(1.) THE petitioner in this application challenges the order made under section 5a of the estates Acquisition Act whereby the deed of partition executed and registered within the prohibited period was declared cancelled. One Gadadhar bhatta is stated to be governed by the mitakshara School of Hindu Law. The said Gadadhar Bhatta came to Bengal with his personal law and settled in bengal. He died leaving behind him his sole heir and legal representative, his son Aniruddha Bhatta, the father of the petitioner. At the time of his death, Gadadhar Bhatta left a considerable property consisting of agricultural lands, non-agricultural lands, tank-fishery and homestead and gardens. It is stated that Aniruddha bhatta had more or less 213 acres of agricultural lands, more or less, 46 acres of non-agricultural lands, 23 acres of tank fishery and 3. 10 acres of home stead in khas and rent receiving interests of land measuring about 168 acres by way of inheritance. It is stated that Aniruddha Bhatta had two sons, dibakar Bhatta, since deceased and sudhakar Bhatta, the present petitioner and three daughters viz. Indira, Sushama and Nirupama. Dibakar Bhatta died leaving behind him his widow, shanti Debi Bhatta, and one daughter, aruna Bhandari, wife of Sri P. R. Bhandari. It is alleged that the joint: family of Aniruddha Bhatta consisted of himself, Santi Debi Bhatta, the widow of Dibakar Bhatta, the son of Aniruddha bhatta and Sudhakar Bhatta, the petitioner and all of them are the coparceners of the Joint Mitakashara Hindu family of Aniruddha Bhatta. On or about 25th September, 1954 the ancestral properties of Aniruddha Bhatta, who was governed, by the Mitakshara school of Hindu Law, was partitioned amongst the members of the joint family of the said coparcenery viz. Aniruddha Bhatta, Santi Debi Bhatta and Sudhakar Bhatta, the petitioner by a deed of partition dated 25th September, 1954 which was registered on the same date and it is alleged that thereafter each of the coparceners is in separate possession of his respective allotments. By the said deed of partition. Aniruddha Bhatta got more or less 85 acres of agricultural land and non-agricultural land in khas, 6. 97 acres of tanks, 1. 05 acres homestead and more or less 56 acres of rent receiving interests of lands Similarly Santi devi Bhatta got more or less 87 acres of agricultural land and non-agricultural land in khas 9. 64 acres tanks and 1. 24 acres homestead and 56 acres of rent receiving interests of lands. The aforesaid Sudhakar Bhatta, the petitioner in this case, got more or less 85 acres of agricultural land and non-agricultural lands in khas and 6. 49 acres of tank and 81 acres of homestead and more or less 56 acres of rent-receiving interests of lands. After the said deed of partition the records of rights was recorded in the respective names and the record of rights was duly published in the settlement records. In 1957 Aniruddha Bhatta, the respondent No. 5 voluntarily surrendered more or less 40. 25 acres of land and delivered the same to the state of West Bengal and that he retained more or less 25. 15 acres of agricultural lands and more or less 18. 46 acres of non-agricultural lands out of the lands allotted to him by the deed of partition. Similarly in 1957, sm. Santi Debi Bhatta and the petitioner voluntarily surrendered the lands in favour of the State Government and retained the lands allotted to them by the deed of partition. Thereafter the respondent initiated a proceeding under section 44 (2a)of the West Bengal Estates Acquisition act suo motu for the revision of the records of rights. Ultimately under section 44 (2a) of the Act the proceeding was dropped but in the mean time the proceeding was started under section 5a of the Act in respect of documents registered and executed by the parties. At the hearing the petitioner stated that the deed executed on 25th September, 1954 and registered on that date was not a deed of partition but a deed of transfer within the meaning of section 5a (7) of the Act. It muse be stated that the deed which is the subject-matter in this case was not produced before me and also it was not annexed to the petition
(2.) THE only point argued before me is that whether the deed of partition which is the subject-matter of a proceeding is a deed of transfer within the meaning of section 5a (7) of the west Bengal Estates Acquisition Act.
(3.) MR. Lala Hemanta Kumar on behalf of the petitioner contended that the partition is hot a transfer within the meaning of section 5a (7) of the act and relied upon a number of cases, namely, ( (1) Champa Bibi v. Panchiram Nahata Siva Bigraha and others) A. I. R. 1963 Cal. 551 and ( V. N. Sarain v. Ajit Kumar Poplai and another A. I. R. 1966 S. C. 432. In my opinion, in view of the pronouncement made by the Supreme Court in the cases reported in A. I. R. 1966 S. C. 432 (supra) it is not necessary for me to refer to any other decisions. In the said case, the point for consideration is whether the partition comes within the meaning of the word 'transfer' under the Transfer of Property Act, 1953. In paragraph. . . . . . . . . . 4. In paragraph 10 and 11 the Supreme Court said as follows: -