the water-rate lev!-* able under this rule. 70-C. Any person who, without the previous written permission of the Collector, makes use of any water of a river, stream or nala which is the property of Government and for which no water-rate is levied under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879, for the purpose of irrigating by a budki or a pumping plant land other than that subject to the existing nala-chad, shall be liable to pay such water-rate as the Collector may deem fit, but not exceeding Rs. 50 per annum per acre
of land so irrigated. 70-D. The water-rates payable under rules 70-B and 70-C shall be recoverable as arrears of land revenue.
J?OT purposes of rules 70-A, 78-B and Explanation. di' or any similar appliance for raising water.
The
are vague since so far as is known there is no such law in force 0. except in the case-law or judge-made law bassed upon the
46 and 63 to "any law for the time being in force" behind the L. B.
natural
equity, and
Island.
some
special Municipal
Bombay
Alluvion must, according to these rulings be interpreted to mean and imperceptible [imperceptible day by day as it occurs but
of course perceptible enough in the long run ^Halsbury's Laws of England, Vol 28, p. 362)] accretion by deposit of fresh soil by water upon existing riparian land
Sand blown by the wind or a mass , p. 525, 1870.) of shingle suddenly flung up after a storm, or new land left bare by a receding sea or a diverted river is not alluvion but derelict land. Nor would the deposits in a
(Jnstinan and 3 Bengal L.
river bed which raise their surfaces above the hot weather water-level be treated as
alluvion in respect of a holding terminating on the upper edge of the steep bank of a river high above the deposit ; there is no physical connexion between them, to which the term 'accretion' would be applicable. L. R. 27 All. 655, 28 All. 647. KaMayatdar (including Sanadi) Knots have a right only to assessed un-
occupied land (and they pay revenue for it). Therefore they can have no rights to alluvion, except that which forms on Khoti Khasgi lands. In such villages
therefore sees. 47, (3 and 64 all apply. It would deem that both classes of
entitled to remission
on account
of dilavion.
72. The Collector to .dispose of claims under section 47. to decrease of assessment on account of diluvion under shall bs disposed of by the Collector.
(a)
Claims
4.7
section
16
(b) It shall be the duty of the village officers to ascertain and to record the increases due to diluvion and losses due to diluvion in every holding subject to such changes. They shall also report to the Mamlatdar for orders when the area of any newly formed alluvial land or island, or of any abandoned river bed*, or land lost by diluvion exceeds the limits prescribed in sections 46, 47 and 61.
Note.
if
Inspector
In Khoti villages, read "Village Accountant or Japtidar, or Circle there be none (K. 3451-08) and "Japtidar or Band Karkun" in
Talukdari and omit reference to sections 46-47 (R. 2180-F.-29-3-22), For Alluvion
increasing forest land, see G, R,
5080-2417-7-26.)
CHAPTER XL
ASSIGNMENT OF LAND FOB SPECIAL PURPOSES.
Cattle stands and dhotis' and potters' grounds. (I) Gurcharatt (gairan) or grazing ground for cattle, burial and burning grounds, spots near villages on which the village cattle stand, and lands for the use of village dhobis and potters, and for other recognised public needs may be assigned by the Collector for these purposes respectively,
7;i.
according to the reasonable requirements of the villagers without charge and he may for sufficient reasons at any time revoke such assignment. (2) Orders under this rule shall bo passed in writing and recorded. (0 Land so assigned remains public property there is no disposal of posses:
sion or proprietary right under sec. 37 (G .ft. 555-01). There is therefore no limit of value (G.' R. 83 17-99). Grams of sites for idgih, temple^ or extensions of Tillage
not assignments bat disposals (G. R. 9424-06). Instances of public or Municipal purposes are land for rab-catting, public latrines. Municipalities may retain half the income derived from tho strictly temporary use of such land subject to the approval of the Uollector or Oily Survey Officer ;
sites are
other
departments
which
() The
11506-11).
(10)
was discontinued
G. B.
'Gairan'
sanction (G.
transferred to 'Burial ground' without Government 5701 01); and Government can modify any gairan assign3317-99,
may
be
ment (G. R. 3181.88). (v) When any expenditure on provision of burial grounds is required, then it devolves upon the local bodies (G. R. 4953-00). But after acquisition, the land
would be assigned under sec. 38, and not as L B. property. luamdara cannot enclose free pasture or other such assigned land
tJ.
Tish^anath
Madhwji, 1879).
CHAPTER
74.
XII.
RKLINQUISBMENTS.
Endorsement as to identify required below rajinamas.-~-'l) Every notice given under section 14 shall be io Form L and the declaration below the notice shall be subscribed by two respectable witnesses.
CODE,
(2) The Mamlatdar who receives any such notice will be held responsible for exercising due care in ascertaining the identity of the who has signed the same, notwithstanding that such notice person has been duly endorsed as hereinbefore required.
Note-
aeo.
74
shall ba kept
in the
records of the
tillage accountant until the expiry of one year after tbo end of
Entry
:
will at once be
made
comse
this will
CHAPTER XIIL
REBTBICTIONS ON USB OF LAND.
76.
Cultivation ofunarable land in survey number when prohibited. (pot kkarab) in a survey number assessed
for purposes of agriculture only is of two kinds: (a) that which is classed as unfit for agriculture at the time of survey including the farm buildings or threshing-floors of the holder ;
(fa
that which
is
it
is
reserved
or
assigned
for public purposes ; or because it is occupied by a road or recognized footpath, or by a tank or stream u&ed by persons other than the holder for irrigation or for drinking or domestic or used for a
purposes,
burial or
or
because
assigned for village potteries. (2) Class (a) may be brought under cultivation at any time by the holder and no additional assessment shall be charged therefor.
it is
section 48,
Provided that this prohibition shall not apply in the case of a tank or stream when such tank or stream is used for irrigation only and waters only land which is in the sole occupation of the holder, or when the privilege of cultivating the dry bed of the tank or stream has been specially conceded to the holder. 76. Use of land for the manufacture of salt prohibited except on certain conditions. (I) No occupant of unalienated land shall use the same or any part thereof for the manufacture of salt without the previous permission in writing, first of the Collector of salt Revenue and then of the Collector of the district.
mission
district may, in any case where such pergranted, either (a) require the occupant to relinquish his rights of occupation, and to enter into an agreement that such land shall be placed at the disposal of the Salt Department, subject to a lease in fovour of the applicant on such terms as the Deputy Commissioner of Salt Revenue under the general orders of Government may require; or
(2)
is
(b) permit the use applied for without requiring the occupant to relinquish his rights of occupation on the following conditions (t) that the occupant shall pay such fine as the Collector may deem proper, not exceeding ooe-t^nth of the amount which would be leviable Under section 66 in a case or unauthorized use, and
:
BULBS
VI
(it) that the occupant shall execute an agreement that he will pay in lieu of the existing assessment and Local Fund cess, such amount or rate as may be imposed by the license to be granted by the Deputy Commissioner of Salt Revenue in accordance with the general and special orders of Government, and shall also in respect of the land used conform to all the conditions of such license ; and
(m) that whenever the Deputy Commissioner of Salt Revenue declares that the land, or any part thereof, is not used or hae ceased to be used for the manufacture of salt, such land shall forthwith become liable to the survey assessment which was chargeable upon it immediately before it was permitced to be used for the manufacture of salt.
77. 76,
Removal of earth,
Save as provided in section 65 and rule no occupant of land assessed or held for purposes of agriculture only, and no person claiming under or acting by authority of any such occupant, shall excavate or remove earth, stone other than loose surface stones, kankar, sand, muram or any other material of the soil so as, in the opinion of thereof, or make any other use of fche land
etc.
the Collector, thereby to destroy or materially injure the land for cultivation or for purposes of trade or profit, or any other purpose
except his
own domestic
or agricultural purposes.
78. Removal of earth, stone, etc ,from building site prohibited except on certain conditions. No holder of Ian 1 assessed or held as a building site, or lease-holder of a building site in a hill station, and no person claiming under any such holder or lease-holder, shall, subject to any special provision in the conditions annexed to his holding under sec-
tion 6*J, section 67 or otherwise, or prescribed by his lease, excavate or r.emove for any purpose whatever earth, stone other than loose surface stones, kankar, sand, inuram or any other material of the soil thereof, except with the previous permission in writing of the Collector, and in accordance with such terms (including the payment of fees for any such excavation or removal) as the Collector in each case thinks fit to
prescribe. 79. Excavation of unalienated land within site of village, town or (1) No unalienated land city prohibited except for certain purposes. within the site of any city, town or village shall be excavated without the previous written permission of the Collector, for any purpose
CHAPTER XIV.
THE USB
OF
LAND FOR ANY PURPOSE OTHER THAN THAT FOR WHICH IT HiS BBBN A8SBSSBD.
Alteration of assessment in the case of unalienated lands. 80, Alteration of assessment when land assessed or Mdfor agriculWhen unalienated tural purposes is used for non-agricultural purpose*.
If
lajnd Assessed u,ied for apy
{
GOBI:, 1170
o r held for purposes of agriculture only is sabsequsntlypurpose unconnected with agriculture, the assessment upon the land so used shall (except in the cases provided for in rule 5v or 76 and except as otherwise directed by Goverhment) be altered under sub-section (2) of section 48 and such alteration shall be made by the Collector in accordance with the following rules. 81 Ordinary rates of altered assessment. Ordinary rates of altered assessment. (1) For the purpose of determining generally the rate of altered assessment leviable, each Commissioner shall, from time to time, by notification published in the official Gazette, divide the villages, towns and cities in each district in his division (to which a standard rate under Rule 82 has not been extended) into two classes.
.
(2) The assessment shall then be fixed by the Collector at his discretion, subject to the general or special orders of Government at a sum per square yard within the following limits
:
For Class I land 2 pies. For Class II ]and 1 pie. Minimum* The agricultural assessment. In fixing the rate within the above limits due regard shall be had
to the general level of the value of lands in the locality used for nonagricultural purposes. u Provided that the altered assessment of plots "f land not buil upon in Development Department Schemes shall be limited to a maximum rate of Re. 1 per 250 square yards or part thereof.":
fc
Maximum
" The Collector with the (3) previous sanction of the Commissioner which shall only be given for special reasons to be recorded in writing, may levy on any land altered assessment at a rate higher than the maximum fixed under Sub-rule (2) in respect of any village, town or city in which such land is situated, in cases where the land is either situated in an exceptionally favourable position, or where it is used temporarily for a non-agricultural purpose, or where the purpose for which it is used is of a special kind. Such higher rate shall not however exceed 50 per cent, of the estimated annual rental value of the land when put to non- agricultural use in question."
(G R. R D., No. 1390-23 of 29th March 1932.) Special rate* of altered assessment in certain areas* In any area in which, or account of there being a keen demand for building sites or for any other special purpose. Government may, by notification in the official Gazette, direct that this rule shall be applied, the rate of altered assessment shall be determined in accordance with the following provisions and not under rule 81
82.
:
full
The altered assessment shall ordinarily be a percentage on the I. market value of the land as a building site.
II.
In cases where this rule is applied on account of there being a for building sites, the market value of the land shall be estimated as far as possible on the basis of actual sales of unoccupied land for building purposes in the locality. In cases where this rule is applied
demand
for other special purposes, the market value shall be estimated as far as possible, on the basis of actual sales of unoccupied land of whic^ the value is enhanced by the existence of the special demand.
RULES
Government shall determine what percentage shall be chargIII. ed io any locality to which this rule is applied, and the standard rates of altered assessment shall be calculated thereupon and shall be levied in place of the current rate of assessment. At intervals often years or, in particular localities, at such shorter intervals as Government may direct, the rates shall be revised with the sanction of Government. Until the rates are so revised, the old rates shall remain in force. The rates sanctioned from time to time shall be published in the official A public notice shall be given one year before any revised gazette. rate comes into force.
IV. A rate differing from the standard rate of altered assessment any locality shall not be levied without special reasons which shall be recorded provided that the Collector, with the previous sanction of the Commissioner, may levy a higher rate in the case of land situated in an exceptionally favourable position.
in
:
Deleted (Q. R. 1890-28 of 1-2-30). The rates of altered assessment leviable on lands in the Bombay Suburban Division, to which this rule applies, shall however be reduced to such extent as Government may specify by a notification
V.
VI.
82-A. Notwithstanding anything in rules 81 and 8\i in any area which Government may by notification in the official Gazette direct that this rule shall be applied an additional rate of Rs. 2\- for every lakh of bricks manufactured in any one year shall be levied in addition to the annual assussment of Rs. 40 per acre on land used for the Provided that where exact accounts of manumanufacture of brick
to
:
facture are not available, the Collector ehall be at liberty to fix the number according to the known capacity of the kiln, and his [decision shall be final.
Note
This
new
rale
82-A
finally sanctioned in
R. 5812
of 0-11-25 assesses
land not according to its value or area or profits or other consideration recognised in the Oode bnt at an arbitrary "Royalty" no doubt r Highly proportionate to
profit.
It is
considered by R.
ID use)
and
is
1890-28 of 20th Aug. 1520.) etc. In hill stations and such other localities as Government my direct, permission shall not be granted under section 65 except oo such conditions as are considered desirable regarding the style of building, the period for construcSuch tion and the observance of municipal or sanitary regulations. conditions shall be embodied in the Sanad.
83.
(Cancelled by G.
$4.
Grant of permission
in hill stations,
Assessment leviable on compounds ; reduced in certain cases 85. Altered assessment shall ordinarily be levied upon the whole of the land within the compound of a building and not merely upon the land covered with building. 80. Levy of altered assessment when to begin. (a) The altered assessment shall ordinarily be levied from the first day of the revenue year next succeeding the revenue year in which permission to use the land for non-agricultural purposes was given, provided that (1) where the use is temporary the Collector may in his discretion levy it from the first day on which or the commencement of the year in which the non-agricultural use begins*
M
(2)
CODE, 1870
In the case of building sites held by Co-operative Housing which are not built upon, no altered assessment shall be levied for the three years subsequent to the date on which possession of the land was taken or the building permission granted, whichever was And on the expiry of that period, altered assessment shall be later ; levied with effect from the first day of the next revenue year at half the rate current in the locality, unless for special reasons which shall be specified in writing the Collector considers it desirable that the full exemption from altered assessment should be continued fora further period or periods. In all cases, the full altered assessment payable in the locality shall be levied as soon as a plot is built upon." (G. R., R. D., No. 620 28, dated 14-10-32.)
Societies
(4)
altered assessment
levied
for non-agricultural use shall always be levied from the first day of the revenue year in which the use commenced. (Notification G. R. 9113-
24 3rd January 1928). 87. Revision of al'ered assessment. (a) Revision of altered assessment. The peroid for which the altered assessment is to be fixed shall ordinarily be 30 years from the date prescribed in the sanad except in the Bombay Suburban District where, on account of its special condiOn the expiry of this tions the period shall ordinarily be fifty years. or any other period mentioned in the sanad, and at such further intervals as may be from time to time directed by Government in this behalf, the assessment fixed shall be liable to revision in accordance with the Code and the rules and orders for the time being in force thereunder.
non-agricultural purposes is assessed (b) When land used for under the provisions of rules 81 to 85, a sanad shall be granted in the if the land is used for building purposes, in form Nl if the Form land is used temporarily for a non-agricultural purpose other than building and in Form N in all other cases. 88. Commuting altered assessment* In cases where the altered assessment is fixed under rule 87 the assessment, if not exceeding one rupee, instead of being rendered annually, may, with the consent of the Collector, be commuted by the occupant for a lump payment of its present value, for the residual term for which that assessment is fixed, at a rate of interest not more than half per cent, above the market rate at the time of commutation upon public securities the interest on which is lial.le to income-tax; and a note of such payment or commutation shall be made in or at the foot of the sanad granted in respect of the land under Rule 87 (b) on the expiry of the period for which it has been commuted the assessment, whether revised or not, shall again be leviable unless it is again commuted under this rule. Note* The commutation is permissive and is to be restricted to cases where
the annual xeveune is so small as not to be worth annual collection(G. R. 4578-18) Such cases mast be so rare that commutations will practically not be allowed.
89.
permanently maintain in his office and from time to time as required renew a map of his district upon which it shall be clearly shown by distinct colours, or otherwise as may be convenient, under which of
the foregoing rules and classes all the land of the district falls. (2) When an area is very small, or when its limits intersect a village in an intricate way, insects on a larger scale or a supplementary file of village maps shall be provided.
Maps showing
altered assessment.
(1)
Each
Collector shall
(&) Whenever any area is brought undtr a different class or rate by a fresh order, the map shall be corrected and the authority for the change noted over the Collector's signature on the map.
(4) Each Maralatdar shall similarly maintain a map of his taluka with similar supplements which shall be similarly corrected and endorsed by the Collector at each change. (5) These maps shall be open to public inspection free of charge during all office hours, "PO. Levy of rate when land assessed for a purpose other than build(1) When any holding which has been assessed ing is used for building. or is held for non-agricultural purposes other than building, is with
the Collector's permission, used for residential building, the Collector shall levy the rate of assessment imposed on land used for such pur" pose in the locality.
(2) In such cases the holder shall be given a new sunad in the form prescribed from time to time under rule 87 (b). 91. (]) When any holdRe-imposition of agricultural assessment. ing, which has been assessed or of which the assessment has been altered for any non-agricultural use, is used for agriculture only, the Collector may on the application of the holder, remove the non-agricultural assessment and impose either the old agricultural assessment, if any, and if the settlement period has not expired ; or may impose in other cases a new agricultural assessment equivalent to that imposed on other similar agricultural lands in the vicinity.
(2) Such agricultural assessments shall be subject to the same con* ditions as to periodical revision and the same rules and provisions of law as if they had been imposed at the ordinary revenue settlement of the village in which land is situated.
Provided that if the holder has paid any lump sum as commuted assessment for any period, he shall not be entitled to any refund or to any change in the conditions of his lease or agreement until the period for which the commutation has been paid expires.
ALIENATED VILLAGES.
Application of rule* ; certain poivers of Collector to be exercised When laud assessed for purposes of agriculby holder with commission. ture only is subsequently used for any purpose unconnected with agriculture, the assessment upon the land so used shall, unless otherwise directed by Government, be altered under sub-section (2) of section 48 by the Collector in accordance with rules 81 to 87 inclusive
92.
:
Provided that the powers of the Collector under those rules, other than the power of estimating the full market value and fixin^ standard rates of assessment, shall be exercised by the holder or hofders of the alienated village in respect of land specified in a commission conferring the powers of a Collector under section 65 or 66 upon such holder or holders under section 88 (rf).
93.
Fines.
fines leviable
For the purposes of determining the amounts of the under section 66, rules 99 to 102 shall be applied
:
Provided that the powers of the Collector under section 65 or 66 respectively shall be exercised in accordance with the provisions of
S2
THE BOMBAY
LJLKD
rules 99 to 102 by the holder or holders of the alienated village in respect of land specified in a commission conferring the powers of a Collector under section 65 or 66 respectively upon such holder or holders under section 88 (d).
94.
receives
Applications how to be dealt uitk. (\) When the Collector an application under section 65 for permission to use for any
other purpose land assessed for purposes of agriculture only, he shall forthwith forward to the holder or holders of the alienated village in which the land is situated a copy of the application and shall as soon as possible thereafter also forward to such holder or holders a letter showing the altered assessment leviable upon use of the land for such other purpose and requesting such holder or holders to intimate within one month of the date of the letter whether the application should be granted or refused.
('^) If such holder or holders intimate that the application should be granted it shall be granted accordingly ; but if such holder or any of such holders intimate that the appliation should be refused or do not make any intimation within the time specified, the application
shall be refused.
Procedure when information of use for non-agricultural purpose* (1) When the Collector receives information that any inferior holder of land assessed for purposes of agriculture only has rendered himself liable to any of the penalties specified in section 66 the Collector shall address to the holder or holders of the alienated village a letter communicating the information and the liabilities of the holder of the said land and showing the altered assessment or fine or both leviable and requesting the holder or holders of the alienated village to intimate within such time as the Collector considers reasonable whether the liabilities should or should not be enforced.
95.
ie ieceived>
(2) If such holder or holders intimate that the liabilities should be enforced, they shall be enforced accordingly; but if such holder or any of such holders intimate that the liabilities should not be enforced or do not make any intimation within the time specified or within such further time as may specially be granted, they shall not be
enforced.
" that the Collector shall not pass any such orders (3) Provided in respect of land specified in a commission conferring* the powers of a Collector under section 66 upon the holder or holders of the alienated 88 (d) but shall forthwith communicate the invillage under section formation for the orders of such holder or holders of the alienated that any such information may be received village; and also provide and acted upon by such holder or holders of the alienated village
direct."
May
1931)
Communication of orders and levy of assessment. (1) The Collector, or the holder or holders of the alienated village, as the case may be, shall communicate any orders passed by him or them under these rules to the Mamlatdar, who shall communicate such orders to the applicant or holder of the land concerned and shall direct the village officers to levy any altered assessment or fine so ordered.
(2) Such altered assessment or fine shall be levied manner as other land revenue and shall be paid wholly
Of holders of the alienated village when such holder or holders are entitled to the whole land revenue of the village or proportionately to their shares when such holder or holders are entitled to a proportion under only cf the land revenue in accordance with the conditions wiiich they hold the alienated village.
97. Kadim and sheri land exempted.--1$Qi\iito% in rules 92 to 95 shall be deemed to apply to lands which are alienated lands apart from the alienation of the village in which they are situated, nor alienated land in the possession of and occupied in person by the holder or holders of the alienated village.
Tenants-at-will do not deprive the Inamdar of his possession 5 but tenants or occupancy tenants do. The distinction betweea permanent "permanent" and tenants-at-will is often hard to draw, when not de6ned by written leases the "sutidars" of Kurla are admitted (I. L. B. 17 Bom. 475, 29 Bom. 415), but
Note
to be permanent.
" " 98. Meaning of holder of alienated village. For the purposes of rules 92 to 97 the holder or holders of any alienated village shall be taken to mean the actual holder or holders or in cases of doubt the in person or persons whose name or names is or are registered as sucb the register kept under section 53.
PERMISSION FOK NON-AGKICULTUKAL USE AND FINES IN
CASES OF UNAUTHORIZED USE.
99. No fine ordinarily to be imposed under section shall ordinarily be imposed under section 65, that is to say, where land assessed or held for purposes of agriculture is used for any purthe Collector. pose unconnected with agriculture with the permission of
65.
fine
No
100.
Maximum
fine leviable
fine
imposed by
the Collector under section 66 shall be fixed by him at his discretion times the altered assesssubject to rule 101 and shall not exceed ten
this Chapter.
77
May
1931).
Maximum fine leviable for unauthorised use for building^ brick "10 land is making ete. -When the material of the soil of any occupied or for any other non-agriculor tiles or for bricks pottery employed tural purposes, without the permission of the Collector b ing first obtained and the value of the land is thereby adversely affected, a fine may be levied at a rate not exceeding double the rate prescribed in
rule 100."
(G. R., B.
102.
DM
1890-28 of loth
May
1931).
Sacing of special cases dealt with by .Government. to lol, tin Collector may, in standing anything contained in rules 99 ^uch cases as Government deem exceptional or unuaual, impose a fine. whether under section 65 or under section 66, at such rate as may be fixed by Government in that behalf.
Notwith-
Note.
areas
;
No ex'ra high maximum may be generally prescribed lor bat an individual order in each case is necessary (G-. it. 1881-1)7).
certain
Limit offine under section 61. ~~The limit of fine to be levied under section 61, when land is anauthorizedly occupied and use4 for
103.
L.
5*
34
eon: 9tT3 jo femora* 9t[^ ejqnop oq th*t would be leviable under section 63 and rale 100 if the same land being in lawful occupation had been used by the holder for the same purpose without the permission of the Collector
:
fine up to Us. 100 may be levied in any such case 7 irrespective of the area of the land involved.'
May
1931).
CHAPTER XV.
RECOKD OF RIGHTS.
104. The record of rights and mutations, the Index of lands and the register of disputed cases shall be kept in forms 0, P,and Q respectively ; provided that in sites surveyed under section 13 1, these forms may *be modified by tbe Director of Land Records to suit the requirements of cities, the record of rights being termed the "Property RegisAfter the original preparation of the Record, all later entries ter." " mutations. " altering or transferring those rights are termed
Notes.
The method of writing the record has been changed. The 352-28 of 10-4-29.
rales
have
Toe subject of the Record of Rights was first mooted by the Government of India in their letter 2770-369 dated -12-97 and it was intended purely for Settle'
In April 1898 orders to make experiments were received. The ment purposes first draft waa prepared by Sir J. W. P. Muir Mackenzie, and the experiments were carried out in 1899 by Messrs. A. B. Fforde, F. B. Young, H. B. Sathe. The first \ct was passed in 1 903 (IV of 1903) but this was repealed and incorp<roated in tbe L, R. 0. of 1913. The Record has now also become the basis of he accounts of liability to pay land revenue : and also of the audit of alienations
i
of land revenue.
105. (i) When the record of rights is first introduced in any village, as soon as the preparation has begun, the vilage accountant shall cause notice thereof to be given by beat of drum and shall post up a written notice in the chavdi. He shall also write at the head of the record a certificate that such notice was duly given.
(2) Prior to the preparation of the fair copy of the record of rights, the villag e accountant shall prepare a rough copy of the record in the form of an Index of Lands with all rights noted against each parcel. Until the fair copy is prepared, such rough copy shall be used as and be deemed to be the register of mutations, and the provisions of the Code and of these rules which apply to the said register shall apply so far as may be to such rough copy, and the provisions of rule 111 respecting the introduction of the re. written copy of the index shall apply so far as may be to the introduction of this first fair copy of the record.
Note
950-1902),
Tbe
course required
G. B.
BTTLII
85
106. (1) Every mutation shall be posted in the Diary by the village accountant and examined by the Circle Inspector and shall be read out and explained by the latter to all persons present. (2) The Circle Inspector shall initial all entries so examined.
(3) If any person adversely affected admits an entry to be correct the Circle Inspector shall note the admission.
(4) If any interested person disputes the correctness of an entry, the Circle Inspector shall not erase but shall correct any errors admitted by all parties either by bracketing the errors and' inserting the correct entries by interlineation or side note or by an entirely fresh entry in either case authenticated by his signature if the error is not admitted, he shall enter the dispute in the Register of Disputed Cases (form Q), and it shall be disposed of under rule 108. Dispute. The dispute must be between holders a claim against Government maat be decided under sec. 37 and the result recorded it cannot be dealt,
:
Any
by him.
(3) Any entry found to be incorrect shall, if no dispute is brought to his notice, be corrected as in rule 10G (4) and certified by him : such correction shall be a new mutation for the purpose of section
135D(2). (4) Where such officer finds that there is a dispute regarding any entry examined by him, he shall enter the dispute in the register of
Such
disputed oases and the dispute shall
officer shall,
be disposed of under rule 108. wherever possible, himself dispose of the dispute
One appeal only shall lie against any entry certified under (;">) sub-rule (3) or corrected under sub-rule (3) otherwise than by the Collector himself, to the same authority to which an appeal lies in a case decided under rule 108.
Correction.
of the opponent or
possibly be
them
B.
also.
o is appeal against Collector's order. Ohap. XIII, of the L. and revision does not apply to the Records of Bights. Therefore papers cannot be called for or proceedings revised otherwise than as provided in this chapter, that is to say, otherwise than daring inspection and test in the If a party presents an appeal this can be decided by taking evidence, etcl village.
Appeal.
There
0., as to appeals
a party makes a formal appea not already made; as the appellate decision can be posted direct to the Mutation Register (V. F. VII) and will operate as a decision of the dispute. (Andw&an),
or on local enquiry by the Appellate Officer.
When
is needed, if
108. (1) Disputes entered in the register of disputed cases shall ordinarily be disposed of by the Mamlatdar's First Karkun or by the Mamlatdar, but may be disposed of by the District Inspector of Land
THE BOMBAY
Records or by any revenue
AJANB
officer
situate or
shall ordinarily be made in the village in where the interested parties reside.
which
(3) The officer making the enquiry shall record his order disposing of the dispute in the said register, and shall then make such eutry in the Diary of mutations as may be necessary. (4) Such officer sball certify the entry in the diary of mutations to be correct. (5) An appeal against an order under thid rule shall, if the order has been passed by the Mamlatdar's first karkun, the Mamlatdar, the District Idspector or a revenue officer of lower rank than that of a Deputy Collector, lie to the Sub-Divisional Officer or an officer appointed by Government in this:behalf, and if the order has been passed by the Sub-Divisional Officer, the Superintendent of Land Records or by a Revenue Officer of not lower rank than that of a Deputy Collector, to the Coll ctor ; and must be presented within 60 days from the day the appellant first knew it had been made The decision of the appelThere ^hall be no appeal against the late authority shall be final. order of the Collector and no second appeal in any case.
(6) If the appellate order coufirms the previous decision, it should noted in the remarks column, against the confirmed entry. If it alters it, the change shall be entered as a fresh, but not disputable, mutation. 109. Entries in the Diary of mutations shall ordinarily be transferred to the Index of lands as soon as certified. I'O. The index of lands shall be re-written incorporating all mutations recorded up to the date prescribed by the sub divisional officer whenever that officer, in view of the number of entries in the Diary of mutations, shall so direct. 111. (1) When the re-written Index of land is reported to be complete, the Collector or sub-divisional officer shall fix a date for its inspection and shall cause notice thereof to be given calling upon all persons interested to appear on such date at a specified place in or in the immediate vicinity of the village concerned, and notifying that any such person may before such date inspect the Index on application.
\>e
(2) On the date at the place appointed, the Collector or subdivisional officer shall compare the new copy with the old Index and the diary of mutations, cause such portions thereof to be read out as any of the persons present may desire to hear, read and make any correction that may be necessary.
(3) Such officer shall then sign tho new Index and subscribe below it a certificate that the entries therein have been duly tested and found correct. 112. Where a revenue officer or a village accountant issues any summons or notice under section U55E (I) OP G, he shall follow the
provisions of section J90 or 191 as the case maybe. 113. Record of such tenancies as are not perpetual or notified under section 135B (2) shall be kept in form R. The enties therein shall be tested by the Circle Inspector when he examines the crops. and by other officers of higher rank. When any error is discovered by any of these inspecting officers, they may correct it and initial the
RTJLEB
37
corrected entry. The register will be compiled every ten years, but there will be no notification. When any dispute as to such tenancies is found to exist, a note of the fact may be [made in the register, but no entry will be made in the register of disputed cases, nor ;will any revenue officer decide the dispute.
CHAPTER XVI.
RECOVERY
114.
OF
LAND REVENUE.
revenue where and to whom to be paid. All payments of land revenue shall be made to the officers of the village in which such revenue is due provided that, with the sanction of the Collector, such payment may in special cases be made into a Government Treasury within the district to which the payment appertains.
:
Land
Notes.
sec.
For
94A.
When
there
Government dues, see no watandar kulkarni, or when the watandar has comthis power cannot be used. Inamdara mast stamp the
or to the kulkarni for sums exceeding Ks. 20, " sheri " lands. not but receipts given to their tenants on (G. R, 2641-84); be made to the to is ordinarily patel in the presence of Payment
the accountant.
115 Except in Sind, Ratnagiri, Kolaba, Kanara and Thana, Collectors shall, with the sanction of the Commissioner, classify the villages in their districts into the following three classes
:
kharif villages in ghat districts and elsewhere where ifc Class I is necessary that the revenue be secured specially early kliarif villages in Gujarat and elsewhere where no such Class 11 special provision is necessary
:
Class III
11(5. Dates on which agricultural revenue to be paid. (1) The land revenue payable in respect of lands assessed lor purposes of agricultme only shall be paid in equal or nearly equal instalments on the following dates for kharif cultivation the 15th February and the (a) in Sind
:
15th April, and for rabi cultivation the 15th (Notification 6961-24 ,lnly 1927).
(b) in
Mav and
the 15th
June
;
Thana district the 1st January and the 16th February and in villages classed under rule 115 in Class I, on the 5th December and the 5th January Class II, on the 5th January and the 5th March Class III, and the whole of the District of Ratnagiri, Kanara and Kolaba the 5th February and the 5th April (?) Provided that
(c)
;
or in any part of a district where the dates (e) in any district above specified are found unsuitable, the Collector may, with the sanction of the Commissioner, fix such other dates as he may deem expedient according to the circumstances of the season and* of the villages concerned and the character of the crops generlly sown therein;
SI
(ii)
Where
the annual amount of the revenue is five rupees or be payable in a lump sum at the date of the first
(Hi) if the person from whom the year's revenue is due so wishes, he may in any case pay the whole amount at once instead of by instalments. 117. Other land revenue. Land revenue, other than that due upon agricultural land, shall ordinarily be paid in one instalment, at the time of the first instalment of agricultural land revenue or on such other date as the Collector thinks fit in any case to prescribe ; but in special cases the Collector may in his discretion allow the payment to be made in two or more instalments on dates which shall be fixed by him. 118. Form of notice of demand. The notice of demand to be issued uoder section 152 shall be in form S.
119. Duties of village officers. (a) It shall be the duty of the village officers to warn landholders verbally from time to time of the dates on which their instalments are due, and to use their influence in securing prompt payment without resort to notices of demand or other
compulsory processes. (b) Village officers shall report to the Mamlatdar the names of landholders who, they have reason to believe, will not punctually pay their instalments, in order that precautionary measures under sections 140-145 may be, when necessary, adopted in time and shall immediately report any case where the produce of any land on which the assessment has not been paid is attached by a Civil Court. Restriction upon distraint. For restrsctions upon distraints; BOG BW
:
of 1908. There is no form of did train t order 60(1), Civil Procedure Code, (G. B, 9401-83 and 1302-89). Dwelling houses may not ba broken open (G. B. No. 9982 of 1884). It is under consideration whether Civil Courts should he
required to notify the Collector when they attach crops (G. B. No. 9188 Of 1916). Notes. Whenever the consolidated demand is ordered to be half- suspended
or half remitted, the division shall be so made that no fraction less than a whole anna shall be taken in the portion to ba suspended or remitted. Whenever an amount is suspended, the suspension shall always be conditional
upon the payment of the amount which is not suspended. When, for inbut any revenue-payer defaults in respect of
any remaining nnsnspended revenue the suspension shall be cancelled so that the suspended amount also becomes due for the current year.
CHAPTER
XVII.
ing
tttritti
**
in the Code for the having resort to any of the other means provided or give it out (as the land of restore, of arrear an revenue, recovery case may be) accordingly, and shall take an agreement in form T. Notes. Land cannot be forfeited for arrears of Lo^al Fond Oess (G, B. No,
on tha day of sale (G. Jtt. mast always be given (G. R. 3009-80) and sent to the Sub-Registrar (sec. 89 (4), Act XVI of 1908). The form is disusa. ed in G. B. 6023 83-, and it must be tampd (Art. 16, Sch. I, Stamp Act), and the
Sale expenses are levied even
if
A certificate of sale
B. 2600-83). purchaser must execute a kabnlayat (G. Where Bule 120 is not applied, resort should not be had to forfeiture of land unless it appears to the Collector that the arrear cannot be readily recovered by of the other means provided in Chapter XI of the Code.
any
Where the land in respect of which an 121. Partial forfeiture. arrear is due consists of two or more survey numbers or of two or more sub-divisions of survey numbers or of two or more estates separately the whole amount of such assessed, and the Collector is of opinion that arrear could be realized by the sale of less than all of such survey numbers, portion or estates, he shall restrict forfeiture to such one or more survey numbers or the sub-divisions as prove sufficient to realise the arrears. 122. Deleted, as it merely repeated sec. Ill B (').
cases.
Disposal offorfeited land otherwise than by sale in certain Forfeited land shall not be put up for gale in the fpllwing cases, but shall be disposed of in the manner hereinafter prescribed for the particular case under which it falls, namely thinks that, owiog to general agricultural (a) Where the Collector for such land, or to a combination demand of the want or to depression of the neighbouring land-holders, or for any other special cause, there that the highest amount bid will be no bidders at the sale, or will be considerably below the reasonable value, he shall cause the land to be entered in the land records as unoccupied. that the land is likely to be required (4) Where the Collector finds either immediately or within a reasonable time, for any of the purin section 38, he shall take steps at once to assign it poses described for such purpose. a forfeited alienated holding, where the Collec(<?) In the case of the land to continue in the tor considers it expedient to allow as an occupant of unalienated or holder actual its of tenant, possession land, annulling the alienation, he shall pass orders accordingly for its continuance. forfeited on account of an (d) In the case of an inferior holding arrear of rent or land revenue due to a superior holder, for the recovery oi which assistance is being rendered under sections 86 and 87, the Collector may in his discretion transfer the holding to the superior holder thereof, subject to such tenures, rights, incumbrances or equities (if any) as he may direct under section 56. where the Collector considers it is expedienl (e) In any other case, that the disposal of a forfeited holding should be otherwise than ty of Government thereto, he shall dispose rfale, and obtains the sanction of it in accordance with the particular orders for its disposal
123.
:
passe(
or sanctioned by Government.
49
CODE, 1879
even
if
may
be bankrupt. 124. Forfeited land to be sold for recovery of arrears in other cases. In cases not under rule IfcO, 121, 122 or 123, forfeited land shall, falling subject to the provisions of rule 126, be put up for sale for recovery of the arrears due.
125. Mules and orders to mles of forfeited land. (1) applieaHe sule of forfeited land shall be made subject to the same rules as are applicable to the sale of unoccupied unalienated land so far as the same are consistent with the provisions of Chapter
Every
XL
(a) the
(b) there has been collusion to recover the holding without payment in full of the arrears and charges due to Government or the superior holder; or
(c) there has been some material irregularity or mistake or fraud, in publishing or conducting such sale, which is likely to have aflfected the amount of the highest bid or otherwise to have caused substantial injury to any person.
Notes. The purchaser of forfeited laud, like purchasers of unoccupied Iand 7 passes an agreement in Form F or (with or without Form I) or if in Hill Stations, or certain Municipal areas, or for certain kinds of leasehold land then 0. E,
0-F, 0-G,
0-H
or O-I as
to
may
be applicable.
(
No
permission
occupy
Form
form
K
is
is
needed since
sec.
181
requires the
Collector to put
him
:
in possession;
but a
sale-certificate
should
be issued on
im-
provided (Anderson). 126. Restoration of forfeited land. (1) It shall be the discretion of the Collector to restore any forfeited land at any time previous to any sale or other disposal under these rules on payment of the arrear
so printed
in respect of
which the forfeiture was incurred together with all costs and charges lawfully due by the defaulter, or on security being given to his satisfaction for the payment of the said arrear, costs and charge
within a reasonable period: Provided that no forfeited alienated holding, which is not held for service, shall be restored as alienated land without the previous
sanction of
(a)
(4)
The Commissioner if it is assessed at more than Rs. 20; Government if it is assessed at more than Rs. 5u. (2) Where in the case of a forfeited alienated land held
watandar the Collector
is satisfied
for ser-
that the failure to pay the land revenue due thereupon arose solely from the inability of the defaulter to meet the demand, he may deduct from the forfeited land a portion of which the price would be likely to equal the amount of the arrear recoverable, and deal with such portion in accordance with such of rules 122 to 1^5 as are applicable, and restore the remainder of the forfeited land to the defaulter, or may restore the entire forfeited land to the defaulter, and either remit the arrear of land revenue due, or m*ke such arrangements for its being paid in the future as
vice by a
he thinks
fit.
fttftSB
&
CHAPTER
1<J7.
XVIII.
BALKS.
Auction sales under rule 42 uhere to be held. Auctions held in (1), 41, 42 and 50 (2) shall ordinarily be conducted the town or village in which the land is situated.
under rules 37
Note. It is of course desirable that most other auctions should similarly be conducted near the property to be sold. Sometimes, however, for some contracts and farms there is better bidding at the taluk* head-quarters than at a distant
village.
128. Upset price may be fixed. Where any land or other property sold by public auction, an upset price shall, if the. Collector thinks fit, be placed thereon.
is
129. Sales how to be conducted. -(1) Every eale by auction, under these rules, or in pursuance of any of the provisions of the Code, shall be conducted, so far as may be, in accordance with sections ib5 f The proclamation and written 166, 170 to 177 both inclusive and 180. notice of sale required to be issued under sections lOo and 166 shall be in one of the forms U or W, with such modifications, if any, as may be
necessary
(2)
Provided that, in conducting thefollwing sales, namely the right to take or cut (a) sales of the right of grazing and of grass in waste lands, the fruit of specified Government trees (*) sales of the right to take
:
sales of
and dead-wood,
the procedure shall be in accordance with such orders as may from time to time be made by the Collector either generally or in a partir cular case instead of the procedure prescribed in sections 16f> and 166.
Notes.
Wfcen a bidder at an auction defaults in fulfilling his contract, he if any are provable (Gr. K. 3*3-12), in add ition to any
other forfeitures provided by the Code. After forfeiture there could be no other claim to which the footnotes in
Form
U could
apply.
CHAPTER
XIX.
APPEALS.
Form and contents.* (1) Every appeal shall be made io the 130. form of a petition addressed to the authority to whom an appeal lies, and shall be drawn up in concise, intelligible and respectful language; and shall bear the signature or mark of the appellant or of his duly
authorized agent.
The petition should give the following particulars the name, father's name, occupation and place of residence or
:
(2)
address of the appellant the name and address of the writer of the petition. contain a brief and unexaggerated (3) The petition should also statement of the facts on which the appellant reliea in support of MB
;
L..R. 6.
&
Notes
THE BOKfcAY
AJAKfr
&X1&HUK OODE, If 79
to
appeal and the grounds of the appellant's objection decision appealed against.
(See rale 108, etc).
the order or
Bights
officers
Applications for compassionate allowances are treated as -appeals" (G. R, No. 4907-08).
131.
Presentation.
authority to
whom
(!) Appeals may either be presented to the an appeal lies in person or be forwarded to him
by
post.
(2)
Where an appeal
it
containing
mast invariably be
Note.
In dealing wit to
sent by post, fche postage on the cover fully prepaid. Oiyil Court dark basts, the Collector is not subject
is
to appeals to or revision
by the Commissioner, but only by the Court. The Coladarkhast sale, but can only confirm or refuse to confirm it.
.
tion in
1 ua tt en Rejection of appeals without enquiry into their merits the to of 130 rule or 131 will material requirements respect any render an appeal liable to be rejected without enquiry into its merits.
CHAPTER XX.
PENALTIES.
Breaches of the rules how punishable. Breaches of rules hereunder mentioned shall be punishable on conviction before a Magistrate as follows (I) Whoever commits a breach of rules 67, 68, 69, 70 or 78, by excavating or removing earth, stone, kankar, sand, mnram or any other material of the soil without due authority with imprisonment which may extend to one month, or with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees,
133.
: :
commits a breach of rules 75, 76, 77 (5J) Whoever or excavating land in a prohibited manner, or for a
pose, without the due authority with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees. (3) Breach of any of rules 67, 70, 72 (4), 119 (a), 135 committed by a village officer or city surveyor
:
or
79, by using
prohibited
pur-
(a) by taking or levying any fees for preparing any document or copy or extract of any document which he is bound by any such rule to prepare without charge, or (6) by charging any fee (i) for granting any permission or inspection which he is authorized by any such rule to grant, or (w) for making any search for records, for which no fee can lawfully be charged, (c) by refusing without reasonable cause an inspection of land records which he is required by any such rule to permit with imprisonment which may extend to one month, or
:
with
fine
five
prescribed by
any such
role, or
(e) by neglecting to make any report or to perform any duty which he is required by any such rule to make or to perform with fine which may extend to five hundred rupees.
:
Notes.-'Magistrate' means
JR.
8103-83; H.
sec,
0. Baling
the
under
187
(not by
OH AFTER XXI.
CERTAIN" DOCUMENTS TO BK PREPARED FREE OF CHARGS.
