Oudh Bihari Singh Vs Sailbndra Nath Bhattacharjee

Calcutta High Court 24 Jul 1957 S.M.A. No. 21 of 1957 (1957) 07 CAL CK 0005
Bench: Single Bench
Result Published
Acts Referenced

Judgement Snapshot

Case Number

S.M.A. No. 21 of 1957

Hon'ble Bench

Guha Ray, J

Advocates

Sudhir Kumar Bose, for the Appellant; Apurbadhan Mukherjee and Amiya Kumar Mukherjee, for the Respondent

Final Decision

Dismissed

Acts Referred
  • Calcutta Thika Tenancy Act, 1949 - Section 28
  • Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (CPC) - Section 28, 47

Judgement Text

Translate:

Guha Ray, J.@mdashThis is an appeal by the judgment-debtor from an order dismissing his objection u/s 47 of the CPC to the execution of a decree obtained by the respondent against him as far back as the 30th September, 1939. This was a decree for ejectment from certain parcels of land which were held by the appellant under the respondent as a thika tenant. The execution out of which this appeal arises was filed on the 26th August, 1950. The appellant filed his objection u/s 47 of the CPC on the 29th November, 1955 claiming the value of the structures which admittedly had been built by him on the land demised. Both the courts found against him on this point. It is now argued on behalf of the appellant that in view of the Calcutta Thicka Tenancy (Amendment) Act, 1953, sections 4 and 5 of the Thika Tenancy Act, 1949 are applicable to the present proceedings but the proviso to section 1(2) of the Calcutta Thika Tenancy (Amendment) Act, 1953 evidently means suits, appeals and proceedings under the Thika Tenancy Act of 1949 and it does not contemplate suits disposed of long before the Thika Tenancy legislation came into force, because there is nothing cither in this proviso or anywhere else giving retrospective operation to the provisions of the Thika Tenancy Act to suits disposed of long before the Thika Tenancy legislation came into force. There is also nothing to show that merely because the execution was pending when this Amending Act came into force, the provisions of the Thika Act would be applicable. It is only if section 28 of the Thika Tenancy Act of 1949 were applicable that the tenant might have claimed a certain amount of relief, but as that section was omitted by the amending Act and as that amending Act has to be deemed to have always applied to all suits, appeals and proceedings pending before any court or before the Controller or before a person deciding an appeal u/s 27 of the said Act on the date of commencement of the Calcutta Thika Tenancy (Amendment) Ordinance, 1952. Section 28 must be held to have been omitted long before the present application u/s 47 of the CPC was filed, with the result that it cannot be held to be applicable to these proceedings by any stretch of imagination. On behalf of the appellant reliance was placed on the decision in Deorajin Debi and Another Vs. Satyadhyan Ghosal and Others, the facts of which were different from the facts of this case, because in that case there was actually an application filed u/s 28 at a time when that section was still in force and it came to be omitted only during the pendency of a revision from the order passed u/s 28. But in this case, as already pointed out, section 28 was no longer in force when the application by the present applicant u/s 47 of the CPC was made. That being so, both the courts were right in the view they took, namely, that the provisions of the Thika Tenancy Act were not applicable to this case and the appellant was not entitled to any relief in the shape of the value of the structures which he had: admittedly built on the land demised. The appeal must accordingly fail and is ordered to be dismissed with costs.

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