K. Kannan, J.@mdashThe appeal is at the instance of the Municipal Committee against the award of the Reference Court passed u/s 30 of the
Land Acquisition Act. The rival claim had been made at the instance of present claimant to be a gair marushi tenant contending that the property
had been periodically let out by Gram Panchayat at a chakota of Rs. 540/- per annum. The tenant was relying on the khasra girdawari from the
year 1964 till the date when the property was acquired by the Government. The Municipal Committee was relying on some records Ex.R-3 to R-
12 that showed several other persons than the appellant as the persons in possession of the property. The Reference Court held that these
documents Ex.R-3 to R-12 seemed to have been prepared for the purpose of the case and placed reliance on the khasra girdawari only. Learned
counsel for the appellant states that there could not have been lease of the property for more than two years at a time by the Gram Panchayat and
therefore, the entries in khasra girdawari could not be true. While it could be a matter of fact and law that the property could not have been leased
under the Act for two years, if the property was allowed to be in possession of the tenant after the initial lease and the tenant had continued in
possession and was paying the rent at the same rate, the possession of such tenant cannot be termed to be unlawful or illegal. This is another way
of saying that the landlord had allowed the tenant to continue in possession of the property under the same terms after the initial period of lease.
The cultivation account is the best method of assessing the actual possession of the property and if the khasra girdawaries referred to the
possession of the tenant as a gair marushi tenant from the year 1964, the Reference Court was justified in preferring the entries found in the said
documents to the documents, which were in the custody of the Municipal Committee and which could have been manipulated to situate their own
needs. I have no reason to differ with the view taken by the Reference Court. Again the determination of compensation for the tenant in recognition
of his right itself has been modest by apportioning only 25% of the total compensation determined for the property. There have been decisions of
the Supreme Court, which have allowed for tenant''s share as high as 75%. I do not, therefore, find any reason to differ with the award passed by
the Reference Court.
2. The award is confirmed and the appeal is dismissed.