134. Villa ye accountants to prepare certain documents without charge desired. (1) It shall be the duty of every village accountant, if so requested by any occupant, or by any person about to become an occupant, of land in his village, to prepare any agreement that may be necessary under either rules 37, 43, 46 or i^O without fee or charge of any kind, and any notice of relinquishment under section 74.
when so
(2) A village accountant who prepares any such agreement or " on the notice shall affix his signature beneath the words "written by lower left-hand corner of such agreement or notice.
135.
Provided that no fee shall be charged for inspection ( with the permission of the Officer in charge ) of the Enquiry Proceedings or register or Property Register of a City Survey by a Municipal Official 13-12-^7 ). for municipal purposes ( Notification R. 5^28/24 Provided further that no fee shall be charged for the inspection of village records by an officer or a member of any Co-operative Society for the business of the Society ( Notification 248/28-3-10-28. ) Notes These rales do not apply to Bombay City ( see rules in R. 2374*14 under sec, 40, Bombay City Land Revenue Act of 1876 ) or to Oi?il or Criminal
Courts ( see High Court Circulars ). For copies from the records of the Registrar of Co-operative Societies, see B. 3047-14. For Hegiat ration Department Records,
see Notification
B. 7368-81.
referred to in sec.
see.
The documents
Persons suing
all
8 (56).
free copies (G,
44
OODK, 1879
Uncertified copies. -(I) No uncertified copy or extract shall be obtainable of or from any documents other than those prescribed in rule 135, nor otherwise than under this rule.
136.
lic
(2) Any person may himself or by an agent make a copy of any pubdocument or of any portion of any public document of which he has duly obtained inspection, but no copy so made Khali be certified by any public officer.
Notes. Local Boards should be supplied free of charge with copies of, or information from, public documents provided that copies from preliminary survey records shall only be given with the sanction of the Collector.
The form
137.
(1)
of ibis certificate
is
Village accountants
So long as the originals are in their charge, all village accountants, and in the cities surveyed under section 131 all City Surveyors. shall themselves receive and grant applications for certified copies of any serial number (entry) in the record of rights, register of mutations
(Property Register) or of tenancies, or of a sub- ai vision thereof.
(2)
map
of a survey
number
or
trict or
The Collector may, in his discretion in respect of his whole disany part thereof, "also empower village accountants to receive
certified copies
of village forms Nos. (new) Nos. I, III, VII XII combined, VI1I-A and B, IX, XI, XII, XIV and XV, and of orders for
and
Such copies shall after comparison with the original bo certithe accountant as true, and giveo to the applicants direct within ten days from their application.
(3)
fied
by
XfOte
Records.
The
period
is
A, B. 0. D.
lists
of
Mamlatdars generally to grant certfiied copies of village paper& Except as provided in rule 137 every application for a certified copy of any public document in the charge of a village accountant shall be made to the Mamlatdar to whom he is subordinate, who shall cause the copy to be prepared, compared with the original, and signed in token of correctness by the village accountant. The copy shall then be certified and made over to the applicant by the Mamlatdar.
138.
139.
Officer in charge of document generally to grant edified copy. other cases the officer in charge of any public document described in rule 135 shall, and in the case of any public document or portion thereof other than those described in rule 135 may, cause to be prepared and give certified copies of the same or of any portion thereof under his own signature to any person applying for such copy on payment of the fees hereinafter prescribed
In
all
Provided that (a) no copy shall be granted of any record, map or plan which has been printed or lithographed and published under the authority of Government and is on sale; but small extracts of not more than five fields or plots may be granted under rule 142 (6); (4) that no copy of auy document is to he given in any case in
45
Notes. (i) Petitions of parties would not be documents maintained under the provisions of or for the purposes of the Act (sec 3 (#)), nor are they records of the proceedings of any public officer, and therefore fall entirely into the optional class.
(it) When an original document is filed in a case nnder the Code, including cash allowance cases and general revenue matters ( R. 2071-8 ) concerning private pa i ties only, and the parties then apply for its return, a certified copy should be retained on the record, unless (G. B. 4492-08} the period of appeal or revision has
Mamlatdars' Courts
( J.
3394-81
and
Proceedings (G. B. 148-86}. No court -fee is leviable on such applications (B. G. G., Part I , P. 3t8 of 1887). The originals of Government Records should therefore always he brought back (Anderson).
Watan
tract granted
endorsed on copy. On every certified copy or exthese rules and delivered otherwise than through the agency of the value payable post there shall be endorsed by the officer who receives the fee for the same a receipt in the following form:140.
Receipt
to be
under
Received Rs.
a.
Dated
of
19
(Signed) A. B.
///.
Searches.
141. Search fees when to be charged. When an application is for an inspection or copy of any public document or of any portion of a public document and such application does not distinctly
made
describe the number, date and nature of the document required ; or if the description given in such application is incorrect, and it shall in consequence be necessary for the officer in charge of the document to search his records in order to find it, a fee, at the rate hereinafter prescribed, shall be payable by the applicant for such search whether the inspection or copy for which he applies, on examination of the said document by the said officer, be granted or not.
rv.Fees.
142.
Fee*.
The following
under these
rules
(1) For an inspection granted under Rule 135 for each day on which inspection is made.
Twelve annas an hour for each applicant subject to a minimum to of Rs. be paid in 1-8-0, advance.
For every certified copy of a (JJ) public document not falling under Articles 3, 4 and ft of this table
(a) if (he original be in English, words or fraction of rjft for even
'<?.*>
Nine
pies,
words
Nine
pies,
4*
(c) (i) tot
OODB, 1879
Nine
pies,
paring 100 words or fraction of 100 words, whether the original be in English or the vernacular
:
(ii)
etc.,
for comparing copies of maps under Articles (5), (6) and (7)
One-fourth
will
be
Twice
named
Three
rates
the rates, respectively, in clauses (a) and (6). the fees at the prescribed for the additions made on
the copy be given on a printed form, for every sheet or page of forms used
(e) if
:
piesjt?/u
herein
manuscript
the form.
Two
annas,
(g)
When
no printed form
is
sup-
Six pies,
plied or available, for each sheet of foolscap paper used in preparing the copy other than that of a map or plan under Articles (5), (6)
and
(7)
(3)
For every
certified
extract
133, a sum equal to one-half of the survey fee which the holder of the building bite included in tha sanad would be liable to pay under section 132 if not exempted by the second paragraph of that section. Povided that the fee shall in no case exceed Us. 10 or be less than 8 annas.
(4) For every certified copy of a serial number (or entry) in the
One anna,
and
(4- A) (i) For every certified copy of the tabular annewari statement of a village with the annewari ... decision worked oat therein
Five annas.
decision of the Collector or Mamlatdar not embodying such a form, or of the opinion of the village committee as to the anna valuation
(5) copy of a map of a survey number or* subdivision of a survey number or of any (uncoloured)map of any immovable property prepared under clause (a) of section 135 G,
certified
copy of the
For every
certified
Two Two
annas.
annas,
or of
an entry
;
in a
City Property
Register
(6) Subject to proviso (a) to rule 139 for every other certified copy of a map of a survey number or of a subdivision or of a field or of any ordinary, (uncoloured) map or plan of any immovable property, or extract of City Survey map, for each field or plot
:
Eight annas.
Such fee not exceeding fifteen certified copy of a of a or of or rupees, and not less than one any portion map plan map or plan not falling under rupee, as the officer who certifies the copy shall determine provided Article (5) or (6) of this table that no fee exceeding Rs. 5 shall be charged by any officer subordinate to a Collector except with the permission of the Collector, or by an Officer of the Land Records Department except with the permission of the Superintendent of Land Records, to whom he is subordinate.
(7)
For every
(8)
One rupee for each year of which the records are searched.
(9) For every authenticated translation of orders, and the reasons therefor, and of exhibits in formal or summary inquiries under the Code .-(a) for the 100 words
:
first
100 or fraction of
or
Eight annas.
Four annas,
Provided that
(a) when any fee is required to be recovered through the agency of the value payable post, postage and postal commission shall be levied
in addition, and when the total amount of fee together with: postage and commission includes a fraction of an anna a whole anna shall be levied in place of the fraction
:
() any revenue officer shall be entitled to receive free o f any charge a certified copy of the final order recorded in his own case under section 33. Notes. The copies or certified extracts from the Record of Rights required
to be produced in
I.
Notfn. F.
&
0.
G.
oi
copies produced
exemption does not extend tc 86, which are not Oivil Suits ( B.
may keep three-fourths of the fee, if the work is done out oi hours (G. B. 3101-83). The V. P. commission and postage may be paid by affixing service stamps ii they are recovered, but it is more convenient to use ordinary stamps. 142. (4). While recovering copying and comparing fees, any amount less than six pies shall be remitted, and six pies or more" shall be rounded to the extent of whole anna.
Office
6507-18). Translators
143. Fees how to be paid. Every fee payable in accordance with the foregoing table shall either be paid in advance or recovered in pursuance of a specific request through the agency of the value payable
post.
Fees held in deposit mast be keptf in a separate box under seal of the in the Treasury if there is one or in the Presidency Town, in a secure place provided with a Police Guard: or, in Sind, in charge of a Muashi who bas given security ( G, 4305 08 ).
Note.
Heeord
Karkum
V.
Miscellaneous.
144. Applications how to be made.T&vwy application under rules 135 to 143 must be made in writing, and except in the case of an ap-
made to a village accountant, must be duly stamped. The application may contain a request that the copy, extract, or translation be forwarded by value payable post (unregistered book packet ) to any post Office which is also a Money Order Office. 145. Stamp duty or court-fee payable in addition. Nothing in these rules affects the provisions of the Stamp Act (II of 1899) or Court Fees Act (VII of 1S7U). The stamp duty or court-fee with which an application, copy or extract made or furnished under these rules may be chargeable is in addition to the fees prescribed herein and care is to be taten that the requirements of the Stamp Act and Court Fees Act are properly fulfilled in respect of every such application, copy or
plication for inspection
extract.
Applications for the return of documents (or of certified copies) are stamps (B. O. G. 1-368-1887). But if the period of appeal is not expired, copies may be retained at applicant's expense (G. H. 4492-98).
Note.
free of 0. F-
FORM A ( Rule 17 ). NOTIFICATION OF SETTLEMENT IOR THE BOMBAY PRBSIDBNOY EXCLUDING SIND. Notice under sections 102 and 103, Land Revenue Code, 1879 ) For Revised Settlements. when tile basis of oJassifica(if or original settlements and reviled settlements tee not* below. )
Whereas the Governor of Bombay in Council has been pleased to sanction, under section 102 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, the levy of assessments for the revised Settlement, which have been fixed under the provisions of sections 100 and 101 of the said Code in the case of such lands as are now actually used for the purposes of agriculture alone and in the case of unoccupied cultivable lands ( but excepting lands classed as/wrt kharab ) within the village of of the taluka it is hereby declared under section 102 of the said Code that the said assessments calculated as noted below shall henceforth be leviable in accordance therewith and shall be fixedfor a term qf to years from
Class of land.
annas
Dry-crop
pies
Rice, etc. Notice of the same is hereby given under section 102 of the said Code to all holders of land in respect of which the assessments have been sanctioned [ approved ].
2. 3. By this notice the Revised Settlement shall be deemed to have been introduced in the aforesaid village. 4. But in the case of land which may hereafter be brought under irrigation by the use of water the right to which vests in Government or which is supplied from works constructed and maintained by, or at the instance of, Government, or in the case of land which may be supplied with an increased amount of water from works constructed, repair-
ed or improved at the cost of the State, Government reserve the right of imposing an extra cess or rate, or of increasing any existing rate, for the use of water supplied or increased by such means, whether, under the provisions of the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879, or otherwise.
rate as
In addition to the fixed assessment, a cess not exceeding such be allowed by law will be levied under the Bombay Local Fund Act, 1869, or other law for the time being in force, for the purpose of providing funds for expenditure on objects of local public
5.
may
and improvement. The reservations respecting the right of Government to trees as made by any general notification at the time of, or after the SurveySettlement and reproduced in the margin, or as
utility
6*.
Not*
1.
In cases of
express order at the time of Survey Settlement and recorded in the Settlement Records, are hereby continued. All other rights over trees are conceded to occupants* original settlements the following changes sboold be made
3 of paragraph
1
made by any
in the above
form
and
(2) After the word "assessments" in line 7 of paragraph 1 add "as shown in the accompanying Akirband" and omit "as noted below." of existing (3) For the words "Approximate increase or decrease in the rupee asseesments" in paragraph 1 substitute "Maximum Bates.
Rs.
as.
"
(4) Substitute the following for paragraph 6: The right of Government to trees standing in lands which are "6. oecnpied is hereby conceded to the occupants thereof subject to tto wiwraJ
now
OODB, 1879
inscribed in the
exceptions
Settlement
Beeords."
M>&
_ in Ca8ei of wised
is
nude
in the above
form
(1) Afar the word "assessments" in line 7 of paragraph 1 add "as shown in the accompanying Akarband" and omit "calculated as noted below." (2) For th words "approximate increase or decrease in the o!
rupee
existing
assessment" in paragraph 1
Note 3.
tubstitut*
"Maximum
Bates.
finally
"FORM AA (Rule 17). NOTIFICATION OF SETTLEMENT FOR SIND. (Notice under sections 102 and 10$ of the Bombay Land Revenue
Code, 181%).
For Revised Settlements. Whereas the Governor in Council has been pleased to sanction, under section 102 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, the levy of assessments for the revised settlement in the case of such lands as are bow actually used for the purpose of agriculture alone and in the case of unoccupied cultivable lands within the in the village of
.
Talukaofthe
District.
Now,
it
hereby declared under section 102 of the said Code that the said assessments as noted below shall hereafter be leviable in accordance therewith and shall be fixed for a term of years and ending with the commencing with the revenue year revenue year.
is
Combined
Flow
Lift.
Flow
and Lift
Bs. Bice
a.
Bs.
a.
Bs.a.
Adhawa
Bftrani
Odftmtion on
Ritas
2.
51
said
Notice of the same is hereby given under section 102 of the to all holders of land in respect of which the assessments, have been sanctioned. 3. By this notice the revised settlement shall be deemed to have been introduced in the aforesaid village. " (G. B., B, D., No. 557-B. dated 5-7-32)
Code
A FOBM
To
A. B. Whereas
FOBM B [Bale 29 (1)]. OF NOTICK UNDER SECTION 37 (2), AHD SUMMONS SECTIONS 189-190.
is
(here describe the property or right in or over any property) claimed by Government (or by 0. D. against Government) notice is hereby given that an enquiry will be held by me in order to decide the
said claim.
You are hereby required to attend before me either in person or by a duly authorized agent at o'clock of the noon (at in the the site in dispute or) at my office (camp at 19 at which taluka) on the day of time and place an enquiry into the same claim will be made*
And you
heard.
are hereby required to produce before me at the aboveor evidence you may wish to be
If you fail to attend in person or by a duly authorized agent in pursuance of this notice the abovementioned claim will be decided in your absence and you will not afterwards be entitled to be heard with io an appeal filed within 60 days or in a suit respect thereto, except civil if filed within one year from the date of my decision.
Dated this
day of
19
(Signed)
Designation of
Officer.
FOBM
Whereas
rule 29 (1) of the
C [Bule
29
(2).
and served under Land Bevenue Bules an enquiry was held by me on and an order
was passed on
Notice is hereby given to all persons concerned and to (here specify decision and order is tke person to whom this notice is directed) that that : (here summarise tke order and define the property or right to which it relates)* You are not entitled to be heard by me in respect thereof. After my decision has been communicated to you, there remain only two
my
ways by which yon can get it altered if you are dissatisfied with it, namely to (i) You must within 60 dayi of the date of my decision appeal (specify the proper appellate authority), and again to the next 'higher
:
revenue authority, or
(tt) within one year from the date of my decision you (without recourse to the appeals above detailed) and notwithstanding anything contained in section 11 of the Bombay Revenue Jurisdiction Act, 1876, file a suit in the proper Civil Court
my
A suit filed more than a year from the date of my decision or from the date of the decision of the last of the appeals if you make them cannot be entertained by any Court.
Dated this
day of
(Signed)
19
Survey
Officer,
or
Collector.
FORM D ( Rule
32
).
To
A.B.
Whereas Government have been pleased to grant revenue-free to you, A. B., the possession of the below-mentioned piece of land situated in the village of for the purpose of
in the
taluka
(namely)
All that piece of land bounded on the North by on the East by on the South oy and on the West by and measuring and from East from North to South
,
, , ,
comprising
less,
same more or
is
ot
rerm
hereby declared that the said land shall be continued ree ^ a ^ claim on the part of Government for rent
yeara^
,
or land revenue to whoever shall from time to time be the lawful holder or manager of the said [ (a) on the condition that neither the said land nor any building erected thereupon shall at any time, without the express consent of Government, be diverted either temporarily or permanently to any other than the aforesaid purpose, and that no change or modification shall be made of such purpose, and that in the invent of any such unauthorized diversion, change or modification being made, the said land shall thereupon, in addition to the assessment to which it becomes liable under section 48 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, become liable to such fine as may be fixed in this behalf by the Collector under the provisions of section 66 of the laid Coda, or other corresponding law for the time being in force relating to the recover; of land revenue, as if the land, having been assedfe04 .for purposes of agriculture only, had been unauthomediy used for
*ny purpose unconnected with agriculture (a) ] and in any such event s aforesaid, or in the event of the land being notified by Govern-
BULBS
IS
ment for acquisition under Act I of 1894, it shall be lawful for Government, on causing six months' previous notice in writing to be given to the said holder or manager, to take one of the two following
courses (namely), either (1) to require that the said land be vacated and delivered up to .Government free of all claims or incnmbrances of any person whatsoever, or (2) to resume and take possession of the said land and any buildings erected or works executed thereon, free of all claims and incumbrances of any person whatsoever, on payment of compensation not exceeding the following amount, namely:
amount (if any) paid to Government for this grant, and the cost or value at the time of resumption, whichever is the less, of any buildings or other works authorizedly erected or execnt* ed on the said land by the said grantee.
(a) the
(4)
This grant is made subject to the reservation of the right of the Secretary of State for India in Council to all mines and mineral products and of full liberty of access for the purpose of working and searching for the same, with all reasonable conveniences.
This sanad is executed on behalf of the Secretary of State for India in Council by order of His Excellency the Governor of Bombay
in Council, by the Collector of 19
this
day of
(Signed)
Collector.
**If there be any farther conditions, add here the words " and subject to the " following farther special conditions, namely: The Commissioners suggest a farther condition: " that an open space shall be kept free from any building whatever, as mark* " ed on the plan hereto appended as land not to be built upon.
'
FORM E
(
is
To
A.B.
Whereas, in consideration of your having built ( or undertaken to on the build, as the case may be )* which is your property, Governpiece of land hereinafter described, ment have been pleased, at your request, to exempt the said piece of land from liability to rent or land revenue.
It is
* Yer * term
of
years
The nature
of tte building and the extent ot the poJWic interest in it should be a tempi* with a Dbarmaihala attached, to? the
II
revenue to whoever shall from time to time be the lawful holder or manager of tfce said (a)" as in Form D.J [Insert "(a) [If there be any further special conditions, here add "and subject to the following further special conditions, namely": ] The piece of land herein referred to is situated in the village of
, . .
.
:
in the
taluka,
,
and
is
on the East by
,
and
comprises about
area, be the
square
or less,
in superficial in the
This sanad is executed on behalf of the Secretary of State for India in Council by order of His Excellency the Governor of Bombay in this Council, by the Collector of , day of
19
(Signed)
Collector.
FORM F
To the Mamlatdar of I, A. B., inhabitant of
The said land has been granted to me subject to the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, and of rules in force thereunder, in perpetuityt, from the day of 19 to pay the land revenue from time to time ; J and I undertake lawfully due in respect of the said land (or I undertake, whenever Government shall see fit to discontinue the exemption of the said land from payment of land revenue, to pay such revenue as may be lawfully
imposed
* This
agreement is (so far a? it is application) exempt from Oonrt fee; item of Notification of the Govt. of India, 4650, 10.9.89. It ;isalo exempt from
0-24
A-9
of Notification of the
fWhen
day of
*
19
^When land is gold for a fixed period free of land revenue the agreement should end here, and the second endorsement may be omitted,
itotfci
**
of otherwise as the
at
Government
19
case
may
be).
day of
(Signed) A. B.
We declare that A. B.> who has signed this agreement, is to our personal knowledge the person he represents himself to be, and that he has affixed his signature hereto in our presence.
(Signed) C. D.
JE.F.
declare that to the best of our knowledge and from the best information we have been able, after careful inquiry, to obtain the person who has passed this agreement is a fit person to be accepted by Government as responsible for the punctual payment of the land revenue from time to time due on the above land
We
/. J.,
"FORM
F-l Rule 37
(4)
To the Mamlatdar of
in the I, A. B., inhabitant of taluka, hereby accept the right of occupation of the land comprised in in the village of in survey No. the taluka and I pray that my name be entered in the Government records as the occupant of the said land.
of
said land has been granted to me in perpetuity from the day 19 subject to (1) the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, and of the rules in force thereunder and to (2) the further condition that I, my heirs, assigns and legal representatives shall not at any time by partition, inheritance, lease, mortgage or otherwise howsoever transfer the said land except as a whole or allow any portion of it to be cultivated, used, or occupied by any other person so as to divide it.
The
If I fail to perform any of the aforesaid conditions I shall be liable without prejudice to any other penalties that I may incur under the said Code, and the rules made thereunder, to have the said land summarily forfeited by the Collector, aod I shall not be entitled to claim compensation for anything done or executed by me in respect of the
said land.
*And I undertake to pay the land revenue from time to time lawfully due in respect of the said laud (or I undertake, whenever Government shall see fit to discontinue the exemption of the said land from
* When land is sold for a fixed period free of land revenue the agreement should end here, and the second endorsement may be omitted. (G. R. 4702-f4-IU of 12.3-1981).
In Bind the Collector b empowered to allow division of survey number Vie* of any special circumstances, he considers it necessary to do so, (G. R. 4703-24 III of 8-8-198*).
if in
5I
CODE, 1879
payment of land revenue to pay such revenue a$ may be lawfully impos* ed thereon under the orders of Government or otherwise, as the ease
may
be).
day of
19
(Signed) A. B.
declare that A. B. who has signed this agreement is to our personal knowledge the person he represents himself to be, and that he nfte affixed his signature hereto in our presence.
We
(Signed) C. D,
(
)E.F.
declare that, to the best of our knowledge and from the best information which we have been able after careful enquiry to obtain, the person who has passed this agreement is a fit person to be accepted by Government as responsible for the punctual payment of the land *r* M r. A from time to time on the above land.
We
(Signed) G. H.
Patel. I.J.,
Village Accountant.
"
FORM
1151411)
Form of lease
granted
to
special terms.
This is to certify that, with the previous sanction of the Commisof has been sioner (in Sind, or as the case may be), granted the right of occupation of survey No. in the in the village oftaluka for a term of 19 years from the day of subject to the payment of land revenue as follows (viz.}:
,
years, A D. 19 years, A. D. 19
to
to
19
nil;
19
a reduced assess-
for the grant of the said land on the favourable terms that the lessee has undertaken, at his own expense, within from the -a period of day of 19 , to carry out to the satisfaction of the following work, whereby the cultivation of the said survey No. will be improved (or rendered feasible or otherwise as the case may be), viz.:
aforesaid
Here
work
to be
executed )
The conditions on which this lease is granted are: (1) That the lessee shall completely execute the work aforesaid
the satisfaction of the said
to
mentioned;
(2) that
$nd repairs
he shall keep the said work to the sati efacti^ji of the said
when executed
of this lease?
&ULX0
67
(3) It shall notf be lawful to the lessee to partition, bequeath, alienate, asign, mortgage or otherwise charge or encumber any portion of the said land less than the area hereby fixed by the Collector as the economic holding, nor shall any such portion of the said land be liable to seizure, requestration, attachment, sale or partition by process of a Court:
(4) that if the lessee shall fail th perform any of the aforesaid conditions he shall be liable, notwithstanding anything hereinbefore written, to pay the full assessment of the land comprised in this lease which such , for the year or years during amounting to Rs. failure shall take place and it shall be open to the Collector either to cancel the remaining portion of the lease and re-enter upon the land, or to levy full assessment from the lessee for every subsequent year of the term of this lease;
(5) that provided the lease shall not have previously determined under the last preceding condition, the lessee shall be entitled, on the expiry of this lease, to retain th occupation of the land herein comprised, subject to the payment of the full assessment from time to time fixed thereupon under the law and rules in force in this behalf, on his executing an agreement in the form prescribed for persons who intend
to
become occupants.
This lease is executed on behalf of the Secretary of State for India in Council, by order of Government of Bombay in Council, by the Collector of and under hie seal of office, this day of
19
(Signed)
Collector.
the aforesaid lessee do hereby accept this and conditions therein mentioned*
Signed by
lessee.
Note,
Form G-I
is
FORM
G-2 (Rule
40).
RECLAMATION LEASE.
THIS INDENTURE made the 19 BETWEEN THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR day of INDIA IN COUNCIL ( hereinafter called the Lessor ) of the one part and inhabitant of hereinafter called the lessee of the other part WITNBSBETH that the Lessor doth hereby lease unto the Lessee all the
Marsh Lands situated in the village of in the and in the Registration Sub-district of talnka the Survey Numbers, Area and Boundaries of which are set forth in Schedule A hereunder written which said Lands were late in the occupation of and are now in the occupation of
Salt
THE BOMBAY
and are delineated in the Plan attached hereto and signed by the Collector of (hereinafter referred to as the Collector) TO HOLD the said Lands unto the Lessee for the term of 999 years from the 19 day of paying during the said term unto the Lessor for the said lands save such portion as may be appropriated for Public Roads which portion shall be exempt from payment^the yearly Rents following that is to say for the first ten years of the said term the rent of One Pie if demanded and for the next 20 years, ttf*., from the day of 19 , till the 19 day of a yearly sum equal to Four annas per Acre in such Instalments on such Dates and to euch Person as may be from time to time prescribed and designated by the Collector and for such Period if any as shall intervene beeween the day of 19 date of the first settlement of Assessment hereinafter , and the provided for the yearly sum hereinbefore lastly reserved payable in the manner hereinbefore mentioned AND from and after the first settlement of assessment hereinafter provided for such sum of Land Revenue as under the Laws or Rules having the force of Law for the time being in force in respect of Lands held under Government by ordinary Occupants shall from time to time be found to be AND the Lessee
,
hereby covenants
the Lessor in manner following that Lessee shall at his own expense and with due diligence completely reclaim the lands hereby leased so as to be in a state fit for use Cor agricultural purposes AND shall so reclaim at least one-half of the said lands within ten years and the whole thereof within 19 twenty years from the day of respectively and shall maintain such Reclamation during the residue of the term hereby granted AND shall not until the whole of the said Lands sh'all have been completely reclaimed and rendered cultivable assignd or underlet the said Lands or any portion thereof or charge or receive any Tax or .Fee for Cattle-grazing npon any portion thereof and that the lessee shall not at any time partion, bequeath, alienate, assign, mortgage or otherwise charge or encumber or allow to be cultivated, used or occupied by any other person, any portion of the said Land less than the Area hereby fixed by the Co'lector as an economic holding in respect of the said lands, nor shall any such portion of the said land be liable to seizure, requestration, attachment, sale or partition by process of a Court. PROVIDED that if any Officer of Government duly empowered in this behalf by the Government of Bombay shall certify in writing that any portion of the said Lands is unreclaimable such portion shall be excluded from the operations of the covenants hereinbefore contained. Provided further that the lessees shall be at liberty during the first ten years to relinquish any portion of the said lands which he cannot reclaim and such portion shall be excluded from the operation of the covenants herein thereupon contained (R. 372-B-nth April 1923) SECOND that the Lessee shall at his own expense (a) keep open the several Roads mentioned and described in Schedule B hereunder written and delineated in the Plan hereunto annexed (b) provide and keep in good order to the satisfac,
:
ad agrees with
payable
* The portion in brackets was inserted as per Draft Notification No. 4702-24, dated 1st June 1933 which would be taken into consideration on or after 1st
Augoat 1938,
Rtrtfis
59
tlon of the Collector such water-ways in and along the Lands hereby leased as may from time to time be required by the Collector (c) erect such new Boundary-marks upon the said Lands as may from time to time be required by the Collector and maintain and keep in good repair to the satisfaction of the Collector all such new Boundarymarks as well as all those at present existing thereon, THIRD that the said Lessee shall pay the rents hereinbefore respectively reserved at the times and in manner hereinbefore provided for payment of the same respectively and that whenever any Instalment of the said Rents respectively shall be in arrear, it shall be recoverable from the Lessee as an arrear of Land Revenue under the provisions of the Law for the time being in force in that behalf AND the Lessee shall also pay all Rates, Taxes and other Outgoings (if any) which shall at any time during the continuance of this Lease be payable in respect of the said Premises or any part thereof FOURTH that from and after the 19 the Lands hereby leased shall be liable to day of be from time to time surveyed and assessed to the Land Revenue under the Laws or Rules having the force of Law for the time being in force in respect of Lands held under Government by ordinary occupants and thenceforward during the residue of the term hereby granted the Lessee shall hold the said Lands subject to all the provisions of such Laws and Rules and subject also to such of .he Covenants and Provisions of this Lease as shall then be capable of continuing effect PROVIDED ALWAYS AND IT is HEREBY AGREED that if and whenever there shall be a breach by the Lessee of any Covenant, Condition or provision herein contained the Lessor may re-enter upon the said Lands or upon part thereof in the name of the whole and thereupon this Lease shall determine AND that in case default shall be made in reclaiming the half or the whole of the Lands within the periods respectively hereinbefore prescribed in that behalf the Lessor may re-enter upon the said Lands and determine this Lease under the power in that behalf hereinbefore contained AND that if in the opinion of the Collector (whoe decision shall be final) the reclamation is not carried on with due diligence during the two years ending on the day of 19 the Lessor may on or after the said day re-enter upon the said Lands and determine this Lease under the power in that behalf hereinbefore contained AND that notwithstanding anything hereinbefore contained if at any time any portion of the said Lands (other than such portion as may be appropriated for Public Roads) is after being reclaimed used for any purpose unconnected with agriculture, such portiou shall be liable to such assessment or altered assessment as may be leviable under the Law or Rules having the force of Law
for the time being in force in respect of land which is held for agricultural purposes and subsequently used for purposes unconnected with agriculture and such assessment or altered assessment shall be leviable notwithstanding that any of the periods hereinbefore specified shall not have elapsed AND that the right of the said Lessor to all Mines and Mineral Proaucts and of full liberty of access for the purpose of working and searching for the same with all reasonable conveniences shall
be reserved.
AND IT is LASTLY AGREED that the word "Lessor" in this Lease shall mean the Lessor and his Successors and Assigns and the word ''Lessee" shall mean the Lessee and his Legal Repmentatves.
THE BOMBAY
WHKRBOF
CODE, 1879
has, by order of the Governor of B*|., Collector of Bombay in Council, hereunto set his hand and affixed his official seal on behalf of the said Secretary of State in Council, and the Lessee has hereunto B6t his hand the day and year first above written.
,
Schedule
A above referred to
Schedule
B ahve referred to
in the presence of
Seal of the
Collector.
in the presence of
FORM H
(Bale 43).
ALTERNATIVE FORM OF AGREEMENT TO BB PASSED BY PERSONS INTENDING TO BEOOKB OCCUPANTS, IF THE OOLIEOTOR SO BEQUTRE8.
Agreement.
to
the llamiatdar of ,,_,,* in the said taluka, agree on behalf of A, B,, of to occupy the land specified in the Schedule myself and my assigns
,
I,
BULB*
61
I
pray that
name may
1.
my
said land.
pay the land revenue from time to time lawfully due in of the eaid land, to wit as assessment the sum of Rs. respect (being at the rate of ) for the period of per and thereafter I will pay years commencing on such assessment for such further periods as may from time to time be fixed by lawful authority.
I will
: ,
2. Within the period of two years from the date hereof or within such further period as may be fixed by lawful authority, I will erect on the said land one or more buildings of a permanent character. I will keep as an open space, free from any buildings what3. ever, the piece of land marked on the plan appended hereto as the land not to be built upon. 4. The provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, and all rules and orders for the time being in force thereunder, shall apply to my occupation of the said land, so far as the same may be applicable and not inconsistent with these conditions. 5. Subject to the foregoing conditions I shall be entitled to occupy the said land in perpetuity, but ifl contravene any of foregoing conditions the Collector may declare the said land forfeited to Government and may dispose of the same in any way he may deena fit, free from any claim by me or by any person holding through or under me* The Schedule*
day of
Signed.
[Declaration, if necessary.] Then follows the Plan.
19
is exempt from Ooart-fee under item (24) of the Government of India, 4650 10-9-89. It is also exempt from the payment of stamp duly, under item A-9 of Notification of Government of India, No. 3616-Exc v 16-7-09.
Note.
This agreement
Notification of the
FORM HH.
of agreement to be passed by persons intending to become occupants of land included in a development scheme or in other special cases (tide Rule 43)
Form
--
AOBEKMENT.
taluka
Bomb *y Suburban
District,
gree on behalf of myself and I, AB, my heirs, executors, administrators and assigns to occupy the land specified in the schedule appended hereto (hereinafter referred to as the said land) on the conditions stated below, and I pray that my name may be entered in the land records as occupant of the said land
:
Conditions.
(1) I will pay the land revenue from time to time lawfully due in (being respect of the said land to wit as assessment the sum of Rs.
:
Tn
or at each lower rate as is leviable time being in force and applicable to such land) for the period of years commencing on and thereafter, I will pay such assessment for such further periods as may from time to time be fixed by lawful authority. I will use the said land only for building purposes of (2) Use. the nature specified in condition (3) of this agreement. I will erect and complete on the said land* of (3) Building. a substantial and permanent description I will in regard thereto duly comply in every respect with the building regulations contained in clauses etc., of the second schedule hereto ;f (and I will not use, or permit the use of, any of the buildings erected or to be erected on the said land as a shop, or carry on in any of the said buildings any trade or business, other than ).
for the
;
,
If at any future date the Collector J(4) Reservation of margin. shall give me notice in writing that a strip from the margin of the feet in depth is required by GovernRaid land not more than ment for the purposes of a road, I will, at the expiration of one month after the receipt of such notice, quietly surrender and hand over possession of such atrip to the Collector in consideration of receving from Government in exchange and as full compensation therefor a sum ( ) times the assessment equivalent to proportionately payable upon the strip so surrendered.
Provided that, where the materials of any gate, wall, pavement or other such authorised erection or construction on such strip cannot in the opinion of the Collector be removed without appreciable loss, such further compensation on this account shall be paid to me as the Collector
may deem
fit.
I will pay all taxes, rates and cesses levi(5) Liability of rates. able in respect of the said land. The Collector may, without prejudice to any (6) Penalty clause. other penalty to which I may be liable under the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879 (hereinafter referred to as "the said Code"), direct the removal or alteration of any building or structure erected or used contrary to the provisions of this agreement within a time prescribed in that behalf by the Collector, and on such removal or alteration not being carried out within the prescribed period, may cause the same to be carried out and may recover the cost of carrying out the same from me as an arrear of land revenue.
The provisions of the said Code (7) Code provisions applicable. all rules and orders for the sirae being in force thereunder shall
to
and
occupation of the said land, so far as the same may this agreement. (8) Subject to the foregoing conditions I shall be entitled to occupy the said land in perpetuity, but if I contravene any of the foregoing conditions, the Collector may declare the said land forfeited to Government and may dispose of the same in any way he may deem fit, free from any claim by me or by any person holding through or under me.
my
able
apply, be applic-
outhouses:
| t
To To
be scored oat in areas where business premises are permitted, be omitted where not required.
RtJLBl
MAP.
Schedule.
Schedule II.
The number of the conditions which are applicable should be entered in condition 3 of the grant; and special conditions should be in(
serted in continuation.)
1.
Buildings
may
be erected only within the area marked on the the remaining area of the said land shall be left as
Three-quarters of the said land shall be left open to the sky. No latrine, cesspool or stables shall be constructed on the said land in any place which shall not have been approved for such purpose by the Collector or an officer authorised by him. 4. No building shall be erected in the said land with more than a ground floor and one upper storey. 5. The building erected on the said land shall be used for residen-
purposes only. No building erected on the said land shall be used as a factory or as a place for carrying on an offensive trade. 7. The grant shall be subject to the following special conditions:6.
tial
()
(6)
etc.,
etc.
Dated the
day of
We declare that AB, who has signed this agreement, is to our personal knowledge the person he represents himself to be, and that he has affixed his signature hereto, in our presence. (Signed) E. F.
G. H.
N.
/?.
at (Signed) A. B.
1. 2.
This document need not be registered. This document it exempt from stamp duty.
CODE, 1879
FORM I [Rules 37 (3) and 43 (3)]. CLAUSE FOB INALIENABLE TENURE ADDITIONAL TO FORMS F AND H OB OTHEB AGREEMENTS. In cases where the land is granted subject to the condition that the occupant shall not transfer it in any way to another person without the sanction of the Collector, the following clause should be added in the agreement to be taken from him: " The said land has been granted to me subject to the condition to which I hereby assent, namely, that I, my heirs, executors, administrators and approved assigns may not at any time lease, mortgage, sell, or otherwise howsoever encumber the said land or any portion thereof without the previous sanction in writing of the Collector. "
"FORM II
FORM
OF
[Rule 37
(4)]
AGREEMENT TO BE PASSED BY PERSONS INTENDING TO BECOME OCCUPANTS OF LAND ON THE INALIENABLE TENURE. To the Mamlatdar of
in the I, A. B., inhabitant of talnka, liereby accept the right of occupation of the land comprised in or of the building site hereinafter described or othersurvey No. in the taluka, wise, as the case may be ), in the village of and I pray that my name be entered in the Government records as the occupant of the said land. The said land has been granted to me in perpetuity from the 19 'day of subject to the conditions hereinbelow mentioned and to the provisions of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, and of the rules in force thereunder; * And I undertake to pay the land revenue from time to time lawfully due in respect of the said land (or I undertake, whenever Government shall see nt to discontinue the exemption of the said land from payment of land revenue, to pay such revenue, as may be lawfully imposed thereon under the orders of Government or otherwise, as the case
said land has been granted to me subject also to the further condition to which 1 hereby assent, namely, I, my heirs, assigns and legal representatives shall not at any time (1) partition the said land;
may
be).
The
or
or otherwise howsoever encumber the said land mortgage or any portion thereof without the previous sanction of the Collector, which snail not be given except in respect of the whole land. If I fail to perform any of ths aforesaid conditions I shall be liable without prejudice to any other penalties that 1 may incur under the said Code, and the rules made thereunder, to have the said land summarily forfeited by the Collector, and I shall not be entitled to claim compensation for anything done or executed by me in respect of the said land. 19 Dated the day of at
(2) lease,
^
*
Written by
(Signed) A. B.
When land is told for a filed period free of land revenue this paragraph bould end here, and the taooad endorsement may be omitted.
In Sind the Collector is empowered to allow division of a survey No. if in view of any special circumstances, he considers it necessary to do so.
We declare that A. B. who has signed this agreement is to oar personal knowledge the person he represents himself to be, and that he has affixed his signature hereto in our presence.
(Signed) C. D.
"
best of our knowledge and from the best information which we have been able after careful enquiry to obtain, the person who has passed this agreement is a fit person to be accepted by Government as responsible for the punctual payment of the land revenue from time to time due on the above land.
We
)E.F.
(Signed) G. H.,
Patel.
I.J.,
Village Accountant.
(
).
FORM
FORM
J (Rule 46).
NEW
VILLAGE-SITE.
19
day of taluka :
by A.
J5.
Whereas Government have been pleased to sanction a change bein the registramade in the position of the site 01 the village of
,
tion sub-district of and in pursuance of such sanction the following plot of ground has been allotted to me in the new site in exchange for the ground held by me in the old site, namely, the piece of land bounded as follows, that is to say on the North by on on the South by on the East by in the West by measuring in length from East length from North to South, and in to West, and comprising about square in the Land Records. superficial area and bearing No.
,
,
new
do hereby agree, in consideration of the allotment to me of the piece of land aforesaid, as follows, namely (1) That all my right, title and interest io any land whatsoever, situate within the old site of the said village, shall be deemed to be, and is hereby, surrendered to Government, together with the trees standing thereon and all rights over or other benefits arising out of or enjoyed by me in respect of the said land
I
:
(2) That I shall hold the piece of land aforesaid in the new site from the date of this agreement on the same terms and with the -same rights and subject to the same liabilities as would apply to my tenure
Notification of the
I
*The stamp duty for this agreement is rednoed to four annas ; item 10 of Government of India, 36lft-Exc., 16-7-09; G, B 7317-OV,
R.
ft.
tiAHD
of the ground held by me in the old site, if I continued to be the holder thereof, f ID witness whereof I have hereto set my hand the day and year aforesaid.
(Signed) A. B.
in our presence.
FORM K
OF
(Rule 54).
in the hereby given to A. J5., inhabitant of taluka, to occupy Survey No. (or the building-site hereinbelow described or otherwise as the case may be) in
Permission
the village of in the in accordance with the Sanad granted sanctioned by the Collector in his order No*
taluka,
(or,
Dated the
day of
19
at
Seal
(Signed)
Mamlatdar.
Form
Permission
is
to hereby given to you AB, inhabitant of the building site hereinbelow described in the in the taluka in village of accordance with the conditions sanctioned by the Collector and accept19 ed by you in the agreement dated the day of subject to which this permission is given. Description of Land.
occupy
in the
day of
at
(Signed)
Mamlatdar,
FORM L
FORM
To the Mamlatdar of
/,
(Rule 74).
A. B., inhabitant of
')
taluka,
(or sub-division
(the Boiler**
of Survey No.
thought
f In omitting a clause reserving the right to impose land revenue if hereafter that right ( G. Rs. Not. fit, Government nevertheless do actually reserve and 10096-85 see Note 27 to Rule 14).
*No
Court-fee
is
chargeable,
ci 1876,
alien 19 (2J)
Butur
6f
or the building-site hereinbelow described the village of in the taluka, hereby give notice under section 74 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, that it is my intention to relinquish and 1 hereby do relinquish the said Survey No. (or building-site, etc.) at the end of the current year,f subject to any rights, tenures, incumbrances or equities lawfully subsisting in favour of any person (other than Government or
)
No.
may
be}, in
thc
.1
holder
>
day of
19
at
(Signed) 4. B,
FORM
Form of sanad
appropriated
to building
M.
land
purposes
is
altered
WHEREAS
When used under rule 51 for land already occupied for agricultural purposes within certain surveyed cities the period for which the assessment is leviable will be ordered to coincide with the expiry of 99 years' period running in that city. (G. R. No. 9508-2423-8-27.)
Now
this is to certify that permission to use for building purposes is hereby granted subject to the provisions of the said
The applicant in lieu of the assessment hereto(1) Assessment. fore leviable in respect of the said plot shall pay to Government on the in each year an annual assessment of Rupees day of
on the
) during the thirty (30) years commencing or in composition therefor 19 day of a lamp sum of Rupees ) being ( Rs, twenty times the said annual assessment; and on the expiry of the said period of thirty years, such revised assessment as may from time to time be fixed by the Collector under the said Code.
(Rs.
fTbcie notices moat be given before the 3 1st March, or inch other date ae prescribe under sec, 74 for each district.
*t
" Provided
^
a Co-operative Housing
Society, it shall be entitled to such exemption from the payment of altered assessment in whole or in part as is permissible under proviso " (2) to clause (a) of rule 88.
no. 620-38, dated 14-10-32 ). said plot only for building purposes of the nature specified in condition (8) of this sanad. The applicant shall within three ( 3 ) (3) Building Time Limit. the from date and complete on the said plot* erect hereof, years of a substantial and permanent description, and shall in regard thereto duly comply in every respect with the building regulations contained in clauses etc., of the second schedule hereto.
