State of H.P. v. Raja Mahendra Pal, (SC) BS87048
SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

Before:- V.N. Khare and R.P. Sethi, JJ.

Civil Appeal No. 9495 of 1995. D/d. 31.3.1999

State of H.P. - Appellant

Versus

Raja Mahendra Pal and others - Respondents

For the Appellant :- Naresh Kumar Sharma, Advocate.

For the Respondent :- K.B. Rohtagi and Ms. Aparna Rohtagi, Advocates.

Constitution of India, Article 12, Forest Act, 1927, Section 82 - Enforcement of right to livelihood - Decendant of princily state claiming Royality in forest including forest produce and monetary gains - High Court allowed writ claiming Royality entitling him to enforce his right to livelihood as envisaged in Article 21 - Such claims of Royality owe their origin to the exercise of sovereign rights vested in State - No private citizen unless specially authorised in that behalf under the provisions of law could prefer such claims - Judgment of High Court set aside.

[Paras 6, 14 and 15]

Cases Referred :-

Keshvananda Bharati v. State of Kerala; (1973) Suppl SCR 1 .

R.C. Cooper v. Union of India, (1970) 3 SCR 530 .

Madhav Rao v. Union of India (1971) 3 SCR 9 .

Province of Bombay v. Khusaldas S. Advani, 1950 SCR 621 .

Rex v. Electricity Commissioner, (1924) 1 KB 171.

Rex v. London County Council (1931) 2-KB 215.

Radheshyam v. State of M. P., AIR 1959 Supreme Court 107.

R. v. Manchester Legal Aid Committee (1952) 2 QB 413.

State of Orissa v. Titaghur Paper Mills Co. Ltd., AIR 1985 Supreme Court 1293.

Raja Bahadur Kamakshya Narain Singh v. Commissioner of Income Tax, Bihar and Orissa, AIR 1943 Privy Council 153.

Inderjeet Singh Sial v. Karamchand Thapar, 1995(3) RRR 628 (SC) : 1996(2) RCR (Rent) 51 (SC) : (1995) 6 SCC 166 .

JUDGMENT

Sethi, J. - Despite independence of the country about half a century back and the establishment of a democratic set up with the declaration in the Constitution to have a Secular, Socialist Republic in the country, there are people and organisations who have not mentally reconciled with the realities of life and the writings in the chapters of history for various reasons including their vested interests. Ignoring the establishment of the rule of law and the development of the constitutional set up, they have made and are making fanatic efforts to sabotage the path of the goal intended to achieve the welfare of the society. Ignoring the verdicts of this Court in Keshvananda Bharati v. State of Kerala; (1973) Suppl SCR 1 , R.C. Cooper v. Union of India, (1970) 3 SCR 530 and Madhav Rao v. Union of India (1971) 3 SCR 9 and various other pronouncements, efforts have been made to reverse back the wheel of history merely for personal gains to quench the lust for money and power. The case of respondent No. 1 in this litigation is one of such persons who has done everything possible to utilise the forum of the Courts for the attainment of his personal benefits by attempting to utilise the alleged constitutional guarantees in his favour. A ruler of the yester years, the respondent No. 1, approached the High Court for issuance of the command to the State Forest Corporation by treating him equivalent to the Government of Himachal Pradesh with conferment a monetary gains which were permissible to the State Government on the basis of the decision of the Pricing Committee. The High Court granted prayer sought for by the judgment impugned in this appeal. The Maharaja was held, to have been equated with the Government and entitled to the relief claimed by him as according to the High Court he was found to have been deprived of the right to life as envisaged by Article 21 of the Constitution of India. The High Court observed "We have held that the petitioner is entitled to enforce his claim particularly the right to his livelihood through this writ petition." It was further held, "he was, for all purposes, possessed power of the government. The Court further observed, "in fact the Pricing Committee on behalf of the Government, in its wisdom, appear to have equated the petitioner with the Government and directed that the decision regarding the aforesaid payments taken in respect of the Government product shall also apply to Kutlehar Forest as well." By way of issuance of the writ of mandamus, the respondent No. 1 was held entitled to the interest on the delayed payment of royalty, damages with respect to illicit felling plus 100 per cent penalty for the illegally felled trees. He was further conferred with the grant of interest on interest and share in the levy of extension fee chargeable by the State from the respondent-corporation under the terms of the agreement or the provisions of law applicable in the case.

