(1.) Sodagar Singh and Dal Singh were two brothers Dal Singh's widow Sham Kaur, respondent No. 1 in this appeal, filed an application for partition against Sodagar Singh before the Revenue Officer. The other respondents were impleaded as merely proforma parties. While contesting the application for partition, Sodagar Singh raised a dispute about title, which could not admittedly be decided by the Revenue Officer as such. By order, dated June 23, 1959, the Revenue Officer directed the plaintiff to present a plaint within one month from that day before himself as a civil Court, and adjourned the partition proceedings to July 27, 1959 for further action. Though there was an appeal and a second appeal against the order of the Revenue Officer, the ultimate result was that by his order, dated July 15, 1961, the Commissioner restored the Revenue Officer's order referred to above. More than two months after the disposal of the appeal by the Commissioner, Sodagar Singh presented a plaint before the Civil Court on September 25, 1961. By one line order, dated May 9, 1962, Mian Dalip Singh; Assistant Collector, Second Grade sitting as Subordinate Judge, Patti; dismissed the suit as barred by time without discussing the matter at all. It is, however, not disputed by either of the parties before me that the suit was not dismissed as barred by the law of limitation but on the solitary ground that the plaint had been presented after the expiry of the time fixed by the Revenue Officer's order, dated June 23, 1959. It is also admitted by the learned counsel for the parties that the order of the Subordinate Judge, Patti, was passed under clause (b) of sub-section (2) of section 117 of the Punjab Land Revenue Act (17 of 1887) (hereinafter referred to as the Revenue Act). Not satisfied with the order of the Subordinate Judge, Sodagar Singh went up in appeal under clause (c) of sub-section (2) of section 117 to the Court of the District Judge. Amritsar. The appeal was dismissed by the order of Shri Kartar Singh. Additional District Judge, Amritsar dated May 13, 1963 on the ground that though in case of a direction for filing a civil suit in an ordinary Civil Court, the suit cannot be dismissed as barred by time on account of exceeding the period fixed by the order of the Revenue Officer, different consideration prevail in a case where the Revenue Officer elects to decide the disputed question of title himself as a Civil Court under section 117(2)(b) of the Revenue Act. Reliance was also placed by the learned Additional District Judge on paragraph 18.9 of the Punjab Land Records Manual for upholding the order of the Subordinate Judge. During the pendency of this appeal. Sodagar Singh died and his legal representatives have been brought on record in his place.
(2.) In this second appeal, Mr. Y.P. Gandhi, the learned counsel for the appellant, has submitted that the Revenue Officer had no jurisdiction to fix the period of time within which the plaint of the title suit had to be presented to the Civil Court even though he had adopted the course permitted by sub-section (2) of section 117 of the Revenue Act, and the plaint had to be presented to his own Court. It is further submitted by Mr. Gandhi that even if there is no legal bar to a Revenue Officer fixing a time within which the plaint may be filed before himself as a Civil Court, the plaint cannot be rejected and the suit cannot be dismissed merely because it is filed or instituted after the expiry of the period so fixed by the Revenue Officer. The argument in brief is that even if the Officer happens to be the same, he cannot as a Revenue Officer control the proceedings in the Civil Court. Mr. Gandhi has firstly referred to the basic Full Bench judgment in Bachan Singh V. Madhan Singh and others, 61 P.R. 1897 (F.B.).
(3.) In that case a partition proceeding was decided by the Revenue Officer without awaiting the decision on a disputed question of title which had been raised before him though he had directed the question to be decided by a Civil Court. The question which came up for decision was whether the title suit instituted within the period of limitation allowed by law but after the conclusion of the partition proceedings before the Revenue Officer was barred or not. It was held by the Full Bench that whenever the question of title is raised before a Revenue Officer in partition proceedings, such officer is bound to refuse partition until the question of title is decided by a Civil Court or by himself acting as such, and that the mere fact that the partition has been completed cannot oust the jurisdiction of the Civil Court to subsequently entertain a suit regarding the disputed question of title. The law laid down by the Full Bench in the aforesaid case has subsequently been followed by a Division Bench of Lahore High Court in Tirath Ram and others V. Mst. Nihal Devi, 12 ILR(Lah) 688 and even by a Division Bench of this Court in Ram Gopal and others V. The State of Punjab and others, 1965 67 PunLR 1102. It has been consistently held that the word "may" in section 117 of the Revenue Act must be construed to mean "must" when a question of title is raised in connection with any of the properties of which partition is sought. Mr. Gandhi has also referred to the order of the Financial Commissioner in Ganda Singh and others V. Jhanda Singh and others, 14 P.R. 1890. In that case it was held that where a question of title had been raised, the lower Courts acted ultra vires in deciding upon which party the onus of appealing to the Civil Courts lay, and in directing that the partition proceedings should continue in default of a party suing in the Civil Court within a specified time. The learned Financial Commissioner held that the proper procedure in such a case was for the Revenue Court either to proceed under section 117 (2) or to leave the parties to have the point at issue deter-mined by a competent Court at their pleasure and till then to decline to grant the application for partition. The order of the Financial Commissioner does not appear to help the appellant. In all the cases cited by Mr. Gandhi, the order of the Revenue Officer had been passed under sub-section (1) of section 117. Even Mr. D. N. Aggarwal, learned counsel for respondent No. 1, did not seriously contest the proposition that in a case where the Revenue Officer leaves the party concerned to institute a suit in an ordinary Civil Court, he cannot control the period of limitation allowed by law for the institution of such an action. None of the decided cases has dealt with the precise question which has arisen in the present appeal, that is whether a Revenue Officer sitting as a Civil Court is bound to dismiss a suit which is filed before that Court in pursuance of a direction given by the Revenue Officer under section 117 (2) of the Revenue Act merely because it is filed beyond the time allowed for its institution by the Revenue Officer though the suit is within time according to the law of limitation for the time being in force. The learned counsel for both the sides agree that this precise question is res integra.