(
G.|B., R. D.,
The applicant
14 From the date of permission " has been suggested by one Commissioner: but there ought not to be any material difference and " can the " permission only date from its formal expression in the Sanad. Government did not accept the suggestion. (R. 1432-24-3-1-25).
If the Collector shall give the appliat gin. (4){ Reservation of cant 'notice in writing that a strip of land from the margin of the said feet in depth, is required by Government for plot not more than the purposes of a road, the applicant shall, at the expiration of one month after the receipt of such notice, quietly surrender and hand over possession of such strip of land to the Collector in consideration of re* ceiving from Government in exchange and as full compensation therefor a sum equivalent to ) times the assessment pro( portionately payable upon the strip so surrendered. An agreement ?ct*fcdl before 1913 was by compromise modified and recast in G. R. No. 99559-2-24.
Provided that, where the materials of any gate, wall, pavement or other such authorized erection or construction on such portion cannot in the opinion of the Collector be removed without appreciable loss, such further compensation on this account shall be paid to the applicant as the Collector may deem fit.
The applicant shall pay all taxes, rates (5) Liability for Rates. and cesses leviable on the said land. The Collector may, without prejudice to any (6) Penalty clause. other penalty to which the applicant may be liable under the provisions of the said Code, direct the removal or alteration of any building
or structure erected or used contrary to the provisions of this grant within a time prescribed in that behalf by the Collector, and on such removal or alteration not being carried out within the prescribed period, may cause the same to be carried out and may recover the cost of carrying out the same from the applicant as an arrear of land reve-
nue.
Save as herein provided, the grant (7) Code provisions applicable. shall be subject to the provisions of the *aid Code.
(8) Execution.lthe applicant shall bear all costs incurred in the preparation, execution, stamping and registration of these presents.
Here
ont-honset.
|
insert;
"
Omit
And
set
Note
1.
Jtouw
Schedule
Schedule II.
(The numbers of the conditions which are applicable should be entered in condition 3 of the grant and special conditions should be inserted in continuation). The applicant may build on the area marked 1. on the map annexed and shall leave the remaining area of the said plot as
:
an open space.
of the said plot shall be let open to the sky. constructed on the said plot nhall, if any place shall have been set apart in the map annexed for such purpose be constructed in such place and not elsewhere*
2.
3.
Any
4.
No
feet in height.
The building erected on the said plot shall be used for 5. dential purposes only. No building erected on the said plot shall be used as a G. or a factory or as a place for carrying on an offensive trade.
7.
shop
The grant
()
(b)
has hereunto set IN WITHESS WHEREOF the Collector of his hand and the seal of his office on hehalf of the Secretary of State for India in Council; and the applicant has also hereunto set his hand of 19 this day the
(Signature of applicant). (Signatures and designations of witnessses). Signature of Collector). (Signatures ami designations of witnesses). (Seal of Collector).
Wft
We declare that A.B., who has signed this notice, is, to our personal knowledge, the person he represents himself to be, and that he has affixed his signature hereto in our presence.
(Signed)
E. F.
G.H.
N.
B.l.
2.
XVI
This document is exempt from stamp duty (Rule 7, G. oi I. Notio. 3616-Exc.-16-7-09) unless condition 4 is retained when it should be stamped under Article 55 of Schedule 1 to Act II of
1899. See also R. 7431*23.
Form was
sanctioned iu G. R. 1291-20
FORM N
Form of Sanad
[Rule 87
(*)
].
land appropriated
to
WHBUBAS the land hereinafter described by measurement and by the boundaries specified in the schedule (and delineated in the map hereto appended) and forming (part of) Survey No. in <ihe village of in the taluka of , entered in the name of and at present held by , resident of has been hitherto assessed for purposes of ; AND WBIBRKAS the said land agriculture at the rate of has been used for a non-agricultural purpose, to wit for (describe purassessment has thereby ) (but not for building) and such pose become liable under section 48 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, to be altered and fixed at a different rate :
,
this is to certify that under the provisions of the said Code, in force thereunder the assessment of the amount to be paid as land-revenue on the said land has been fixed: for a term of annually "
Now
and rules
day of
(figures)
19
[Rupees (uords)] payable in each year of the said term in in each year. one instalment due on*
sum of Rs.
On the expiry of the said term, and at such further intervals as may be from time to time directed by Government in this behalf, the
assessment aforesaid will be liable to revision in accordance with the said Code and the rales and orders for the time being in force thereunder.
* Here
Land Revenue
first
instalment
or
such
may
fix
(Role 116).
li
In witness whereof the Collector has hereto set his hand and the 19 day of
Seal
Collector.
jVbfo.~In such Banads also the Collector has which will he inserted after the sthedule.
full
"
FORMNI
Rule 87
(*) ]
Form of Sanad
appropriated
to non-agricultural
land temporarily purposes other than building is altered under section 48.
Whereas the land hereinafter described by measurement and by the boundaries specified in the schedule ( and delineated in the map hereto appended ) and forming (part of) Survey No. in the village of in the taluka of entered in the name of, and at present held by resident of , has been hitherto , assessed for purposes of agriculture, at the rate of ; and whereas the said land has been used for a non-agricultural purpose, to wit for
but not for a permanent building) and such assessment has thereby become liable under section 48 of the Bombay Land Reve* nue Code, 1879, to be altered and fixed at a different rate:
(^5ribT^piIFpSio<
this is to certify that under the provisions of the said Code in force thereunder, the assessment of the amount to be paid as land-revenue on the said land, has been fixed for a term of from the 19 day of , at the sum of
Now
and rules
Rs. (figures) [ Rupees (words)] payable in one instalment on On the expiry of the said term the assessment aforesaid will be liable to revision in accordance with the said Code and the rules and orders for the time being in force thereunder,
v*
CODE, 1879
In case of a breach of liny of the conditions of this Sanad the Collecmay, without prejudice to any other penalty to which the holder of the said land may be liable under the provisions of the said Code, direct the removal or alteration of any structure erected or used contrary to the provisions of this Sanad within a time precribed in that behalf by the Collector, and on such removal or alteration not being carried out within the prescribed period, may cause the same to be carried out and may recover the cost of carrying out the same from the holder as an arrear of land revenue:
tor
to.
In witness whereof the Collector has hereto, set his hand and the 19 day of
.
Seal*
Collector.
to impose
fit.
$och conditions
structures."
the erection
of tempoary
FORM
.
,
V.
JP*
double-page form with sufficiently wide columns for YII-XII ruled to contain) the following particulars 1. Serial Number. 2. Survey Number (if inam> the kiod of inam).
i
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9. 10.
Assessment. Judi or Special or Non-agricultural Assessment payable. Occupant of Khalsa Land or Holder of Alienated Land.
11.
12.
13.
Nature and origin of Title. Other rights or encumbrances with names of rigW/~holder or encumbrancer. References to Mutation Diary, Form P Remarks.
FORM P
Nature of right
Initial! or
ramarki
offioera
No. of entry
Noa. affected
by testing
EORM Q
L. K. 0, 10.
1879
FORM B
Now Combined
in card form.
To
A B residing at
Yoa
p.
due by you on the as the* instalment of land revenue on the land held by you, of which full details can be obtained from the village Accountant ( or otherwise as the case may
be
),
in the village of
in the taluka of
has not been paid, and that, unless it is paid within ten days from the date of this notice together with the sum of annas, being the fee chargeable for this notice, complusory proceedings will be taken according to law for the recovery of the whole of the revenue still due by you on the said land, together with an additional penalty not exceeding one-fourth of the said arrears under section ;148 of the Land Bevenue Code. Dated the 19 day of (Signed) Mainlatdar ( or Aval Karkun ) t
FOBM
OP
To
The Mamlatdar of
in the Taluka I, A. ., inhabitant of hereby accept the right of occupation of the land comprised in Survey in the of in the Number village and I pray that my name may be entered Taluka in the Government records as the occupant of the said land. The said land which has been forfeited for arrears of land revenue has been regranted to me subject to the provisions of the Bombay Land Bevenue Code, 1879, and of the Bules in force thereunder in perpetuity! 19 from the ; and I undertake to day of pay the land revenue from time to time lawfully due in respect of the said land. The said land has been regranted to me after forfeiture, subject to the condition to which I hereby assent in consideration of the regrant, namely, that I, my heirs, executors, administrators and approved assigns may not at any time lease, mortgage, sell or otherwise howsoever encumber the said land or any portion thereof without the previous sanction in writing of the Collector. 19 at Dated the day of
Written by
(Signed)
*
B.
<<
may
bo.
When
by Q. B. No. 2469-88; 9268-11. not granted in perpetuity delete the word and insert " until the
J Authorised
day of
19
."
Rtruw
?5
We declare that A. B., who has signed this agreement, is to our personal knowledge, the person he represents himself to be, and that ne has affixed his signature hereto in our presence.
(Signed) C.
D.
E.F.
We declare that to the best of our knowledge and from the best information we have been able, after careful inquiry, to obtain, the person who has passed this agreement is a fit person to be accepted by Government as responsible for the punctual payment of the land revenue from time to time due on the above land. (Signed) Q. H. Patel,
7. /.,
Village- Accountant.
FORM U (Rule 129). (Standard form R.M.20) FOBM OF PROCLAMATION AND WRITTEN NOTICE OF SALE OF ATTACHID
PROPERTY. (Under Section 165, L. R. C.) hereinunder specified has been attachWhereas the property of ed on account of the Government assessment Rs. due by the said recover the said amount by sale ; and whereas it is necessary to of the said property, together with all lawful charges and expenses resulting from the said attachment and sale 19 Notice is hereby given that on the at day of A. B. the Mamlatdar of o'clock A. x. ( or in other person appointed ) will, at taluka in this district, sell by auction to the highest bidder and upon such condi:
tions as to upset price and other conditions as are set out in the subjoined Schedule of Conditions of Sale, the right, title and interest of in the property hereinunder specified, and every power the said of disposing of the same or any of them or of the profits arising therefrom which the said may now consistently with the law exercise for his
own
benefit.
is to
Movable Property. ba omitted when the form should This table only ( under rules for the execution of decrees.)
be used
Tsx
fioKBAY
Immovable Property.
or of N. B. No guarantee is given of the title of the said of any of the right charges or interests claimed by third parties,
the
validity
(Signed)
Collector.
printed schedule setting forth the conditions of sale according to the Code and Bales shall be appended.
FORM
FORM
or PROCLAMATION
W (Rule 129).
Notice
is
mentioned unoccupied land, situate in the village of the taluka will be put up to public auction at
of
10
,
on the
day
at or after
o'clock A. M.
p. M.
The written (or printed) conditions of sale signed by *[may be seen on application during office hours, on any office day before tho or, at the time of the aucday of the auction, to the Mamlatdar of tion, to the officer who conducts the same] and intending bidders are warned that they should ascertain the said conditions before bidding,
*[or are subjoined to this Proclamation'
7
].
Description of the Land. Here give a full description of the land, viz., the Survey Number or Numbers, if it has been surveyed, if not, its boundaries; the class of land, t. a., whether it is dry-crop land, garden land, or a building-site, etc., the area of the land, adding "be the same more or less"; the assessment, if any, at present payable for the land, and the term for which that assessment has been fixed.
(Signed)
Dated the
of
19
day
RULES
under sub-section
(l)of s.2l4of L-R.
ode
Regulating entry into any premises by any officer empowered under a. 164 of this Code for the distraint of moveable property of a defaulter.
(Vide G. R. R. D. No. 4112, dated
Kih November
1930).
regulating entry into any premises by any officer empowered under section 154 of the said Code for the distraint of moveable property of a defaulter
:
No. 4112. In exercise of the powers conferred by sub-section (l)of section 214 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 187* (Bom. Vof 1879), the Governor in Council is pleased to make the following rules
1. Service of notice. Where an officer in exercise of his power of distraint under section 154 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, intends to enter any building used as a human dwelling, the notice required by the proviso to section 200 shall be served by presentation to the defaulter or to any adult male member of his family present in the building, or failing either of the aforesaid methods, by being affixed to any prominent part of the building.
Breaking open doors* An officer in exercise of the aforesaid of distraint may break open, at any time between sunrise and power sunset, the gate of any private street or any outer or inner door or window of any permises, if he has reasonable grounds for believing that such street or premises contain any property liable to distraint as aforesaid, and if after notifying his authority and purpose and duly demanding admittance, he cannot otherwise obtain admittance;
2.
officer shall
window of any apartment in the actual occupation of a woman who according to custom does not appear in public, until he has given
notice to such woman that she is at liberty to withdraw given her every reasonable facility for withdrawing,
and has
3. Forcing open of receptacle. An officer in exercise of the aforesaid power of distraint may break open any closed receptacle found on any permises entered in exercise of the said power, if he cannot otherwise, after demand duly made from the persons, if any, occupying the said premises to open the receptacle, obtain inspection of the contents of the same.
4. Value of property distrained. The estimated sale-proceed|B of the property distrained shall be as nearly as possible equal to the amount in respect of which the defaulter has made default.
An officer on distraining any property from any Inventory. an inventory thereof; and shall supply a copy of shall make permises the inventory to the defaulter, or to any adult male member of his
5.
family present ; if neither the defaulter nor any such member is present, the officer shall affix a copy of the inventory to a prominent part of the premises from which distraint has been made.
List of Applications
UNDER THE
Proper fee
1.
Appeals
against imposition of fine under section 61, L.R.O., for unauthorized occupation of Government land ... (2) against imposition of fine for unauthorised conversion of land for non-agricultural purposes ... (3) against the order of the Deputy Collector (4) against refusal or grant of permanent, punjsala or eksali
(1)
(5)
(6)
... ... ... ... land ... again s t refusal of fasuli remission and suspension against notice of demand, distraint, auction of moveable and immoveables, notice of forfeiture against the order re precautionary measure ... against the imposition of fine under s, 148, L.R.O. regarding grant of copies against levy of land revenue
:
Rs.
As.
8
8
8 8
(7)
(8) (9)
8 8
8
(10)
2.
8 8
Assessment
application for commutation of altered assessment
3.
Assistance suits
(1)
application for assistance under section 86, L.R.O. when the amount claimed is lees than Rs. 50. ... ... when the amount claimed is Rs. 50 or more or summons in assistance cases (2) process fee for every notice
8 6
4.
Boundaries
(1) application for fixing boundaries of building plots (2) applicaton for demarcation of boundaries of survey
8
8
numbers
f>.
Bricks
application for removing earth
for brick
manufacture
6.
7.
8.
Commission
application
for
L.R.O
Description oi Applications.
Proper fct
9.
Bs. As.
(1)
(2)
record
...
words
10,
...
Decrees
application in decree after agreement...
11.
perty
(2)
(3) (4)
petition regarding dispute on pattadari and jagirdari ... application for dispute of karia
}2.
Farm
building
farm building
Fishery rights
application for grant of fishery rights of
Be venue Dbands
14.
Revenue
16.
Fuel
(1) application to cut fuel (2) application for fuel for kilns (3) application for transit pass for removing or carrying fuel
16.
Huri
Application for Huri grants
17
Hari
or an agent
18i
Ijazatnama
application for grant of Bubkari or Ijazatnama
19.
Kiln
(1
)
application for permission to burn a kiln application for burning a brick kiln ... petition for fuel for kiln ... petition for grant of kiln application for conversion of land for kiln purposes
Description of Applications.
Proper
fee
20.
application for excavation of khada
...
Rs. As.
8
21.
Lands
(1)
application for exchange of laud application for leasing out land (3) application for transfer or conversion of building sites to agricultural land and vice versa ... (4) application for permission to lease, transfer or sell land granted on restricted tenure (5) application for reservation of track out of occupied or
(2)
8 8
8
8
unoccupied land
(6)
...
Government
8
for
Government land
non-agri8
8 8 8 8
(8)
(9)
purposes
application for exchange of land on restricted tenure or to become a partner in the same ... (10) application for conversion of land other than non-agricultural purposes .. (11) application for transfer of land from one deh to the other.
22.
Land Revenue
(1)
payment of
8
Laud Revenue
(2)
(3)
application from co-oco upant to pay Land Revenue to save the forfeiture of Ka bull Survey number ... appeal against the levy of Land Revenue
8
8
23.
Partition
24.
Pasturage
application for farming of pasturage rights
25.
in
execu-
Land Revenue,
26. 27.
Quarry
application for granting permission to quarry stones
.,
Rebate
J.
2.
28.
Restricted tenure
Description of Applications.
Proper fee
29.
Restriction
1.
2.
8.
Ha, As. 8 8
application for removal of restriction ... application for removal of rice restriction application for removal or imposition of restriction against extension or grant of land on Government canal
30.
Rotation
Sale
application to sot aside sale...
Site
8
8
Sub-division
application for sub-division of a survey
number
34.
Wadharvaras
application for wadharvaras
35.
Wtll
application for sinking of a well in
Government land
...
RECORD OF RIGHTS.
1.
between
Inamdare
and
8
2.
tenancy,
easements
8
3.
inheritance,
posses-
4.
Application regarding acquisition of a right by succession, survivorship, inheritance, partition, purchase, mortgage, gift, lease or otherwise
5.
1 to
4 above..
6.
under
s,
8 8 2
7.
8.
trite
Bombay Revenue
ACT
(.Is
Jurisdiction Act
1876
No.
X OF
amended by Ad* XVI of 1811, of 1880, XII of 189 1, XIV 1895 1894: XXI of 1929). and Bom. Act of of
[28th March
XV
IV
1876
out the
Act to limit the jurisdiction of the Civil Courts throughBombay Presidency in matters relating to the Landrevenue, and for other purposes.
An
WIIEHKAS
'
in
certain
psrts of
jurisdiction
connected
tensive that
it is
Prcsidenay of Bombay, the Civil Courts in matters with the land-revenue is more exthe
of
the
And whereas it is expedient that the jurisdiction the Civil Courts in the said Presidency should be limited in hereinafter appearing ;
of
all
manner
Civil
And whereas
Courts
section
it
is
also
Bombay
Act, 32, and to revive certain provisions of the [1] thirteenth section of Regulation XVII of 1827 of the Bombay Code, which was repealed by the Land Improvement Act, 1871 ; [2] of this Act which revised a. 13 of Boin. Rog, 17 of 1827 was [1J Section 17 repealed by Act XV of 1880, except in scheduled districts to which the Bombay
Land Revenue Code, 1879 (Bom. Act of 1879) does not extend. Act IV [2] The portion repealed by the Repealing and Amending
:>
of
1894
is
omitted.
It is
Short
may
be called
<k
The Bombay
title.
Revenue Jurisdiction
as
relates to claims to set aside, on of ground irregularity, mistake or any Commencement. other groun(} except fraud, sales for arrears of land revenue, shall come into force on such* day as the Governor General in Council directs in that behalf by notification in the
The
rest of this
Act
shall
come
into force
on the
And
*' xteDt
'
it
shall
extend to all the territories for the time being under the Government of the Governor of Bombay in Council, but not so as to affect
G. N. 188~Y, Pt.l,
s.
92.
JURISDICTION
ACT
revenue
of 1862 (b) any of the provisions of Bombay Acts of 1862, or of Act XXI of of 1871 XXIII or of Act 1881,
and VI
;
[a]
[a]
'
*
I8'..\
2.
XII of 1891.
In this Act, unless there be something 3. repugnant in the subj ect or con text, "Land" includes the sites of villages, towns and cities it also includes trees, growing crops and grass, " fruit upon, and juice in, trees, rights-of-way, fiisheries all other benefits to arise out of land, and and ferries,
T Interpretation clause.
:
earth, or
permanently
fastened
to things
"Land-revenue" means
all
in
money
or
behalf "Land-rownne of Government from any person on account of any land held by or vested in him, and any cess or rate authorized by Government under the provisions of any law for the time
in kind, received or claimable
by or on
being in force
"Revenue
.,
officer"
ovcuuc otficer."
employed in or about the land-revenue, or of the survejs, assessment, accounts or records connected therewith.
officer
means any
business of
the
4.
Subject
certain salts.
to
the
Bar of
exceptions hereinafter appearing, no Civil Court shall exercise J "jurisdiction as to any of thfl following mafcters
.
(a) claims against Government relating to any property appertaining to the office of any hereditary officer appointed or recognized under Bombay Act No. Ill of 1874, or any other law for the time being in force, or of any other village-officer or servant, or
claims to perform the duties of any such officer or servant, or in respect of any injury caused by exclusion from such office or service, or
suits to set aside or avoid any order under the same Act or any other law relating to the same subject for the time being in force passed by Government or any officer duly authorized in that behalf, or
claims against Government relating to lands held under treaty, or to lands granted or held as saranjam or on other political tenure, or to lands declared by Government or any officer duly authorized in that behalf to be held for service ;
JURISDICTION ACT
office
8
or
plaintiff's
concerned,
the words
of
this
section arc wide enough to preclude the Civil Courts suit, however, for a declaration that the
deceased representative watandar is not barred by this section (ffanmantv Secretary of State, 54 Bom, 126, s. c. 32 Bom. L. E. 155).
Where
from
the
or mortgage
in adverse possession of the land after death of the owner for the statutory period, he is still liable to be ousted under the Hereditary Offices
owner continues
is
most entitled only to an injunction restraining the owners from than under the Hereditary Offices Act to recover possesother taking proceedings An order which, though purporting to bo passed under the sion. Offices
at
Act, and so he
Act,
Hereditary not authori/ed hy the Act, does not come within the purview of this Act (Jlfaaanchand v. Vithalrao, 37 Bora. 37).
is
Suit to recover
of land, the
Saranjam
in
v.
lands.
suit to recover
back possession
is
Saranjam rights
this
by Government,
not
barred by
section (Gunirao
Bom.
408).
"Claims to perform duties of Hereditary officer/' The plaintiff who was a Deshpando, an Hereditary District Officer, claimed against Government
to
from the
1897,
Held, that such suits were excluded perform the duties of a Deshpande'd office jurisdiction of the Civil Courts ( Narayan v Secretary of State, P. J.
p. 42.")).
'Claims
When
it
has
been decided that a particular land is service inam land, the Civil Court, under this clause, ceases to have jurisdiction over the plaintiff's claim against Government in
respect of th3 trees growing thereon, as such claims related to property appeartaining to the ollice of a village officer (Dj soitza Devino v Sycrjfary of State for India/
18 Bom. 319),
by exclusion from
A.suit in respect of any injury caused barred by the 2nd paragraph of cl. () of this section. Having regard to tho wording of the clauses of this section, the bar therein provided is not limited to suits against Government (Naro v. Mahadeo, 12 Bom. 014).
"
Claims
in respect of injury
office
?1
or
sorvico is
this Act, receive au between two or more inagreement generally accepted meaning, dependent sovereign powers of State (Kalabhaiv. The Secretary of State for India,
-treaty' must, seeing
viz
,
The word
that
it is
not defined in
that
it is
29
Bom
19).
suit in a
Civil
Court against Government to recover possession of inam lands together with arrears of the amals is barred both under this section and s. 4 of the Pensions Act (XEIC of
of 1827. These Acts, though not reIt was barred under Reg. 1871). do not create rights to relief against the Govtrospective in their operation, still ernment where none subsisted before (SMvram v. Secretary of State Jor India, 1 1
XXJX
Bom.
222).
Commutation
Of watan.
Where
of
vatandar, but
without
JURISDICTION
observing the procedure prescribed by the order passed is ultra vires of him
3 of the
and a
suit to set
cl
(a) of this
(Bhikaji
A suit for
plaintiffs
are
hereditary Vatandar Kulkarnis, and that they are entitled to be Vatandar and entitled to the Vahivat of the Vatau hereditarily, is barred by the provisions of clause
(a) of this section
(Damodar
v.
Collector of Na*ik,
44
Bom
261).
nor this Act contains any provision excluding the jurisdiction of Oivil Courts in a suit brought to establish a share in the emoluments of a watan which has ceased to
be a service watan (Moheyodin
v.
Chhotibibi, o
Bom,
578).
A suit,
in respect of
deo,
is
damages by reason of a breach of an agreement bebarred by para. (2) of cl (a) of this section (Naro v. Mahaall suits,
and not
to
suits against
Government only
Government
to
have the
v.
resolution
of the
Government
set
s. c.
aside
Secretary of State , 54
Bom.
125,
So far
have their
Bom
Hereditary Offices
Act, 1874
The
of
the Collector only came into play when it is determined if one is a watandar so far as the plaintiffs ask for a declaration that defendant is not entitled to ba on the list
of watandars, the Civil Courts have jurisdiction
P. J. 1888, p. 224).
Where an order is passed by revenue officers that a person is not a Vatandar a suit to obtain a declaration from a Oivil Court that the decision is bad, is barred under the 3rd paragraph of cl. (a) of this section. If suoh a suit seeks relief against
Government
relating to vatan land,
v.
it falls
paragraph of
cl.
(a)
(Baslingappagouda
Secretary of State,
28 Bom. L.
60 1).
order cx-parte is made by revenue authorities is enhave the matter fully heard after arguments on both sides. An order so passed on further hearing is not an order passed in revision, but an order properly made after hearing both the parties, one of whom had not bjen heard on the pretitled to
The
jurisdiction to
Offices
made under
2 of
cl.
ss. 11,
11
A and
9 (2) of the
Bombay Hereditary
Act
(Ibid.).
Under
para.
(a) of
this
Court
is
an
hereditary district
officer,
claiming against
JURISDICTION ACT
Government the right to perform the duties of a Deshpande's office. The meaning of the words "claims to perform the duties of any such officer or servant" is to be taken from the preceding sentence (Narayan v. Secretary of State, P. J. 1894,
t
p.
450).
Civil
a declaration that they arc entitled to a share in the Maharki Vatan and for an injunction restraining the defendants from obstructing them in the enjoyment of the said share (BMva v Vithya, 25 Bom. 186).
Under this section a Civil Court has no jurisdiction to entertain a suit for a declaration that the plaintiffs are watandar patils and kulkarnis of the village, and for Th-3 words of this section in question are wide cancellation of the watan register. enough to preclude the Civil Courts from entertaining any claim to the watau
offices in
oppposition to the claim of the hereditary officers appointed or recognised under the Bom. Hereditary Offices Act, 1874, and also any claim for the cancellation of the
watau
register
P. C.).
The
by
of tbd
Bom.
Hereditary
Act, 1874,
is
not barred
assessinoat
suit
for
In the course of the execution proceedings under that decree, the plaintiff On this, the petitioner applied got attached a buffalo belonging to tha defendant. to the Mamlatdar to raise the attachment oa the ground that the buffalo had been
Plaintiff's case was that the pledged to him and the same was ordered. alleged that the suit was intended for pledge was a fraud and she sued for damages.
HM,
of the
Mamlatdar
as
to
whether
the
buffalo
was
pledged to the applicant and was not a bona fidt suit for damages for a fraud practised on the court and that consequently it was not maintainable (Sadashiv v.
Radkibai, SlJBoin.
It
is
L R
504).
competent to a Civil
of a
plaintiffs are
s. e.
Watandars
L. E. 83<J).
Maharki
Watan
Dagdu,
Bom
23
18
Bom.
should
bj
recognized
watandar of a watau, a suit brought against Government to set aside the Government Resolution is barrel unler this section (Flanmint v. Secretary
of State, 54
Bom. 125
s. c.
32
Bom.
L. R. 155).
"
suit by the Malnr Vatandars to restrain Cognizance of Civil Court. the villagers of their village from delivering the carcasses of dead animals and payto s. 18 ing baluta to the mangs, is not cogniziblo by a Civil Oourfc, having
regard
of the
Bom. Hereditary
heir
Offices Act,
A suit to
the nearer
obtain a declaration thit the Plaintiff, baing of thj eldest family, is to the late Vutandar than the defendant, is cogai/ ible by the Civil
v
Court (Shanfar
Dattatraya, 17
Bom
L. R. 725).
plaintiff, a watandar patil, was. under orders of bis and his life-interest in Patilki watan was from dismissed office, Government, He sued the Secretary of State for a doclar ition that th j ordor of forfeited.
The
Government was
illegal
Ti
The a, 61 ol the Bom. Hereditary Offices Act, and for possession of. the lands. lower Court dismissed the suit on the ground that is wa* barred by para. (1) of The plaintiff appealed contending that para (l)ofcl. (a) ft}, (a) of this section. was ultra vires of the Government of India Held, that para. (I) of cl. (a) was not
:
ultra
vires
of the
could not have been brought in the ordinary Oivil Courts against the East India Company by virtue of the preamble to Act XI of J852 (Rachanyauda v Secretary of
State,
the Civil Courts to entertain suits against Government regarding land of which the plaintiff is put into occupation by Government free from exemption of the reward
xjlaim
The plaintiff cannot escape from the bar by contending that his for the possession of land, while the property that appertains to his office is not the land but the revenue arising from the land (Appaji v. Secretary of State,
of his
service.
is
28 Bom. 435).
Land held io Saranjam Suit against Government. The Inatu Commissioner decided in 1858, under the provisions of Act Xt of i852, that cerOn the death of its holder I', in tain estate was Saranjam and not sarva luain. and 1890, Government resumed the property on the grouud that it was Saranjam
The plaintiff, another grandson of P, granted it to V, one of the grandsons of P. sued tha Secretary of State for ludia and V, for a declaration of title to and for Serva Inam and that it was not possession of the property, alleging that it was
ono it liked. Held, (1) competent to Government to resnma and regrant it to any that the decision of tha Inam Commissioner was, by virtue of the provisions of r. 2 of Sch. of Act XI of 1852, final as regards interests concerned in the decision
must be determined under Soh. 13. (2) that the title to and continuance of the estate as Government under such rules Act of the 10 r. might find it necessary to issao
from time
to
time
(3)
death resumed by Government who re- granted it to V 5 (i) that the suit having been one against Government relating to land hold as Suranjam, was excluded from thj
jurisdiction
of
the
()
of this section
(Ramrao
v.
1333)
residing in a village, sought for
Mahar
Vatan.
The
plaintiffs,
who were
an injunction to prevent the skius of their dead animals boing taken away by defendants who were Village Mihars aud claimed the right of taking away the The lower Courts held that the suit was barred by s. 18 of the skins as Vatandars.
Hereditary Offices Act,
1874, and
it
having appealed,
was
Tha plaintiffs sub-section (a) of this section, whether there was or was not a
Mahar Vatan
as contended for, was within the jurisdiction of the Civil Court ; would be entitled to injunction unless the Mahars should iho that plaintiffs (2) v. succeed in showing that there was an hereditary office as alleged by them (Savin
Suntya 20 Bom. L. B.
99,5).
Alienation.
that a Where, on an application by a Vatandar to declare that an to make order refuses Collector is null and void, the
to file a suit in a void, it is open to the party aggrieved of the alienation (Dattatraya v. Tukaram^ respect
k B.
376).
^\or
to
the
amount or incidence
of
authorized by Government, or
to
the
is
mode
assessment
to
the
ment, or of any
Obj< c
1
validity or effect of the notification of survey or settlenotiiic.ttiou determining the period of settlement;
;ns
An
,se
cither of the
two heads
and 3 of
e
,
(b) of
Uii=
t<>
section
/))>'
ob/'ctioi)
thjtn
objection whbh rciohjs ttan directly, i which :iJ.iiit- thj hi'oilky to piy Irri I revoima ou thj
bj an
an
part
wih Us amount
sjUL ujut
or
a->
by thimnilvis objectionable,
not because
aft'jcts
thjin
mik-js
them inapplicable
Objections in i\vr
but
in
which-
way particular nature described in cl. (ft). Whoro thuy fall outride thit class, thuy can be raised in defence as well MS by a suit (Laknhiiman v. Govind ; (roviitd v. L<iks human, ^8 Pom. 74)
k -
Objection to
amount
land-revenue."
In a suit by an inomdar of a village against a Knot to recover rent in kind (according to the market rate at the time of payment), the defendant (Knot) oonteuded that he was only liable to pay cash assessment as fixed by the survey made by th British Government, which was at a lower rate than he hod previously paid and that the Civil Court had no jurisdiction to entertain the suit under this clause.
;
Hold, that as there was no objection by either party to the amount or incidence o! assessment of laud-revenue fixed by Government; and the question being whether the
Khot was liable to pay to away from the cognizance Bom. 525).
the inamdar maktns or assessment, the suit of a Civil Court by this clause (Ganyadhar
Morbhat, 18
Wnero
water-rate
is
levkd under
s.
of
the Irrigation Act, the question whether the Civil Courts have jurisdiction
in (b) of this section,
in view
of such levy, depends upon whether the incideuce of the rate is authorized by the Under it, the condition precedent to provisions of s. 48 of the Irrigation Act.
levying the rate is not the fact ascertained by evidence whether the water in dispute has percolated from the canal, but the opinion of the Canal Officer that it has so such percolation for percolated, he and not the Civil Court being mide the Judge of
Such water-rate falls within the purposes of the Act. revenue (BalnMnt v. Secretary of State, 22 Bom 377).
or arising out of any proceedings for (c) claims connected with the realization of land-revenue or the rendering of assistance, by Government or any officer duly authorized in that behalf, to superior for the recovery of their dues from inferior holders or
claims to set aside, on a account of irregularity, mistake or any other ground except fraud, sales for arrears of land-revenue ;
&EVENUE
tTuBISDICTIOK A.0t
land-revenue."
laud mortgaged by him to the first the land as owner, alleging that the mortthe assessment on the land to the Native Chief to whom it gagee had failed to pay was due. The latter had accordingly sold it by public auction to realise the assess-
The
plaintiff
sued to redeem
certain
defendant.
ment, and he (defendant No. 2) had bought it. The Court of first instance rejected the plaintiffs claim on the ground that the suit could not be entertained by a Civil
this
On
on
District Court reversed the decree and remanded the case for
th-3
Hold, confirming the order of the District Court, that Government having rendered no
assistance in the proceedings for the realization of the revenue by tho Native Chief on whom ihe defendant roliel, tho jurisdiction of the Civil Court wis not taken awiy
by
'--I.
Defendiut No. 3
tiu
witan-
He enjoyul for the performance of bis duties souu dar Kulkarci of the village. inam lands, and a cash allowance of B# o paid annually by the iu:iindir. In 1884.
defendant No. 3
h'tvirjg failed to
from 20th November 1884 to 4th December 18SG. Ou the application of DofeiUant No. 2, the Collector increased his remuneration according to the scale fixed for Government villages known as the Wingate scale, and ordered plaintiff to pay tho Ou increased remuneration, s') as to make up the amount due under that scale.
26th September 1890, the Collector recovered the sum of by attachment of his property. The plaintiff thereupon
&&
171
from the
tho
plaintiff
sued
Secretary*
of
Tho State for India in Council to recover this amount as being illegally levied. defendant pleaded that the Collector, having determined the amount of Defendant
No. 2>s remuneration under 8. 17 of the Hereditary Offices Act, 1874, the plaintiff had no cause of action against him, and that tho suit was barred under this clause. Held, that as the cash payment made by the plaintiff to the vatandar was certain,
and not of a fluctuating or indeterminate character, the Collector had no power to
increase the remuneration of the officiator under
s.
suit
this clause
(Anantacharya
Bom.
581).
An
order
transferring
them
thereof to fall
removing A's lands from his Khata, and on the ground that A had allowed the assessment into arrears and that B had paid the assessment, does not by itself
to JVs Khata,
made by a
amount to forftiture of A's interest in the lands. A suit by A to recover such land from B being simply a suit between private parties for the purpose of establishing a private right, this clause does not bar the jurisdiction of the Civil Court (Bhau
v.
747).
A suit for
Code was
passed after an attachment issued under s 150 of the same not barred by this clause, as the order of forfeiture is not a
v.
Secretary of State,
16
Bom.
455),
A.OT
The
XXf
plaintiff.
If the
Held, that the Civil Courts have jurisdiction claim be held to be one in respect of land-revenue, it
cl.
(c) of s. 5.
no application (Narayan
If it is not,
this
section has
v.
Right Of Government tO
is
Whenever
the
land-revenue
its
in arrears,
is
Government
is
due,
who-
ever
clause excepts from the jurisdiction of the Civil Courts claims to set aside, on account of irregularity, mistake or any other ground except iraud, sales for arrears oi land-revenue. Itus doubtful whether the exception of fraud in this clause fe confined to fraud on the part of officers conducting sale for arrears of land
revenue (Ibid.).
Suit tO Set aside Collector's Order. The predecessor-tn-titlc of defendants Nos. 2 to 8 alienated his vatan land to the plaintiff. After the death of the alienor, the defendants applied to the Collector to take proceedings for the protection of the vatan. On October 5, 1904, the Collector made a declaration, under s. 11 of
the Vatan Act, that the alienation was null and void. The Collector did nob summarily resume possession of the laud but decided to assess it at a full rent On
July
6, 1
further proceedings
rental of Bs. 75 per annum. On the land as the plaintiff had not
March
The
tor
paid the full amount of arrears of rent then duo. plaintiff sued for a declaration that the order of forfeiture made by the Collecinvalid.
was
He
;
6, 1
908,
when the
Held, that
was barred by
25 Bom. L.
785).
defendant
who
pieces
was
a Mamlatdar
of
District, attached
being taken in five carts on a public road by who owed arrears of land-revenue to Government and had to satisfy two decrees in assistance cases. The defendant was not invested, by the Collector of Satara Dis-
aome
with the powers contained in s. HO of the Land-Bevenue Code. The plaintiff a suit against the defendant to recover damages for wrongful attachment. The lower Court dismissed the suit on the ground that it was barred by s. 4 (c) of this
trict,
filed
and that as the defendant acted bonajide and was authorized under s. 154 of distrain the property, the suit was barred by s. 6 of this On appeal it was held, that s. 4 (c) was not a bar to the suit, in which thoro Act. was a claim arising out of the alleged illegality of the proceedings taken for the
;
Act
the
(Ganyaram
(c)
must be in
10
JuniSDionoHr ACT
(d) claims against Government (1) to be entered in the revenue survey or settlement records or village papers as liable for the land-revenue, or as
(2) (3)
(e)
or superior holder, inferior holder, occupant or tenant, surof a revenue to have any entry made in any record or or settlement, vey
to have
either omitted or
amended
the distribution of land or allotment of land-revenue on partition of any estate under Bombay Act IV of 1868, or any other law for the time being in force ;
claims against Government to hold land wholly or partially free from payment of landrevenue, or to receive payments charged on or payable out of the land-revenue, or to set aside any cess or rate authorized by Government under the provisions of any law for the time being in focce, or respecting the occupation of waste or vacant land belonging to
( /")
Government Claim to hold lands free from payment of Government revenue. The effect of the amendment of this section by A?t XVI of 1877 is
5
prevented from exercising their jurisdiction over claims against Government to hold lands wholly or partially free from payment of land-revenue (Kalabhai v. The Secretary of State for India,
<
29 Bom.
19).
The
fact 'that
the tenants of the neighbouring lands have cut the grass on the disputed land for the rab of their rice cultivation and have taken the produce of the tree standing thereon would not change the character of the land which was always treated as unassessed waste land (Shridhar v. The Secretary of State,
While
the Courts
may
have jurisdiction to declare that the villagers of a specified village are entitled to rights of free pasturage over Government waste lands within the limits of their village, still they can go no further and enjoin the Collector to pursue any particular
course in connection with thom,while he is acting bom fide in pursuance of the powers which the provisions of the statute confer upon him. The claim being against Government respecting the occupation of the waste land belonging to Government, the Oiyil Courts are precluded from entertaining it under cl. (/) of this section. qiestion relating to the discontinuous occupation of village wastes by the village cattle IB as much a question of land-revenue as one relating to the permanent occupation of them or a portion of them by an individual (Trimbak v Secretary of State, 21
Bom.
684).
Act No. I (g) claims regarding boundaries fixed under Bombay of 1865, or any other law for the time being in force, or to set aside any order passed by a competent officer under any such law with regard to boundary-marks :
Provided that
if
partially
any person claim to hold land wholly or exempt from payment of land-revenue uader-
JURISDICTION ACT
11
jurisdiction Of a Civil Court is not ousted by this clause, in case of a dispute as to the position of the boundary line between two survey numbers as laid down by the survey authorities, the defendant alleging that the boundary marks were changed, the plaintiff alleging that they are in their right direction
(Bala
v.
The
Nana. P.
J. 1898, p. 41).
The
Collector's
deci-
sion as to the fixation of boundaries, under sec. 121 of the Land-Revenue Code, 1879, does not prevent one of the disputing parties filing a suit in the Civil Court on
the ground that he has acquired a portion of his neighbour's survey possession (Bhaga v Dorabji, 43 Bom. 67).
number by adverse
Proviso contains no exceptions in respect of holdings unaccompanied by proprietary right in the soil and there -is no saving clause which would suggest that
such a claim to such holdings might fall within the purview of the Pensions Act. The right of an alienee of the revenue to sue for disturbance of his possession by a stranger or by Government is clearly recognized by the proviso, and the only condition required is that the claim should bo under an enactment, instrument, sanad, written grant or judgment such as is described in tho proviso (Bafoant v. The Secre-
29 Bom. 480).
written
of the proviso must prove that there was a British and it cannot be presumed that a Government, grant by written grant of some kind must have been made simply because a grant is not denied
v.
The effect of the proviso is that where an occupancy tenant holding under Government is called upon to pay land revenue according to the survey rates, it is open to him to resist the clHim of Government in a Civil Court on the ground that he holds under a written grant or an enactment, &c v which prevents Government from claiming more than can be recovered under the grant or enactment, &c.
(Laksuman
(K)
v.
Gwind, 28
Bom
26).
any enactment for the time being in force expressly an exemption not before existing in favour of an individual creating or of any class of persons, or expressly confirming such an exemption on the ground of its being shown in a public record, or of its having existed for a specified term of years, or
Note.
source of
Clauses (A),
(i), (;)
and
(K) stand
the
each clause is referred to in each, stands apart from the rest, and connected only with that portion of the proviso which precedes clause f h) (Kalabhai
title, v.
an instrument or sanad given by or by order of the GoverBombay in Council under Bombay Act No. II of 1863, section I, clause first, or Bombay Act No. 7 of 1863, section 2, clause
nor of
first,
or
(j )
any other written grant by the British Government expressly creating or confirming such exemption, or "Any otjier written grant/' The phrase "any other written grant"
in this clause
means any written grant other than that which falls within 29 Bom. 19). and {) of this section (Kalalhai v. Secretary of State,
els.
(h)
12
JURISDICTION ACT
bach exemption.
tioned in that portion.
() a judgment by a Court of law, or an adjudication duly passed by a competent officer under Bombay Regulation XVII of 1827, chapter A, or under Act No. XI of 1852, which declares the particular property in dispute to be exempt ;
such claim shall be cognizable in the Civil Courts.
officer." These words, as used in this clause, included the Governor in Council, who is one of the authorities upon whom judicial powers were conferred by Act XI of 1852 (Janardanrao v. Secretary of State, 13 Bom. 442).
"Competent
Khatib in am. Lands assigned to a Khatib inam were enjoyed rent-free by the grantee and continued to him on the same terms by the Inam Commissioner in 1856 under Act XI of 1852. Plaintiff, an alienee from a Khatib, enjoyed them
similarly
from 1864
to
to
In
91 1 the Commissioner resumed tho land* by levying full assessment on them. Plaintiff sued for a declaration that he was the full owner of the lands of the
1
Khatibgari right appertaining to them, field, that the plaintiffs claim to hold the land wholly or partially free from payment of land revenue under an adjudication
of IS 52 was cognizable in the order passed by a competent officer under Act Civil Courts under proviso (k) to this section (Fakrodin Saheb v. Secretary of State,
22 Bom. L. E. 1166).
Inam Commissioner
in
predecea so r-in- title of the plaintiff. Plaintiff, an alienee from a Kaji, held the lands free of assessment, though the service of the Kaji continued lo be performed by the
Collector ordered in 914 full assessment to bo and in case of non-payment lands to be forfeited. Plaintiff sued for a declaration that the Collector's order was illegal and idtra vires. Held, that cognizance of the suit by the Civil Court was not birred under s 4 ()(!)
The
of this Act,
State,
for
the suit
fell
v.