2. The judgment impugned in this appeal has been assailed on various grounds including the ground of non-maintainability of the writ petition error on the part of the High Court to equate the State Government with a private person, disentitlement of the respondent to claim a share in the penal interest and levies which the State was entitled to impose and recover as a consequence of its sovereign functions.

3. The relevant facts for deciding the present appeal are, that the dispute relates to Kutlehar Forest located in the district of Kangra, now a part of Himachal Pradesh State which was earlier a Princely State. The aforesaid Princely State was founded by one Shri Narendra Pal about 300-400 years back whose descendant is respondent No. 1, the said State was conferred 16 'Tappas' (chunks of land), four were Jagir 'Tappas' and twelve Khalsa 'Tappas'. In Four Jagir 'Tapas', the land revenue to the extent of Rs. 10,000/- was assigned to the forefathers of respondent No. 1 by way of 'Jagir. In addition to four 'Tappas', about twenty thousand acres of land belonging to the 'Baratandars' (right holders) which was not used for agricultural purposes, was also assigned. The forefathers of respondent No. 1 are stated to have grown large number of trees over the said land from the period before 1868 A. D. Respondent No. 1 claimed that his ancestors protected and maintained those trees while 'Baratandars' were granted various rights including the right to get timber on concessional rate for their domestic requirements and the right to graze their cattle. During the settlement operation of civil district of Kangra in 1869, Mr. James Lyall, Settlement Officer, had made a proposal vide the letter 12-2-1868 that the management of forests in four 'Tappas' be granted to the Raja of Kutlehar. The aforesaid proposal is claimed to have been accepted by the Government of Punjab not only with respect to four 'Jagir Tappas' but also for all 16 'Tappas' including 12 Khalsa 'Tappas'. The predecessor-in-interest of respondent No. 1 are stated to have started managing the Kutlehar Forest subject to the conditions contained in the approval dated 11-1-1869. The then Government is stated to have started laying claims to the trees grown on the aforesaid land in the year 1915 which was resisted and resulted in the commencement of the fresh correspondence between the parties. The controversies are said to have been set at rest by the Lt. Governor of Punjab in the year 1916 vide letter dated 25-5-1916 by which it was made clear that "All trees growing in the protected forests, subject to the right of 'Bartandars' and to the other conditions and exceptions hereinafter specified, belong to Government, but have been assigned by Government to the Raja so long as he abides by the conditions of management hereunto appended".

4. In exercise of his powers vested under Sections 28, 29(a) and 31 of the Indian Forests Act, 1878, the Lt. Governor of Punjab issued Notification dated 31-8-1915 by which various lands within the limits of various Jagirs including the Jagir of Kutlehar in the district of Kangra, the management of the forests was assigned to the Rajas' including the predecessor-in-interest of the respondent No. 1, subject to the terms and conditions specified in the aforesaid orders. The Rajas' were directed to maintain proper account of the trees standing on the land which could be sold to traders only after the trees were marked by the Forest Department. The trees could be sold only at the rates approved by the Forest Department. The Raja was held entitled to continue to realise grazing fees from the 'Gaddies at the rates fixed by Government or by mutual agreement between the Raja and the 'Gaddi' subject to the approval by the Deputy Commissioner. However, vide Notification No. 4531-FT. (CH-58/523 dated 1-10-1958 issued under Section 2(2) of the Forest Act, the respondent was appointed as a Forest Superintendent and the employees working under him in the aforesaid forest declared as Forest Officers with respect to Kutlehar Forest. As per terms of his appointment, the respondent was held entitled to retain ¾ of the income derivable from the forest whereas ¼ of the gross income was payable to the government. The conditions explicitly provided :-

