PATNA HIGH COURT
Hari Lal Agrawal, J.
Dhanusdhari Rai
Versus
Man Mohan Rai
Civil Revision No. 933 of 1972 ;
Decided On : NOVEMBER 07, 1973
LAND ACQUISITION ACT, 1894 - SECTION 30 - RES JUDICATA - APPLICABILITY - DISPUTE REGARDING APPORTIONMENT OF COMPENSATION MONEY - ADJUDICATION BY CIVIL COURT - BINDING EFFECT - SUBSEQUENT SUIT FOR DECLARATION OF TITLE - NOT MAINTAINABLE.
Fact of the Case:
In a partition suit, survey plots were allotted to the petitioner. The State Government acquired these plots for a bundh, and the award was prepared in favor of the petitioners. Opposite party No. 1 claimed the compensation money, leading to a reference to the Civil Court under Section 30 of the Land Acquisition Act. The Civil Court held that the petitioners were entitled to the compensation. Opposite party No. 1 filed a money suit for a declaration of entitlement to one-third of the compensation money, which was later amended to a title suit, adding his son as a co-plaintiff. The petitioners filed a petition for dismissal on the ground of res judicata.
Finding of the Court:
The court held that the Civil Court's decision in the earlier proceeding was binding on the parties and operated as res judicata. The court reasoned that Section 30 of the Land Acquisition Act provides for a complete machinery for the final determination of disputes regarding apportionment of compensation money, and the adjudication under this provision is subject to the principles of res judicata. The court also rejected the contention that the second plaintiff, who was not a party in the earlier proceeding, was not bound by the decision, as the claim of the plaintiffs was based on the acquisition proceeding.
Issues: Whether the decision of the Civil Court in the earlier proceeding operated as res judicata in the subsequent suit for declaration of title.
Ratio Decidendi: The court held that the Civil Court's decision in the earlier proceeding operated as res judicata in the subsequent suit for declaration of title. The court reasoned that Section 30 of the Land Acquisition Act provides for a complete machinery for the final determination of disputes regarding apportionment of compensation money, and the adjudication under this provision is subject to the principles of res judicata. The court also rejected the contention that the second plaintiff, who was not a party in the earlier proceeding, was not bound by the decision, as the claim of the plaintiffs was based on the acquisition proceeding.
Final Decision: The court allowed the revision application and set aside the order of the Munsif Court holding that the suit was maintainable. However, the court clarified that the bar of res judicata would not apply to any properties in the suit that were not the subject matter of the acquisition proceeding.
H.L.Agarwal, J.
1. The defendants 1st party, who are brothers, have moved this Court in revisional jurisdiction against the Order of the learned Munsif for deciding the question of res judicata as a preliminary issue against them.
2. The facts giving rise to this application are as follows: In a partition suit No. 20 of 1946 by petitioner No. 1 against opposite party Nos. 1, 2 and others, who were the members of a joint Hindu family, survey Plots Nos. 614 and 615 and a portion of survey plot No. 616 along with other plots are said to have been allotted to the share of the petitioner No. 1 who came in exclusive possession of the same. These plots were acquired fay the State Government for construction of a bundh and the award for a sum of Rs. 1,415.51 was prepared in favour of both the petitioners. An objection was raised by opposite party No. 1 before the Land Acquisition Officer claiming the compensation money himself. The Land Acquisition Officer, in view of the dispute regarding apportionment of the compensation money, referred the dispute for the decision of the Civil Court and the learned Additional Subordinate Judge, Muzaffarpur, after taking evidence and hearing the parties, held that the claim of the opposite party was untenable and the award in question was prepared in favour of the petitioners, An appeal was filed by opposite party No. 1 against the said judgment before the District Judge, Muzaffarpur, which was registered as Miscellaneous Appeal No. 121 of 1963 and was dismissed on the 23rd of January, 1967.
3. Opposite party No. 1 thereafter filed a money suit in the court of the Munsif at Sitamarhi in the year 1968 for a declaration that he was entitled to get one third amount out of the compensation money. The petitioners filed a petition on the 26th July, 1968, in the said suit for dismissal of the same on the ground of res judicata. Long thereafter, on the 6th September, 1971, the plaint was amended and the suit was converted from money suit into title suit and a further declaration for one third share in the Lands acquired by the State Government was sought and opposite party No. 2, his son, was also added as a co-plaintiff in the suit.
4. By the impugned order, the learned Munsif has held that, inasmuch as, in the present suit, a question for determination of the title of the plaintiff was also arising, the earlier decision would not apply as res judicata and the present suit was maintainable. The petitioners have, therefore, moved this Court as stated above.
5. It is difficult to sustain the order of the court below. The Civil Court, on a reference to it under Sec.30 of the Land Acquisition Act (hereinafter referred to as the Act), had considered all the relevant evidence and materials produced by the parties and had come to the conclusion that, by a partition in the family of the parties, the lands in question were exclusively allotted to the share of petitioner No. 1. In paragraph 5 of the plaint of the present suit, opposite party No. 1 has stated that he purchased 3 khathas 9 dhurs of the lands in question under a Kebala dated the 6th October, 1953, in the name of his son Maheshwar Narayan (Plaintiff No. 2) from a different co-sharer. This date is certainly much beyond the date of the partition suit which was of the year 1946 under which the petitioners were allotted the properties in question and the Civil Court recorded the definite finding that the petitioners alone became the exclusive owners of the plots in question.
6. By virtue of Sec. 53 of the Act, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, so far as they are not inconsistent with the Act, apply to the proceeding under the Act before the Court and, therefore, it was competent to the Civil Court, when the dispute was referred to it to consider the claim of the respective parties who appeared before it. The claim of the plaintiff No. 1 was, therefore, fully adjudicated upon by the Civil Court and the said adjudication under the Act is,
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