Secretary of
21 Bom. L, R. 1159).
lllustratiotis to (h).
enacted that, in the event of the proprietary right in (1) lands, the property of Government, being transferred to individuals, they shall be permitted to hold the lands for ever at the assessment at which they are transferred. The proprietary right in certain land is transferred to A at an assessment of Rs. 100. An exemption from higher assessment not before existing is expressly created in favour of A by enactment, and he may seek relief in the Civil Court against over-assessment.
It is
(2) It is enacted that when a specific limit to assessment has been established and preserved, the assessment shall not exceed such A is the owner of land worth Rs. 100 for assessspecific limit. ment. He claims to be assessed at Rs. 50 only on the strength of a course of dealing wilh him and his predecessors under which his land has not been more highly assessed* There is no exemption
JUBISDXOTION ACT
13
claim
is
not
(3) It is enacted that land-revenue shall not be leviable from land held and entered in the land -registers as exempt. A claims any to hold certain land as exempt on the ground that it has been so held by him, and is so entered in the land-register. This is an
exemption expressly confirmed by enactment on the ground of its being shown in a public record, and A's claim is cognizable in a
Civil Court.
enacted that the Collector shall confirm existing all lands shown in certain maps to be exempt. exemptions claims exemption alleging that his land is shown in the maps to be exempt. A's claim is cogniz ible in a Civil Court.
(4) It
is
of
(5) It is enacted that assessment shall be fixed with reference to certain con side, ations, and not with reference to others. This is
not an enactment creating an exemption in favour of any individual or class, and no objection to an assessment under such an enactment is cognizable in a Civil Court.
Saving
suits.
of
certain
5.
Nothing
the
in section
prevent
:
Civil Courts
(a) Suits against Government to contest the amount claimed, or paid under protest, or recovered, as land-revenue, on the ground that such amount is in excess of the amount authorized in that behalf by Government, or that such amount had, previous to such claim, payment or recovery, been satisfied, in whole or in part, or that the plaintiff, or the person whom he represents, is not the per-
suits between private parties for the purpose of establish(/>) ing any private right, although it may be affected by any entry in any record of a revenue survey or settlement or in any village papers ;
relating to
cl. (b)
inam land
for
the purpose
falls
\vithin
suits
tenants
between superior holders or occupants and inferior regarding the dues claimed or recovered from
in section J, clause ((/), shall bs held to prevent Courts from entertaining suits, other than suits against Government, for possession of any land being a whole survey number or a recognized share of a survey number
and nothing
the
Civil
14
JURISDICTION
ACT
* and nothing in section 4 shall be held to prevent the Civil Courts in the district mentioned in the second schedule hereto annexed from exercising such jurisdiction as, according to the terms of any law in force on the twenty-eighth day of March 1876, they could have exercised over claims against Government
any property appertaining to the office of any hereditary officer appointed or recognized under Bombay Act No. Ill of 1874 or any other law for the time being in force, or of any other village-officer or servant ;
(a)
(b)
relating to
to hold land
;
revenue
(e)
to receive
revenue.
* This para, was added by the Act, 1877 (16 of 1877).
6.
(Amendment)
Revenue
officers shall
not be liable to be sued for damages any any act bona fide done, or ordere to be d e > b y the as such in suance of the provisions of any law for the
in
P*
If
time being in force. any Revenue officer absconds or does not attend when called
official
on by his
ceeds against
him
superior, and if the Collector of the District or his sureties for public money, papers or
time
proprobeing in
costs
in
damages or
or
sureties
although
appears that a
part
only,
or no
demanded was due from the officer or that he was not in possession of
of him.
part whatever, of the sum so absconding or failing to attend, the papers or property demanded
Act not done in pursuance of law. The defendant who was a Mamhtdar of Khanapur
attached some pieces of jaggery which were being taken in five carts on a public road by the plaintiff's son from the fields of D, who owed arrears of land revenue
Government and had to satisfy two decrees in assistance cases. The defendant was not invested, by the Collector of Satara District, with the powers contained in s. 140 of the Land Revenue Code. The plaintiff filed a suit against the defendant to
to
recover damages for wrongful attachment. The lower Court dismissed the suit on the ground that as the defendant acted bonajido and was authorized under s. 154 of the Land Revenue Code to distrain the property the euit was barred by this section. On
was held that the defendant was not entitled to claim protection under this which required that the act complained of should have been done bona fid* in pursuance of the provisions of any law, as he was not invested by the Collector of the District with powers contained in s. 140 of the Land Revenue Code and it was not i roved that he believed the property distrained to be that of the
appeal, it
section
defaulter, aa
required under
s.
(Gangaram
v.
Dinfar
15
Bom
L. R. 665),
THE
7.
. .
ACT
15
Nothing
in
LveZ
officers
no bar to Civil
any law for the time being in force which authorizes the punishment departmentally of any Revenue oficer for any offence or breach duty, or which sanctions his prosecution
criminally for such offence or breach, shall be held to bar any remedy which may be had in
remedies.
8-10.
ings;
proceed-
for
record."]
Rep. Act
XV
of
1880.
No
on account of any act or omission of any the P laintiff tain? "i? pla laTS Revenue fficer UnlC8S L has exhausted right of that, previously to bringing his suit, he has appeal. presented all such appeals allowed by the law for the time being in force as, within the of for bringing such suit, it was possible limitation allowed period
to present.
This section requires only presentation of appeal and not waiting for the reply.
to his appeal
This section doe* not require that a plaintiff should wait till he receives a reply from Government. It is enough that he has presented an appeal otherwise his suit might become time-barred before he receives the reply (Abaji v.
Secretary of State for India, P. J. for 1896, p. 686 ; 8. c. 22 Bom. 579). " Act. " Under section 62 of the Land Revenue Code, the Collector ordered
certain
Government land
to be sold.
Held, that
v.
is
an
J. for
18 96
341).
Forest Officer
an appeal.
ed
strictly.
is
not a
is
Revenue
and only in cases where the law allows not a Revenue Officer. This Act must bo construwords (Narayan
to
v.
No
Secretary of State, 20 Borm. 803). The bar of jurisdiction contained in this section does
not apply
cases
in
s.
81 of the Forest
to recover, at
the request of a Forest Officer, the price of cut-timber sold by the latter under s. 81 of the Forest Act (Haribhai v. Secretary of State, 20 Bom. 714). ' "All such appeals. 7 This expression means appeals in respect of the "act
or omission/
omission concerned
of appeal under the
this clause does not apply where the act or not an order or decision in respect of which there is a right
(Sakharam
v.
Collector of Ratnagiri,
28
Bom.
382).
the time allowed by law/'
"Appeal allowed by
mean "an appeal within
The words "appeal allowed by law" do not They refer to the appeals which
the law prescribes, and have no reference to the limitation in point of time, which the law may impose upon the bringing of such appeals (Ranchhod v. Secretary of State,
22 Bom. 563).
16
TEX BOMBAY
Application to Commissioner
Where
the plaintiffs had obtained a decree declaring that the Government had not the right to enhance the land revenue on their village, and the Collector pending an
levy such enhanced assessment, it was hild that though the plaintiffs might have obtained an injunction against the Collector by motion either in the Oourt which had passed the decree, or in the High
Court, that did not prevent the plaintiff from bringing an that purpose, and that this section did not apply.
independent
suit
for
Even
assuming,
that
an application to set aside a Collector's order made to the Revenue Commissioner would be an "appeal allowed by law" within the meaning of this section, the present case was not within Bombay Regulation V of 1830, inasmuch as cl 4 (1; of that
Regulation would have excluded his intervention, as the claim to exemption from liability to enhancement of revenue had already been the subject of judicial investigation, and was still sub-judice in the High Court (The Government of Bombay v.
Bhimabhai, P. J. for 1879, p 351).
Practice
applies,
Procedure.
Under
this
Act, in a suit to
which
this
Act
the Court, before taking evidence on the merits, should requije the plaintiff to prove first of all that he has, previously to bringing the suit, presented all such appeals allowed by the law for the time being in force as within
it
was possible to
prevent
(Ranchhod
v.
Secretary of State,
22 Bom. 173).
No
Where
a plaintiff
files
a suit for
the reversal of an order of the Collector directing him to remove an encroachment on a public road and for an injunction, his omission to file an appeal from the Collector's order to the Revenue Commissioner or Government bars the suit
v.
Secretary of State, 22
Bom.
L R
1089):*
The
plaintiff's
land
on the 6th
May
1911
after
which he applied
first to
the
Collector
aside the order. Eventually he filed a suit on 1 4th October 1915 for a declaration that the proceedings hold by the revenue authorities in respect of the forfeiture were illegal and ultra vires. Held, that the suit was
to the Commissioner to set
barred by limitation since if the plaintiff wished to have a decision of the Oourt upon the legality or illegality of the order of forfeiture, he was bound to put his plaint on the file within one year of the date of the order (Ganesh v. Secretary of
State,
44 Bom. 451).
demand
to pay assessment.
held their land free of rent, were all of a sudden served by the Mamlatdar with a notice of demand to pay assessment. No order of the Collector
who
The plaintiffs having filed a suit for a declaration that they were entitled to hold their land rent free, the Secretary of State contended that the suit was barred under this section. Held, that this section did not apply to thu as an order case, since the notice of demand by the Mamlatdar could not be treated
was forthcoming.
or decision within the meaning of
ss.
Code (Nathuram
v.
Secretary of State,
The
6th February 1917, to remove an encroachment on a public road. No appeal was made to tbe Revenue Commissioner or to Government. On the 2 1st April, the
JURISDICTION
h*
filed
Acr
a suit,
17
the encroachment
that unless
would be removed.
the 27th April, 1917, the present suit was filed for a reversal of the order and for an injunction to restrain the defendant from carrying
On
out the order. Held, that no appeal from the Collector's order having been made either before the suit was filed or afterwards, the suit was barred by the provisions of this section (Dayal v. Secretary of State, 22 Bom. L. E. 1089).
the trial or investigation of any suit, claim or objection, which, but for the passing of this Act r 1 t have been tri ed or investigated by a ? to u ^ lv " p Court, there arises any question on which of cision the High the Governor General in Council or the Local Court. Government desires to have the decision of the High Court, the Governor-General in Council or the Local Government, as the case may be, may cause a statement of the ques12If, in
STiSSfcTS!
tion to be prepared, and may refer such question for the decision the High Court of Judicature at Bombay.
of
The said High Court shall fix an early day for the hearing the question referred, and cause notice of such day to be placed the Court house.
of
in
The parties to tin case may appear and be heard in the High Court in person or by their advocates or pleaders. The High Court, when it has heard and considered the case ? shall send a copy of its decision, with the reasons therefor, under the
seal of the Court, to the Government oy which the reference was made, and subject to any appeal which may be presented to Her Majesty in Council, the case shall be disposed of conformably to such decision.
Tf the
High Court considers that any such statement is imHigh Court may return it for amendment.
any) consequent on any such reference shall be High Court in each case directs.
Under
this
The
costs (if
section
a question for the decision of the High Court, when investigating any claim or objection which before 1876 may have been excluded from the cognizance of a Civil Court (Vasudev Harihar Pandit, In re, 23 Bom. L. R. 161 ;
a. c.
Bom. 45
463).
This section gives the High Court absolute power not only to deal with costs as to who should pay them, but also by giving directions as to how directing by those costs should be ascertained (Jagannath Vasudeo Pandit In re, 23 Bom. L. E.
189
s. c.
45 Bom. 1177).
British Government granted by a Sanad in 1818 some villages in the talukas of Chikodi and Manowlee in Inam Dharmadaya from generation to generation to a predecessor of the respondent. Thereafter the Government ceded those talukas
The
In 1821, the Maharaja granted to the Maharaja of Kolhapur subject to the grant. some more villages in the said talnkas to the same grantee. In 1827, the two
3
18
talukas
to be handed back to the British Government by the Maharaja of under a which confirmed In 1864 the Governthe about Kolhapur treaty grant. meat made a summary settlement of the village with the grantee's son. The widow of a descendant of the grantee made an adoption which was upheld by the Privy Council in 1 91 4. The Maharaja took up the position that the adoption was invalid in absence of his consent ; and that as the lands were held under or on political tenure
treaty they were excluded from the settlement by s. 1 (2) of the Summary Settlement Act. Held, that the claim of the Maharaja was excluded from the jurisdiction of the Civil Courts under s. 4 supra and that, therefore, the Government were
entitled to
make a
reference to
the
Kolhapur v Bala
Maharaj, 48
Bom
this
section
(Maharaja
oj
the jurisdiction of the High Court to give special directions in each case (Ibid
ucouuuo
Court.
JA
juris^ction^^o^^laigh
suit instituted, or in any a in Civil Court, the Judge appeal presented doubts whether he is by this Act
13.
If in
any
precluded
suit or
may
High
appeal, Court.
The High Court may order the Judge making the reference, either to proceed with the case or to return the plaint.
The order
of the
High Court on any such reference shall be subHer Majesty in Council, and save as aforesaid,
section twelve
14
or
section
thirteen
shall be heard
Composition of Bench.
Qumber
For section thirty-two of the Bombay Civil Courts Act, No. XIV of 1869, the following shall be sub-
3^r^mb*"Sl
Courts Act.
sauted (namely)
r
"
register a suit in which the Government or in his official capacity is a party, but in such case such every Judge or Court shall refer the plaintiff to the District Judge, in whose Court alone (subject to the provisions of
any
officer of
Government
16.
Whenever any
.
* This
1929,
s.
section
section
by Bom. Act
XXI
of
2.
JURISDICTION ACT
19
any such suit shall have precedence over the trial of any other suit or other civil proceeding then pending in the Court of the first class
subordinate judge, or,
District
if
the suit
is
Judge;
shall
requirement.
The privilege conferred on Government by this section shall, mutatis mutandis, apply to any appeal or special appeal against any decree in any such suit as is described in this section.
17.
[First clause.
1827.]
Repealed by Act
XV of 1880;
Revival of section 13 of
Bom. Reg.
XVII
of
any scheduled district unless and until the Bombay Land Revenue Code (Bom. Act V of 1879) has been extended to such district.
[Second
villages
clause.
X VII of 1827
in
sites
and
towns.]
clause.
Rep. Act
XV of 1880.
of
[Third
ment. ]
Rep. Act
XV
SCHEDULE
[ENACTMENTS REPEALED]
Repealed by Act
XII of 1891
Ahmedabad.
Fanob Mahals.
The
The
Broach.
The
Mandvi, as described in
Act
of 1848.
The
district of
Thana.
exclusive of the lapsed State of
[2]
Kolaba mentioned in
The
The
Kanara.
[1]
Bombay Revenue
s. 5.
Jurisdiction
(Amendand
It is referred to in 1877J.
1853
were repealed by
the Repealing
OF
[
1865.
21st January 1865.
An Ac* to provide for the survey, demarcation, assessment and administration of lands held under Government, in the districts belonging to the Bombay Presidency, and for the registration of the rights and interests of the occupants of the same.
Tremble.
of 1879.
1 to 36.
[Rep.
locally
by
Bom.
Ad V of 1819}.
the Ratnagiri collectorate and in the Raigarh, Kajpuri and Sanksi taluqas of the r pel for Tanft collectorate, the survey-settlement is w JiT? * S n ? which settlement guo1 -j MI i introduced into villages or estates held by ranteed may be granted to Khots in Katiiagiri Khots, it shall be competent for the Superintenand in certain taluqns of dent or Survey or Settlement-officer, with the the Tana collectorate sanction of the Governor in Council to grant the Khot a lease for the full period for which the settlement may b< guaranteed, in place of the annual agreements under which such villages have hitherto been held, and, further, the provisions of [/*] section 36 in respect to the right of permanent occupancy at the expiration of a settlement-lease shall hold good in regard to those villages or estates.
[aj
37
Whenever,
in
[]
any
Act.
[A]
(
Ss.
Act, 1880
Bom. Act
I of
1880
extends or
is
extended
see
8.
2 of
the latter
8.
Horn.
Act
locally
by the
Bombay Laud-revenue
Code, 1879
competent to such officer, with the sanction of the Governor in Council, to fix the demands Power to fix demands o f the Khut on the tenant at the time o the of KJQOt on tenant at , P i general survey ot a district, ana the terms UmeofSurvty thus fixed shall hold good for the period for which the settlement muy be sanctioned. Hut this limitation of demand on the tenant shall not confer on hi |n an )' ri ght of transfer by sale, mortgage or Proviso otherwise, where such did not exist before, and shall not affect the right of the Khot to the reversion of all lands resigned by his tenant during the currency of the general lease.
38.
It shall also be
,
.
1^1.
The
plaintiff
who was
thp
Idol of a village in the Kolata District took a leaee of the khoti rigtks from Gov-
From 1864 to 1892 the original survey settlement remained in In 1902 the revised settlement was introduced but tbo demands of the kbot
fixed
were not
to
under
this section
plaintiff
the settlement
plaintiff
tenant
of bib
rent at the
mamuli
was
mamuli
rates.
was
power under
intention to continue
of the ex-
pired settlement and the amount of the old rent being in law expressly enforced for the period of the old settlement and not enforced after the revised settlement the
plaintiff
wihiutat
(Abdul Rahim
back on
his
rights
).
Bom
L. R. 176
An
demand
will.
this
section,
fixing
the
of the
the tenant, could not bind the ryots to the land against their
It
reduce
free tenants to
adscriptiylebae
There
is
a distinc-
ed and "sanctioning" a settlement which simply accepts the rates proposed by the So where a settlement has been sanctioned and a period fixed, settlement Officer.
the
Khot
is
till
the
even after
it; if
no new settlement
v.
is
introduced, the
be
deemed
to continue.
Secretary of State
Sada&kiv, 36
Bom. 290
39-51.
Repealed
loccdly
by Bom. Art
V of 1879.
me
Revenue Recovery Act
ACT
No. X
OF 1890.
An Act to make
[14th February 1890. better provision for recovering certain public demands.
mencement.
f
WHBBBAS it is expedient to make better provision for recovering Certain public demands ; It is hereby enacted as follows : 1* (1) This Act may be called the ReTitle, extent and comvenue Recovery Act, 1890.
2)
It
extends to
;
Baluchistan
(3) It
.
the whole of British India, and British and shall come into force at once.
In this Act, unless there is something 2. repugnant in the subject or context, " district" includes a presidency-town; (1) (2) "Collector" means the chief officer in charge of the landrevenue administration of a district ; and " defaulter" means a (3) person from whom an arrear of land* revenue or a sum recoverable as an arrear of land-revenue, is due, and includes a person who is responsible as surety for the payment of any such arrear or sum. 3. (1) Where an arrear of land-revenue, or a sum recoverDefinitions.
able as an arrear of land-revenue, is payable to a Collector fc y defaulter bei "g or havin of process in other disproperty in a disdnct other than that in which the arrear accrued or the sum is payable, the triots than those in which became they Collector may send to the Collector of that payable. other district a certificate in the form as nearly as may be of the schedule, stating (a) the name of the defaulter and such other particulars as
*7 1C
be necessary for his identification, and the account on which it is due. (2) The certificate shall be signed by the Collector making it, and, save as otherwise provided by this Act, shall be conclusive proof of the matters therein stated. (8) The Collector of the other district shall, on receiving the certificate, proceed to recover the amount stated therein as if it were an arrear of land-revenue which had accrued in his own
may
(b) the
district,
proceedings are taken against a person under the last foregoing section for the recovery of an Remedy available to amount stated in a certificate, that person may, 011 the amount SJe/- if he denies his liabilit y to P*y ST art ^reof and an same urder for the pays ? P ed oSta^Mt fongobg in writing at the time of paymade notion. protest
4.
(1)
When
Snt
1
ment and signed by him or his agent, institute a suit payment of the amount or the part thereof so paid.
(2) A suit under sub-secetion (I) must be instituted in a Civil Court having jurisdiction in the !<>cal area in which the office of the Collector who made the certificate is situate, and the suit shall be determined in accordance with the law in force at the place where the arrear accrued or the liability for the payment o f the sum arose.
(3) In the suit the plaintiff may, notwithstanding anything in the last foregoing section, but subject to the law in force at the place aforesaid, give evidence with respect to any matter stated in the
certificate.
5.
Recovery by Collectors
J;r
rS
(1)
liable
is recoversble as an arrear of land-revimue by any public officer other than a Collector or by any local authority, the Collector of the
dis
by local authorities. sum as if it were an arrear of land-revenue which had accrued in his own district, and may send a certificate of the amount to be recovered to the Collector of another district under the
ct in the oft* of or offle . tl^ authority is situate shall, on the request of the officer or authority* proceed to recover the
wM*
if
the
sum were
When
to
Property
the CDllector of a district receives a certificate under this Act, he may issue a proclamation prohibiting the transfer or charging of any i mmov eable property belonging to the defaulter in the district.
(2) The Collector may at any time, by order in writing, withdraw the proclamation, and it shall be deemed to be withdrawn when either the amount stated in the certificate has been
sold
for the
recovery of
that
amount.
(3) Any private alienation of the property or of any interest of the defaulter therein, whether by sale, gift, mortgage or otherwise, made after the issue of the proclamation and before the with* drawal thereof, shall be void as against the Government and any person who may purchase the property at a sale held for the recovery of the amount stated in the certificate.
(4j Subject to the foregoing provisions of this section, when proceedings are taken against any immoveable property under this Act for the recovery of an amount stated in certificate, the interest! of the defaulter alone therein shall be so proceeded against, and no incumbrances created, grants made or contracts entered into by him in good faith shall be rendered invalid by reason only of proceedings being taken against those interests.
(5j
of
drum
relates.
Saying of local
relating to
laws
Nothing
in
the
foregoing
sections
revenue.
shall be construed
sions of,
(a) to impair any security provided by, or affect the proviany other enactment for the time being in force for the recovory of land-revenue or of sums recoverable as arrears of land-
revenue, or
(b) to authorize the arrest of any person for the recovery of any tax payable to the corporation, commissioner, committee, board, council or person having authority over a municipality under any enactment for the time being in force* When this Act has been applied to any local area which is 8. under the administration of the Governor1i General in Council, but which i. not part of $at -British demands arising beyond India, an arrear of land-revenue accru-
iZ&
British India.
sum
recoverable as payable to a
Collector or other public officer or to a local authority in that local area, may be recovered under this Act in British India.
THE SCHEDULE
OEBimOATE.
Set section 3, svb-uction (/).)
From
The
Collector of
To
The
Collector of
Dated the
of
is
18
payable o
by
son of
,
resident
of
*
)
who
is
bettered (to be
(to
ol
district.
at
your
Subject to the provisions of the Revenue Recovery Act, 1890, the said snmig recoverable by you as if it were an arrear of land-revenue which had accrued in
your own
district,
it
and to remit
it
to
my office
at
A.B.
The Bombay
BOM. ACT
2nd
October, 1879.
(As amended ty Bom. Acts III of 1880, 11 1 of 1886, I of 1910, II of 1914 and X V of 1933).
XVI
of 1895,
An Act
Bombay
Presidency.
WHEREAS
Flu;uilblL> '
necesarry to
make
maintenance and regulation of canals, for the supply of water therefrom and for the levy of
Bombay Presidency
It
is
enacted
PART
1.
shorttllle>
be
called
the
Bombay
Local cxtuut.
Construction Of Statutes.
the subjects, whether as regards person or property, oinat receive a strict con2H Bom. 105). struction (Secretary of State v. tialwml, 5 Bon. L, 7l*0
In section 55 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, for the words "or which has been made available hl consequence of the construction, improveof^oft^nd'i^nul tuent or repair of any irrigational or other work Code, i87t>, amenvieci by, or at the instance of, Government/' the words "and in respect of which no rate us leviable under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879" shall be substituted
2.
;
and in section 101 of the said Code, for the word "leviable" the word "levied" shall be substituted, and the words "or under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879," shall be inserted after the figures "55"; and to section 105 of the said Code, the words "or of the Irrigation Act, 1879" shall be added,
Interpretation clause.
Bombay
3. In this Act, unless there be something repugliant in the subject Or COOteXt,(1) "Canal" includes
(a)
all canals,
tained or controlled
channels, pipes, and reservoirs constructed, mainby Government for the supply or storage of
water
(b) all works, embankments, structures and supply and escape channels connected with such canals, channels, pipes or reservoirs and all roads constructed for the purpose of facilitating the construction or maintenance of such canals, channels, pipes oi reservoirs;
(c) all water-courses, drainage-works and flood hereinafter respectively defined
5
embankments
as
THE BOMBAY
IBBIGITION ACT,
(d) anv part of a river, stream, lake, natural collection of watef or natural drainage, channel, to which the Governor in Council may apply the provisions of section 5, or of which the water has been applied or used before the passing of this Act for the purpose of any
existing canal
(e)
or land belonging to Government which is situate on a bank of ajoy canal an hereinbefore defined, and which has been appropriated' under the orders of Government for the purposes of such canal ;
(2) '-water-course" means any channel or pipe not maintained at the cost of Government, which is supplied with water fiom a canal, and includes ail subsidiary works connected with any such channel or pipe, except the sluice or outlet through which water is supplied from a canal to sui-h channel or pipe ;
diainage work" means any work in connection with a system of irrigation or reclamation made or improved by the Government for the purpose of the drainage of the country, whether under the provisions of section 15 or otherwise, and includes escape channels from a canal, dams, weirs embankments, sluices, groins and other works connected therewith, but does not include works for their removal of sewage from towns ;
(3)
(4) ''flood embankment" means any embankment constructed or maintained by Government in connection with any system of irrigation or reclamation-works for the protection of lands from inundation or which may be declared by the Governor in Council to be maintained in connection with any such system, and includes all groins, spurs, dams and other protective works connected with such embankments i5, "Collector" [a] includes any officer appointed by the Governor in Council to exercise all or any of the powers of a Collector under this Act (6) KJanal officer" means any officer lawfully appointed or invested v ith powers under section 4
:
"
includes every person having a joint interest in the ownership of the thing specified; and all rights and obligations which attach to un owner under the provisions of this Act shall attach jointly and severally to every person having such joint interest in the owner(7)
"Owner"
ship.
such orders as may from time to time be passed by Government, any officer of f Canal ntment P Government whom the Governor in Council emoffll powers in this behalf may (a) appoint such officers with such designations and assign to them respectively such powers and duties, under this Act, as Government or such officer may deem fit
4.
Government
or, subject to
officer, in any department, either personally or in right of his office, or any other person, with such powers, and impose upon him such duties, under this Act, as Government or such officer may deem fit
(6)
invest
an)
Government
of, or investment with, powers or duties made under this section may at any time be cancelled or varied by the authority who
made
I
it.
a]
Words
repealed by Boin.
Act
ACT, 1870
PART
II.
OF
CANALS
Application of Water for purposes of Canals 6. Whenever it expedient to the Governor in Council appears tlm t the w a fcer of any river or stream flowing in Notification when water t a natural channel, or of any lake or any other supply to be -applied for natural collection of still water, should he applipurposes of Canal. ed or used by the Government or for the purpose of any existing or projected canal, the Governor in Council may by notification in the Bombay Government Gazette declare, that the said water will be so applied or used after a day to be named in the said notification, not being earlier than three months from the date thereof.
natural stream, though its flow of water be in Vote. part derived by percolation from a oanal, is not a canal until the Ghvernor in Council ha, applied to it the provisions of this section (Secretary * of State v Balwant, 5 Boin, L. ft. 790, 28 L'om. 105 ).
Poivers of entry on Land, etc. At any time after the day so named, any Canal-officer duly em P were <* in this behalf may enter on any land Powers of Canal officers remove any obstruction, close any channel and for purposes of so applying do any other thing necessary for such applicawater-supply. tion or use of the said water, and for such purpose may take with him, or depute or employ, such subordinates and other persons as he deems fit.
6.
'
7.
Whenever
for i en uir enquiry.
it
Kntr
shall be necessary to make any enquiry or examination in connection with a projected canal, or with the maintenance of an existing canal,
this behalf,
of anv
may
enter upon such land and as he may think necessary for the (tf) purpose, and exercise all powers and do all things in respect of such land (b) as he might exercise and do if the Government had issued a notification under the provisions of section 4 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, [a] to the effect that land in that locality is likely to be needed for a public purpose, and set up and maintain (c) water-gauges and do all other things necessary for the prosecution of such enquiry and examination.
Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf and any P erson acting under the general or special order Power to ioapeot and of any such Canal-officer, may enter regulate water supply. upon any land, building or water-course, on account of which any water-rate is chargeable for the purpose of inspecting or regulating the use of the water supplied, or of measuring the land irrigated thereby or chargeable with a water-rate, and of doing all things necessary for the proper regulation and management of the
8.
Any
canal from which such water is supplied. Note. This section only empowers a oanal officer to enter on any land, etc., and in no way defines what he may do for the proper regulation and management of the oanal (Secretary ofBtatt 9. Balvanc, 5 Bom. L. B. 790 ; a c. 28 Bom. 105).
[a
|
The
reference to
Act
of 1870 is altered
in accordance
with Act I of
1894,
1. 2.
*
9.
THE BOMBAY
In case of any accident being apprehended or happening to a canal, anv tCanal-officer dnlv empowered in , Irower to enter for rei i.i_' i/ i.i_ this behalf, and any person acting under the and to pairs, prevent accidents. general or special order of any such Canal-officer, may enter upon any land adjacent to such canal, and may take trees and other materials, and execute all works which maybe necessary for the purpose of preventing such accident or repairing any damage done. 10. When a Canal-officer or other person proposes, under the
tt A
* i
i
..
provisions of anv of the three last preceding sections, to enter 'into any building or enclosed conrt or garden attachched to a dwelling-house, not supplied with water from a canal, and not adjacen t to a iiood embankment, he shall previously give to the occupier of such building, court or garden such reasonable notice as the urgency of the case may
eCUpi0r
f
buUdTgt
e!c.
allpw.
Canal Crossings.
11.
Suitable means of crossing canals shall be provided at such places as the Governor in Council [a] or any
canals
if empowered by Government in this behalf [a] thinks necessary for the reasondlina^to able convenience of the inhabitants of the adbe avoided. jacent lands ; and suitable bridges, culverts or other works shall be constructed to prevent the drainage of the adjajent land being obstructed by any canal.
Commissioner
12.
Whenever
to the public health, or public convenience, or to ary canal or to' any land for which irrigation f * available, has arisen or may w'^n '> arise from the obstruction of any river, stream certain HmtB, or natural drainage-course, the Governor in Council may by notification published in the Bombay Government Gazette, prohibit, within limits to be defined in such notification, the formation of any such obstruction, or may, within such limits order the removal or other modification of such obstruction.
Government may
prohi.
M^ Wei*c
Thereupon so much of the said river, stream or natural drainageis comprised within such limits, shall be held to be a drainage-work as defined in section 3. 13. Any Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf may, after such publication, issue an order to any person causing or having control over any such obstruc order^perl^LZ^ tion to remove or modify the same within a time obstraction.
channel, as
_,
.
.
14.
If,
to be fixed in such order. within the time so fixed, such person does not comply with the order, the Canal-officer may cause the
when
obstruction to be removed or modified; and if the person to whom the order was issued does not, called upon, pay the expenses of such removal or modification,
[a]
inserted
by Bam.
't
of
1910, Schedule
I,
Part
II,
Serial
No,
THE BOMMBAY
the Collector an an
arrear of
Construction of Drainnage-works.
15.
Whenever
drainage -works
it
when
^"5FZZr&
carried out.
that any appears to the Governor in Council drainage-work is necessary for the public health or for the improvement of the proper cultivation Protection from iig*fo of .* la " d or tha / water, or from iloods or other accumulations of
'
erosion by a river, is required for any land, the Governor in Council may cause a scheme for such work to be drawn up and carried into execution, and the person authorized by the Governor in Council to draw up and execute such scheme may exercise in connection therewith the shall be powers conferred on Canal-officers by sections 7, 8 and 9, and liable to the obligations imposed upon Canal officers by sections 10 and 34.
PART
III
OF WATER~COI;KSKS
Construction of new* watercourses
l(>.
the
permission
water^u^'ly priv^
arrangement.
Any person
i.y
on
desiring to construct a new water-course, but being unable or unwilling to construct it under a arrangement with the holder of the land
private
j
Canai-offl.^r
<>onrsi>>
now
w:l "''
re ^ n
n
ma y
apply, in
writing, to
empowered
to receive
such
that he is ready to defrax all the expenses necessary for acthe land and constructing such water-course quiringhe desires the said Canal-officer, in his behalf and at his that (-2) cost to do all thrngs necessary for constructing such water-course. If the ('anal-officer considers the conis. Procedure when Canalof such water-course expedient, he structioii
(1)
;
officer oonsideis
oonatruo.
tioaofwatcr-oou^expe-
of
to deposit any part the applicant |j F l he expe nse aach Jfficer ma v consider neces-
sary,
made
into the
made, shall cause enquiry to be most suitable alignment for the said water-course,
and shall mark out the land which, in his opion, it will be necessary to occupy for the construction thereof, and shall forthwith publish a notification in every village through which the water-course is proposed to be taken, that so much of such land as is situated within such village has been so marked out,
and
district in
shall send a copy of such notification to the Collector of every which such land in situated, for publication on such land.
.
THE BOMBAY
The said
notification shall also call upon any person who wishes to share in the ownership of such water-course to the to make his application [ that respect Canal-officer within thirty days of the publication of such notification.
If any such applicant appears, and his application is admitted, he shall be liable to pav his share in the con... , , Btruction of such watercourse, and in the cost w]S^*btoto?*^ of otcost, acquiring the land for the same, and shall be an owner of such water-course when constructed.
_.
.
of such notification the Collector shall proceed to acquire such land under the proviQf fche Acqnigition Act> 1894| [a ] as if a declaration had been issued by the Government for the acquisition thereof under section tf of that Act, and as if the Government had thereupon directed the Collector to take order for the acquisition of such land under section 7 of the said Act, and (if necessary) as if the Government had issued orders for summary possession being taken under section 17 of the said Act.
receipt of copy
19.
On
^^
20.
On being put
c'
in possession of the land, the Canal-officer shall construct the required water-course ; and on its completion shall give to the owner notice thereof, and of any sura payable by him on ac-
course.
count of the cost of acquiring the land 'and constructing the waterOn such norice being given, such sum shall be due from the owner to the Canal-officer. On receipt of payment in full of all expenses incurred, the Canal-officer shall make over possession of such water-course to such owners.
Rights
and
obligations of
21.
Owners of Water-Courses
1^,1 bound
(a) to construct and maintain all works necessary for the passage across such water-course, of canals, water-courses, drainage channels and public roads existing at the time of its construction, and of the drainage intercepted by it, and for affording proper communications across it for the convenience of the occupants of neighbouring lands ;
(b) to maintain such water-course in a fit stite of repair for the conveyance of water ; (?) to allow the use of it to others or to admit other persons as joint owners thereof OD such terms as may be prescribed under the
and every owner of a water-course and every person duly authorised under the provisions hereinafter contained to use a water-course
shall be entitled
(d) to have a supply of water by such water-course, at such rates and on such terms, as may from time to time be prescribed under
[a]
The
2.
reference to
Act
of 1870
is alltered
in
accordance with
Act I of
1894, 8i
i?HK
section 44 section 70
to the
Council under
Provided always that any owner of a water-course and, subject terms of any" agreement between the parties, or to any condition imposed under section 23, any such person as aforesaid may at any time, by giving three months previous notice in writing in this behalf to a Canal-offifier duly empowered to receive such notices,
7
person desiring to have a supply of water through a water-course of which he is not an owner may ith Wner make tt l)nvate arrangement with the owner for or permitting the conveyance of water thereby, such receive to to a Canal-officer applicaduly empowered may apply tions for authority to use such water-course or to be declared a joint
22.
Any
section speaks merely of a supply of water and there U no valid reason for restricting these words to the case of a first supply of water, which a person may desire to have, or which may be authorised under s. 28 j but
where the special statutory powers given by tin Act have been exercised
without
as to serving notice and hearing objeccomplying witb the statutory requirements ani U ultra vires (62 1.0. 225). tions, the order is one p*33ed without jurisdiction
the Canal-officer shall receipt of any such application, serve a notice on the owner to show cause why Canai-officer after enquiry such authority should not be granted, or such may authorise supply. ^ ec ara ti n should not be made, and, if no obbe raised jection be raised, or if any objection and be found insufficient or invalid, shall, subof the Collector, either authorize the applicant to ject to the approval use the water-course, or.declare him to be a joint owner thereof on of compensation or rent or othersuch conditions as to the
23.
On
frnt*
payment
wise as
falls
by a
Collector under
this
section
within the purview of 8. 203 of the Bom. Land Revenue Code and is tbe order of the Collector though it is a confirmation of an order of a Canal-officr. An appeal from such an order lies to the Commissioner, and unltl presentation of
the appeal, suit to set aside the order da* Khatomal, 6 8. L. K. 241).
Use
of
is
9.
Jeramfor a
purof a Canalpose without the previous consent officer duly empowered to grant such permission. If any owner of a water-course ails to fulfil any obligation 2r>. imposed upon him by clause (a) or (b) of section If owner fails to execute 21, any Canal-officer duly empowered in this work or to repair waterbehalf may require him by notice, to execute the By necessary work or repair within a period, to be of not less than fifteen prescribed in such notice, the same on his behalf, execute of event the failure, in may days, and, this section, all expenses inand, except as hereinafter provided in curred in the execution of such work or repair shall be a sum due by such owner to Government.
8 r
Una
acquired
nr
No land acquired under this Part 24. wa ter-course shall be used for any other
f""^
SSSe^i^
THE BOMBAY
couopa,:
in Every person other than an owner who uses any water-course respect of which any repair has been executed by * Canal-officer under this section shall, in the absence ofany agreement between the parties or penses of repair. of any condition imposed under section 23 at the
time such person was authorized to use such water-course to the the excontrary, be liable to pay to Government such ^proportion of determinbe shall as such the of in execution incurred repairs penses ed by the said Canal-officer.
Settlement of Disputes concerning Water-courses.
a dispute arises between two or more persons in regard to their mutual rights or liabilities in Settlement of disputes reepect of the use, construction or maintenance of a water-course, or among joint owners of a ot crested in water-coursewater-course, as to their respective shares 01 expense of constructing or maintaining such water-course, or as to the aYaount severally contributed by them towards such of any owner to or as to failure on the
26.
Whenever
abUito
me
part
any person interested in the matter of such dispute may apply, in writing, to any Canal-officer duly empowered to receive such applications, stating the matter in dispute.
Such officer shall thereupon give notice to the other persons interested that, on a day to be named in such notice, lie will proceed to enquire into the said matter,
and
if all
arbitrator, he
the persons interested consent, in writing, to his may pass his order thereon ;
being
who
failing such consent, he shall transfer the matter to the Collector, shall enquire into and pass his order thereon.
Any order passed by the Collector under this section shall in force until set aside bv a deecree of a Civil Court.
remain
PART IV
OF THE SUPPLY
OF
WATER
Every person desiring to have a supply of water from a canal shall submit a written application to that effect Ln supplied on f^ ^.02 ji r to a kanal-omcer duly empowered to receive written application. such applications, in such form as shall from time to time be prescribed by Government in this behalf.
27.
..,.., water do he
..
t>b
ma >\ w ^^ the sanction of Government, give permission for water to be taken for such purposes under such special conditions and restrictions as to the limitation, control and measurement of the supply as he shall be empowered by Government to impose in each case.
pifed
for"
If the application be for a supply of water to be used for purpose other than those ol irrigation, the Canal-officer
,
purposes
other
an those of
irrigation.
THJ BOMBAY
Provisions as
28.
'
supply
t0
St
Water
supply?
The supply of water to any water-coarse an ? P erson who is entitled to such supply
whenever and so l )ng as it is necessasy to stop such supply purpose of executing any work ordered by competent autho-
rity;
ply
and so long as any w&ter-^ourse by which such supnot maintained in such repair as to prevent tne wasteful escape of water therefrom (c) whenever and so long as it is necessary to do so in order to supply in rotation the legitimate demands of other persons entitled to
(6) whenever is received is
;
water
to prevent the
whenever and so long as it miy 1)3 necessary to do so in order wantage or misuse of water (e) within periods fixed from time to time by a Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf, of which due notice shall be given.
(d)
;
Thie section contemplates the snpaly of watjr (I) to a water-coarse, It does nob deal with the supply of water to any person entitled to snch supply, which means entitled under the Act to such a supply (Secretary of State v* B'llwant, 5 Bjm. L R. 7^0,3. c. 28 B >m, 105).
XVote.
and
()
to a person.
supplied for the irrigation of one or only, the permission to use such Duration of supply. )(J wafcer sUal IQ confcinU3 only unbil gQch crop or crops shall come to maturity, and to apply only to such crop
29.
is
When
canal-water
more crops
j
or crops.
30.
Every agreement
for
W ^;r 'r"t
y
Agreements
supply
'oi-
for the supply of canal-water to any land, building or other immoveable property shall be transferable therewith, and shall be presumed to * transferred whenever a transferor guchlaml, building or other immoveable property takes place.
S" ^?,
person entitled to the use of an) work or land appertaining to any canal, anJ, except in the case of any such as aforesaid, no person entitled to Kight u> use oC \vatur not agreement m ab se the water of any canal, shall sell or sub-let, "t or otherwise transier, his right to such use withCauai-ofik'cr. out the permission of a Canal-officer duly en> such to permission. grant powered
No
PART
tial
10
Exceptions.
whon such
failure
(2) the
any cause beyond the control of Government, execution of any repairs, alterations or additions
to the
canal, or
any measures considered necessary by any Canal-officer duly in this behalf for regulating the proper flow of water in the canal, or for maintaining the established course of irrigation ; but any person who suffers loss from any stoppage or diminution of his water-supply due to any of the causes m water "*"
(3)
empowered
when auowabfe
able by
him
as
may
section shall be ensuch remission of the water-rate paybe authorized by the Governor in Council.
in clause (^) of this
titled to
named
Scope.
The
any
salt for
of water due to G-ovt. Engineer's action against tha Secretary of State 9. Secretary ofBtate, 58 1. 0. 7C9) (Siiid).
(Gangaram
claim for compensation under this Act shall be entertained after the expiration of twelve months from Limitation of Claim.. the time w hen the damage complained ofcommenced,unless the Collector is satiseftd that the claimant had sufficient Cause for not making the claim within such period.
32.
33.
[
No
Repealed by Act
X VI of 1895.
Summary
34.
Decisions.
In every case of entry upon any land or building under section 6, section 7, section 8 or section 9, the
Canal-officer or person making the entry shall ascertain and record the extent of the damage, if any, caused by the entry, or in the execution work, to any crop, tree, building or other property,
SSW^ol'uS:
etc.
of any
and within one month from the date of such entry compensation shall be tendered by a Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf to the landholder or owner of the property damaged.
If such tender is not accepted, the Canal-officer shall forthwith refer the matter to the Collector for the purpose of making enquiry as to the amount of compensation and deciding the same.
35.
If the supply of water to any land irrigated from a canal be interrupted otherwise than in the manner deBribed in clause (rf) of faction, 81. the holder of such land may present a petition for compensation to the Collector for any loss arising from
Tn
tl
such interruption, and the Collector, after consulting the Canal-officer, shall award to the petitioner reasonable compensation for such loss.
Civil Court has no jurisdiction to Jurisdiction Of Civil Court. entertain a claim to recover compensation from Government for failure by the Irrigation Department to supply water for his crops when the claim baa already
Secretary of State,
46
Bom.
738).
36.
Deciaum as to amount
dih^^wo
conclusive.
^^
either of the last two preceding sections as to the amount of compen8a tion to be awarded, or, if in any rule framed under 8ection 70 u 'h Vision shall be declared to be appealable, then the decision of the authority to whom the appeal lies, shall be conclusive.
>
Formal Adjudications.
37.