The various forest produces such as resin, timber, bamboo and bhabar grass etc. were required to be auctioned by the respondent like the manner such auctions were held by the Forest Department in respect of Government forests in accordance with the working plan and the highest bidder was to be granted the lease. This practice was discontinued after the forests were nationalised by the Appellant-State in the year 1974, when Himachal Pradesh Forest Corporation was incorporated under the provisions of the Companies Act, 1956. Produce of the Government forests, thereafter, could be sold only to the Forest Corporation. Ever since its incorporation the respondent-corporation continued purchasing timber and other forest produces from respondent No. 1 in accordance with the working plan. The said respondent alleged that in addition to his entitlement of the sale price of the various forest produces sold by him out of the Kutlehar forest to the respondent-corporation, he was also entitled to share the interest on delayed payment, interest on interest and compensation for damages caused to the trees in the course of extraction of timber etc. The basis for his claim as pleaded in writ petition and noticed by the High Court was :-

Firstly, the Government of Himachal Pradesh constituted a Committee of officers for determination of the price and terms and conditions of the supply of forest produce sold in favour of the second respondent (HP Forest Corporation) vide notification dated 18-5-1974 (Annexure-C) whereby the fourth respondent (Pricing Committee) on behalf of the Government in its wisdom had equated the petitioner with the Government and directed that the decision regarding the aforesaid payments taken in respect of the Government produce should apply to Kutlehar Forest as well;

Secondly, that according to the practice prevailing and trade custom, the petitioner is entitled to his share in the above said additional income; and

Thirdly, that the Government and the petitioner were similarly circumstanced in so far as the sale of the forest produce is concerned and, therefore, any discrimination of the share of additional amount by way of income is offensive to Article 14 of the Constitution."

The respondent asserted that the additional amounts claimed by him were payable even by the private lessees to whom he and the Government had sold various forest produces before coming into the existence of the respondent-corporation. The appellant-State was claimed to have constituted a Pricing Committee which decided to apply the decisions taken by it in regard to the sales made by Forest Department to the sales made by the respondent out of the Kutlehar forest as well. To strengthen his claim, the respondent relied upon Article 51 of the Article of Association of the respondent-corporation which provided that the Government could issue directions from time to time which the directors of the company were bound to comply with. The respondent claimed that the corporation had an inescapable obligation to pay to him all the amounts claimed which it had failed to pay despite repeated written requests. The decision qua interest on interest is stated to have been taken by the Pricing Committee with the object to curb the pendency of belated payments attributed to the respondent-corporation. The decision regarding penalty of the illicit/outshaped blazes was stated to have been taken on 17-8-1982. Levy of extension fee was imposed vide decision of the Pricing Committee dated 4-12-1986. The aforesaid decisions are stated to have been made applicable in the case of the respondent vide item No. VIII recorded in the minutes of the proceedings of the meeting held on 16-5-1988.

5. The Pricing Committee in its meeting held on 6-10-1990 was stated to have reviewed the guidelines issued earlier in respect of the dealing of the Himachal Pradesh State Forest Corporation with the Government and the royalty to be charged from, and levies and penalties to be imposed upon the corporation in respect of the working of the forest by the corporation. The Kutlehar Forest is stated to have been resumed by the State of Himachal Pradesh vide Notification dated 19-1-1990 issued under Section 3 of the Punjab Resumption of Jagir Act, 1957. The Principal Chief Conservator of Forests was directed to take over management and possession of Kutlehar forest from respondent No. 1 with the assistance of the Collector. Respondent No. 1 filed a writ petition (WP No. 42/90) with respect to his preexisting rights as also his entitlement to retain the forest by challenging the validity of the notification. Thereafter, he also challenged the Himachal Pradesh (Acquisition of Management) Act, 1992 by filing a writ petition (W. P. No. 707/92). During the pendency of the aforesaid writ petition No. 42/90, respondent No. 1 filed C.W.P. No. 528/91 in the High Court of Himachal Pradesh claiming the relief on the basis of the decisions of the Pricing Committee being applicable to him. The claim of the respondent No. 1 was resisted on various grounds including :-