(1.) The learned Subordinate Judge rejected the present revision petition under Order 1, Rule 10 C. P. C. to implead her as one of the respondents in Land Acquisition O.P. 113 of 1972. That O P. arises out of a reference made by the Land Acquisition Officer under Section 31 of the LAND ACQUISITION ACT, 1894 stating than there was dispute about the ownership of the lands and the compensation awarded thereto. He therefore placed the matter before the Court under section 31.
(2.) It is no doubt true that the petitioner did not participate in the actual award proceedings. But the award itself would clearly show that consideration of her rights in the property formed a substantial portion of the award proceedings, as well as the award itself. The properties acquired form part of the estate of late Ramakrishnayya. It appears that he had left behind him the petitioner a daughter through his first wife, and children of another daughter through his second wife. His two wives and the second daughter predeceased him. When the acquisition of about Ac. 4-30 cents of land took place, the award proceedings were carried on. One of the sons of the step sister of the petitioner filed O.S. 83 of 1967 on the file of the Subordinate Judge's Court, Khammam which was later transferred to the file of the District Court, Khammam and re-numbered as O.S. 7 of 1972. That was a suit for partition and it was decreed declaring that the sons of the petitioner's sister were entitled to half share and the petitioner herself was entitled to the other half. The plaintiff who was the son of the step-sister filed A.S. 112 of 1977 in this Court which is pending. The properties acquired by the Government are part and parcel of the suit properties.
(3.) In the award enquiry, three persons appeared. The first of them is Venkatappachary and he claimed that he and bis brother Satyanarayanachary were entitled to half share and that the present petitioner and her step sister were entitled to the other half. The second person Sharabacbary was the power of attorney holder of Radhakrishna Murthy, son of the petitioner. He claimed that Radhakrishna Murthy has been adopted by Ramakrishnayya and in consequence, was entitled to the entire property. The third person was Swarachary, son of the step-sister of the petitioner who claimed that he and his three brothers, being sons of Nagasuramma, were entitled to a half share and that the present petitioner being the other daughter of the deceased Ramakrishnayya, was entitled to the other half share. In the light of these variegated claims, the land Acquisition Officer said that there was dispute about the ownership of the land and consequently about compensation to be awarded. Thereupon, he deposited the compensation amount and referred the matter to the Court under Section 31. At this juncture, I must re fer to another circumstance. The petitioner filed an application before the Land Acquisition Officer on 2nd July, 1977 that she was very much interested in the award proceedings. The Officer informed her that there was dispute about the ownership of the lands and that therefore, the matter was ref erred to the Sub-Court for determination of the shares among the interested persons. The Officer concluded the communication dated 17-7-1977 by saying: "She is therefore directed to approach Court of law and leek redressal'. Upon this she filed an application under Order 1 Rule 10 C .P.G. to implead her in the O.P. under Section 31. This wathe petition which was dismissed by the Lower Court relying on Nalgonda Municipality vs. Mohiuddin. The facts of that case were vitally different from the present case._There, Jaganmohan Reddy, J. (as he then was) and Chandrasekhara Sastry. J. decided that a person who had not appeared before the Taluqdor and whose name was not mentioned in the reference could not be added as party in the proc- eedings before the Court. That case has no application because the claim- ant who claimed before the Court Old not only appear in the award enquiry but also there was no reference at all to him. But in the present Qase, the entire dispute is as to which person is entitled to what share in the acquired property. 1 have already referred to the substance of the award proceedings and the reference made by the Land Acquisition Officer. The dispute was whether the present petitioner was entitled to l/4ih share or half share but there was consensus that the petitioner was entitled to a share in the acqui- red property. Since the petitioner was entitled to a share in the properties and some other persons claimed varying rights and shares in the properties, the Land Acquisition Officer referred the matter to the Court under Section 31. It is thus manifest that even if the petitioner was not formally a party to the original petition under Section 31, her rights must be adjudicated upon the order to apportion tne compensation amount. Without doing that, there cannot be any apportionment. It is inereiore essential that she be made a party to the proceedings. Her rights are very much in question belore the award enquiry and in the reference, She is certainly a person interested with- in the meaning ot Section 31. She is aiso a person interested wiihm the meaning of Section 18. Though she was not a participant in the award enq- uiry, her ngh.s were actually canvassed therein and because ol that, relere- nce under Section 31 became necessary. In tnese circumstances, 1 hold that it is not only essential in the interests'ot justice but also in the light of the language of Sections 18 and 31 thai she be brougnt on record as a party to the original proceedings.