As soon
cases.
may
be
made
as practicable after the issue of a notification under section 5, the Collector shall cause public notice to be given at convenient places, etating that oer the Government intend to apply or use the water as aforesaid and that claims for compensation before him.
of sections 31 and 32 shall be annexed to every such notice. 38. All claims for compensation under this Act, other than _. claims of the nature provided for in sections 34 and ? 5 must )e made before the Collector of the toCoZ*or ! district in which such claim arises. Soope This section does not bar any suit for compensation for deScienoy.
.
,
A copy
>
of water due to
(Gangaram
39.
Collector
v.
the
Secretary of State
The Oollector shall enquire into every such claim and determine the amount of compensation, if any, which
to
opinion be given to the claimant; 23 (inclusive), mo AonSw"Act Act, 1870. Acquisition 5 g of fche Lftnd ftl Acquisition Act, 1810 (a) shall apply to such enquiries: Provided that instead of the last clause of the said section 26, the following shall be read
s
ho gnuta!
should in hi
Lanri
and Actions
"The provisions of
Bombay
language which amount of compensation to be awarded. " In determining the amount of compensation under the last 40. preceding section, regard shall be had to the Diminution in market, diminution in the market-value, at the time of awarding comnensation, of the property in respect of which compensation IB claimed ;
[a]
i.
Irrigation
this section and of sections 31 and 40 of the 1879, shall be read to every assessor in a he understands before he gives his opinion as to the
Act,
Act
Act
I of 1894, but
see saving in
13
THE BOMBAY
annual net profits of such property, caused by the exercise of the powers conferred by this Act. 41. All sums of money payable for compensation awarded under section 39. shall become due three months after ^ Compaction when due. the daim for compengation was made
..
.
centum per annum shall be allowed on any such sum remaining unpaid rei after the said three months, except when the tion-payment of such sum is caused by the neglect or refusal of the claimant to apply for or receive the same.
and simple
'
Abatements of Land-revenue and rent. compensation is awarded under section 39 no account of a stoppage or diminution of supply of water . A to an y land paying revenue to Government, and demand onlnterrupllon of the amount of the revenue payable on account of water-supply. such land has been fixed with reference to the water-advantages appertaining thereto, the holder of the said land shall be entitled to an abatement of the amount of revenue payable to such extent as shall be determined by the Collector. 43. Every inferior holder of any land in respect of which such .. . has been paid shall, if he receives c compensation r Abatement or inferior ., ,. ,, j.**.i j A to no part of the said compensation, \be entitled holder's rent on interruption of water supply. an abatement oft he rent previously payable by
42.
If the
him to the superior holder thereof in to the reduced value of the holding ;
proportion
which increases the value of the holding is afterwards restored to the said land otherwise en than at the cost of the inferior holder, the supeho?d\rTrent on rTstomrior holder shall be entitled to enhance the rent tion of water-suppiy. in proportion to such increased value provided that the enhanced rent shall not in any case exceed the rent payable by the inferior holder before the abatement, unless the superior holder shall, independently of the provisions of this section, be entitled so to enhance the previous rent,
but, if a water-supply
.
PART
VI.
OF WATER-RATES.
Supply Rates.
44.
to^pp^^^r
If,
for canal-water supplied for purposes of irrigation, or for any other purpose, as shall from time to time be determined by the Governor in Council.
owing
j
to the construction of a
p whiST
supply
.or extension of an
^Ser-
"existing
is
improved,
or to the improvement existing canal, the amount or duration of any water supply, in respect of which eifrher no revenue or a fixed amount of revenue has hitherto been paid to Govt. is increased,
new canal
THE BOMBAY
water- supply only.
II
The said rates shall be payable by the person on whose application the supply was granted, or by any person who uses the water so supplied.
Occasional Rates.
using
water supplied through a waterin an authorized manner, and if the person by whose act. or neglect such use has ly cannot be identified. occurred cannot be identified, the person or all the persons on whose land such water has flowed, if such land has
y
wal r
n^MS"
<" ^ used
45.
If
shall be liable,
or jointly
liable,
as
the case
may
be,
for
the
charges which shall be made for such use under the rules by the Governor in Council under section 70.
46.
l
prescribed
WatPf
ruMto wMter
water-course be suffered to run after enquiry, the person through whose act or neglect such water was suffered to run to waste cannot be discovered,
if,
the person or all the persons chargeable in respect of the water supplied through such water-course shall be liable or jointly liable, as the case may be, for the charges which shall be made in respect of Mie water so wasted, under the rule prescribed by the Governor in Council under section 70.
All questions arising under this and the last preceding shall, subject to the provisions of section 07, be decided by a officer duly empowered in this behalf.
section
Canal-
J&
48.
water
rate.
'"' '"
pfnX*
for
All charges for the unauthorized use or 47. waste of water may be recovered, as waterrates in addition to any penalties incurred on
and Leakage-rates.
shall appear to a Canal-officer duly empowered to enforce the provisions of this section, that any cultivat-
r^^iSiSt
would
ed
!<
receives, by percolation or leakage from such canal, an advantage equivalent to that which be given by a direct supply of canal-water for irrigation,
or that any cultivated hnd, whenever situate, derives by a surface flow, or by means of a well sunk within two hundred yards of any canal after the admission of water into such canal, a supply of water which has percolated or leaked from such canal,
he may charge on such land a water-rate not exceeding that which would ordinarily have been charged for a similar direct supply to
land similarly cultivated.
14
In
For the purposes of this *Act, land charged under this section shall be deemed to be land irrigated from a canal.
[ Reaped by Bom. Act III of 1880. ] Recovery of Water-rates and other Dues in Arrears. in 57, Every water-rate leviable under this Act shall be payable such instalments and on such dates and to such officers as shall from time to time be determined under the orders of the Governor in CouncilJJ or of any Commissioner empowered by Government in this behalf [0J-
49 to 56.
is not paid on the becomes due, and any sum due to * or to * Canal officer, whether on behalf of Government or of any oth^r person, under Part III [a] which is not paid when demanded, shall be recoverable according to the law and under the rules for the time being
Any
dav when
it
in force for the recovery of arrears of land-revenue. Rent payable to the owner of a water-course-bj a person authorized to use such water-course shall be payable in Rent due to owners of g uo h instalments and on such dates as the Canalofficer duly to act under section 23
o'v^buT
and may be recovered on benaiioi the owner according to the law and rules aforesaid : Provided always that no more shall at any time be payable to the owner than is actually recovered from the said person.
land-revenue.
arret 7f
empowered
shall direct,
PART
58.
VII
to or
lJ^"^!S
urgently required,
OF OBTAINING LIBOUB FOR CANALS ON EMERGENCIES Whenever it appears to a Canal-officer duly empowered act under this section, that unless some work
pair
is
such serious .immediately executed, as to cause to canal damage any happen sudden and extensive public injury,
will
or, that unless nome clearance of a canal or othor work which is necessary in order to maintain the established course of irrigation is immediately executed, serious pulic loss will occur, and that the labourers necessary for the proper execution of such repair, clearance or work cannot be obained in the ordinary manner within the time that can be allowed for the execution of the same so as to prevent such injury or loss,
the said officer may, by order under his hand, direct that the provisions of this section shall be put into operation for the execution of such repair, clearance or work ; and thereupon every able-bodied pergon who resides or holds land in the vicinity of the locality where such repair, clearance or work has to b* executed, and whose name appears in the list hereinafter mentioned, shall, if required to do so by such officer or by any person authorized by him in this behalf, be bound to assist in the execution of such repair, clearance or work by
ilfcW
These words were added by the Bombay Reapealing and Amending Act (Bow. Act I o! 1910), Schedule 1, Part, II, Serial No. 12. words "of this At" repealed by [*j ?iie Jthe Bombay General Clauses ^ot, 1886 (Bom. Act III of 1886), Schedule B, are omitted.
[a]
BOMBAY tsRiomoN
labouring thereat as such his behalf may direct.
officer or
Aoff,
in
All persons so labouring shall be entitled to payment at rates which shall not be less than the highest rates for the time being paid in the neighbourhood for similar labour. 59. Subject to such rules as may from time to time be prescribed under section 10 in this behalf, the Collector
shall prepare a list of the persons liable to be required to assist as aforesaid, and :uay from time to time add to or alter such list or any part thereof.
60.
List of a bo urers.
All orders
ade by
made under
_
eP
Ca?a omcer?
i
section 5^ shall be immediately reported to the Collector for the information of the Commissioner of the Division, and likewise to the Chief Engineer for Irrigation, for the infor-
mation of Government.
PART
VIII.
OF PENALTIES.
fll. Whoever voluntarily and without pcr aut horitydamages, alters, enlarges or obstructs any canal ;
pro-
(1)
(2) interferes with, or increases or diminishes the supply of water in or the flow of water from, through, over or under any canal, or by any means raises or lowers the level of the water in any canal ;
less
(3) corrupts or fouls the water of any canals so as fit for the purposes for which it is ordinarily used ;
to render
it
gauge
(4) destroys, defaces or moves any land or level fixed by the authority of a public servant ;
mark
or
water-
(5) destroys, tampers with, or removes any apparatus, or part of any apparatus, for controlling, regulating or measuring the flow of water in any canal (6) passes, or causes animals or vehicles to pass, in or across any of the works, banks or channels of a canal contrary to rules made under section 70, after he has been desired to desist therefrom ; (7) causes or knowingly and wilfully permits cattle to graze upon any canal or flood-embankment, or tethers or causes or knowingly and wilfully permits cattle to be tethered, upon any such canal or embankment, or roots up any grass or other vegetation growing on
;
or embankment, or removes, cuts or in any way injures, or causes to be removed, cut or otherwise injured, any tree, bush, grass or hedge intended for the protection of such canal or embankment ;
(8) neglects without reasonable cause, to assist or to continue to assist in the execution of any repair, clearance or work, when lawfully bound so to do under section 58 ;
70 for breach whereof (9) violates any rules made under section the Governor in Council shall, in such rules, direct that a penalty may be incurred ;
and whoever
A.OT,
(10) being responsible for the maintenance of a water-course, of using a water-course, neglects to take proper percautions for the prevention of waste of the water thereof, or interferes with the authorized distribution of the water thereform, or uses such water in an un-
authorized manner or prevents or interferes with the lawful use of such water course by any person authorized to use the same or declared to be a joint owner thereof under section 23 ;
shall when such act shall not amount to the offence of committing mischief within the meaning of the Indian Penal Code, on conviction before a magistrate, be punished for each such offence with fine which may extend to fifty rupees, or with imprisonment [a] for a term which may extend to one month, or with both.
8Ubi "
(1) pierces or cuts through, or attempts to pierce or cut through, or otherwise to damage, destroy or endanger the stability of any canal; (2) opens, shuts or obstructs, or attempts to open, shut or obstruct, any sluice in any canal (3) makes any dam or obstruction for the purpose of diverting or opposing the current of a river or canal on the bank whereof there is a flood-embankment, or refuses or neglects to remove any such dam or obstruction when lawfully required so to do ;
;
shall, when such act shall not amount to the offence of committing mischief within the meaning of the Indian Penal Code, on conviction before a Magistrate of the first or second class, be punished for each such offence with fine which may extend to two hundred rupees, or with imprisonment for a term which may extend to six months,
or
with both.
63.
U
fcrate raa J order that he sha 1 remove the obstruc! tion or repair the damage in respect of which the conviction is held within a period to be fixed in such order. If such person neglects or refuses to obey such order within the period so fixed, any Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf may remove such obstruction or repair such damage, and the cost of such removal or repair, as certified by the said officer, shall be leviable from such person by the Collector as an arrear of landrevenue.
Whenever any person is convicted under either of the Jast two preceding sections, the convicting Magisn
person in charge, or employed upon, any canal may remove from the lands or buildings belonging on Persons employed take into custody without a thereto, or may ffender8 and take forthwith before a Magistrate warrant, LTcStody*^ or to the nearest Police station, to be dealt with according to law, any person who within his view
64.
Any
damages, obstructs or fouls any canal, or without (2) proper authority interferes with the supply or flow of water, in or from any canal, or in any river or stream, so as to endanger, damage, make dangerous or render less useful any canal.
(1) wilfully
[a]
Words
repealed
are omitted.
It
shall prevent any person from being prosecuted under any other law for any act or omission made punishable by this Act : twice provided that no person shall be punished in respect of one and the same act or omission. 66 Whenever any person is fined for an offence under this Act, the Court which imposes such fine, or which
65.
r a sentence of which such line forms part, of such fine may be t>aid by way any part may direct that the whole of award to any person who gave information leading to tne detection of such offence or to the conviction of the offender.
fine, or
or
If the fine be awarded by a Court whose decision is subject to appeal or revision, the amount awarded shall not be paid until the period prescribed for presentation of the appeal has elapsed, or, if an appeal be presented, till after the decision of the appeal.
PART
H7.
IX.
MISCELLANEOUS
Collector provided that the appeal be presented within thirty days of the date on which the order appealed against was communicated to the appellant. All orders and proceedings of a Collector under this Act shall be subject to the supervision and control of the Commissioner. [<t]
:
Every order passed by a Canal-officer under sections 25, 30, 45, 40 and 48 shall be appealable
rder8
fiffect.
to
the con
trary
aaid in
[Secretary of State
0,
empowered under
production of
this
exfrnhfewlSr
may exercise all such powers connected with summoning and examining of witnesses and
;
Civil Courts by the Code of Civil Procedure [6] quiry shall be deemed a judicial proceeding.
(>9.
Service of any notice under this Act shall be made by delivering or tendering a copy thereof signed by the service of notice,. officer therein mentioned. Whenever it may be practicable, the service of the notice shall be made on the person therein named. When such person cannot be found, the service may be made on any adult male member of his family residing with him ; and, if no such adnlt male member can be found, tne notice may be served by fixing the copy on the outer door of the house in which person therein named ordinarily dwells or carries on business ; and, if such person has no ordinary place of residence within the district, service Of any notice may be made by sending copy of such notice by post in a registered cover addressed to such person at his usual place of residence.
[aj
\b\
Words repealed by Bom. Act ill of 1*80, Schedule B are omitted. This reference should now be read as applying to Act of lV09 (
BOMBAY
*****
lEftlGitlON A6*,
1 8?
and
cails
70. The Governor in Council may from time to time make rales nofc inconsistent with this Act to regulate the following matters :
(a) the proceedings of any officer who, under this Act, is required or empowered to take action in
any provision of any matter ; (b) the cases in which, the. officers to whom and the conditions subject to which orders and decisions given under any provision of this Act, and not expressly provided for as regards appeal, shall be
;
appealable
(c) the person by whom, the time, place or manner at or in which, anything for the doing of which provision is made in this Act, shall
be done
amount of any charge to be made under this Act and generally to carry out the provisions of this Act. The Governor in Council may, from time to time, alter or cancel any rules so made. Such rules, alterations and cancelments shall rubiication of rules. be pub i ished in the Bombay Government Gazette, and shall thereupon have the force of law. 71. Nothing in this Act shall be deemed of municipal water t o apply to any canal, channel, reservoir, lake Saving or other collection of water vesting in any muni(d) the
(e)
;
cipality.
PART X
72.
la]
Application^
this Part.
Irrigation
to
Second-class
H*h a
?3. (1) The Governor in Council may pubnotification in the Bombay Government
Gazette
(a) declaring that it is proposed to constitute any canal, channel, stream, river, pipe or reservoir, natural or artificial, or any part thereof, whether constructed, maintained or controlled by Government or not, which is actually used or required for the purposes of irrigation, a Second-class Irrigation Work ; (d) fixing a period of not less than four months from the date of publication of such notification in the Bombay Government Gazette for the submission of objections to such proposal.
Provided that no artificial reservoir or water-course supplied from such reservoir which is actually used for the purposes of irrigation by a single irrigator shall be included in such notification except either with the consent of such irrigator,or if in the opinion of the Governor in Council such inclusion is necessary in the putic interests, then without such consent but subject to the payment, after the issue of the declaration mentioned in sub-section (3), to such irrigator of such
[a]
fee. *,
Tn
15
by such notification.
(3) After considering such objections as may have been received within the period fixed as aforesaid the Governor in Council may, by notification in the Bombay Government ^Gazette, declare such canal, channel, stream, river, pipe or reservoir or any part thereof to be a Second-class Irrigation Work.
74.
When
a notification has been issued under sub-section (3) of section 73 the Collector shall publish in the language of the district at the Mamlatdar's Office of the taluka in which the work is situat-
ed,
and in every town and village which in his opinion is likely to be affected by such declaration, a proclamation (a; specifying, as nearly as possible, the source of supply, situation and limits of the Second-olass Irrigation Work notified under sub-section (3) of section 73;
(^) stating that this Part applies to the work so notified from the date of the notification published under sub-section (3) of section
73;
and
(c) fixing a period of not less than three months from the date of such proclamation, and requiring every person claiming any right in the work so notified either to present to the Collector within suchperiod a written notice specifying, or to appear before him and state, the nature of such right.
75.
(I)
Second-class Irrigation Work shall be deemed to be a canal within the meaning of sub-section (1) of 8 and to soch work the following sec"fction tions and Parts only shall, so far as may be,
:
apply, namely
Sections, 3, 4,
8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23,
Part IX.
(2) The aforesaid sections and Parts shall, for the purposes of this Part, be subject to the following modifications, namely (i) In section 16 before the word 'any' prefix the words
:
Record-of-rights
prepared
(ii) In section 17 before the word 'any' prefix the words Subject as aforesaid'. (iii) lo section 21 for clause (rf), the following shall be substitut-
ed,
namely
To have a supply of water on such terms as may be pre(rf) scribed in the Record -of-rights prepared or revised as hereinafter
provide^'
W
<iv)
Tftfc
BCO&AY
iBfclOAf1021 ACT,
To
'Provided that no such private arrangement shall .atfect anj^ rights to water recorded in the Record-of-rights prepared or revised a* hereinafter provided/
words In section 30 for the words 'every agreement for* th rights to' shall b mibstiitufced and in the same section after the word 'property' the words 'which have been recorded in the Record-ofrrights prepared or revised as hereinafter provided' shall be inserted. Paragraph 2 of the same section shall be omitted.
(v>
'all
31,
proviso clause
(c)
and the
0,
last
para-
'48'
76.
(1)
As soon as possible
period fixed
bv the Collector under section 74, clause (tf), a Record " of " Canal-officer duly empowered in this behalf, who shall be a Revenue officer not below the rank of a Mamlatdar, shall enquire into and settle claims to any right in the Second-class Irrigation Work, and shall record the extent of such risrht and draw up in the form from time to time prescribed by the Governor in Council an Irrigation Record -of-rts:hts so far as the same may be ascertainable from the records of Government and the evi dence of any person likely to be acquainted with the same and any other documentary or oral evidence which the parties concerned or their witnesses may produce.
4-
(2;
(^
Such Record-of-rights shall contain the following matters: the nature of the Second-class Irrigation Work and any work
subsidiary thereto, (b) the lands irrigable therefrom, (c) the custom or rule of irrigation,
(rf) the rights to water and the conditions on which such rights are enjoyed, and (e) such other matters as the Governor in Council may by rales
prescribe in this behalf, For the purposes of the inquiries under section 76 such 77. (1) Canal-officer may enter, by himself or any officer Powers of Canal-officer, authorised by him for the purpose, upon any land adjacent to any such work, and may survey, demarcate and make a map of the same.
(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in section 76 where no sufficient evidence is forthcoming as to all or any of the matters Specified in
as
and record the aforesaid matters in such manner as he may deem fit. 78. The Recoid-of-rights prepared under section 76 may be revised from time to time by a Canal-officer duly em*** * t> A . of Record^!. powered {n thftt behalf> who shall be ^ B emue . EjHiion officer not below the rank of a Mamlatdar.
'
may
'be,
settle
THI BOKBAY
79.
5t
who has prepared or revised any under this Part finds that, Record-of-rights 6 nghts. having dne r egard to the maint enance or management of the Second-class Irrigation Work, any ri^ht contained in the Record-of-rights cannot continue to be exercised to the extent recorded, he shall (subject to such rules as the Governor in Council
the Canal-officer
Wherd
.... .. n Oo*mutattoaoe
.
may from time to time prescribe in this behalf) commute wholly or in part, either by the piyment to the holder of of a sum of money in lieu thereof, or y the grant of land, other manner as he may think fit and he shall revise the
I
rights accordingly.
In the event of Government undertaking at their own cost any work whereby the supply of water in any Power oi Government Second-class Irrigition Work is increased beer" &t " Ume Of ^ nd the am Unfc f 8UCh ito?lnSnr.upSy preparing or revising the Record-of-rights under this Part the Governor in Council may, without prejudice to any rights so recorded, direct that the right to such surplus water shall vest in Government and shall be applied as Government may deem fit and the Record-of-rights shall be revised in accordance with such direction.
80.
.
^P^
81.
When any
"
Record-of-rights has been prepared or revised under this Part it shall be published in the Ian[ ReCOr<1 S Uft S e of th ? district at the Mamlatdar's Office of the taluka in which the work is situated and in and village which in die opinion of the Collector is affect-
entry in any RecorJ-of-rights prepared or revised under this Part shall be relevant as evidence in any Entries in the Keconias to the matters and shall be * be releVa lt US dispute to be true until recorded, the contrary is proved presumed evince. or a new entry is lawfully substituted therefor Provided that no such entry shall be so construed as to ILuit any of the powers conferred on the Governor in Council by this Part.
'
An
83.
(1)
In any suit or proceeding in which an entry made in any prepared or revised under this * Record-of-rights is directl y or "directly called in Part question, Collector. the Court shall, before the final settlement of
issues, give notice of the suit or proceeding to the Collector, and if moved to do so by the Collector, shall make the Secretary of State for India in Council a party to the same.
(2)
it8
Q ^ nn
Government
'
n * m ment
ing under the orders of Government in the exerPart conferred on such Collector, Canalofficer or other person or on Government,
cise of
pollector,
this
(1) no suit shall lie against in respect of anything done by the Canal-officer or any other person act*
any power by
which an entry made in any Record-of-rights prepared or revised under this Period of limitation. p a rt is directly or indirectly called in question shall be dismissed although limitation has not been set up as a defence if it has not been instituted within one year from the date of the? under section 81 of the Record-of-rights containing the
(3)
Any
suit or proceeding in
publication
19
said entry, or, if one or more appeals have been made against any order of a Canal-officer with reference to any entry in suah Record-oirights, then from the date of any order passed by the final appellate authority, as determined according to this Part.
In every Second-class Irrigation Work the following repairs shall be performed by the persons on whom the Ut obligation to perform them is imposed by the next following section, that is to say (1) The filling up of gullies, ruts and holes especially at the back of revetments, and all petty repairs of a like nature essential for the safety of bunds, of tanks, channel-banks or other portions of the said Second-class Irrigation Work.
84.
:
(2)
young
trees
The prevention of the growth on such work of prickly pear, and other vegetation endangering the safety or conceal-
ing the condition of such work. The preservation of such bushes and grasses as have been (3) planted for the protection of the interior water slopes of such work.
(4)
The clearance of
silt
from
sluices,
channels.
(5)
to perform the repairs prescribed by the last section shall, with reference to any preceding incidence of obligation. i an d irrigated from uch work, be deemed to be imposed jointly and severally, in the case of unalienated land, on the occupants of the land, and, in the case of all other land, qn the holders of the land, as defined in either case in the Bombay Landrevenue Code, 1879.
85.
whom any obligation is imposed with reference to any Second-class Irrigation Work by e Provisions of this Part, fails to fulfil ? of the obligation so imposed, or if any person infringes any right recorded in the Record-of rights prepared or revised as hereinbefore provided, the Canal-officer may require him by notice to fulfil such obligation or to desist from infringing such right within a period to be prescribed in the notice of not less than fifteen days, and in the event of failure may take such steps as may be necessary for the discharge of the said obligation, or the enforcement of the said right, and the amount of any expense so incurred shall be a sum due to Government and recoverable as an arrear of land revenue*
86.
If
any person on
.
ot^pS
duty of the Patel of any village within the Second-class Inigation limits of which any Work or portion of such work is situated to report to the Mamlatdar without unnecessary delay any failure or neglect to carry out any of the repairs specified in section 84. 88. No suit, prosecution or other legal proceeding shall be maintained against any public servant or person Bt appointed under this part in respect oF anyin good faith done or purporting to be from legal proceedings. tiding dttne under the provisions thereof or the rales
87.
It shall be the
$^
made thereunder.
Tn
89.
18
The Governor
es.
power o make ru
in Council may, from to time by notification in the Bombay Government Gazette and after previous publication, make rules as to all or any
of the following matters The manner of framing and revising the Record-of-right. (i) the proceedings of any officer who under the provisions O't) this Part is required to take action in any matter
;
of
"PART XT
SPECIAL PROVISIONS FOB CURTAIN LANDS IRRIGABLE BY
Provided further that if and when this part is extended to such lands, the cost of reconstructing water-courses shall oot be charged on lands watered within the 20 years immediately preceding the date of such notification by canals in lower Sind outsi'de the zone commanded by the Lloyd Barrage Canals.
Commentary.
This section incorporates the principle accepted in the Council
provisions should apply in the first instance to lands irrigable
that these
by the
Lloyd Bar-
it appears to any Canal-officer not inferior in rank to an Executive Engineer that it is exp dient to change the source of water-supply of any land for the more efficient distribution of water, he shall serve a notice on the holder or holders of the land and, if he proposes to transfer the source of water-supply of the land to any existing water-course, on the owner or owners of such watercourse also, calling upon them to state in writing their objections, if any, as to the source or alignment or construction of the proposed
water-course.
(2) (i) If no objection is raised within thirty days from the date of service of the notice, the Canal-officer may change the source of water-supply of the land in such manner as he thinks expedient.
(ii) If any objections are received within the said period of thirty days, the Canal-officer shall give the holder or holders of [1] "the land and the owner or owners of the water course" [1] a reasonable opportunity of being heard and may, if the said objections are settled, proceed to change the source of water-supply accordingly.
These words were substituted for the original words "land con[ /}-[!] cerned" 67 the Bombay Irrigation (Amendment) Act (iV of 1938), i, 3,
tt
(m) If no settlement in respect of tne said objections be arrived at between the Canal-officer ani the holder or holders of the land [a] and the owner or owners of the watercourse [a] the Canal-officer shall forthwith refer the matter to the Collector whose decision subject to any orders that may be passed in revision by the Commissioner, shall be final and conclusive as regards the alignment and construction of the proposed water-course and shall not be called in question in any Civil Court.
(3)
3.
XV of 1933,
(2).
Commentary
Sub-section (I) provides that the Canal-officer who exercises powers under this section should not interfere in rank to an Executive Engineer, Bub-section (2) deals with the procedure to be adopted after objections have been called for under sub-section (1).
appear to any Canal-officer not inferior rank to an Executive that Engineer Construction of new new water-courses should be constructed for the irrigation of any land in place of any existing "todiridto"to water courses or of any existing sources of m$nt of cost thereof water supply, it shall be lawful for him to construct such water-courses as he thinks necessary
it
.
92.
(I; If
shall in
Provided that befoce a Canal-officer constructs a water-course under the provisions of this sub-section, the provisions of the last preceding section relating to notice, objections, reference and revision shall, so far as may be, apply as if such water-course were a watercourse to be constructed under the said section Provided that if the holder or holders of such land agree to construct such water-courses at his or their own cost to the satisfactipn of the Canal-officer within a specified period, the said officer shall give the said holder or holders an option of so constructing the CIA r-k A same. In the event of the holder or holders of any land failing to (2) construct any such water-course under the option given to such holder
:
or holders in the proviso to sub-section (1) either to the satisfaction of the Canal-officer or within the period specified, the Canal-officer may .construct or reconstruct the same in whole or in part, as he thinks necessary.
The Canal-officer shall, on completion of any such water(3) course as is referred to in sub-section (I) or (2), give to the holder or holders of land concerned notice thereof, and shall make over possessession of the water-course to the said holder or holders.
Cost* of construction of new water courses in local areas. competent to the Canal-officer to fix the boundaries of local areas which are irrigated by one canal system, and within w&ich water-courses have been or are to be constructed in whole or in part under the provisions of sub-section (1) or (^), and to determine th$ cost or estimated cost, as the case may be, of such water courses,
4.
(<*)
It shall be
[aj
These words were ittbatitatex for the original words "land concerned" by
(Amendment) Aet
(XV
of 1993),
s.
2.
THE BOMBAY
-J5
and
the sums to be recovered from all holders of lands irrigated or to be irrigated within such areas as their share of the cost thereof. The estimated cost of such water-courses to be constructed within a local area shall be determined by the Canal-officer on the basis of the actual cost of such water-courses constructed within the local area before the 30th day of September 1933.
For the purposes of this sub-section a canal sysExplanation* tem means a caoal taking off direct from the river Indus, except in the case of the Nasrat Branch, Jararao, Thar and Hiral Canals each of which shall be deemed to be a canal system.
When (b) Distribution of costs of construction over irrigated lands. the Canal- officer has determined the cost of the construction of watercourses in any local area in accordance with the provisions of clause (a), he shall distrtibute such cost proportionately over the lands irrigated or to be irrigated and nhall declare the amount payable on account of such cost in respect of the land constituting each survey number as defined in the Bombay Land Revenue Code, J879, and the amount so determined shall be deemed a charge upon such land and shall be payable in the manner hereafter prohibited, by the holder for the time being of such land and no such survey number shall be sub-divided so long as th'3 amount so determined with interest remains unpaid
:
Provided that in distributing such cost in acccordance with the provisions of this clause land belonging to Government on the 1st day of August 1931 shall be assessed to such cost at twice the rate of
occupied land. Provided further that when the holder or holders of land have constructed a part only of a water-course under the option given by the proviso to sub-section (1) and the Canal-officer has constructed the remaining part of such water-course there shall be credited to such holder or holders the cost of the construction of the part constructed by them, such cost being based upon and proportionate to the cost of the construction of water-courses by the Canal-officer within the local area as determined by the Canal-officer in accordance with the provisions of clause (a).
(c) The Canal-officer after determining and declaring the sum payable by each holder of land on account of the cost of construting or reconstructing a water-course in accordance with the provisions of clause (a) or () shall give notice thereof to such nolder or holders of the land concerned, with, an intimation that the sum payable on account of such cost has become due from the date on which
possession of the water-course was made over to such holder or holders and that, if so desired, such holder or holders shall be permitted to pay the sum due in twenty equal instalments payable either annually or at such lesser instalments as may be convenient to such holder or holders together with interest at such rate as may be fixed by Government but not exceeding the rate payable by Government on its own borrowings on the date on which the said sum became payable as aforesaid.
(d) In the event of any default in payment of any sum due under clause (c) by the holder or holders, the sum payable shall be recoverable under section 57.
Tint
(5) The holder or holders of land to whom possession of a watercourse is given in accordance with the provisions of sub-section (3) shall be the owner or owners of such water-course.
under (6) Any person aggrieved by an order of a Canal-officer sub-section (4) as to the apportionment of the cost of construction of a water-course may present a petition to the Collector requesting him to revise that order, and the Collector after such inquiry as he ; thinks necessary and after giving the persons concerned a reasonable opportunity of being heard may pass such orders as he thinks fit. The orders passed by the Collector shall, subject to revision by the Commissioner, be final and conclusive unless modified by a Civil Court of
competent jurisdiction.
(7) If after the construction of any water-course under the provisions of this section the Canal-officer finds that any further alterations in the alignment or construction of the said water-course are necessary, it shall be lawful for him with the previous sanction of the Collector to carry out such alterations at the expense of Govern-
ment.
Explanation. For the purposes of this section 'the cost of constructing a water course' shall include the cost of aligning the watercourse and of such preliminary operations as are necessary for such alignment, but shall not include more than two-thirds of the cost of
printed as amended by
93.
Bom. Act
XV of
1933,
s. 8.
91
and 92
except the proviso to sub-section (1) of section 92 shall be deemed to have come into operation and to have had effect from the 1st June 1926
:
Provided that anything done by the Canal-officer under the said provisions between the 1st June 1926 and the date of the coming into operation of the Bombay Irrigation (Amendment) Act, 1931, shall not be invalid merely on the ground that any procedure laid down in the said provisions have not been followed.
Provided further that no compensation shall be payable for the stoppage of the supply of water to any water-course or to any person who was entitled to such supply if such stoppage was due to any action of the Canal-officer in changing or transferring the source of water-supply under the provisions of section 91 during the period
aforesaid.
No.
XVI
of 1838.
In the territories subject to the Presidency of Bombay, all suits in regard to tenures, and tne nature and Huita to be brought in extent of the interest and advantage which in D0t Revcm e virtue thereof should be enjoyed by the parties court* concerned, and all suits in which the right to possession of land is claimed, shall be brought in the Courts of Adalat and the Courts subordinate thereto, and not in the Courts of Revenue.
First.
'
'
Second.
Third.
2.
If a suit be presented in the Court of a Judge or Collector, which such Judge or Collector shall not deem within his Procedure on suit being jurisdiction the party presenting such suit shall
'
referred by the Court in which it may be fir 8 t presented to that in which, in the opinion or such Court, the jurisdiction lies, and the latter Court shall, in the event of its doubting its jurisdiction in the case, refer the question of jurisdiction to the Sadar Diwani Adalat, whose decision on the point shall be final.
abtog ta
tion.
"5.
If a suit be presented in any Court subordinate to the Court of a Judge or Collector, which suit such subordiAnd in subordinate nate Court shall not deem to be within its jurisCourt so doubting. diction, such subordinate Court shall submit the case to the Judge's or Collector's Court to which such subordinate Court is subordinate ; and if the superior Court to which the case is so submitted shall be of opinion that such subordinate Court has jurisdiction in the case, such superior Court shall direct such subordinate Court to proceed with the case ; and if such superior Court shall be of opinion that such subordinate Court has not jurisiction in the case, such superior Court shall proceed in the manner ^directed in the last preceding section.
3.
Court of Adalat or a Revenue Court shall have entered on its file, under this Act, a suit in which it has Transfer of suit entered not jurisdiction, it shall be competent to the in Couit not having jwi8g a(j ar i)i va ni Adalat, either on a reference from
4.
Whenever
a,
the Judge or Collector (as the case may be), or on application from the parties, to direct that the suit be transferred, with all the proceedings which may have taken place therein up to the which shall period of transfer, to the Court possessing jurisdiction, if the suit had been originally filed in that Court. as therewith proceed
'
* Act
XVI of
(XV
1838 has been declared to apply to the whole of the Bombay Kxtent Act the Scheduled Districts, by the Laws Local
LA.NDS ACT.
When any
Court,
lll
ordinate thereto, or that the action was origiCourt of in a nally brought and decided Adalat or a court subordinate thereto, when it ought to have been brought and decided in a Revenue Court, the Court trying the appeal shall, instead of quashing the whole proceedings, annul only the decree, and refer the suit to be tried in the Court to which the jurisdiction properly belongs, and the Court trying any such case referred under the foregoing section shall take further pleadings, exhibits, and evidence only if it deem such necessary, and shall pass a new decree.
Court.
? Stt
Court trying an appeal finds that the action wfcs decided in a Revenue originally brougnt and of Court, when it ought to have been brought and de( d * d in a Oourt of Adalat or a (Jourt 8Ul?>
tHE
Bhagdari and Narwadari Tenures Act
BOMB A V ACT
An Act for
WHEREAS
it
No.
V OF 1862
[
Narwadari Tenures
has been found that the permanence of the tenures known as the Bhagdari and Narwadari tenures, Ireamble. which have existed from time immemorial in certain parts of the Presidency of Bombay, is endangered by the increasing practice of attachment and sale by civil process of the homesteads and building sites ("gabhan") appertaining or appendant to the constituted bhags or the recognized sub-divisions or such bhags or shares, in bhagdari or narwadari villages ;
and whereas it is desirable to prevent the alienation, assignment, mortgaging, charging or incumbering of any portion of any bhag or share in any bhagdari or narwadari village other than a recognized sub-division of such bhag or share, or the alienation,
assignment, mortgaging, charging or incumbering of any homestead, building site (gabhan), or premises appurtenant or appendant to or any such bhag or share, or recognized sub-division
separately apart from such bhag or share or recognized sub- division ; It is, therefore, enacted as follows :
1.
portion of a bhag or share in any bhagdari or narwadari village other than a recognized sub* No portion of bhag division cf such be bhag or share shall [lj* r r nf l^ble to seizure, sequestration, attachment or e\o be urWe 8ft l e e process of any Civil Court, and no to seizure, etc., by proty of such Court shall be enforced so as cees of Oivil Court. process to cause the dismemberment from any such bhag or share or recognized sub-division thereof, of any homestead, building site (gabhan) or premises appurtenant or appendant to such bhag or share, or recognized sub-division thereof. Objeot Of this Aot. The principal object of this Act is to prevent the
No
LiTmi
further dismemberment of bhaga or shares in bhagdari villages ; it renders nail and void any future alienation of any portion of a bhag, other than a recognized sab-division, bat it does not invalidate previous alienations (Bhxi*ha*kar 9. Coletcr
after the
passing of this
ACT,
'bhiag' means not only a subdivision bat an aliquot share of a village' subject to an aliquot portion of the total land-tax imposed on it, aad not any sfb-division by partition or otherwise. When, therefore, certain oo-ihirers
partitioned a bhag between them before the passing of this
Act, each share did not thereby become a separato bhag so as to enable tha proprietor thereof to alienate it as a whole after the passing of this Act (Gulam Narotam Secretary of State j 8 Bom. 596). R, on whom certain land forming part of a bhag had devolved
by marriage and inheritance before this Act came into force alienated it to the Act came into force. Held, following the above case, that the alienation being after thia Act came into force, fell within its operation (AaAim 9.
plaintiff after this
BaiGulab, P. J. 1890, p. 5). This section does not prohibit the sale of an unascertained share of an undivided bhag. The object and intention of this Act is to prevent a pky&ical discrease in the
of a bhag, or recognized sub-division thereof, and not a mere innumber of persons who may from time to time be owners of the bhag (Bai Kucarbai v. Bhagwan Ichcharam, 13 Bom. 203). A Civil Court Tills seotion does not bar the right of action. would not be bound to make a decree though it might anticipate that this section would stand in the way of the execution of the decree. After a decree has been
memberment
passed against a portion of a bhag, the Collector might recognize such portion as a division of the bhag, if assured that justice required that the decree should be executed
(Ibid.)
Sale of portion of
The
ap-
pellant was the mortgagee of a portion of a bhag under a mortgage, dated and in a suit brought upon the mortgage obtained a decree for a sale of the gaged property. An attachment was issued, and an order for sale was Thereupon the Collector applied under s. 2, to set aside the attachment and
1880,
mortmade.
order
for sale.
Held, distinguishing 1
Bom. 581
the
mortgage of a
portion of a bhag was unlawful under e. 3, and a process having been issued for the sale of such portion, the Collector was entitled to have it quashed (Narkheram
v. Collector of
Broach, 22
Bom. 737).
Narwa
the proprietor of a recognized sub-division of a land separates a portion of the land for building purposes and the separation has been recognized by the Collector, such separation in no way derogates from the constitution of the Narwa homestead, and the separated portions become re-
NarWa land.
Where
9.
Lallubhai, 27
Bom. 958
Bhagdari tenure.
Court from making
divisions of bhags
nothing in this Act which debars a Civil a decree for the partition of narwadar land among the bhag-
may
recognized sub-
Ragabhai,
Bom. 225
).
2.
Whenever any
bhagdari or narwadari village other thaui recognized sub-division of such bhag or share, or for the seizure, sequestration, attachment or sale of any homeitead, building site (gabhan) or premises appurtenant or appcndant
pr
"
process has issued out of any Civil Court for the seizure, seqestration, attachment or Q y portion o a bhag or share in any a* 1 *
BftAODABZ AKD
NABWA0AW
TaWttMUi AdT,
to such bhag or share, or recognized sub-division thereof, it shall be lawful for the Collector or other chief revenue-officer of the district in which any such bhagdari or narwadari village is situated, although not a litigating party, to move in such Civil Court, that such process shall be set aside or quashed, and that the provisions of this Act be put in force ;
and
if
by
the Collector or other chief revenue-officer of the district on such motion, that the case is
,,
.
one following within this Act, it shall set aside or quash such process, and cause the to be put in force ; [1]* * * any order which Act of this provisions the said Court may make on such motion shall be appealable in the same manner as a decree of the Court in which it is made.
.,,.
.,.
-.in
invalid.
Under
move
the
portion of a bhag in satisfaction of a mortgage debt thereon. The remark to the contrary in Ranchhoddas 0. Ranchhodhas (1 Bom. 581) mast be confined to a mortgage made before the Act was promulgated. The fact that a mortgage, though of
a portion of a bhag, other than a recognized sub-division, is a mortgage of the whole remaining interest of the mortgagor by reason of a prior sale, similarly
illegal,
(
Narbheram
Collector of Broach,
and in execution of decree against it sold his right, title and interest in the bhag on the 28th February 1876. It was was put in possession purchased by B. The sale was subsequently confirmed, and
a
R obtained
N N
held unrecognized
of a portion of the land. On the 30th September 1880, the Collector applied to the Court to set aside the sale on the ground that it was illegal under this Act. It appeared that the Collector did not know till November 1877 that the knd told
was an unrecognized portion of the bhag, and not the whole of it. Htld, that the might be set aside under this section notwithstanding its confirmation and subsequent delivery of possession ( Colleobor of Broach v. Rajaram, 7 Bom, 542).
sale
lawful to alienate, assign, mortgage or otherwise charge or inc umber any portion of any or share ia any bhagdari or narwadari AtSff-T'lfil village other than a recognized sub -division in bhagdari or narwaof such bhag or share, or to alienate, assign, dari village other than recognized sub-division mortgage or otherwise charge or incutnber any thereof. homestead, building-site (gabhan) or premises appurtenant or appendant to any such bhag or share or recognized sub-division, appurtenant or appendant thereto, apart or separately from any such bhag or share, or recognized sub-division thereof.
3.
It shall not be
^g
[1]
The words
*<
and
it is
by the
A<5T, 1862
Any
alienation, assignment, mortgage, charge or incumbrance, contrary to the provisions of this section, shall
be null for d void ; d it .Wl be U^ol ot tbe toliector or otaer chief revenue-omcer the district, whenever he shall, upon due inquiry, find that any person or persons is or are in possession of any of any homestead, building-site portion of any bhag or share or appendant to such bhag or ( gabhan ) or premises appurtenant share in any bhagdari or narwadari village other than a recognized sub-division of such bhag or share, in violation of any of the provisions of this section, snmmarily to remove him or them from such possession, and to restore the possession to the person or persons whom the Collector ahall deem to be entitled thereto 5
portion of such bhag.
rsK
uouector
and any suit brought to try the validity of any order or orders which the Collector may make in such matter Limitation of suit on mus t be brought within three [ 1 ] months
s order.
ftf tep
This section has no bearing on sales by order of a Civil Court, but is intended to apply to unlawful sales and alienations of portions of bhag made out of Court, or by private individuals (Collactor of. BpocA v. Dtsai
Raghunath, 1 Bom. 564).
Alienation-' The word 'alienation' as used in this section not only covers transfers 'inter vivos\ but extends to testamentary dispositions also (Javar
Jijilhai v. Haribhai,
40
Bom
207).
(Vonidas
Hari, 38
wrong
The
alienation of an
undivided portion of a bhag, or share in the bhag, to a person who is not dar, is void under this section (Purshotam v. Hira, 15 Bom, 172).
1
a bhag-
The prohibition against alienation of an unrecognized sub* division Of a bhag provided by this section, applies to the person in posWhere an alienation is session of the bhag, though he may not be the bhagdar.
,
declared to be void under this section, an order for refund of the consideration money which has passed under the impeached trensaction may be made (Jijibhai v.
Nafii, 11
Bom.
UK.
693.)
Ths sale of is illegal. portion of a bhag or share in a bhagdari or narwadari village other than a recognized subdivision of such bhag or share, or of a building site appurtenant to it is illegal -creditor cannot, in execution of his decree* and Under this section
judgment
evade the law by describing his debtor's separate portion in a bhag as his "right > of Oiv.il Protitle and interest in the whole bhag"; for under s. 213 of the Code cedure, the creditor is bound to specify the debtor's share or interest to the best
of his belief,
Nasar~
man]i
v.
MUM
Nath
A.mi<ji, I
Bom.
601).
repealed by the
The word " calendar " was (Bom. Aot 3 of 1886), gotadule B.
[1]
Bombay General
Clause* Act,
Aor, 1662
where the
5
effect
no alienation each as
is
prohibited
by
this section,
dismemberment of
hhags or
shares, bat to
into the
bring together the various severed portions of a recognized lab-division hands of one owner (Oulab v. Bai T%j Bai, 21 Bom. L. R. 707).
Award-Division
award the
result of
of recognized sub-division of
void under this
section.
bhag.An
effect
which
in a certain recogniz-
ed sab-division of a bhag
the transaction is
it is
oi
to, for
If
share
in
it
compromise (Nagar
An
unre-
cognized sub-division of a bhag, namely, a house, was mortgaged and the mortga" In a suit for possession the defendant adgors were in possession as tenants. mitted the mortgage deed and rent notes. Held, that the mortgage and rent notes
mortgage
failed ab initio
and
9.
recovery
barred
if
3 years after
(Javerbhai
Adverse possession
of
an unrecognized share.
Under
this
section the Collector can aot at any time, and the Statute of Limitation is no bar to his action. So adverse possession for however a long time for an unrecognized
share of a Bhagdari village is no bar to the Collector acting under this section and removing the occupant from possession (Data v. Parag, 4 Bom. L. R. 797). Where the parties to a suit arrive at a compromise the effect of which is
his right in favour of the other
that a nerva is split up into two portions over one of which one party givea up and the division so effected is not a recognised
Where a transub-division, the compromise is void under this section and s. 5. saction is not lawful under cl. (1) of this section, the Civil Court is bound to adjudicate
not under
it independently of the question whether the Collector interferes or The Collector can under this section take action (2) of this section. at any time and the plea of adverse possession cannot prevail against any order that he may make (Jethabhai 0. Nanabhai, 6 Bom. L. R, 128 ; 28 Bom. 399).
upon
c).
in contravention
Bapu
Bata]i,
10
Bom. L, R. 1128
this
33 Bom. 116).
There
nothing in
of the tress
a permanent tenant of a Bhagdar, from alienating the fruit on the land, of which he is a tenant in the same way as he could alie-
of a Bhagdari nate the crops or grass upon such land. The position of a tenant ]and-who is presumed to be a permanent tenant under s. 33 of the Land Revenue
Code, 1879,
is
against alienation
not affected in any way by the prohibition contained in this Act (Nahanchand v. Kekhushru, 9 Bom. L. R. 60 ; 31 Bom. 183),
The
are instituted by persons against whom made or whom it affects injuriously and which are
TtE
bw*ghiidtffytoBTWitydth60rderof
Nttwa (Haribhai
4.
laafce
9.
The
Collector
10
not compe-
the
title
of
*nd eoecntion of
in other
res-
proceiB
[1] Nothing in this Act contained shall be construed as prohibiting the issue and execution of any such process as aforesaid against 11 i i bha or sbare Or recognized sub-dw*?? i n of any bhag or share, in any such village
IT.
'
fl
as aforesaid, conjointly
its
homestead, building-site (gabhan) and other proper appurtenonces, if the issue and execution of such process be in other respects authorized by law.
*
5.
*
of
Alienation,
etc
[I] Nothing in this Act contained shall be construed as prohibiting the alienation, assignment, mortgaging, charging or incumbering
warranted by law,
barred.
not
of an y bhag or share, in any such village as aforesaid, enjointly and in the gross with its
homestead, building-site (gabhan) and other proper appurtenances, if such alienation, assignment, mortgage, charge orincumbnmce, be in other respects warranted by law, the object and intention of this Act being to prevent the dismemberment of bhags, or shares, or recongnized sub-divisions thereof, in bhagdari or narwadari villages and also to prevent the severance of homesteads, building-sites (gabhan) or other premises, appurtenant or appendant to bhags or shares, or recognized sub-divisions of bhags or shares, from the same or any of them.
[1
The words
in
as.
4 and 5 "And
it is
were
Act, 188&
25th March, 1889
An Aot to provide for the Revenue Administration of Estates held by certain superior land-holders in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach and the Panoh Mahals, and to limit the further operation of
Bombay Aot VI
of 1862
remove doubts as to the applicaLand-Revenue Code, 1879, of the certain of Bombay bility portions to estates held by certain superior land-holders in the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira, Broach and the Panch Mahals, and to make
WHEREAS
it is
expedient to
the said estates special provision for the revenue administration of and for the partition thereof ; It is enacted as follows :
PART
1.
PRELIMINARY
Short
title.
(2) It
as the (1) This Act may be cited 1888. Talukdars Act, Gujarat extends only to the districts of Ahmedabad, Kaira,
2.
(1) In
this
something repugnant
text,
in
naik (a) "talukdar" includes a thakur, mehwassi, kasbati and and a tnulgameti who holds land directly from Government ; Talukdar. A purchaser from a talukdar does not become a "talukar*
within the meaning of this clsnae (Naiandas
Thakors
verence or respect
v. Purushottam, 26 Bom. 657). The expression "Thakor" means any individual entited to rewhence it is generally applied to persons of rank and autho-
MehWaSSi.
This term
ing
literally, residence
ELasbatlS.
kasbatis or townsmen, the descendants of rich solDholka, a body of men called and acting as revenue securities raised themselves to had money lending diers, by be upper landlords or middlemen. The tenure known as kasbati in the Viramgaon taluka is permanent (t c., as
the
British
resume the villages in case any of the conditions imposed is not fiulfilled (Becrt39 Bom. 625, (P. 0). tary of State 9. Bai Rajbai, not apply to Kasbatis Bombay Act VI of 1862 (Ahedabad Talukdars) does and a Kasbati 9 s riffhfcs under this Aot are subject to. and limited by. his vattas
* The
triot of
ACT,
Dhandhaka Talaka
of the Dts-
are Mulgametis, hat they do not hold land directly from Government and consequently are not Talakdars within the meaning of this clans 2
(Sir Dolatsingaji
9.
Ahmedahad
Oghat Vitha, 25
Bom. L.
726).
NaikS.
kantha.
and Rewa-
metis Gtometia mean Kajpnt Grasbigas in the Ahmedabad Oollectorate. Gometis or village owners are a class of owner a of proprietary villages in the
Ahmedabad
(b)
District.
Go
or principal of several co-sharers cf a talukdar i estate, whose name is authorizedly entered in the Government records as holding such co-sharers of the several or as the holding estates, representative
the
same
((?)
;
to
Gov-
ernment
(d) "alienation" means a transfer of ownership, and "alienee" means a person to whom ownership is transferred j (c) "incumbrance" includes a mortgage, charge, usufructuary grant and any interest other than that of an ordinary tenant or of an alienee or talukdar, and "incumbrancer" means a person in
whom
an incumbrance vests
(/)
tne
Any word
or expression which
is
defined in the
Bombay
Land-Revenue Code, 1879, snd is not here* inbefore defined, shall be deemed to have ., ,i_ i t "e m enmg given to it by that Code.
.
.
,
/^i
something repugnant in the subject or context, "talukdar" includes any of "talukdar" class of holders of unalienated estates, upon ;Meeting in Fart II. which the land-revenue is fixed by a lump assessment, to whom the Governor in Council deems fit from time to time, by notification in the Bombay Govern" ment Gazette, to extend the provisions of the said part.
(2)
3.
In Part
XVI of 1895.
Bombay Act
of.
1879-]
Rep. Act
PART
II.
It shall be
SSTSSSSi
estate.
lawful for the Governor in Council, whenever it may seem expedient, to direct a revenue-rvey or a revised revenue .uryey of any
talukdan
estate,
surveys,
Talukdar's estate
it is
a single talukdar
different sharers
Talukdari estate.
is
settlement register prepared by the survey officer under section 108 of the said Code on the occasion fl ,,, , M Settlement register of r i -n /of ma kmg any suchsurvey shall, unless Gova taluqdari estate what ernment otherwise direct, contain, in lieu o to contain. the particulars specified in the said section, the following particulars (namely) : the area and assessment of each (a) survey number ; the name of the registered (6) taluqdar, and if there are cosharers, the name of each co-sharer and the extent of each one's interest in the estate ; if the estate is (c) undivided, the manner in which the (i) profits derived from sources common to the co-sharers are to be distributed amongst them ; the share to be contributed (if) by each co-sharer of the jama, of police charges, of the cost of erecting and maintaining boundary marks, and of any other charge to which under any law for the time being in force the co-sharers are liable in common ; the manner in which the co-sharers are to collect from (iff) the tenants ; W) if a partition of the estate has been effected and the cosharers hold their respective shares in severalty the extent and limits of each (f) separate share! ; the same particulars in respect of the several sub-sharers, (ff) if any, of each such share, as are required to be given concerning all the co-sharers when an estate is undivided ; the name and description and the nature and extent of the (e) interest of every alienee and of every incumbrancer of the estate or
,
5.
The
When
or other;
any portion thereof, together with a specification of the aggregate area over which such interest extends ; (f) the amount and nature of rent, or land (ff) revenue, if any, payable or receivable by each alienee and incumbrancer the basis of such interest, whether (fff) grant, contract, custom
;
the conditions of service or other conditions on which (iv) such interest depends ; (v) any other particulars which Government shall from time to time direct.
6.
(1) If it
who frames
\ i
the said
any dispute as to any matter wMcU he j 8 boun(j under th j A ti. t j ^K r ecord therein may, either on the applicai
^
\
hy Survey
officer.
any of the disputant parties, or of his investigate and determine such dispute and frame the register accordingly:
tion of
own motion
ACT, 1888
Provided that, when any such dispute shall appear to the (2) Survey officer to have been already finally decided by a Court of competent jurisdiction, the entry in the said register shall be made in conformity with such decision. Custody and amendment of Records. 1. When the Survey Settlement of a talukdari estate is (1) completed, the said register and the other
whom
records thereof shall be kept by the Collector, and eyery reg i stered talukdar shall be entitled to receive one copy of the register free of any charge except the cost of copying. So long as the said register and other records are in the (2) charge of the Survey Oficer, the said officer, to be from time to time an d afterwards the shall cause to be
corrected.
Collector,
therein all changes that occur, and everything that affects any of the rights or interests therein recorded ; and shall at any time correct or cause to be corrected any clerical error therein and also any other error which all the parties interested admit to have been made in the same.
entered
of suits
against
.
or against any officer of Government to set aside any decision or order of a Survey Officer or of a Collector under section 6 or 7.
ment
parties inter
so.
But the said register and other records shall from time amended by the Survey Officer, or, when the survey settlement is completed by the Collector, in accordance with any final decree of a Court of competent jurisdiction which the parties may obtain inter se on an application accompanied by a certified copy of such decree, boing duly made to the Survey officer or Col(2) to time be
lector for that purpose. In any suit in a Civil (3)
Court between the parties or persons claiming under them, a decision or order of a Survey Officer or Collector under section 6 or 7 shall not be held to be conclusive as to any matter therein decided.
Changes in records to
Every change in the said register ^^\[ fa communicated without delay by the officer making it to each of
9.
PART
10.
Person*
partition.
III
PARTITION
(1) Every person
entitled
to
who
has
obtained a
final
decree of
Court of competent jurisdiction declaring him to j^ en titled to a share of a talukdari estate an(j ever y co -sharer whose name is recorded,
TEE GUJARAT
as such, in the settlement register prepared in accordance with section 5 and pending the preparation of the said register, every person whose title to any such share as aforesaid is not disputed by any
other person claiming a share in the same estate, shall be entitled to have his share divided from the rest of the estate and to hold the same as a separate estate.
(2)
titled to
Any two or more such co-sharers or persons shall be enhave their shares divided from the rest of the estate and to
estate.
Officer is
latter,
not a Court
subordinate
and the
vision under s. 115 of the Civil Procedure Code that officer (Gambhirsingji v. parsing, 13 Bom. L. B. 118). judlOata. Under this section every person who has obtained a final decree of a competent Court, declaring him to be entitled to a share of a Talukdari estate, is entitled as of right to have his share divided from the rest of the estate and to hold the same as a separate estate. There is no provision in this section that the decree alluded to must of necessity operate as res judicata between all the
ReS
11.
parliSt^hom
be made.
'to'
** suc a other
'
Applications for partition shall be Talukdari Settlement- officer or to Council officer as the Governor
(1)
Officer,
or
other officer
for
on receiving
an
application
Notification of application.
fication of the same in the office of the MamTaluka and at some conspicuous place in the village in which the estate to which the application relates is situate or in
Ptition, shall if the application be not open to objection on the face of it, publish a noti-
latdar of the
each of the villages comprised in the said estate, as the case may be. (2) He shall also serve a notice on each of the known co-sharers who has not joined in the application, requirr r' t0 N in S an y o them w ho objects to the partition in"the a n t -Sn g "* &P ~ to appear before him to state his objection pHcation? either in person or by a duly authorized agent on a day to be specified in the notice, not less than thirty or more than sixty days from the date on which such notice is issued. "KHOWn GO~SliarerS." The phrase "known co-sharers' in this section covers all who are known to have interest in the property and is not limited
.
to those only
this
Act
(Sursangji
t.
Pratapsing,
28 Bom. 20V).
13.
Procedure
Where,
8
from any
where
I
S^rS
sharer.
or
cause, notice cannot be personally served on any co-sharer, the Talukdari Sett i ement Officer or other officer aforesaid shall order the same to be served by affixing a
known
copy thereof upon some conspicuous part of the house, if any, in which such co-sharer is resided, or in such other manner as the Talukfit.
Aor, 1SSS
'oSirt
admitted.
any objection is made sharer, and the partition by any or other officer Settlement-officer Taluqdari aforesaid, on a consideration of such objection, is of opinion that there is any good and
specified,
the
sufficient reason
refuse
the
the partition should be disallowed, he application, recording the grounds of his refusal.
why
may
15.
Procedure
of title
(1)
if
question
raised.
any question as to the right applicant to partition or any other question of title which has not been already determined by a Court of competent jurisdicof
the
officer aforesaid
Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other may grant the application until the question in dispute has been determined by a competent Court, or if no suit is at the time pending in any such Court in which the question is likely to be determined, may proceed to inquire into the
tion, the
either decline to
In the latter
when
and
case, the Taluqdari Settlement Officer or other officer aforesaid, after making the necesfiar y inquiry and taking such evidence as may
officer
or
officer
ap-
pointed by Government,
nature and extent of the interests of the party or parties applying for the partition and of the other co-sharers of the estate, if any, and
by whom, and in what proportion, the costs of the inof the partition (which shall be recoverable as au arrear and quiry
directing
of land-revenue) are to be paid.
by the Taluqdari Settlementother officer aforesaid in any such Procedure previous to inquiry shall be that laid down by the Code deci8ion of Civil Procedure, 1882, for the trial of original suits , and the provisions of Chapter of that Code, in so far as they apply to a review of judgment in an original suit, shall be applicable to the decision of the Taluqdari Settlement-Officer or other officer aforesaid. The Taluqdari Settlement-Officer or other officer aforesaid may, with the consent of the parties, refer any question arising in such inquiry to
(3)
officer or
'
The procedure
to be observed
XLVH
arbitration, and the provisions of the tors shall apply to such references.
same Code
relative to arbitra-
^SSSSSSSy.
appeal shall lie from any decision, or from any part of a dicision, passed under the last preDialriot Court may ceding section by the Taluqdari Settiementofficer or other officer aforesaid, to the Distnct u urt, as if such decision were a decree or other officer's deoision and may stay of a Court from whose decisions the District Court is authorized to hear appeals, partition.
16. (1)
An
ffi
(3) Upon such appeal being made, the District Court may issue a precept to the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid, requiring him to stay the partition pending the decision of the appeal.
decision contemplated by this section is the decision, referred to in sub-section (2) of a 16 supra, which is come to after the making of all necessary enquiry and the taking of such evidence as may be adduced (Oambhirsingji c. Agarsing, 13 Bom. L. 118).
The
No
second ap-
17.
Partition
effected.
(1)
When
to be
how
the it has been decided to make a partition, Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid shall give the parcies the option of making the partition themselves; in the event
of their not agreeing or of their failing to the partition, within a period prescribed by the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or the officer aforesaid in this behalf, the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or othsr officer aforesaid shall either make it himself or, if he thinks fit, shall entrust it to arbitrators appointed for this purpose by the parties.
make
In making the partition, the Taluqdari Settlement-officer (2) or other officer aforesaid and any person acting under his orders shall have the same powers to enter on the estate under partition, for making out the boundaries, surveying the land and other purposes as are conferred on Survey-officers by the Bombay Land
JS? ^ ?
complete,
_,_
8 P fcitl be order to K
it.
made confirming
(2)
When the partition is com(1) the Settlement-officer or r Pkted Taluqdari ~> * -j u n i_ j other officer aforesaid shall make an order
18.
.
On making
Nokification of order.
confirming it. such order the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid shall publish a notification o tfae f act in the Q ffi ce Q f the Mam l at .
dar of the taiuka and at some conspicuous place in the village in which the estate which has been divided is situate, or in each of the villages comprised in the said estate, as the Partition when to case may be ; and the partition shall take take effect. effect on and from the first day of June next after the date of such notification, or such other date next after the date of such notification between the first day of June and the first day of October as the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid, having regard to the usual season of cultivation in the said estate, shall fix in this behalf.
19.
(1)
If necessary,
DeUvery of
posiession.
the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid may, at any time after the date aforesaid, order delivery of the share, or anv nortion of the share, allotted to amr
TUB
(JtJJlBiT
TALUKDiRS*
AttT,
1&88
co-sharer to be made to him in the manner in which delivery the same might be ordered by a Civil Court, under the Code Civil Procedure, 1882, in execution of a decree.
(2)
If, in
of of
Settlement-
other officer aforesaid, the officer charged with the execution thereof is resisted or obstructed by any person, or if a co-sharer is resisted or obstructed in obtaining possession of the share or of any portion of the share allotted to him, the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid shall proceed in the manner in which, by section 202 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879, a Collector is authorized to proceed for the purpose of inquiring into the reasonableness of any resistance or obstruction to the execution of an order made under that section and of preventing the continuance thereof. #
Besiatance or F ob tru tion how to be Vealt with.
Or
appeal against the decision of the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or other officer aforesaid confirmA a 6 in S a P arfcifci n shall lie to the Commissioner confimin g pwtition t o within one year from the date of the order the Commissioner. confirming such partition.
.
. .
20.
An
Civil Court shall entertain any suit or application for partition of a taluqdari estate ; provided that n ., n nothin g thi * secti Q * ha11 b * deemed to from*12!*!inJ suTts affect the jurisdiction of Her or applications for Majesty's High Court of Judicature at Bombay. partition.
.
21.
No
Note The expressions "taluqdar's estate" and ^taluqdari estate" in this Act are used to denote different matters; the former expression means something other
than taluqdari estate.
The expression
(Purstotam
an
v.
PART IV
REVENUE ADMINISTRATION Talukdar's Jama
22.
(1)
If a talukdar's estate
Talukar's jama
w> oe calculated.
how
or any portion thereof, is not wholly or partially exempt from land-revenue and its liability to payment of land revenue is not Bu bj ec t to special conditions or restric-
tions, the jama payable to Government in respect of such estate or portion thereof shall, if a survey lettlement has been extended thereto, be the aggregate of the survey assessments of the lands composing such estate or such portion thereof, minus such deduction, if any, as Government shall in each case
direct,
The Governor in Council may declare the amount of o ascertained fixed for any term not exceeding jama thirty years.
(2)
THE
23.
Saving
(1)
of
Nothing
existing
T?t TluS
jama.
Act shall be deemed to affect the of validity any agreement heretofore entered i n to by or with a talukdar and still in force as to the * mount i K* of y ettle ment of the amount of jama made by or under the orders of Government for a term of
in this
j'>
years and still in force. (2) Every such agreement and settlement shall have effect as if this Act had not been passed. 24. The registered talukdar shall be primarily respon(1) sible to Government for the jama of his vilResponeibility for jama. l age , and, if there are sharers, all the cosharers shall be jointly and severally responsible therefor.
(2)
If the registered talukdar fails to pay the jama according to the rules legally prescribed in that behalf,
If
pe
makes
recovered from his co-sharers, if the extent to which it is due in respect of the holding of any mortgagee in possession, inferior holder or person in actual occupation of the estate or of any portion thereof, from such mortgagee in possession, inferior holder or person.
taluktl
ifc
may be
r to
default.
an y>
recovered from any such co-sharer, mortgagee in possession, inferior holder or other " > ! be -itowd credit for all paya ments which he may have made to the taiukfrom other persons. dar at or after the prescribed or usual time of such payments, and he shall be entitled to credit in account with the talukdar for the amount recovered from him. 25. When a partition has taken place and a talukdari (1) estate is held in severalty, the jama payable in
(3)
.
When jama is
respect of each separate portion into which the 8ftme has been divided ghftll be determined
by the Collector, and thereupon each such portion shall, for the purposes of the last preceding section, be deemed to be a distinct estate.
Provided that the aggregate jama payable in respect ot (2) the several portions into which the estate has been divided shall not exceed the jama which would be leviable from the entire estate if
still
undivided.
26.
^Management of talukdar's
(1)
*
If
i
owing
t_
di*2S3T may
to
estates by Govevnment Officers. disputes among the sharers in any talukdari estate, or for other cause, the Gover* n f in Council shal1 deem tbftt ther6 5s Peai0n to apprehend danger to the peace of the country or injury to the well-being of the inferior holders, he may direct the Collector
to
10
tBE
4 to cause such estate to be attached and taken under the manage* ment of himself or any agent whom he appoints for this purpose ; and, on the application of any registered talukdar or co sharer, the. Collector shall furnish him with a of the reasons on which the
copy
orders of Government were passed. (2) When any estate is so attached and taken under management, the sharers, or any one or more of the sharers therein, may at any time apply to the District Magistrate to restore the management thereof ; and, if the applicants shall prove to the satisfaction of the District Magistrate that no reason for any such apprehension as aforesaid any longer exists, the District Magistrate may order restoration of the management to be made to the talukdar. 27. (1) With the sanction of the Commissioner, the Talukdari Settlement-officer or other officer apinted b y Government hold the estate
managemeu't of e'staTe pending partition.
P * n which partition
n7
own
the partition. (2) Provided that, before applying to the Commissioner for sanction under this section, the Talukdari Settlement-officer Or other officer aforesaid shall &ive to the parties reasonable notice of his intention so to do, and shall forward, with his application, for the Commissioner's consideration, any written statement of objection thereto which any of the parties shall present to him for this
(1)
With
ma y> u P on the written application of a taluqdar in this behalf, take charge of such talukdar' s estate and keep the same under his management for such period as may be agreed upon. [6] (1A) Any co-sharer of a talukdari estate, other than a co-sharer in a family undivided according to Hindu law, may make an application under sub-section (1) in respect of his own share in such estate. In every case where a talukdari estate is held [c] (2) by co-sharers in a family undivided according to Hindu law or otherwise, an application signed by co-sharers holding an agregate interest of not less than three-fourths of the whole estate shall, for the purposes of sub-section (1), be deemed to be an application by a talukdar in respect of the whole estate.
2a was renumbered 28, sub-section (1) by the Gujarat Talukdari Act, 1905 (Bom. Act2 of I905)s. 3 (1), and sub-section, (2) and the provisos were substituted for the concluding words and proyiso of section 28 by s. 3 (2) of the same Act. [b] This sub-section was inserted by Bom. Act I of 1910. Printed as amended by Bom, Act I of 1 910.
[a] 8.
( Amendment)
the sanction of Government, the Taluqdari Settlement-officer or any other officer PP<>inted by Government for thi 8 purpose
ACT, 1888
11
provided, firstly, that no sanction shall be given on any such application under sub-section (1) where it appears to the Governor in Council doubtful whether the aggregate interest of the cosharers signing the application amounts to three-fourths of the
whole
estate
and
,
provided, secondly that nothing in this Act shall be deemed to prevent any co-sharer other than those signing any such application from obtaining partition of his share. 29. (1) When any talukdari estate is Applicability of sec. offit k der mana g eme nt by J Government tion IPO of , ., Bombay ? xl_ ^ j. the of three cers under last any preceding Act Vof 1879 when an estate is taken under sections, the provisions of section 160 of the management by a GovBombay Land-Revenue Code, 1879, shall be
,
eminent
officer.
applicable thereto.
Provided that no "transfer" [a] or agreement entered (2) into by a Government officer managing an estate under section 26, in respect of any land in such estate shall be for a period exceeding five yenrs from the date thereof, and that no such "transfer" [a] or agreement by a Government officer managing an estate under section 27 shall have effect beyond the end of the revenue year in which such officer's management determines, unless the same is ratified by the co-sharer to whose share the said land is finally
allotted
the partition of the estate is completed. All surplus receipts, if any, which accrue during such management, after defraying the costs of the Disposal of anrplns management, including the payment of the receipts. current land-revenue and of all arrears there(3)
if
when
of,
and the cost of the extension to the estate of a revenue-survey, the Governor in Council directs, or has before directed, the extension of a revenue survey thereto under section 4, shall be divided amongst the co-sharers in proportion to their respective shares, at such periods as the Talukdari Settlement-officer or other officer
aforesaid shall see fit. (1) Except with the approval of the managing [b] 29 A. officer, a talukdar whose estate is taken under DinbilitiesofatalakGovernment officers under mana e gement by J dar whose estate is ,__ rt0 ,, **.,> or 28 shall be incompetent to 26 section taken under managetransfer or create any charge on, or interest ment. or to in, his property or any part thereof, enter into any contract which may involve him in pecuniary liabiCivil Court whereby to in and no auit shall be j
.
lity
brought
any
the detercharge any such talukdar upon any promise made after contracted debt to of mination during such management pay any the period of such management, or upon any ratification, made
occupancy rights" by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 94. inserted by the Gujurat Talukdara' [b] Sees. 29-A and 29-B were ment) Act, 1905 (Bom. Act II of 1905), 8. 4.
[J The word
"transfer"
waa
snbssituted.
for
the
original
words
"sale
of
(Amend-
12
TUB
after such determination, of any promise or contract made durin g the period aforesaid, whether there is or is not any new consideration for such promise or ratification.
Nothing in sub-section (1) shall be deemed to affect the of any such talukdar to enter into a contract of marriage s capacity Provided that no such talukdar shall incur, in connection with such a contract, any pecuniary liability, except such as, having his rank regard to the personal law to which he is subject and to officer may, in writing, declare to and circumstances, the
(2)
managing
be reasonable.
Power
to
continue
*****
(3)
On
to his property or any part thereof disputed, the managing officer may, with in case of disputed the sanction of the Governor in Council, succession, and either retain the superintendence of the property until one of the claimants has established his claim to the same in a competent Civil Court, or institute a suit of interpleader against all the claimants ; and
(a)
(6)
where hi property
still
where property
meumbered.
incumbeted with debts and the liabilities, managing officer may, with the sanction of the Governor in Council, retain ga j d p roperty un der his superintendence
is
still
dis-
charged.
Ascertainment
and
(1)
whose
estates are
29-B,
publication of
S^^"tti
is taken under
Where any talukdari estate has been taken under management by Government officers under notice section 26 or 2X, the managing officer may
b y Government Gazette, P ublish in the B u aQ d in such other manner as the (governor in
manage-
Council may by general or special order direct, a notice in English and also in the vernacular, talukdar or his calling upon all persons having claims against such six months within him same in to to the submit writing property, from the date of the publication of the notice.
ment.
was unable
the managing officer is satisfied that any claimant comply with the notice published under sub-section after the (1), he may allow his claim to be submitted at any time date of the expiry of the period fixed therein j but any such claim to the shall, notwithstanding any law, contract, decree or award such of of the date from cease to interest the expiry contrary, carry
(2)
Where
to
*.
-9- A supra.
_____
ACT,
I&8
13
(3) Every claim against such talukdar or his property (other than a claim on the part of Government) not submitted to the managing officer in compliance with the notice published under subsection (1) or allowed to be submitted under sub-section (2), shall, save in the cases provided for by section 29 ( / ), sub-section (2), clause (c) and by sections 7 and 13 of the Indian Limitation Act, 1877, be deemed for all purposes and on all occasions, whether during the continuance of the management or afterwards, to have been duly discharged, unless in any suit or proceeding instituted
the claimant, or by any person claiming under him, in respect of any such claim, it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that he was unable to comply with the notice published under sub-section (1).
by
The word "unable" in this section is not confined to physion the part of the claimant ( TAanilal 9. Khodabhai, 38 Bom. 604). Notice. Although a decree had been oaaaed against a Talukdar, which was being executed before this section was enacted, still notice of the claims is necessary after the notification under this section has bean issued (The Talukdari Settlement Officer v. Akuji Abharam, 46 Bom. 993).
cal liability
"Unable".
[a] 29C.
(1)
and
The managing
.
.
Claimants to furnish
full
particulars
documents.
officer may by written order require that any claimant submitting his claim Q compliance w i t h the notice published under r v n or,r> /if t_ section 29B, sub-section (1), shall, within such reasonable time as he may prescribe in
i
such order, furnish full particulars thereof, and produce all documents (including entries in books of account J on which he relies to support his claim, together with a true copy of every such docu-
ment
that, where the claim relates to an amount secured it shall be sufficient for the claimant to prodecree or a award, by duce before the managing officer a certified copy of the decree and a certificate from the Court which passed or is executing the same declaring the amount recoverable thereunder, or a true copy of the award and a statement of the sum recoverable thereunder, as the case may be; and where the claim is pending adjudication in any Court or has been referred to arbitration, it shall be sufficient for the claimant to produce a certified copy of the plaint, or a true copy of the reference to arbitration, as the case may be*
Provided
The managing officer shall, after making, for the pur(2) pose of identification, every original document so produced and verifying the correctness of the copy, retain the copy and return the original to the claimant.
(3) Where any document, which is in the possession or under the control of a claimant, is not produced by him in accordance with an order under sub-section (1), the document shall not be admissible in evidence against the talukdar whose estate is taken under management, whether during the continuance of the management
[a] Section
290 was
inserted by
Bom. Act
II of 1905,
g.
4.
14
Tax GUJABAT
or afterwards, in any suit brought by such claimant or by any which such person claiming under him, in respect of any claim to document relates, unless it is proved to the satisfaction of the Court that it was not within his power to produce such document as required by such order.
receipts of all claims submitted in compliance with the provisions of sections 29 B and Investigation and deci290, the managing officer shall proceed to sion of claims. investigate such claims and shall decide, subject to the provisions of sub-section (3), which of them are to be wholly or partly admitted or wholly or partly rejected, as the case may be, and shall communicate his decision in writing to each claimant concerned.
[a]
29D.
(I)
On
(2) Where the managing officer has admitted any claim under sub-section (1), he may make to the claimant a proposal in writing for the reduction of the claim, or of the rate of interest to be paid in future, or of both ; and if such proposal, or any modification of it, is accepted by the claimant, and his acceptance is finally recorded and attended by the managing officer or by any Revenue-officer not below the rank of an Assistant or Deputy Collector whom the Governor in Council may, by general or special order, appoint in this behalf, it shall be conlusively binding upon the claimant. Provided that if, when the management is withdrawn, any portion of the claim reduced as aforesaid is still unsatisfied, the claimant shall be entitled to recover a sum bearing the same proportion to the original claim admitted under sub-section (1^, as the unsatisfied portion bears to the reduced claim. (3) Subject to the provisions of sub-section (2), nothing in this section shall be construed to bar the institution of a suit in a Civil Court for the recovery of a claim, against a talukdar whose estate is taken under management or his property, which has been duly submitted to the managing officer : provided that no decision of the managing officer under this section shall be proved in any such suit as against the defendant.
toKS*
by Government officers publication of a notice under section _ . . 29B, sub-section (1), no proceeding in execu. tion o an y decree a S ain8fc the talukdar whos e Ull estate is taken under management or his proflcate filed. perty shall be instituted or continued until the decree-holder files a certificate from the managing officer that the decree-claim has been duly submitted, or until the expiration of one month from the date of receipt by the managing officer of a written application f jr such certificate, accompanied by a certified copy of the decree*
Management of talukdar's
estates
On
the
la] Section* 291) and 29E were inserted by the Gujarat Talukdara* (Amendment) Act, 1905 (Bom. Act 2 of 1905), a. 4.
15
person holding a decree against such taluk dar or his to receive from the managing officer, property free of cost, the certificate required by sub-section (1).
Any
shall be entitled
(&) In computing the period of limitation prescribed by Indian Limitation Act, 1877, or by section 230 of the Code of Civil Procedure for any application for the execution of a decree, proceedings in which have been stayed or temporarily barred by reason of the claim not having been duly submitted, the lime from the date of the notice published under section 29B, sub-section (l)j
or of the decree if it was passed subsequently to the publication of the notice, to the date of due submission shall be excluded.
the
The two things a claimant has to do under this section before asking: the Court to execute deoree. Under this section the
claimant has to do one of two things before he could ask the Court to execute the decree. He has either to produce a certificate from the Talukdari Settlementofficer that the claim has been duly submitted or to apply in writing to that officer for such certificate accompanied by a certified copy of the decree and wait for the expiry of one month from the date of receipt by the officer of the application. If the officer gave no certificate within that month, the claimant's right to apply to the Court for execution revived (Ganpatsing v. Bajibhai, 35 Bom. 324).
Managing Officer. This section means that before execution of a decree can be proceeded with the Court must be satisfied that the decree claimed has been duly submitted. If the officer certifies th&t it has been duly submitted there is an end of the matter. If, however, he does not certiiy that it has been duly submitted, the Oourt must wait for one month from the date of the receipt by the officer of an application for a certificate, and upon being satisfied that a claim has been duly submitted in accordance with provisions of section 29B, it may then proceed with the execution. The expression "Managing Officer" is merely a compendious term used in this Act for "the Talukdari Settlement Officer or any other officer appointed by Government to take charge of the Talnkdar's estate and keep the same in his management" refer red to in section 28 of this Act, and where the officer who takes charge of the estate and keeps tho same in his management is the Talukdari Settlement Officer; the "Managing Officer" is merely a synonym for "Talukdari yetthment Officer." Whore an application relating to a claim is presented to the Subordinate Judge and it is forwarded by him to the Talukdari Settlement Officer, it amounts to a submission of the claim in writing within the meaning of section 2vB of this Act, if the Talukdari Settlement Officer is aUo the managing Officer (Pur us hot tarn e Rsjbai, 34 Bom. 142).
claims have been investigated under 29D, the managing officer shall submit to the Governor in Council a schedule of the Report to Government debts and liabilities o the talukdar whose estate is taken under management, and the Governor in Council may, where the property appears to be involed beyond all hope of
[a] 29F.
(1)
When
all
section
extrication, or for any other sufficient reason, by order published in the Bombay Government Gazette, direct that, on a date to be fixed by
management
(2)
'
On
(a) the
[a] Stc.
management
.
shall terminate
29F waa
10
(b) the
TUB
1888
estate shall be restored to the possession to thereof, subject any contracts entered into by the managing officer for the preservation or benefit thereof ; and (c) the claims referred to in section 29B, sub-section (3), shall revive. (3j In calculating the periods of limitation applicable to suits
owner of
to recover
(c),
and enforce claims revived under sub-section (2 j, clause the time during which the management has continued shall be excluded.
Application of provisions of the Bombay Court of Wards Act, 1906. On the issue of a notification under clause (c) of [a] 296.
Application of the Bombay Court of Wards Act, 1905 when Talukdari Settlement officer appointCourt of ed to be a
'
section 3 of the Bombay Court Q War(j 8 A t 19Q5 ap p oilltin g the m j o x^i \ a* t_ r\ * lalukdari Settlement-omcer to be a Court of Wards for the whole or any part of the area to which this Act extends, the proviWards sions of tho said Bombay Court of Wards shall without Act, 1905, prejudice to, and save so far as they may be inconsistent with, anything contained in this Act, be deemed to apply to, or in respect of any estate, which may thereafter be taken under the management of the said Talukdari Settlement-officer under section 26 or 23, as if it were an estate under his superintendence as such Court of Wards, and the talukdar, whose estate is taken under management a Government ward within the meaning
the proviso to
i
i
of that Act.
Police-officers
and
(1) \ '
establishment,
3Q
-
rom
tlrc e to
-
may J
What Police-officer and establishment are requisite in (a) each village in a talukdar i estate ; by whom and under what conditions the Police-officers (ft) and establishment shall be appointed, punished and dismissed ; what remuneration shall be paid to each Police-officer (c) and member of the Police-establishment.
Charges on account of police shall be defrayed by thfl talukdar at such times as shall from time tc time be determined by Government, and in Police-charges how recoverable. t k e event O f failure by the talukdar to pay, at the time when the same becomes due, anj
(2)
sum so payable, the said sum shall be recoverable from him, in addition to the jama as if the same were a part of the jama. If a partition has taken place and the estate is held in (8) severalty, the said charges shall be payable by, and recoverable
[a] Sec.
29G wa
.
inter ted
4.
(Bom.
II 011995),
17
from, the holders of the various portions into which the estate has been divided in proportion to their respective shares in the estate.
PARTY
MISCELLANEOUS.
la] 31
. -D a * of
(1)
,
No
B
Me,
moumbratices
TL-AJ. tli18 Ct
portion
thereof,
made
*.
...
trtM&r?"Sife
ment-officer
j
an y time beyond such talukdar's natural life, unless such incumbrance is made with the pre. vious written consent of the talukdari Settle. ment-officer. or of some other officer appointed b 7 the Governor in Council in this behalf [6] (and after the death of a talukdar no pro-
comes mt
force
ceeding for attachment, sale or delivery of, or other any process affecting the possession or ownership of, a talukdari estate, or any portion thereof, in execution of any decree obtained against such talukdar or his legal representative, except a decree obtained in respect of an incumbrance made with such consent as aforesaid, or made before this Act comes into force, shall be instituted or continued except with the like consent.)
(2)
No
alienation of a talukdar' s estate or of any portion thereinterest therein, made of, or of any share or
e^iS
2f3
aft
Governor in Council.
this Ac come 8 into force be valid ' u unless such alienation is made with the previous sanction of the Governor in Council,
shall not be given except upon the condition that the entire responsibility for the portion of the jama and of the village expen.es ani polhe-chargaa du-3 in respect of the alienated area shall thenceforward vest in the alienee and not in the talukdar*
A. money-decree is not an iucumbrance on the estate ." The word "incumbrance" does not include a within the meaning of this section. decree for the recovery ol money from a talakdar or from the estate of a deceased
which sanction
An
attachment
effects
no transfer of ownership.
rather a prohibition of transfer, since it is a process preparatory to sale by which intermediate transfers or charges are prevented and the title to the prov.
Mulaji,
Bom, L. K.
154).
Nothing in section 31 shall be deemed to apply to any incumbrance or \a\ alienation made before the passing of the Gujarat Talukdara' ( Amendment) Act IU05 (Bom. Act II of 1905), by a mulgauaeti, who holds land directly from Government, except whore his estate his been taken under management by a
Government
[b\
officer under Bom. Act VI of 1888. See s 2 (2) proviso, of that Act. These words were added by the Gujarat Talnkdar's (Amendment) Act,
s. 4.
18
ACT, 1888
The expression "Talukdar's Estate" in thii by the Talukdar as a Talakdar. It does not, therefore, include that which a Talakdar owns as assignee oi a mortgage debt by a private investment of bis money (Khodabhai t>, Chhaganlal, 9 Bom. L. B. 1122
section
763). This expression means only the estate held by a talakdar on talukdari tenure and not property held on any ordinary tenure which is distinguishable from the former (Bichubha v. Vela Dhan]i, 11 Bom. L. B. 763).
Bichubha
v.
Vila Dhanji, 11
Bom. L. E.
Vanta
in the
village, which are shown in the Government Udhar Jamabaudi, but which are only recently described as register of Inami Vanta lands kept by the Talukdar do not thereby
cease to be
'Talukdar's
estate'
this section
(Bhankarlal
v.
Bajikh**, 24
Bom. L. B.
709).
Jivaidar is a Talakdar within the meaning son mortgaged a portion of talukdari estate and after the death of the Talukdar his son sold the property to the mortgagee. The Talnkdari Settlement Officer having issued a notice, under s. 7 3- A of the Bomof this Act.
JlVaidar Is a Talukdar.- A
was
entitled to
Held, (1) That the mortgage by the Taluklar ceased to be operative after his death; (2) that the mortgage by his son was inoperative from the start, for he was not a co-sharer with his father in the talukdari estate, and not having an interest
in the property fit the time, he was not competent to incamber the interest to which he might succeed on his father's death ; (3) that the sale of the property by the son was an invalid alienation under sub-section (2) of this section ; and (4) that
s.
Talukdari Settlement
Officer,
79-A of the Land Revenue Oode was valid (Bhaiji 22 Bom. L. R. 906, s. c. 44 Bom. 872).
Otfloer
presumed to
The powers conferred on the Collector, under section 323 of the Civil Procedure Oode, 1882, and those conferred on the Taluqdari Settlement-officer under section 31 of the Gujarat Talukdar's or discretionAct, 7888, are both of
enabling
ary and are not necessarily of a mutually contradictory character. Where the two offices are combined in one and the same person on grounds of public convenience or expediency, his action must be referred to the exercise of bis
powers uuder both sections, if it can be so referred. It is not one office the action was without, and in respect of the other diction ( Parthotam t>. Aarft&mji, li Tom. L. H. 665).
that in
it
discretionary respect of
juris-
was with,
32.
(1)
No consent
Saving of rights of
ment of claims to exemption from the payment of Government laud-revenue and for regulating the terms upon whicli such exemption shall be recognized in future, in those parts of the Bombay Presidency which are not subject to the operation of Act XI of 1852 of the Council
VII
1863.
THTSSiy of
or sanction given under the last preceding section shall be deemed to affect any right of Government under section 3 of Bombay Act V11 o l8 Settle(* Act for the
Summary
of India).
ACT, 1888
10
And
S
JhTC ana 4*
1881.
01
A A. A. A.CG
^T
nothing in the last preceding section shall apply to the property of any thakur to which section 28 o theBorach and Kaira Encumbered Es!2
01
rn
iii
affect the power of the Thakur's immoveable property under section 24 of the said Act. [a] 33, (1) Nothing in sections 38 to 40, both inclusive, 44, 60 to 67, both inclusive, 76, 82, 85, 116, A ,. UM C e to 184, both inclusive, 136, 163, H7A, ^127 -Bnthav Tin% ? xJombay JUaua-Kevenue ^TT -IT* 2 16 and 217 of the Bombay Land-Revenue to Code
.
j ^
fc
taluqdar's
estates.
Code, 1879, shall be deemed to apply estate to which this Act extends.
to
any
The provisions of the said Code when applied to any such (2) estate shall be subject to the following modifications (namely): (a) in section 3, clause (1), the words "the Talukdari Settlement-officer and every officer appointed by the Governor in Council to exercise any power or perform any duty under the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 1888, and" shall be inserted after the word "means" ;
(&) in section 54, the words "or under the Gujarat Talukdars* Act, 1888," shall be inserted after the figures "136" ; (c) in sections 46, 88, 89 and 94, the word "talukdar" shall be substituted for the words "holder of alienated lands" and the word
"holder" wherever they occur ; [6] (c'f) to section 79A, clause (a), the words "whieh he uses or occupies in contravention of any of the provisions of the Gujarat Talukdars' Act, 18S8, or", shall be added 5
(d) in section 88, the clauses
( c ) to
shall be
omitted
(e)
Revenue management
JS^ t4S
any talukdar's estate coming under the temporary management of Government officers, it shall be lawful for the Collector, Talukdari
Settlement officer, or other officer appointed b 7 Government in this behalf, subject, any
the proviso to section 29 of the Gujarat Talukdars* Act, 1888, to let out the lands thereof at rates determined by means of a survey-settlement or at such other fixed rates as he may deem to be reasonable, and to "grant unoccupied lands by lease" [a] and otherwise to conduct the revenue management thereof under the rules for the management of unalienated lands not comprised within a
management.
case to
it
which
applies, to
33 was
substituted
Bom,
Act
IV
[b]
of 1913,
s.
94.
Clause
(c-c)
was insterted by
s.
(Amendment)
20
TfiS
GTOBAT TALUKDARB
such rules
be
AOT, 188ft
may be
ment
land
officers
Provided, however, that any written agreements relating to the the talukdar of such estate shall not be affected by any proceedings under this section in so far as they shall not operate to the detriment of the lawful claims of Government on the land ; and provided also that, when the estate ceases to be under the manage-
made by
ment of Government
shall,
officers,
enjoyment thereof
except as is otherwise provided in section 29 of the Gujarat Talukdars* Act, 1 888, revert to the talukdar, subject to the leases, if any, granted under this section"; ......... [a] (f) section 113 shall be omitted ; (g) in section 147, the words "or under the Gujarat Talukdara' " section"; Act, 1888," shall be inserted after the word (h) in section 150, clause ( /), the word "alienated" shall be omitted ; in section 160, the word "be" shall be substituted for the (?) " revert to Government"
words
(k) in section
from the
omitted
(I)
;
first
162, the words "at any time within twelve years day of August next after the attachment" shall be
;
" shall be substituted " for (m) generally, the word talukdar the word "occupant"; [6]. ..and the words "talukdar's holding" or such words to that effect as may be required by the context, for the
word "occupancy".
And
whereas
(
estates
expedient to limit; the period within be subjected to the operation of Bombay Act may an Act for the amelioration of the condition of Talukit is
also
dars in the Ahmedabad Collectorate and for their relief from It is further enacted as follows:
debt);
officer
offloer
-A Government
management of a Talukdar's estate has, under this section, the same powers which the Collector has in an nnalienated village, to recover arrears of revenue inclusive of rent (Jinabhai 9. Ths Collector, 28 Bom, L. 417).
Limitation of operatton of
34,
No new
, ,
.
Bom. Act VI
of
jggg at time ftftep month, f rom the , /. p date on which this Act comes into force.
.
[a]
lands by lease"
Bom. Act
IV of 1013,
[b]
94.
The portion
repealed
9*, is omitted,
XIV
of 1877.
[38th June, 1S77.]
An
Act
to relieve
estates of
Thakurs
and Kaira.
XXI of 1881.
;
and preliminary enquiry Order of manage, Scheme for liquidation ; Proceedings subsequent to sanction of liquidation scheme Appeal and revision ; Miscellaneous.} 1881. XXI Act of Hep.
1 to 38.
;
[Application
;
ment
proof of debts
Whereas doubts have been raised as to the validity o Bombay Act No. VI of 1862 ( for the arnelioraAmendment of Bom- tion of the condition of taluqdars in the Ahmedabay Act VI of 1862. bad Co liectorate, and /or their relief from debt ) so
39. f
far as it purports to affect the
High Court
of Judicature at
Bombay
for the purpose of precluding such doubts, it is hereby enacted that the said Act, so far as it purports to affect the said High Court, shall be deemed to be and to have been valid.
40
The Taluqdari
Broach
Talaqdari Settlementofficer to
be
Settlement-officer mentioned in the and Eaira Incumbered Estates Act, 1881, section 7, ] for the time being shall, unless the Local Government in any case other-
wise directs, be
(a)
deemed
to
er
be an officer
said
under section 1 of the Act No. of 1862 to manage VI Bombay a11 estates with res P ecfc to which a declaration . K t_ j j uij is or has been made and published under the
appointed
t_
j*u
said section
assistant to certain Oollecfcors -
Col-
41.
Acts
of
Nothing heretofore
done by any
be
Talaqdari
Settlement-officer valid.
deemed
reason only
The words "and" in paragraph 1 and " farther " in the second paragraph | were repealed by the Repealing and Amending Act 1894 (4 of 1894). These words and figures were substituted for the words " The said TaluqJ
dar
i
Settlement-officer
"
by
s.
J
(a)
KA.IEA.
section 1 of
estates
to
manage any
the said Bombay Act No. VI of 1862 with respect to which a declaration his been
made under
1871, or
(6) to be a
manager under
t Act No.
XV
of
ACT
An
No.
XXI
of 1881. *
[ 7th
September 1881
relief of
Act to amend the law providing for the In the Districts of Broach and Kaira.
.
Thakurs
WHBBEAS
it is
Thakurs
;
in the
Preamble
an(j Kaira
It is
CHAPTER
Short
title.
I.
PRELTMINABY
1 This Act may be called the Broach and Kaira incumbered Estates Act, 1881 : and it shall come into force on the pass-
Commencement.
ing thereo f.
2.
Act No.
XIV
of
877
( to relieve from
Act
Incumbrances the estates of Thakurs in Broach an j a{ra f except the last three sections, is
repealed.
appointments and rules made, all notices or things duly done under the said Act of 1871 (to relieve from Incumbrances the under [a] Act No. have been respecestates of Thakurs in Broach ) shall be deemed to tively made, published and done under this Act.
all applications, published and all other
But
XV
In section 40 of the said Act, No. XIV of 1877, for the wordi " the said Taluqdari Settlement-officer," the words the Taluqdari Settlement-officer mentioned in the Broach and Eaira Incumbered
Estates Act, 1881, section 7," shall be substituted, ibe words " the said " were repealed by the Repealing and Amending Act 1894 (4 of 1894). * This Act is not in force in the Panoh Mahals. See the Panoh Mahals Laws
Act, 1885 (7 oil886), a, 2(1). f Act 15 oi 1871 was repealed by s. 2 of this Act. Act 15 of 1871 was repealed by the Broach and Kaira Incumbered Esta[a]
tes
In this Act
"thakur" means also taluqdar, jagirdar and kasbati, and such other classes of holders of estates as the Local Government may, with the previous sanction of the Governor General in Council, [a] declare to be tbakurs for the purposes of the Act; "heir" means the person for the time being entitled as heir to a thakur : 1 "Commissioner' means the Revenue Commissioner of the
Northern Division of the Presidency or Bombay.
CHAPTER
At any time within
II.
INQUIRY.
six months after the passing of this Act, any thakur, or any person who would be Application for benefit sole heir or one of the heirs to such thakur * Act if he then died intestate, may apply, in writing, to the Commissioner stating that such thakur is subject to debts or liabilities, other than debts due f or liabilities incurred, to Government, or that his immoveable property is charged with debts or liabilities other than as afore*
Act
be applied
to
thakur or other person entitled to make an applicais a minor, or of unsound mind, or an idiot, such application may be made on his behalf by the guardian or
tion under this section
When any
the
legally
constituted
is made by or on behalf of a or the thakur, person who would be his sole Order to inquire. heir if he then died, the Commissioner shall direct an inquiry to be made by such officer as he thinks fit into the nature and amount of such debts and liabilities and the sufficiency of the debtor's property, whether moveable or immoveable, to discharge the same.
When
When
such an application
is
made
in
any other
case, it shall be
in the discretion of the Commissioner, subject to any general rules which may from time to time be made by the Governor of Bombay
such application or to
Thakura for
in the District of Kaira are declared foj 1 be Maliks of Thara thepurpoaea of thia Act (B. G. G. lor 1883, Ft. I, p. 504).
4
6.
THE
BBOA.OH
ACT, 1881
When
an inquiry has been directed under section 5, the applicant shall, within a period to be fixed by
the Commissioner, submit to the officer appointed to make such inquiry a statement duly verified by the said applicant, or by some other competent person, in the manner required by law for the verification of plaints, and containing, so far as may be practicable, such details as to the debts and liabilities, and as to the sufficiency oC the debtor's property, whether moveable or immoveable, to meet the same, as the Commissioner, or the said officer subject to his
control,
may
require.
If
any such statement contains any averment which the person making the verification knows or believes to
be false, or does not know or believe to be true ^ guc ji p ergon g ^ a n be deemed to have intentionally given false evidence within the
proceedings
meaning of the Indian Penal Code. The officer so appointed, after mak7. Report of inquiry and i ng inquiry, shall submit a report of his thereon.
proceedings to the Commissioner.
On
(b)
may
(c) by order published in the Bombay Government Gazette, direct that the immoveable property of the debtor shall be managed, and that his debts shall be liquidated, in the manner hereinafter
provided, by a manager.
The Taluqdari
unless the Local
Government
Settlement-officer* for the time being shall, in any case otherwise directs, be such
manager.
CHAPTER
Off
8.
III.
"Order of management"
fco
what
extends,
is
own
right,
or which he
which may be acquired by or devolve on him during the continuance of the management, and to * As to this officer, see the Broach and Kaira i no urn be red Estates Act, 1877,
entitled to redeem, or
(14 of 1877),
B.
40.
THE BBOAOH
all
debts and liabilities to which he is subject or which are charged on the whole or any part of his immoveable property on the said date, and to the amount of any loan which may be received by the manager from Government in the manner hereinafter provided. The management shall be deemed to comCommencement of ma* mence from the date on which the order is
nagement.
published.
9.
On
the publication
of the
order of
shall
Effect
o!
order
of
management.
first, all
proceedings then pending in any Civil Court in British India in respect to the debts and liabilities mentioned in section 8 shall be stayed ; and pending pro-
operation of all processes, executions and attachments then in force for or in respect of such debts and liabilities shall be suspended ;
secondly, so long as the
management continues no
fresh
pro-
Bar
lngs *
of fresh proceed-
ceedings, processes, executions or attachments ghall be instituted in or issued by any Civil Court in British India in respect of such
;
The debtor
potent
incom-
thirdly,
so long as
the
to contract debts
hj
all-
m |n
(b)
to incumber
or
nate property.
management
or
any part
(c) to grant valid receipts for the rents an(j profits arising or accruing therefrom :
Provided that nothing contained in this clause shall be deemed manager from letting, and the debtor from taking, the whole or any part of such property on such terms consistent with this Act as m*y be agreed upon between the parties :
to preclude the
fourthly, so long as the management continues, no person other than the manager shall be competent to mortgage, charge, lease or alienate such property or any part thereof.
r
receive rents
fits
-,
pro-
The manager shall, during the 10. management of the property, have all powers which the owner thereof might, as such,
have legally exercised, and shall receive and due in respect of the property under
recover
all
management
Tra
and
BftOAOH
Aor,
for the purpose of recovering such rents and profits shall have, in addition to any powers possessed by
lector,
Tk-kor, dl the power, po,ses.ed by a Colunder the law for the time being in land re force, for securing and recovering
venue due to Government ; Provided that he shall not, before the liquidation-scheme hereinafter mentioned has been sanctioned, demise the property under management, or auy part thereof, for any term exceeding two years, to take effect in possession.
Manager from
to
pay there-
From the sums received under sec-* 11. tion 10, the manager shall pay
the costs of the management, the costs of necessary repairs ; eluding
first,
in-
aosta of
management,
Gofernment revenue,
6
'
secondly^ the Government revenue and all debts and liabilities for the time being due or incurred to Government in respect of the pro-
dU6 t0 saperior
holder
perty under management ; thirdly, the rent (if any) due to any superior holder in Aspect of the said property ;
such periodical allowance as the Commissioner may from time to time fix for the maintenance allowance for main i *na other necessary expenses of the debtor tenance and expenses of and of such members of his family as the debtor and family.
fourthly,
. i
Commissioner
cost of improvements,
etc>
directs
the cost of such improvements of fifthly, the said property as he thinks necessary, and as are approved by the Commissioner.
residue shall be retained by the manager for the liquidation, in manner hereinafter provided, or the Besidne how disposed debts and liabilities mentioned in section 8, other than those so due or incurred to Government, and also for the repayment, either before or after the liquidation of such debts and liabilities, of any loan received from Government by the manager under this Act.
'
The
CHAPTER IV
12.
On
PROOF OF Dasrs AND SCHEME FJB LIQUIDATION the publication of the order of management,
the
manager
claimftnt8
shall
publish in
notice
all
the
in
against debtor.
^fdhfc
er
nt
Gazeette a
Qujarati calling
upon
persons
feaoAOH
& KAIRA
claim against the debtor or the property under mauagemnt to notify the same in writing to such manager within six months from the
date of the publication.
Copies of notice to be
exhibited.
He shall also cause copies of such notice to be exhibited at the Matnlatdars' kacheris in the ^i str | ct } n hich the said property lies,
and
fit.
Claim to coutain
particular*.
13.
^fa Mg
p rese nt
Documents to be given
up<
Every document on which the claimant founds his claim, or on which he relies in sup* port thereof, shall be delivered to the manager
document be an entry
If
any document
to exclude docu-
claimant
Power
ments not with claim.
produced
the possession or under the control of the is not delivered or produced by him to the manager a l 0ng with the c l aim the P f j manager may refuse to receive such document
in
\
A.
in evidence
at the in-
14.
is made to the manager that the claimant was unable to comply with the prov i s i ons O f sec tion 12, the manager may receive ... .. ,.' ., .'^ such claim within the further period of six
.
of
the
original
The manager
Determination of debts
and
liabilities.
shall enquire into the history and merits of every claim received under sections 12 and 14, and shall, in accordance with the rules to be made under this Act, determine the amount
( if
of the
debts and
liabilities
any
justly
claimants*
2
THE
16.
BfioioH
ft
If such
Power
and to
to
rank debts
fix interest.
at once, the manager shall then proceed to rank such debts and liabilities according to the order in which they shall be
pftid)
gnd
^ fix
^ ^^
jf
ftay ^
fae
on
17.
When
the total
ing those due and incurred to Government Bcheme for liquidation, has been finally determined, the manager shall prepare and submit to the Commissioner a schedule of such debts and liabilities, and a scheme ( hereinafter
called the
liquidation- scheme
in
which
it is
proposed to pay and discharge the same, whether from the income of the property under management, or with the aid o funds raised under the powers hereinafter conferred, or partly in one of such
ways and partly in the other. Every such scheme shall further provide for the continuance of the payments to be made by the manager un. ^ of echeme Propone
.
der
^^ n> ^
ftnd
(if
th
^ Tep^mejJ^oi the
which the manager proposes to borrow from Government under this Act, and may provide for the improvement of the property under management either from the said income or with the aid of the funds raised as aforesaid, or part* ly in one of such ways and partly in the other. The Commissioner may 18.
money
any)
ma7 be wqawite for the proper preparation of the scheme, or (b) sanction any liquidation-scheme, or any revised liquidation* scheme, submitted to him, either as it stands, or subject to such modifications as he may deem expedient. 19. At any time before he has sanctioned a liquidation -scheme, UQ der section 18, the Commissioner may, by an r u * order Pushed in the Government
ther in(l uir 7
scheme.
{O ^eTonTnbmissioTof
(a) as often he thinks fit aend back such scheme to the manager for revision, and direct him to make such fur..
.
Bombay
by such
or*
(a) the management shall terminate ; (b) the owener of the property under management shall be res* tored to the possession thereof, subject to any leases made odder
section 10;
(c) any residue of the rents and profits of the said property retained under the last clause of section 11 shall be paid to him ; and the proceedings, processes, executions and attachments (d)
stayed and suspended under section 9, and the debts and liabilities tarred by section 14 shall revive*
ACT, 1861
In calculating the periods of limitation applicable to suits to recover and enforce debts and liabilities revived under this section, the time during which the management has continued shall be excluded*
CHAPTER
Or THE
20-
V.
80
the Commissioner sanctions the liquidation-scheme, he shall notify the fact of such sanction at Effects of sanctioning guch places and in such manner as the Local
When
"
*'
to
time by rule
attachments 1st, all proceedings, processes, executions and stayed or suspended under section 9 shall be for ever barred ; and 2nd, every debt or liability due or owing to any person which was provable before the manager shall be extinguished, and such person shall be entitled to receive under the liquidation-scheme the amount (if any) finally awarded to him under Chapter IV of this Act in respect of such debt or liability. Suit in Civil Courts for partition not barred by liquida-
tion-scheme In respect of the debts and liabilities of a Thakur, this Act oasts the jurisdiction of the Oivil Courts as soon as a liquidation-scheme under this section is sanctioned ; bnt thit ouster does not apply to a suit for partition
among
(Afalek
Sees. 9,
JamiatRaju v. Kanmkhan JAubarajkhan, P.J.for 1896, p. 721), 21. If the property under management or any part thereof be in the possession of a mortgagee or condiPower to remove mort- tional vendee, the manager at any time after gagee in possession. fa li qu i<j a tion-8cheme has been sanctioned as aforesaid, may, by an order in writing, re* such incumbrancer to deliver up possession of the same to quire him at the end of the then current revenue-year.
If such incumbrancer refuse or neglect to obey such order, the manager may, without resorting to a Civil Court, enter upon the property and summarily evict therefrom the said incumbrancer and any other person obstructing or resisting on his behalf. Nothing in this section shall be held to affect the right of any incumbrancer to receive, under the liquidation-scheme, the amount (if any) awarded to him under Chapter IV of this Act. If the property under management or any part thereof 22. be in the possession of any person claiming to hold under a lea* dated wUhin the three
...
years immediately preceding the commencement of the management, the manager may inquire into the sufficiency of the consideration for which the lease was given ; and if such consideration appear to him insufficient,
leases
JSSSZSET&
10
after the liquidation -scheme has been sanctioned as aforesaid, either set aside the lease on require the person so in possession to pay such consideration for the said lease as the manager thinks fit $ and, in
default of such payment, the lease shall be cancelled* 23. Subject to the rules made under section 31, the manager, after the liquidation-scheme has been sane-* Power to lease. tioned as aforesaid, shall have power to
demise all or any part of the property under any term of years not exceeding twenty yearn absolute, to take effect in possession, in consideration of the payment to him of any fine, or without fine, and reserving such rents, and under such conditions, as may be agreed upon.
management
for
24.
At any time
tioned
after the liquidation-scheme has been sancas aforesaid, the manager, with the
previous assent of the Commissioner, shall have power to raise any money which may be required for carrying out such scheme
by mortgaging the whole or any part of the property (a) under management for a term not exceeding twenty years from the
publication
(b)
of the order of
management
or
by charging the whole or any part of such property; or and (c) by selling, by public auction or by private contract, as the manager thinks fit, such portion of the said terms such upon
property
s
or
(d) by borrowing money from Government at such rate of interest as appears reasonable to the Local Government.
25.
The manager's
receipt for any moneys, rents or profits raised or received by him under this Act shall
discharge the person paying the same theref rom an(j f rom being concerned to see to the application thereof. When the debts and liabilities mentioned in the liquida26. tion-scheme and the amount of any loan reTermination of manageceived from Government under clause (d) of menfc section 24, together with the interest (if any) due thereon, have been paid and discharged as therein provided, or in such other manner as the Commissioner thinks fit, the manager shall publish in the Bombay Government Gazette a notice fixing a date for the termination of the managedischarge.
*
Manager's receipt a
ment.
the date so fixed the mapfegement shall terminate, and the owner alkali be restored to the possession and Restoration of owner. enjoyment of the property under management, or of such part thereof as has not been sold by the manager under the power conferred by section 24, but subject to the leases
On
THE BBOAOH
If 81
11
and mortgages (if any) granted and made by the manager under the powers conferred by sections 10, 23 and 24.
27.
Death of debtor during management
of the
modes
the
management and before the manag eme nt has been terminated in either hereinbefore provided,
tion of the order of
shall continue
1st,
management
and proceed
in all respects
as
if
still
living
2ndly, any person succeeding to the whole or any portion of the property under management shall, while such management continues, be subject in respect of such property to the disabilities imposed by clauses (b) and (c) of section 9 ; and
Srdly, no Civil Court in British India shall, during the continuance of the management, issue any attachment or other process against any portion of the property under management, for or in respect of any debt or liability incurred by any such person whether before or after his said succession.
Where
this
Act to
bar a suit
debts,
whose indebtedness rendered necessary the application of during the management; there is nothing in the Act to against the successor during the management in respect of his own
the Thakur,
his estate, dies
;
estate
(Bhikha
Thakur has been restored under section 26 to the possession of any property, no mortgage, M g char g e eftse or alienation of such property, tored rM ^'hakor by or f an J P* rt thereof, made by such Thakur, valid only for his life. shall be valid as to any time beyond his natural life [unless made or granted with the previous sanction of
28.
a
>
When
'
Commissioner.]"}
disability con-
life-time
the
was taken under management under this Act, bit to his successor also (Gavrishankar v Madhavsang]i, 27 Bom. L. R. 88). Mortgage by Talukdar. Where a mortgage effected by a Talukdar
is
becomes void under this section, after the death of the Talnkdar the mortgagee not entitled to recover back the money advanced by him on the mortgage under 19 Bom, L. B. 545 ; sec. 65 of the Contract Act (Parshottam v. Chatrasang'}*,
s. c.
41 Bom. 546).
CHAPTER
29.
VI
An
-
APPeal
f
appeal against any* decision or order under sections 14, 15 16 and 22, or imposing a fine or imprisonment in exercise of the powers conferred
}
The words
in brackets
12
TfiE BaoicH
Aw,
within
by
six weeks
section 35, shall lie to the Commissioner, if preferred from the date of such decision or order*
There
30.
shall be
no appeal against the decision of the Commisof his own motion or on the application of any person concerned, call for the proceedings in any under this Act an pa** such order thereon consistent with the provisions of this Act as he thinks fit.
JS^ft^K
thereon.
ce
CHAPTER
31.
VII
MISCELLANEOUS
Power
to
make
roles,
co^g^
with thi|
from Subordinate
(6)
(c) for the guidance of officers enquiring into and determining on claims under Chapter IV of this Act ; and in particular as to the allowance of interest (if any) on each of the principal debts and liabilities so determined, from the date on which it was incurred down to the date of the determination, and on the a<rgre~ gate amount of such debts and liabilities from the date of the deter-
mination
down to the date of payment, and as to the order of paying debts and liabilities and repaying any loan received hereunder
;
from Government
(d) for investing any moneys received or raised by the manager under this Act in any Government securities of Biitish India, and for the sale of such securities ; and
(0)
Such rules shall be published in the Bombay Government Gazitte, and when so published, shall have the force of law.
32.
manager, and may appoint any officer in the 8 tead of any manager appointed under this man>lger Act; and thereupon the management then vested under this Act in the former manager shsll become vested in the new manager. Every such new manager shall have the same powers as if he had been originally appointed.
Power
to appoint
'
is
to
Every manager appointed under this Act and every agent of such manager shall be deemed a gers & their agents public servant within the meaning of the be pnbhc servants. fndUn p enal
34.
proceeding.
Every investigation conducted by the manager with reference to any claim preferred before him Investigation a judicial un(ier this Act, or to any matter connected
judicial proceeding
ftny
gach
flammoni
of
witaes?*
ftn nd
prodSn
ments.
".
1
this Act, the manager and any officer an making inquiry under section 5 may sum* mon and enforce the attendance of witnesses aad com Pel them to g ive evidence, and compel the production of documents by the
same means and, as far as possible, in the same manner as is provided in the case of a Civil Court by the Code of Civil Procedure.
36.
.
No
. '
n_ r ot Bwfc8 fl
37.
suit or other proceeding shall be maintained against any person in respect of anything done by
to this
Act
Nothing
-^tCSS ^
of
made
Act precludes the Courts in Broach and Kaira having jurisdiction in suits relating to 8U y immoveable property brou g h t under the operation of this Act from entertaining and disposing of such suits; but to all such suits the manager of such property
^^
.
a party.
mentions succession only,
relating
it is
As
tion
this section
parti-
to
succession,
on
the
of
uniua
excluded.
purpose extending This section requiries the manager to be made a party. matttr for amendment and it does not take the
It loses all force where one class of universally conclusive. suits only are removed from the cognisance of the Oivil Courts and no reason exists in the nature of of this Act or the
class.
away
jurisdiction of the
*
it is
it
Katimkhan Mubarajkhan,
P, J.
186,p.
38.
721).
Nothing
*
-
in
uv
JSfiSL
provisions of
u * 01 * Act*
Kerwara, the thakur of Dehej, and the thakur of Janiadra, incompetent to enter into con* tracts involving him in pecuniary liability, nor? shall anything in section 38 apply to any of the said tbaknrs i
section 9 shall be deemed to render any of the following thakurs, namely, the thakuf of Abraod > th of'Sarod, the thakur of
the settlement of his debts and section 11 of the said Act, No.
tract involving
liabilities
XY
scheme for was approved under of 1871, entered into any conhas, since the
liability exceeding the average annual income derived during the previous five years from his immoveable property after deducting therefrom the land-tax and other dues of Government, the Local Government may, by notification in the Bombay Government Gazette^ declare that the exemption made by the former part of this section shall cease in his case, and thereupon such exemption shall cease accordingly.
him
in pecuniary
THE
VI OF
1862.
[14th October 1862.]
Aot for the amelioration of the condition of taluqdars in the Ahmedabad Colleotorate, and for their relief from
the lands held in
debt.
WHEBKAS
the
zila
of
Ahmedabad
in
the
Province of Gujarat under the title of taluqPreamble dari estates are now only held on leasehold tenure determinable at the pleasure of Government; and whereas it has been of the brought to the notice of Government that
many
circumstances and have borrowed money on the security of their landed estates ; and whereas such of the said landed estates as are of the taluqdari tenure aforesaid could not and cannot be lawfully charged, encumbered or alienated ; and whereas it is expedient to enable the said taluqdara to effect a settlement of their debts and liabilities ; It is hereby enacted as follows :
taluqdars
are in
embarrassed
talakdari
villages,
and
interest of the
which
Act came
obtained by
1.
into operation, though possession of such villages had not then the purchaser of Ahmedabad v. Samaldas, 9 Bom.
(Collector
206)^
Whenever
decla "
it
rat
f*
ertomake
shall appear to the Governor in Council that any taluqdar in the zila aforesaid is subject
mentV^utel
dar in
officer
3toto<
e8ta es of
f
equal to or exceeding five times the average rents, profits and other annual income derived by the taluqdar from his estates aforesaid during the previous five years after deducting thereout the land tax and other dues of Government, it shall be lawful for the Governor in Council to make a declaration vesting the management of the said estates in an officer or officers who shall then be appointed by the Governor in Council in that behalf, and the said declaration shall be published in the Bombay Government Gazette. Comment. No new declaration ia to be made under this section at any
appointed
liabilities
by Government.
time after six months from the date on which Bom. Aot
force
4
VI
of
VI of 1888).
'liabilities/
The
which the
which,
first
ten sections of
this
Act
at
the
this section, were not merely contingent, but could be made the subThe case of debt or liability to which a talnkdar of an immediate claim. ject has become ivibject during the period of management in oonsequence of an event
[Pox. ACT
is
which at the commence <nent of such period could not be foreseen with certainty, a casus omissus in this Act (Sheik Gulam 0. Waghcla, P J., 1883, p. 68).
2.
From and
on above mentioned, other than debts due or UabiUUes in first secf liabilities incurred to the Grown or Governtioa mentioned, other than debts to Government, pending before or under appeal from ment, to be permanentan y of the Civil Courts in the said Presidency, y aye shall be, and are hereby declared to be, permanently stayed, and no further prosecution thereof shall be permitted, and all writs, processes, executions or attachments for or in respect of such debts and liabilities shall forthwith cease and be
t
. fl
A^
after the publication of said declaration as aforesaid all suits or judicial proceedings for or in
W P* of
first
sec-
raised.
3.
From and
to
K ^
0r
Power
after the publication of such declaration, the said officer or officers shall have power, without
of
estate of taluqdar.
any Civil Court, to remove from of the landed estates of the taluqPossession dar of any description of tenure, or any part
porting
to
thereof, any mortgagee or other encumbrancer be in possession of the same, without prejudice to such mortgagee or encumbrancer bringing his claim under sections 8 and 9 before the officer or officers appointed for the management of the
who may
said estates.
4.
From and
declaration
after the publication of such declaration as aforesaid, the taluqdar, the subject of such declarat ion, shall not be liable to arrest, nor shall his
After
a
n0
la
process, decree, judgment or execution of the Civil Court of the Presidency of Bombay for or in respect of any debts or liablities existing at the time of such declaration, other than debts due or liabilities incurred to the Crown or Government.
Lp
Phonal
any
estates of
e liable to seizure,
5.
From and
after the publication of such declaration as aforesaid) the landed estates of such taluqdar of
aay description of tenure and the rents, profits and income thereof shall during- the period o the management thereof by the said of debts and liabilities officer ot officers, be wholly exempt from aforesaid or attachment sale under or by virtue of any process, deseizure, cree, judgment or execution of any Civil Court of the Presidency ot Bombay for or in respect of the debts and liabilities aforesaid, other than debts due or liabilities incurred to the Crown or Government.
Daring management,
dSft^SlfJS
VI
w i862
6.
Power
make and
alter rules,
Governor in Council to make rules for the purpose of carrying this Act i ato e ffect,and from time to time to alter,vary Of amea(j mc \i ^j^ ag necessity may arise,
during the continuance of his or their management of the said estates, reand inCeiv e the whole of the rents, r profits i n i_ ^ i j come thereof and shall defray thereout land,
,
<.
7.
The
rents,
;
Managing
receive
officer
profits
and income
other debts due or liabilities inor hereafter respectively to grow due curred, or to be incurred, to the Crown or Govern-
tax and
to
the taluqdar
such annual
sum
Governor in
expenses
of
manage.
Te^anTliabUUieT^n
accordance with rules.
Council requisite for the decent support of the taluqdar and his family, and any balance remaining after such payment as aforesaid 8 k a u jj e a ppH e(j i n discharge of the expenses of such management as aforesaid and in liand quidation or settlement of the debts liabilities to which at the time of the publiis
cation of the said declaration the taluqdar sonally or in respect of his landed estates
section.
8.
subject either perany description of tenure, in accordance with the rules alluded to in the last preceding
of
The
publish
in
the
Bombay
Managing
officer
Government Gazette a notice in English and Gujarathi, calling upon all persons having
c l aira * a n g ainsl the 8aid taluqdara or theirj said , , LJ. landed estates respect ot any of the debts
.
m
.
<
<
0.1
same in or liabilities aforesaid, to notify time months' three such within officer or officers writing r#] fnm the time of such notice in the Gazette, and the said officer or officers shall, before or contemporaneously with such publications in the Gazette, cause copies o such notice to Publication of copies be exhibited at the maralatdars' kache ria in o notice the said zilla and in such place or ulaces as
the
to
-
seem
fit
and as
be directed by the said rules. 9. Any debt or liability of the taluqdar other than as aforeeither personally said, to which he is subject, Debt or liability not or in respect of the said landed estates, existnotified to be barred. the jn g at t ^ e t me O f fo e Bg \ft declaration by the to notified not in Council Governor duly
may
the
time and in
the
manner
iq the
was reapealed by the Bombay General Clauses Act, [a. The word "calendar" 1886 (Bombay Act 3 ol 1886), Schedule B,
4
last
TILH
Bon. Act
hereby declared to be
Provided always
Upon proof
of inabli-
Provisions of this and the last preceding sections, it shall be lawful for the said officer or officers, to entertain and admit such claim within the further period of nine months from the expiration of the above-mentioned period of three months. 10. Ths said officer or officers shall as early as possible prepare and submit to the Governor in Couucil a scheme f <* of SSI's' *? ?ttlement of the taluqdar's debts and liabilities. liabilities, and such scheme, when approved by the Governor in Council, shall be carried into effect.
T f^I
that, upon proof being given to the satisfaction of such officer or officers of the inability of the claimant to have complied with the
SBTEl
The amount of any debt or liability as fi*ed in such approved scheme shall not be
creased.
liable to increase.
Any
Bar of 8llowed -
debt Or liability
debts
dis-
shall, if
disallowed by such officer or officers such disallowance be approved by Government, be and it is hereby declared to be for ever barred.
r
ihe case of a debt or liability to which a Talukdar has become subject daring such period in consequence of an eyent which could not be foreseen with certainty at the commencement of uch period must be treated as a catus omistut in this Act (Shaik Gulam v. WagJula Rajsangji, P. J.
Debt or
liability.
1883, p. 63).
11.
Power
the Governor in Council to emor officers aforesaid to raise the officer power fund t be applie(i to the settlement of the , , -., , , ,. ..vv. , deb ts and liabilities c f the talukdar by assigning the whole or a portion of hi* landed
.
estates of any description of tenure to be held and enjoyed, for a period or periods not exceeding twenty years from the publication of the declaration aforesaid, by any fit person or persons who may advance money on the security thereof, or by
the sale of such outlying portion or portions of the said estates as may appear expedient ; but in case of such sale the consent of the and of his next heir, if the latter be of age, shall first be
taluqdar obtained.
12.
Any
debt or liability, except as hereinbefore excepted, which may be incurred by the taluqdar, either inUF " personally or in respect to his said landed ea-
J
ceablo against estates.
such management as aforesaid, shall not be enforceable in any manner whatever, either
VI
OF 1&62
during or subsequently to such period of management, against his any part thereof, and it shall not be competent for the taluqdar during the said period ... T of charge, encumber, sell or dartTSlel, afe alienate his said to landed estates or any part nate. thereof, and such charge, encumbrance, sale
said landed estates or
"*'
and void.
Inability of guardian to contract on behalf of infant ward 80 as tO bind him personally. A guardian cannot contract in the name of a ward, so as to impose on him a personal liability. This Ac t is intended to
deal with debts and liabilities which can possibly impose a charge
dar estate at the end of the period of management, when the estate was to be restored to the talnkdar free of incnmbranoe, excepting the Government revenne
(Waffhelav. Masludin, 11
4
Bom.
551).
in this section is
'Incurred
7 '
used in
its
proper
Wjghela Rajsanji, P,
In
the
Maintenance grant.
family in the
Thakorate
of
impartible estate subject to the rale Bombay of primogeniture it was customary to grant villages to junior sons of tbe holder of The grant reverted to the gaddi on failure of the gaddi for jivai or maintenance.
Presidency, holding au
One of such grantees the grantee's male descendants, widows being excluded, died issueless leaving a widow who purported to adopt a son subsequently. Hld that the adopted son inherited the grant (Pratap Singh Qhivsingh v. Agarsinghi\i Raiingh y 43 Bom. 773, P. 0.).
13.
It shall be lawful for
t0
every officer or officers appointed under this Act to demand and require the
Production of any writs, decrees, judgments,
records, deeds, documents,
up wHts
eto,,
drr^ par8
required.
exhbit, pleadings, books, accounts, letters, petitions, papers or writings filed in any of the suits mentioned in the second section of this Act, or relating to the debts or liabilities of any taluqdar whose landed estates are brought under such management as aforesaid, in the custody or control of any Civil Court, or in the custody or control of any Judges, Judge, Assistant Judge, officer or person connected with such Court, and upon notice being given in writing by such officer or officers to guch Civil Court, or to any Judges, Judge, Assistant Judge, officer or person connected therewith, such
when
1
writs, decrees, judgments, records, deeds, documents, exhibits, pleadings, books, accounts, letters, petitions, papers or writings in the said notice mentioned shall be immediately given up to the said officer or officers appointed under this Act, in the manner directed by the said notice, any act, usage or custom to tbe contrary in 'any
wise notwithstanding,
Tsa
14.
It shall be
BOM. ACT
and it shall also be [.]* f*t lawful for the said officer or officers to compel the production of books, accounts, papers, deeds or other documents, and to inflict a fine not exceeding rupees one hundred for disobedience to any sanad or order made under
production of books, etc.
Sr td
,.
t.
lawful for every officer or officers appointed under this Act to summon witnesses and to
e^ce,
this section.
appointed for the management of the landed estates of any taluqdar under this 1 Act 8ha1 haV6 > f r the P Ur P 8e Of thi8 realiza ' cfficeTfor / tion and recovery of the rents, profits and rents and profits. income of such landed estates, the same powers as a Collector possesses under the Regulations or Acts now or hereafter in force for the realization and recovery of land-
15.
The
officer or officers
SS
under
this
section
some
moveables in levy of rent. Held, that his process was " legal process" under Art. 29 of ch. 11 of the Limitation Act of 1877( T&akwanta 9. The Tulkdari Bitthment
Officer,
P. J. 1892, p. 32).
16.
The management
limited
Management
i^UatoiT'clliill*
eto.,%o be
settled,
considered
of the landed estates of any taluqtla r officer or officers as aforesaid shall not such by extend beyond the period of twenty years, to be calculated trom the first publication of 8UC ^ declaration as aforesaid in the Bom-
bay
the
end of such period of twenty years, all debts and the (except as hereinbefore excepted) existing at such declaration, and comprised in such time of approved intents scheme as aforesaid, shall be deemed to be for all and purposes whatsoever fully discharged and satisfied, and neither the uluqdar nor his heirs nor representatives, nor his heir nor their estate?, whether moveable or iinrn >veable, or any part thereof shall be subject in any manner whatsoever to such debts or liabilities (except as hereinbefore exceptei) or any pare thereof.
or at
liabilities
Power
officer8 -
to appoint
new
17. It shall be lawful for the Governor n Council from time to time to appoint new officers to carry this Act into effect, and all such officers shall have the same powers as
i
first
appointed.
(1
The words
VI OF 1862
Aofr
8 jj a
under this Act same powers for enforcing the payment of fines imposed under this Act as
Officers appointed
n k ave
foe
XXV
are given
to Courts [a]
of 1861.
w
of,
Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Act, it shall be lawful for the Civil Courts to enterSmt3 cognizable by tain and dispose of suits relating to the sueourts.
19.
cession to, or rights of co-parcenary in, or rights of persons claiming maintenance out
estate or estates
ing
officer.
Provided always that neither the Crown nor any officer or officer. appointed under this Act, shall be liable to
**
done
in
Government
any
any
act or
acts
good
faith
by such
20.
From and
after the expiration of the period of ment of the estate of any taluqdar,
managewhether
management.
K years, the taluqkdar shall be the absolute proprietor of his said landed estates as regards
manamgement and
transfer of,
the
same, subject to such land-tax as the Governor in Council may be pleased to reserve and all usual remedies for the recovery thereof,
Interpretation-clause.
In this Act, [b] unlegg tfaere be 80mefch i a g in the 8ubj ec t O r * * *. context repugnant to such construction*
21.
[b]
****
***
(1) the term "Civil Court" shall mean and include every Court of Civil Judicature in the Presidency of Bombay whether established by Royal Charter or not.
(2)
and
(5)
[a]
See
now
s.
Procedure,
1898 (Act 6 of
1898).
No.
OF
the
1880.
[
6tk
May, 1880.
amend
the
law relating
to
settlement of Villages
held by Khots.
WHEBBAS it is expedient to make special provision for the settlement and revenue-administration of villages in the Ratnagiri District,
which are held by khots
;
It is
enacted as follows
FART
1.
I.
PRELIMINARY.
shorttltle
'
This Act may be cited as the Khoti Settlement Act, .88u. It extends to all villages held by khots in
the district of Ratnagiri.
The Governor in Council may from time to time, by notification in the Bombay Government Gazette, extend all or any of its provisions to any such village in the Kolaba District.
Sections 37 and 38 of the Bombay Survey and Settlement Act, 1865, are repealed so far as they apply to any Repeal of sections 37 village to which this Act extends, or may here8 ACb l ay Provided that the said repeal after be extended oU8b 5 shall not affect the validity of any settlement already made under the provisions of the said sections and which has been guaranteed by the Government for a filed period under section 28 of the said Act.
2.
:
3.
Interrelation clause
be something
re p U g nant in the subject Or COntext:(1) "village" means a village, or a portion or share of a village, to the extent to which a khot hat? any right or interest in such village
"khot" includes
mortgagee lawfully in possession of a khotki,
co-sharers in a khotkti
;
(a) a
()
all
(3) "khotki" means the aggregate of the rights and interests vested in a khot as such
:
(4)
(5)
a khot to Government.
(a) a dharekari, or
(4)
tenure
[a]
The phraeo permanent tenant' was substituted for by Bom. Act V of 1913, B, 85 (b).
*
'
the
original
phraie
urinations
[cj (11) ''Recording-officer" means any officer duly empowered to make or am^nd entries in the settlement-register or other settlement records by or under flection 1U8 of the Bombay Land-Revenue Code, 1879, or Part Hi of this Act
:
one Code.
? is
(12) Any word or expression which is defind in the Bombay Land-revenue Code, 1870, and not hereinbefore defined, shall be deemed to have the meaning given to it by that Code.
PART
II.
piymeVof
Khots shall continue to hold their villages conditionally on the payment of the amounts due on account of the Continuance of Rhote' of the same, according to the provisions of jama "* * this Aot aild of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, taT*
4.
1
made under
1879, and of any rules for the time being in force this Acfc or under the said Code, and subject to the fulfilother term or liability lawfully annexed or appertaining
of a
whose* duty
In some provinces he is an hereditary to collect for Government the revenue of the village, also an
officer
officer
The
<
khoti'
practice,
e. </.,
business or office of a
in the
word "khoti" means contracting for a standing crop A Khot ia a farmer of land-revenue and that his
(Ibid).
office has become hereditary (Tajubai t>. Svk-C*llu!torofKo<tba, 3 Born H. 0. R. A. 0. -T. 132), He is a superior holder with respect to all the village lands over whitfh he exercises kboti rights. Proprietary rights are not essential to the conception of a Khotftiup; in the absence
of an express grant of the proprietorship of the soil a khot is to be presumed not That does not, however, mean that be has to be the proprietor of the soil (Ibid). no interest whatever in his Khoti village, nor that he is merely an officer or agent Of the Government (Collector of Ratnayiri
v.
^ntajt, 12
Bom.
634).
III of J886, are omitted, repealed [a] was substituted for the original phrase "an tenant" ihe phrtie "permanent [&J occupancy tenant" by Bon, Act IV of 1918.
[e]
Words
ty Bom. Act
Bom. Act HI
of 1904,
8. 2,
in the place of
UK fomtr cJme
&
Every holder of Khoti land who hns actually occupied or cultivated the same continuously from any tjrae
"nt
* * he of the revenne previ coipmencetneBt '? ear lo45-4D has a right of >' occupancy in the land* so occupied or cultivated
ants.
()
The occupation or cultivating of the father or other person from the present holder inherits, and in the case of perm taint tev> aucies which are transferable otherwise than by inheritance, tha occupation or cultivating of any former holder through whom the per* sent holder claims, or of any mortgagee or lessee of the present or any former holder, shall be deemed to be the occupation or cultivating of the persent holder within the meaning of this section ; and, in the case of land which is periodically fallow, years of fallow shall be reckoned as years of occupation or cultivation for the
whom
is not transferable otherwise than by inheritance, has been so transferred, the actual holder of the land shall be deemed to be has been the tenant thereof, and if he, or his father or transferred, other person from whom no inheiits, has occupied or cultivated the land continuously r'r nu ,-uiy tira? previous to the commencement of the revenue year iS43-46 he shuil hav^ a permanent tenancy therein provided that, if the actual holder i^ in possession of the land as mortgagee, or lessee merely, his occupation or cultivating shall for the be deemed to be the occupation purpose of this section and of section cultivating of the mortgagor or lessor, and that if such mortgagor. or lessor has a permanent tenancy in the land such permanent tenancy shall, notwithstanding the provisions of sectiun 9, be subject to the
If a
'/
,">
mortgage lien or lease of the said mortgagee or lessee until the sam*
is
There is no authority for saying that an ocoapancy not determined, forfeits bis tenancy by parting temporarily with the possession of his land to another without resigning the land as completely as would be necessary, in the case of privileged occupants of another sabAnd o long as his tenancy if clasr, to place the land at the disposal of the khot. not determined the land is not at the disposal of the kh >t. And the khot cannot
Occupancy tenant.
whose tenancy
is
tenant,
olaim to trnat the person in possession under a right derived from the occupancy tenant either as a trespasser even as a yearly tenant, so long aa the privileged occupant's rights remain undetermined by resignation, lapse or duly certifiad forfeiture (}'e,v? v.
7.
,
,,
^X
.
8.
,.
^Ordinary
Sakharam, 30 Bom. 290). Privileged occupants shall continue to hold their lands conditionally on the payment of the rent from time V>l9f *' time "lawfully due by them to the khot or n rg other person entitled to receive payment of the same. Tenants other than permanent tenants shall continue to hold their lands subject to such terms and conditions A tenants. a s may have been, or may hereafter he, agreed
.
" sva " substituted lor (a-a) The phrase permanent tenants 7' Act words "occupancy tenants by Bom. IV of 1913, s, 85 (6).
the
original
upon between the khot and themselves, and in the absence of any such specific agreement shall be held to be yearly tenants liable to pay rent to the khot at the same rates as are*p*ud by permanent tenants in which the lands held by them are situate Provided in the village that the said rate shall not exceed the maxima prescribed in section
:
pear to hold ther lands on any terms agreed upon between the khot and themselves, inch tenants are entitled, under thia section, to pay rent to the khot at the same
rates as are paid
0.
Keshav, 21
Bom.
71).
Note*
landlord.
'Thai'
TRANSFER
What
'
&c., OF
RIGHTS
9. The rights of khots, dharekaris and quasi-dharekaris shall be heritable and transfer-
able.
Permanent-tenancies shall be heritable, bnt shall not be otherwise transferable without the consent of the khot, unless in any case the tenant proves that such risrht of transfer has been exercised in respect of the land in hi* occupancy, independently of the consent of the khot, at some time within the period of thirty years next previous to the commencement of the revenue year 1865-66, or unless, in the case of a permanent tenancy conferred by the khot under section 11, the khot grants such right of transfer of the same Provided that a permanent tenant raay without the consent of the grant a lease for a term not exceeding one year.
:
Under
managing khot
t>.
is
/Tri'.sA-
26 Bom. L. R. 421).
*iO.
If the land by
a privileged occupant lapses for failure of heirs or ip forfeited oo the occupant's failing to Resignation, lapse or for. pav the rent due in respect thereof, or if any CCU fri?ilesel his land or any porresigns * permanent tenant -v _ tion of his land or does any act purporting to transfer his laod or any portion thereof or any interest therein without the consent of the khot (except in the cases provided for in section 9), such land shall be at the disposal of the khot as khoti land free of all encumbrances, other than liens or charges created or existing in favour
"
i
'
of Government.
But it shall not be competent to a privileged occupant at any time to resign a portion only of his entire holding: except with the consent of the khot ; and no privileged occupant shall be deemed to have for* feited his land on failure to pay rent unless such foreitnre is certified
by the Collector.
*Not6
VIII
of 1912,
by Bom. Act
1.
1880,
Agreement ly tenant to sell whether amounts to transfer. The of a penal nature and must be construed strictly, fold, that a
mere contract
not be sufficient to amount to a transfer and will not attract the operation of -8. 10 and place the land at the disposal of the Khot. Semble It may be that in the case
:
of a contract to
sell
may
give consent to
L. R. 1015).
long as a knot's power of perwith him and has not been alienanted to a tenant with privi-
must be regarded for all purposes as nndistingnish* from ordinary Khoti Khisqi, the right remaining with the khot at pleasure to recover the land on the determination of any yearly or abort term tenancy
(Oajanan
v.
NVo, 6 Bom.
L B 84).
An occupancy tenant by transferring his land on does not resign it within the meaning of this section so aa to place the land at the disposal of the khot (Ramchindra 9. Dattrttrayft, 31 Bom. 261).
Ooonpauoy tenants.
sale
When
Though
tion
an oconpincy tenant transfers land to another on a sale deed he cannot, be said to have resigned the land.
the consent of the khot is not necessary to a resignation still the resignamust be made to the khot, and it i* only to the khot that tbe resignation can be mnde As to whether or not * pr titular transaction is a resignation to the khot must depend upon the circumstances of suoh ca*e (Badeshih r. Narayan, 9 Bom.
L. R.
29).
this section the
Under
tions
first,
occupancy tenant's
is
risjht
To
Khot
ferred upon the lessee the right of occupancy at the time of creating the tenancy. Hence, where after the occupancy has been created the Khot consents to the
transfer
section
of
his
rights
o.
(MAHADEV
KhOti land.
Where
tion thereof without the consent of the Kbit, only the portion so
and
not the entire holding, is at the disposal of the khot, under this rao v. Krishn^i, 46 Bom. 470).
section (ftfadhav-
simple mortgage
of
Khoti land by its occupant amounts to a transfer of meaning of this section. The mortgage itself
;
mortgage
is satisfied
the fact that the right to claim that the land is at his disposal before the date of the suit is no answer to the claim (Vasu v.
*lfadhavrao, 24
Bom. L. R. 1160).
Grant of Privileged Occupant's Rights by Khots. 11. It shall be competent to the khot at any time to confer on any tenant the right of a privileged occupant of any a privileged occupant of one class, right^tco^rdby class, or on the right of a privileged occupant of a superior khots Provided that the grant by the knot of class
:
ft
ACT, 1880.
any such right shall not affect any right of Government in respect of the land which is the subject of such grant or of the trees or other
forest-produce of such land.
receipt of a written application from the khot, in such form as shall he prescribed in rules to be framRecord of g rant. ed under section 40, the Collector shall cause an entry to be made, in such record as may from time to time be prescribed by Government in this behalf, of any right conferred by the
12.
^
On
khot under the last preceding section, and an entry thus duly made and authenticated by the Collector's signature shall be conclusive proof of the facts therein recorded.
Nothing in this section or in section 11 shall be deemed to apply to a mortgagee lawfully in possession of a khotki unless such mortgagee shall have been expressly authorized by his mortgagor to exercise the
powers conferred by the said sections.
Recovery of Rents.
[Repealed by Bom. Act III of 1904, s. 3."] If a permanent tenant neglect to raise a crop on any land in his holding on account of the rent of which he Rent of land which a would, if he raised a crop, be liable to pay the Gnant khot a share of the produce, the khot shall be to7ate!
13.
14.
fcS
In the event of a as to the amount of rent due under this dispute section, such amount shall be determined by the Collector, but no such rent shall be recoverable by the khot if the tenant shall satisfy the Collector that in the year for which such rent is claimed it was proper
having regard to the custom of the village in respect of lands of the same class, or to the nature and requirements of the soil, that the
land should be left fallow.
Accounts.
15.
to
time be required
orderg Qf
bv
.
the
Collector
under the
\ ernmen t Qo
1100
when ri^aiwSl
(6) produce such accounts whenever requir"" ed fco fche Collector or to any officer subordinate to the Collector not lower in rank than a mahal-
kari
and
*"
receTpts!
******
(c) give a written receipt for every payment of rent or land-revenue made to him whether by a privileged occupant or tenant, or by a cosharer
in his khotki.
For disobedience of any order duly made under this section, or for any infraction of the provisions of this section, y the khot shall, on conviction before the Collector or the Assistant or Dcfputy Collector in charge of the taluka in which such khot'e village is situate, be liable to a fine not exceeding one hundred rupees, which shall be recoverable as an arrear of jama*
'
Eton
&dtn>teflT A<n,
PART
III
Whenever
or village to which this Act extends is made Preparation of settlerevised under the provisions of Chapter VIII of r egi8tei> f kh0ti the Bomb y Land-Revenue Code, 1879, the ^iia g e s settlement-register prepared under section 108 of the said (/ode shall show the area and assessment of each survey-number and also whether such survey number is held by a privileged occupant or not.
*If a survey-number is held by one or more privileged occupants? the said register shall further specify the tenure on which such numr ber is held, the names of the occupants thereof, and, in the case of a survey-number held by a permanent-tenant, whether his interest therein is transferable otherwise than by inheritance or not.
Survey-numbers which are not held by privileged occupants shall be entered in the said register in the name of the khot, or, if a partition of the khotki has taken place, of the co-sharers to whose shares
they respectively belong.
The
and
the khotki,
khotki.
said register shall also contain a list of all the co-sharers of if the village be not held by one khot ID his own sole right shall specify the extent of each such co-sharer's interest in the
A mortgagee
(Vithalv. Sitabai, 3
within the meaning of tnU section, and cannot claim to have hi* name entered in the register, though a mortgagee of a whole khotki m*y claim to be so registered
Bom
L.
li
181).
of a oo-sharer in the
inolude a mortgagee of
Officer, when prethe title to determine and the settlement invdstigate register, any authority paring of persons who claim as mortgagees only of a share in the khofcki, still less to
determine whether an
subsisting (Dattatraya
alleged
v.
is
still
SOr. _ A Survey
office in predecessor in
officer making it or his SUCCeShis power to revise an order made by himself or accordance with the provisions of this section or the next
has no
J., 1897, p. 119). The other records [a] 17. t )^ ^id section shall specify
section (Bhifaji v.
Sakharam, P.
other records
to
show
prepared
under
privilegeci
occupant.
and amount of ront, if any, payable to the khot by each privileged occupant according to and r< J vigioil|S ^f 3e cti n 33
;
one by Bom.
Act IV
the
of
1913,
88.
(rtj
Sections 17 to 22, both inclusive, were cabatituted for tions 17 to 22, both inclusive, by Bern. Act III oi 1904, 6, 4.
original see*
I
and, when the khotki is undivided, the co-sharers respective rights;
1
tsi*
kwon
/i^
SBTTLWOEWT Act,
M /4;r;/l */l
(*)
a 18
;
r.
Undivided,
the survey-numbers in the possession of each co-sharer and (i) the rent payable by such co-sharer on account of the same ; and the terms and particulars of any written agreement which (it) the co-sharers, or any of them, have entered into, or may at the time of the framing of the said record enter into, determining their respective reponsibility ; and (w) the order of rotation in which the said co-sharers agree in writing, if they do so agree, to take the management of the village under the provisions of section 27 ; or or when the khotki is if a partition has been effected and the (c ) *"**" c - sharer8 of tlie ktotki hold their respective shares in severalty, the extent and limits of each separate share ; and (1)
%S&$j.
the same particulars in respect of the several sub-shares, if (it) any, of each such share as are required by clause (b) to be given concerning all the co-sharers when a khotki is undivided. Custody and Amendment of Records Determination of Disputes. 18. (1) When the survey- settlement of any village to which this Act extends is completed, the settlement-register and other records thereof completed, shall be kept by the Collector,
:
.fcT^S&SSS
(2)
Power
Recording-
^writ^inSi'tf
parties
;
and afterwards the Collector or any other officer in Council from time to time whom fche empowers in this behalf, may, in the cases spe-
?mor
cified in sub-section (3), but not otherwise save with the consent of the parties affected thereby given in writing before the Recording-officer, at any time amend, or cause to be amended, any entry in such register or records, whether by addition thereto, in-
sertion therein, cancellation or other alteration thereof, as may be required ; and unless and until so amended, every entry made shall, as long as the survey settlement for which it was made remains in force, continue to be spplicable to the land referred to.
case8"
The cases referred to in sub-section (3) (2; are the following, namely (a) any clerical error, or any error which all the parties affected to have been in the same, may be corrected ; admit thereby
and
in
certain
other
(b) any entry which the Recording-officer is satisfied has been caused by mistake or obtained by means of fraud, misrepresentation or personation, or by other means amounting to an offence under the Indian Penal Code, may be cancelled, and such other entry (if any) substituted therefor as the Recording-officer shall determine ; (c) any entry which is rendered inapplicable or incorrect by any of cicumstances or transfer of rights or interests relating change thereto may be cancelled or corrected, as the Recording-officer may
deem
fit
(d)
by a permanent tenant
an entry of the description and amount of the rent payable may be inserted or altered in accordance with
THE KHOTI
and
under clause
(c)
of section
subject to the provisions of section 20, any entry in respect of affected thereby may have obtained inter se a final decree of a Court of competent jurisdiction undr section 21, shall be amended in accordance therewith, on an accompanied by
application,
being
duly
made
to the Recording-
(1)
If
it
any m ttter which he is bound to be deterto record, or as to any amendment proposed to Disputes Rec ^ lln be made under section* 18, he may, either on the Xer. application of any of the disputant, parties, or of his own motion, investigate and decide such dispute, and frame or
there exists
any dispute as
to
amend
(2)
No
.fb*btldWj$j: to
parties.
thereby, and without giving them an opportunity of being heard in respect thereto Provided that no such decision or amendment of an entry shall be deemed invalid mcrt y for want of such notice V180< or opportunity as aforesaid
:
d"".""^
to
the
partis affected
(3)
Remedy of party
opp'orta^ity gi ven
any such decision or amendment, notice or opportunity at- atorenaid has not been given, may apph to tue RtCuidingofficer to hav 8llcl1 decision or amendment cancelled or altered, as the circumstances of the
whom
affec'ed by
Kiu
ii
'
case
may require, and, subject to the provisions 01 sub-section ^;, the Recording-officer shall reinvestigafe the mitter and may, if he thinks fit, cancel or alter such decision or amendment accordingly.
20.
(1)
Subject to such orders as may be passed on appeal under sab- section ("2) and to the provisions of sub section (3), every entry in the settlement-register Recording-officer's dec\matin certain sion final or other records made by the Recording-officer under section 16, 17 or 18, and purporting to record
(a) the fact thaj the interest of any permanent tenant transferable otherwise than by inheritance, or
is
or is not
(b) the liability of each privileged occupant to pay rent of the description and amount entered, shall, subject to the provisions of section 18, be conclusive and final evidence of the fact or liability so recorded.
person aggrieved by any such entry may, within one year or the mnking of the entry, appeal to the Qovernto or in onncil to hiive be'entn altered, and the subjecb to appeal Governor in Couucii. a tpre jf { i e orders pa^ed on the entry phall appeal so direct, and the entry so altered in accordance with such orders shall be conclusive and final evidence in the manner and to the extent specified in &Ujb-sectioii (I).
(2)
Any
rf
10
THK Enoti
(3)
of
Nothing
affect
fd*
pending
cirii
Saving proceedings.
when
this section
comes into
force.
landlord can sue in ejectment his yearly tenants who have atNotice. tempted to deny his title, and in each case it is not necessary to give any notice to them prior to suit. It is a disclaimer on the p%rt of a yearly tenant to claim to
be a mirasi or permanent tenant. Where under a plea of ownership a party has eucoeeded in obtaining a possessory order in a suit before a Mamlatdar, it is not
necessary for the evicted party to give notice to quit before suing in ejectment on his title. It may, however, be otherwise when the possessory order is sought on
the plea
of
a disturbance of an
existing easement
Mahipat
v.
Lakshman, 24
Bom
420).
Cause Of action.
This section and the following section do not constiwhere theie has been a denial of title prior
Bom.
I.
R.
Recording-officer's
de6
Hef^e^^/a^cree
of Court.
In any other matter the decision of the Recording-officer shall not be open to appeal or revision, and shall be binding upon all the parties affected thereby until reversed or modified by a final decree of a competent Court
21.
s a id
:
Provided that
(a) no person shall be permitted in any Civil ant or otherwise, to plead,
Proviso smts<
Court, as a defend-
whether directly or
is,
restraint of
ous or
is
institution of the suit in which the question arises, debarred by the law ot limitation for the time being in force from instituting a suit for, or with a view to, the reversal of modification of such decision or entry ; and
(d)
(i) a decision or entry made for the purpose of, or in the course of, a revised survey-settlement, or
() an amendment of an entry made under any of the provisions of section 16, wiiich makes no alteration affecting the substance of the previous decision or entry relating to the same subject-matter.
Ent ry in revenue records not conclusive,
the
name
of
officer
which
The mere entry of not a decision of the recording Decisions to the class of tenure and as to the complicated
as occupant
is
48 Bom. 469)*
This
section
nowhere
in the settlement register of the name of a particular provides that the mere entry of a as the occupant survey number is eithe r final and conclusive or that it person
is
binding upon all parties concerned unless and until it is reversed or modi6ed by a decree of the Oivil Court. What is made binding by the provisions of this section is the decision of the Recording Officer and not a mete entry of a person's name in
the settlement regitar (Rafrram,
-,
ACT, 1880
The
period of
limitation
120,
8oh, II,
against
""
against any
T
S'officTrs.
Government or of Government to set aside an ) decision or order of a Survey-officer or other Recording-officer under this Part.
22.
suit shall lie against
officer
No
PART
IV.
ADMINISTRATION OF SURVEY-SETTLEMENTS MADE UNDE THIS ACT. 3. The provisions of this Part shall not apply to any village to _ L which this Act extends until such time as the Governor in Council first after the passing of
4
, .
this Act sanctions a survey-settlement or a revised survey-settlement of such village and declares the assessments settled thereunder fixed for a period of years, in accordance with section 102 of the Bombay Land-Revenue Code, i879.
Until such time, the rights and responsibilities of all parties so far as regards the matters treated of in this Part shall continue to be such as they would be if this Part had not been enacted.
Khots' Jama.
24.
^aouhowtobecalculat-
Government by the khot shall be the of the survey-assessments of the lands aggregate e of the vi , lage minus p recent 8ge ofdedaction, if any, as Government may in each case
to
direct.
U
e
for
ceftSn periods
The amount of the said jama shall be from time to me fixed for the same period for which the survey-assessments are fixed.
Managing Khots. The annual kabulayats hitherto executed by khots shall no Provided that longer be required from them ** nothing herein contained shall be deemed to affect the liability of khots to perform any condition of their tenure, or to do any act which they are now bound to perform or to do, or their obligation to refrain from doing anything which they are now bound not to do. 26. When a village is held by two or more co-sharers jointly, the said sharers shall be jointly and severally res' "^ P onsible for the jama, but one of their number shall be nominated every year to receive the inferior holders' rents, to pay the Government dues, and generally to all acts required by this Act or by any other law or rule havperform
25.
:
,
ing the force of law, to be performed by the khot. The sharer so nominated shall be called "the managing khot".* * Note. The words repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, ?. P3, are omitted. 27. If the co-sharers have, at the time of the framing of the survey settlement records or at any subsequent g kh0thOWt P eriod > a reed in writing as to the order of be^omTt ed rotation, the nomination of the managing khot shall be made by the Collector in the order so agreed upon.
IS
In the absence of any such agreement, [a] or if the share* whose tarn it is to he nominated is for any reason unable to serve as managing khot, and fails to delegate his duties and powers under section 31-A within such time as may be prescribed by the Collector in this behalf, \a] the co-sharers shall be called upon to nominate one of their number year by year, [j or for the >ear, as the case may be, [] and in the event of their failing so to do within such time as may be prescribed by the Collector in this behalf, or if th>y are not unanimous as to the nomination, the Collector shall either select the managing khot for the year, or cause the village to be attached and taken under the management of himself or any agent whom he appoints for that purpose in the manner provided in section 144 of the Bombay LandRevenue Code, 1879. 28. [c] The Collector's nomination or selection under section 27 shall be made by a written order, which shall to appeal, and no suit shall lie be "<*. ;P"> against Government or against any omcer of puted. Government in respect of any such nomination
orS'LtTteS
or selection
[<?].
But
it
Ru'flui'p in
!
1M .rn'SHhi
shall be lawful for anv of the co sharers at any time to sue for a decree inter se to declare which Of them revert to is entitled to the management, or the order in
wl^h
merit,
they should respectively have the managethan one of them be entitled if more to the same, and from the commencement of
the revenue year next after an application (accompanied by a certified copy of any such decree) is duly made to him for the purpo'se, the Collector shall nominate the managing khot in accordance with such
decree.
The mamlatdar shall furnish every managing khot [YJ nominated or selected under section 27 [0] with er kh S a certificate under his hand and seal to the effect that the holder thereof is the recognized managthe khot for to which such certificate relates, and a certificte year ing so signed and sealed shall be conclusive evidence of the right of the khot therein named to manage the village to which it relates for the
29.
[d]
'
fc
"
When
31.
Exclusive
When
power
managiug khot.
87 of the
Bombay
Act
[a-a] iheae words were inserted by Bom Act III of IVOt, s. 5, ol. (a). lW| These words were inserted by Bom. Act IH of 1994, s. 5, el (&). 1 by [0-c] This paragraph waa substitued for the original paragraph 111 of 1204,8. 6. Aot III of Words a. are Bom. omitted. 7, repeald by 1905, [d\ These words were inserted by Bom. Aot III of 1904, s. 7.
Bom.
i&
be lawful for the managing khot to delegate, subject to the approval of the Collector, the perDf legation of duties and formance and exercise of all duties and powers, powers by managing khot impoeed or cott fer red upon him either by section 15 or by section 31, to any person duly empowered in writing by him in this behalf; and the person so appointed shall in respect of the prefor jance of the duties prescribed in section 15, be subject to all the liabilities to which the khot is subject under the said section.
32.
When
^^^M"
Separated sharers to be
Separated Sharers. divided their khotki or a partition thereof has been effected by the Civil Court, or otherwise, and the co-sharers hold their respective
8h ares
.
in
severalty, the
-Collector
shall
of each separate share, and the holders of the said shares shall be held severally liable for the portions of the jama so fixed on their respective shares, and all the provisions of this Act shall apply to them respectively as if they were independent holders of entire khotkis.
Privileged Occupant'* Rents. 33. The rent payable
privileged
:
^:%*i
occupants.
to
follows (namely): the survey-assessment of his land ; (a) by a dharekari the survey-assessment of his land and (b) by a qnasi-dharekari in addition thereto the amounts of grain or money respectively set forth in the schedule [];
:
occupants "shall
be
the as
khot by
permanent-tenant in each case according to the [<?] (c> by any terms of the entry in the survey-record made in respect thereof, and for the time being applicable thereto, under the following rules Liability to payment. The libility of occupancy tenant to pay rent
: :
to
khot
is
as laid dovr
.>f
by
ol.
fixed
annual produce
Entry
to
any (f^inayik
v.
show form
payment
is
Rule l ?very *ach entry shall show whether any rent is payable and, if so, whether it
, :
payable as
that is so sav, a certain (a) an amount fixed tive of the crop, payable in money or kind, or both
:
amount, irrespec;
or
that is to say, a fixed of the gross (4) a crop-share proportion annual produce of the land, >md of the produce or fruit-trees (if any). Hov* and whan emri.-a Mule //. (1) Amounts fixed shall be entered ** determined *>>' agreement of the partiesmTned
^^^^
Words
Clause (c) was
(a) at the
officer is satisfied
|o] Section
[ft
I
time of framing the survey-record, if the Recordingthat they have then or at any time previous agreed
inserted by
31~A was
repealed
by Bom. Aot
substituted
ill of
8.
[c|
for
claue by Bom,
At
HI of
1004,
a. 9.
TOT KHOTX
BaxqaucwfrT
Acrr,
1880
that Back amounts shall be the rent payable daring any period sequent to the introduction of the survey ; or or by (A) at any other time, on the parties appearing in person duly authorized agent before the Recording-officer and consenting to such entry. () No crop-share shall at any time be enterNo crop-share to be ed as determined by agreement, entered as determined by
agreement*
Meaning
'parties.,
of
the
word
w ith
:
In this rule the word 'parties' means, reference to an agreement, the tenant and the p ergon W h a t t he time of the agreement is
(3)
the managing khot Provided that if any sharer in a khotki whose interest, or any number of such sharers the aggregate of whose How far, in an agree- interests, exceeds three-eighths of the entire khotki, shall declare in writing delivered to the k: hater or sharers in a Recording-officer at the time of the nomination khotki. or at any or appointment of a managing khot, time during the tenure of his office by such managing khot, that the managing khot shall have no power to bind such sharer or sharers by an agreement with any tenant specified in such writing, no agreement entered into after the delivery of such declaration, between auch managing khot and such tenant, shall be binding on such sharer or sharers, unless
=U%
(a) such sharers shall appear before the Recording-officer and assent thereto, or (b) written notice of an intention to execute such an agreement has been sent at the cost of such managing khot or tenant through the Recording-officer by post in a registered cover addressed to such sharer or sharers, and such sharer or sharers shall, for a period of not less than three months after such notice has been sent as aforesaid, fail to to appear before the Recording-officer and object to such agreement.
How
>H
termined.
Ed
Rule III. If at the framing of the surveyrecord there appears to be no amount fixed by agreement of the parties, the Recording-officer
shall,
he finds that a crop share has theretofore been paid in ac(a) cordance with the general custom of the village in respect of similar lands, enter such crop-share ; or,
if
(b) if he finds in any case that the rent theretofore paid has been different in description or amount from that payable under the general custom of the village in respect of similar land therein, or tnat no
is
ascertainable,
enter the rent theretofore paid in such case, or, if such rent has not been uniform, the average of the rent paid or payable for such land during the twelve years last preceding his enquiry ; or,
if he finds that a commuted-value of a crop-share has become under sub-rule (1) of rule V, payable enter the commuted-value payable under sub-rule (3) of the same
(c)
rule:
15
Provided that no crop-share shall in any case be entered exceeding in the case of rice land one-half and in the case Limits of crop share* Q Wftrkas lftnd one _ third
.
Rule IV.
(1) If in
any case
(a) no entry has been made at the introduction of a survey-settlement, or of entry at settlement or (o) the entry made has, by reason of a deon account of entry ceasC ree of a competent Court or of any change in be to ing applicable; the tenant's mode of cultivation or otherwise, ceased to be applicable, wholly or in part, to the land in respect of
fixed by
the Recording-officer may determine and enter, or alter the entry already made in respect of, the rent payable, as if he were acting
If any land
o render
is
to
held wholly or partly in consideration of services to be rendered by the tenant to the khot or to the village community or for the benefit of any class thereof, the Recording officer shall, upon proof that such services are no longer
leviable,
rendered, determine and enter the rent which but for such total or partial exemption.
If in respect of any land, other than land which is entered as held rent-free, the amount fixed, or in the case
and survey assessment local fund cess together with a percentage thereon,
crop-shares,the commuted-value whkh ha 8 {* been, oi* might be, under rule V entered as payable, is less than the total sum representing the 8urvey assessment and local fund cess recover-
able from the khot in respect thereof, together with twenty-five per centum of such assessment and local fund cess (hereinafter ca.led "the percentage"), the Recording-officer shall on the application of either of the parties, raise such amount fixed or commuted-valae to such total sum or the equivalent thereof in kind, and shall alter the
entry accordingly Provided that the Governor in Council may, during the period of the survey-settlement in force at the commencesubject to proportionate ment of the Khoti Settlement Act Amendment G .Daci.1 order, in this rtt d.^bo,e p the percentage behalf, direct that the whole or part of the percentage shall during the remainder of such and so long as such defrayal period be defrayed by Government continues, the rent payable by the tenant to the knot under the provisions of this sub-rule shall be reduced to the extent of the amount so defrayed, and a note shall be inserted by the Recording-officer in the altered entry accordingly.
:
r
;
^,1904,bjnalor
;
survey-assessment fixed on any survey-number has been reduced or struck off on account of diluot when the assessment vion, deterioration by floods or other cause beS'n'JTon ont jond the control of the permanent-tenant, the jury to the land. Recording-officer shall reduce the total amount fixed, or- in the case of crop-shares the total
(4)
If the
Sf
IB
Tm
Kx<m 6xmaaaan
comnuited-valne
(if any), which has been entered as payable for the of that number in such tenant's occnj.atkn, by an amount portion bearing to the total amount or coiumn red-value the same proportion as the amount of assessment remitted or struck off bears to the total assessment for the entire area in his occupation and shall make an entry io the record specifying
(a)
(6) the limit of time for which it is without further entry to hold good. Rule V. (1) On an application made on or before the first day of May in any year by any tenant, whose rent when entry of comma. i s payable wholly or partly as a crop-share, the Va e f officer shall fix and enter the commutRecording b e ma de andTS may ed-value of the whole of such crop-share, and of such entry. such commuted-value shall thenceforth, subject .to the provisions of sub-rule (3), be payable, with effect from the commencement of the next ensuing revenue-year, by the tenant in lieu of the whole crop-share hitherto payable by him.
In this rule *commuted-value' means the average mo^ey value of the produce payable, and the Recordingoff cer shall > in th e absence of any satifactory JS5^"f tow toS evidence to the contrary, take, as a 'standard for estimating such money-value, a half crop-share as equivalent to hree multiples of the survey-assessment fixed on the land, a third cropshare i\s equivalent to two multiples of Mich assessment, and any other crop-share as equivalent to a proportional multiple of such
(2)
f
assessment
provided that the commuted-value of the produce payable on any warkas land entered in th records existing on
the day when this rule comes into operation, as actually U8ed for the p Urp0se O f ra b manure in connection with rice cultivation, shall not exceed an amount equal to the survey-assessment on such land.
rovis
i
land used
^.
^ for
8 to
rab
warka8 ma.
Und
a commuted-value has become payable tinder sub-rule the Recording-officer shall at a revised (1), Commuted-value subject revise the commuted-value survey-settlement 8 reyi8ed in accordance with the provisions of sub-rule wrv7y ^trement. (*) with reference to the revised survey-assessment fixed on the land, but shall not alter the description of the rent BO payable.
(3)
section it
Where
determined by Survey officer and not by Civil Court Under this the duty of the Survey officer to determine the thl or ens torn iry rent payable to a knot by an occupancy -tenant. Until a new determination baa been made by the Survey officer under this section of the rent payable to the knot, a
to be
is
Thai
OiTil
legally
fixed
(Bapujitao
9.
GUM, 24
Bom.
Appeal.
Under
*.
this section
s.
2M
of the
an appeal lies from a decision, and the decision Land Hevenue Code by the authorities therein
Dathrtththtt, 21
$om.
344).
Tsfc
34.
1680.
17
occupants' when to be
shall be payable on such dates, in such instalments and subject to guch rules not inconsistent with the provisions Qf A ftg mfty frQm time Ume prescribed in this behalf by the Governor in Council.
fc
Cesses
35.
It
efc.
shall
Ab Oll0n
etc.
not be lawful for any khot to levy phaski, vet/i, nangarvetk, wartala, or any other cess, rate, tax Cesse8
or service of
whatsoever, from any privileged occupant other than the rent la-wfully leviable under the provisions of this Act.
Local Fund Cess.
Local fund cess at such rate as shall from time to time be fixed by Government under section 6 of the f Bombay Local Funds Act, J869, shall be leviable by Government from the khot on every rupee of his jama. The khot shall be entitled to assistance under sections 86 and 87 of the Bombay Land-Revenue Code, 1869, for
36.
h funo oe
,
.,
recovery of the said cess at the said rate from dharekans aud quasi-dharekcris on every * rupee of the survey-assessment of their respective holdings. Hole. The words "the lands in" repealed by Bom. Act IV of 1913, s. 91,
dh2S
That
liable forthecess.
are omitted.
anything contained
be
PART V. MISCELLANEOUS.
37.
BkiBtii*
menta confirmed.
any Act extends, made, apunder the authority of the proved and confirmed r\ n j 1*1 Governor in Council, shall be deemed to have
which
this
!
,
i_
i_
been lawfully made, and, except as is hereinafter otherwise provided, shall continue in force for the terms for which they have been respectively guaranteed, subject to all the provisions of law which would be applicable thereto if this Act had not been passed, and anything iw this Act which is inconsistent with any of the said provisions shall be deemed not to apply to such settlements.
expiry of the period of any such guarantee, or, if it shall appear to the Governor in Council that a rifc y of the land-holders affected by any such uS5 mttJ settlements, guarantee so desire, at any time previous to the expiry of the said period (such time being fix ad by the Governor in Council)* a new survey-settlement shall be introduced into the village in which such guarantee was in force,
Upon
the
JibJSwT
W
ing.
39.
THS KHOT*
this Act shall thenceforward apply to the said settlement, anything in any other law to the contrary notwithstand-
Nothing in sections
L and Re T enue
u
,
1
mb
rf
?7 o
SSbiatMottX ^"
68, 72, 73, 74, the second paragraph of section 104, sections 112, 117A, 117B, clause (*) of section 150, or section 153 of the Bombay Land Revenue Coce, 1879, ahall.be deemed to apply to any village to which this Act extends
The provisions of the said Code wheo applied to any such shall be subject to the following modifications (namely):
(a)
village
IV of 1913, section 92 (b). 119 and 123 shall be read and understood as if the word "khots" were substituted for the words "patels and other village-officers", and the words "village-officers" and the words "village-officers and servants", wherever they occur ; (c) the khot shall for the purposes of section 136 be deemed to be the person primarily responsible to Government for the jama of his village ; in clause (/) of section 150 shall be (d) the word "alienated" deemed to be omitted and
Repealed by Bom. Act
(b) sections 118,
;
such village is under attachment at the date of this Act coming into force, applications may be made under section 162 for the restoration thereof at any time within twelve years from the firt day of August next after such date.
(e) if
40.
c Rules
,
.
The Governor
,
GoTemor
to bo made in Council.
by
in Council may, by notification in the Bombay Government Gazttee* from time to time frame, and , ,. lrom time fco time Var 7 r rescind, rules not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act
./
(a) for the inspection and appraisement of crops when the rent payable to a khot consists of a share of the produce of a privileged occupant's land ; (b) for determining what land is dhara land ; (c) for allotting to each privileged occupant, when the exact limits of his warkas holding are not ascertainable, such portion of the entire warkas land of the village or such rights or privileges in respect of any warkas land, or both a portion of the entire warkas land and suck rights or privileges in respect of any other such land as may be fair and reasonable
;
(d) determining to what extent, if any, any rule or order made under section 214 of the Bombay Land-Revenue Code, 1879, shall be applicable to villages to which this Act extends ;
(e) for the furtherance of the objects of this Act in matters not expressly provided for therein ; (/) generally for the guidance of all persons in matters connected with the enforcement of this Act.
41.
And whereas
4 reserved
^rStiv^ S
forest.
it is necessary in the general interests of the people to enable Government to promote the e^ension of forests in yillageB held by khots, it ** hereby enacted that Government may at any time constitute any uncultivated laud in any
ACT, 1880
1ft
village to which this Act extends or may hereafter be extended, a reserved forest [a] in accordance with the procedure enacted in Chapter II of the Indian Jforest Act, 1878 [a]. But nothing in this section contained shall derogate from any rights conferred by any sanad or other grant made by any lawful authority.
Explanation.
For the purposes of this section "uncultivated land tilled for a period of twenty years next
of the order constituting such
uted uuder last preceding section to be subject to of Icdian provisions Forest Act,
42. Every reserved forest constituted under the last section shall be subject to all preceding the provisions of the Indian Forest Act, 1878, and of any other law relating to forests for the
provided
upon the condition of duly preforming such service connected with such forest as shall from time to time be prescribed by Government, the khot shall be entitled to a share of one-third of the net profits derived by Government from such forest after deducting the cost of management ;
(1) that, (2) that, in the event of the service prescribed by Government as aforesaid not being duly performed by the khot, the provisions of section 80 of the Indian Forest Act, 1878, shall be apblicable.
SCHEDULE.
(
7,
and
section 33.
Denomination
qnasi-dharekaris.
of
|
Excess amount of rent payable for every Rupee and proportionately for every fraction of a Rupee of the Survey-Assessment in respect of
Rice lands
Warkas
lands.
Dupatkari
Dnpatkari
annas
2 annas
annas
mannd
the husk.
Didpatkari Didiwala
or
of
the husk.
Panne dupatkari
6 pailis of rice in i pallia of grain (half nachanib annai. the husk. and half van).
INDEX
Page
Acquisition of right
Page
Assessment
contd.
by whom
101
Ooortiee stamp
Agricultural produce
39
Government
survey
officer to fix
...
40
81
...
meaning of
Alienated holdings
...
may
of
be on land or on means
of irrigation
32
...
non-applicability of 8. 72 to ... 113 not to be alienated for recovery of arrears of local ...113 fund cess
Government
82
Alluvial land
...
83
re-
of small extent, temporary ... 48 right to ... 39 register of "Any other natural product" does not include excavated 83 ... stones
83
Appeal
against Collector's order under Irrigation Act lies to Com...132 missioner when to lie to Governor in
periods
...133 Council within which, to be ...133 brought admission of, after period of
culturists,
exemption
Boundary
effect of settlement of
...
91
limitation
...133
92
fixed
by Collector
92 93
day
.,.133
Copy of order to acompany ...133 petition of to lie from any order passed by revenue officer to his
superior
..,132
Boundary
dispuies
Boundary-marks meaning of
Arrears of revenue
public
ed as Arrears of assessment
suit
23 75
Construction and repair of, of ... 93 survey numbers to requisition on land-holders 93 ... erect or
repair responsibility for maintenance -. of
by Inamdar for
of,
...
Arrest
94
power
Assessment
by whom
cised
to be exer...116
Collector to have charge of, after introduction of Sur... 94 vey Settlement of survey numbers and villggw, 98 Construction of
excess of,
may
be laid on land
held
...
inadequately assessed
with
it
38
description of
...
98
Page
Pape
Decision or order notice of damand
Boundary-marks
of
94 94
4
7
by Mamlatis
..
132
....
extract...
Defaultersale
of immoveablo
property
meaning of
Certified purchaser bar of salt against
...123
liable
Chavdi
meaning of
"Civil suit
4 75
...
longer than debtors may be detained by Civil Court ... 116 date upto which, to pay arrears ...120 arrest of, to be made upon warrant ...130
not
...
Dispute
76
meaning of
Distraint
...90
revisional
of
...135
...113 of defaulter's property ... 113 by whom to be made delegation to Mamlatdar s and Mahalkaris of the power of ..114 ... 1 1 4 of chattels how effected of cash and currency notes or
Distraint
Estate
Commented
of land indirectly taxed to the State ... 38 of land liable to occasional as-
...114
...114
exemptions from
Commission
3 ... meaning of Exemptions, claims to to be determined by Collector... 96 Field boundaries ... 90 determination of
Fine
inflicted
to exceed
necessary
...
...
form of
77 77
how
recovered
be taken possession of
Forfeited holdings
reference to be made by holder ... 78 of, to Collector power under, to extend to carrent and previous year's
may
Forfeiture
...
43
...
78
...US
...
1 13
unusual or
...113
mand
78
Court
Creditors
...
79
Hereditary Officers to grant receipts ... 44 Hereditary village accountant talati appointed to be kulkarni ... 74 is not
Holding
Drop
reaping of, not to be unduly deferred , ...10B when to be released ...108
...
...114
...
occupanl**-
meaning of
iii
Page
Mahalkari
eontd.
Page
written permission of, required previous to takfog ...44 up unoccupied land
Land
inoludea benefits to arise out of, to be assigned for special pur-
poses
filial]
and,
when
assigned,
Mamlatfar
... 12 appointment of duties and powers of ... 13 may depute subordinate to perform his duties ... 16 substitute under s. 15 not
30
17
Land records
rerunning of open to inspection
...
under
...
22
...135
dilu...
village offi..,26
Land Revenue
assessment vion
of, in
cers
case of
manner and
alteration of
...
36 36
62
create
...
written permission of, required previous to taking up unoccu... 44 pied land Mines and mineral product* reservation of right of Govern-
recovery of. how to be credited ...107 may be levied at any time ... 1 7 during revenue year
to secure, Collector to prevent
ment to
Notice
...
54
reapin g of Orop
fine
... 1
07
exempt from
registration.. 58
...
under
s.
142
is
no arrear
stamp duty
of serv ing not void for error Notice of demand
mode
...
..
59 127
...109 incurred by default of payment of ...110 Certified account to be evidence as to arrears of ...110 process for recovery of arrears of ...110
of
payment of
.127
...111
recovery of arrears of
...
111
Land Revenue
Code...
...
70 70
71
...
...
Occupancy grant
Mahalkari
delegation of power to duties of
...
...
15 16
Civil Court
intestate, to be xold
...
...
treated
55 55
to
56
may
not to be alienated for re* covery of arrears of local fund cess ...113
Occupant
form
88.
19
under
...
meaning of
22
tenant
responsible
to, in
...
da*
...
...
village offi...
mages.
26
6| 58
Page
Age
Register of mutations entries in, how to be certified... 101 Certified entry in, to be presumed as correct ...105 application for certified copy of entry in, to whom to be
possession
...
Occupy land
...129
made
Resale
notification before
liability of
...105
...
122
ed ... 86 Civil Court cannot reopen ... 86 of certain estates by Collector on application by co-sharers. 87
Pasturage
regulation of nee of Plaint or application
Certified
...
purchaser for
loss
by
Revenue demands of former years
able
...122
how
recover...111
31
Revenne defaulters
sureties liable as
...125
...
Revenue
officer
officer is not...
...
3 3
3
of
Land
...
Records
is
belong to Government encroachment on, amounts criminal trespass Purchase money when to be made
...
28
47
to
...
taking temporary charge of the office during absence of mamlatdar is not.. 17 19 ... seals to be used by ... 2 security to be furnished by for purposes of ss. 25 and 26... 22 village officers are prohibited acts of not to trade ...24 not to purchase at public sale... 25 not to be concerned in the re-
Karkun
...121
registration
under
s.
Receipts to be given
by revenue
officers,
hereditary patels and village aooonntans for receiving payments of land revenue
private use of public money or property... 15 not to make or receive undue 25 ... exactions or presents in orders of, to be made
...
25
...
...
43 44 44
writing
fine inflicted by,
...
26
not to
exceed
Record
Certified
to give
copy
of, to be-
annexed
to months' pay ... 27 receipt for receiving payment of land revenue ... 48
sub ordination of
Revenue survey-introduction in Council control of Rules
of,
... 1
26
by Governor
...
...
introduction
villages
of,
in
Inam
...100
80 80
1 86
entry
be presumed as correct ...105 application for certified copy of entry in, to be made to
in, to
framed by Government
penalty for breach of
forfeiture
...
...187 ...118
village Acconntattt,
Mahal...105
not followed by
of forfeiture
kuri or Mamlatdar
declaration fore
fa~
...113
INDEX
Page
Sale
Pag.
contd.
of defaulter's property proolaimation of, to be by beat of dram
notification of
... 1 1
Summons
3
made
...
...
by
at
whom
what time
to be made to be made
postponement of
when
119 120 ... 120 ...120 ...120 ... 120 ... 120
...
to be ia writing signed, and sealed ... 127 how to be served ... 1?7 service of, in district other than that of issuer ... 127 Superior holder 5 .... meaning of
Talukdari S. Officer
is
...
when
121
mode of payment
property confirmation
... 73 recovery of dues of suit by, to recover dues from inferior holders ... 73 entitled to assistance in recovery of dues from inferior
121
holders
...
74
deposit by purchaser in case of, 121 of immoveable property ... ... 122 application to set aside order confirming or setting
aside
...
122
application by, for. assistance ... 74 may be sent by p^st ... 75 municipality deemed to be Sureties liable as revenue officers ... 125
money when,
to be put in
certificate of
set aside
...
123
123 123 124
113
on confirmation of
purchaser
,..
...
possession
...
117
118
...
...
...
23
if
...
...
penalty be paid
in jail
23
24
Sanad
to be granted without extra
may, by furnishing
...
97
98 98
liability of,
s.
133
is
document
...
holders
...
death of principal or by his taking different ap... pointment how to withdraw from farther
liability
...
24 24
revenue officers
19
furnished by revenue
...
officers
fresh or additional
Settlements
...
20 22
Survey Mamlatdar appointment of, by Commie sioner of Survey ... Survey numbers
15
4 87
87 3
meaning of
division of, in
...
new survey
...
introduction of
Sites of villages limits of, how to be fixed
...
82
95
17 Survey
numbers
officer
meaning of
...
appointment
in Council
their duties
of,
by Governor
...
...
...
,17
and powers
...
25
to fix assessments
18 81
Talati
demand more
...
...
25
117
Tenancy
section 83 determines nature
Summary
enquiry
officer holding, to
be deemed
of
...
...
from year
to year
...
...
...
64 64 64 64
INDEX
Page
Village
Page
antiquity of
permanent
Tenatit
64 65 65 65 65 66
5
...
..
17
..
. .
..
17 17 44
meaning of
responsible
Village boundaries
to
oecupant in
... ...
determination of
51
..88
.
63
69
95 47
by agreement. Court has no power to fix .. may be settled by agreement... ... power of court to fix
Village cattle
maybe
settled
89 89
89 89
...
31
to bt granted on conditions
...