LAWS(PVC)-1941-12-29

MT JANAKDULARI KUER Vs. MEGHAN TELI

Decided On December 01, 1941
MT JANAKDULARI KUER Appellant
V/S
MEGHAN TELI Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This appeal is by the plaintiffs and arises out of a suit which they instituted against the respondents seeking to eject the latter from the land in dispute, or for assessment of fair and equitable rent in respect of the land. Both Courts have dismissed the plaintiffs suit and their decision with regard to the question of ejectment is not challenged in this appeal. It is, however, contended that the plaintiffs are entitled to assessment of rent. The plot in dispute formed a part of a holding, which was recorded in survey as khata No. 171. This holding belonged to one Somar Mushahar, a settled raiyat of the village, and consisted of three plots. In the khatian two of these plots Nos. 2469 and 2459 are recorded as belagan dih and the third plot No. 2502 has been recorded as rent paying. At the foot of the entry the area of belagan land is stated and the amount of the rent payable in respect of the remainder of the land is stated with its area. In 1927 or so, Somar Mushahar transferred a part of plot No. 2459 to the respondents. Subsequently, there was a Collectorate partition among the cosharer proprietors, as a result of which plot No. 2459 was separated from the remainder of the holding and constituted into a separate holding No. 2459-3727. This latter plot was allotted to the patti of the plaintiffs-appellants and it is in respect of this plot that the plaintiffs claim to be entitled to have rent assessed.

(2.) On behalf of the defendants it is contended that all three of the original plots constituted one holding and that as rent was payable in respect of this holding the landlords are not now entitled to ask the Court to assess rent. The entry in the record of rights, however, to my mind does not mean that the rent which is shown as payable in respect of the third of the original plots is rent payable in respect of the holding. Had that been so, there would have been no object in putting the word "belagan" against plots Nos. 2469 and 2459, or ( stating at the foot of the entry the area of these two plots and that that area was belagan.

(3.) The next question that arises, therefore, is that with regard to the meaning of "belagan." It is conceded that the word does not necessarily denote a rent-free grant, but may merely mean that rent had not yet been agreed upon or assessed. The right of the plaintiffs appellants must, therefore, turn on the question of onus, that is to say, on whom does the burden lie of proving that this land is assessable to rent, or is not assessable to rent, as the case may be. In Jagdeo Narain v. Baldeo Singh A.I.R. 1922 P.C. 272, the Privy Council held that when a landlord has proved that a parcel of land, which is claimed to be held rent-free, is within his regularly settled mahal, it lies upon those who so claim to show that they have been relieved of the obligation to pay rent either by contract or by some old grant recognized by Government. In this case the defendants did not plead a contract or an old rent-free grant. In the same case it was held that the presumption of correctness attaching to an entry in the Record of Eights is insufficient for the purpose of proving that the landlord has no right to have rent assessed on land which he has proved to be within his zemindari. This decision was applied by a Bench of which I was a member in Kameshwar Singh Bahadur V/s. Sakhawat Ali A.I.R. 1937 Pat. 96 . That also was a suit for a declaration that the land in suit was liable to assessment of fair rent. In the Record of Bights the land was recorded as belagan, and it was contended that the onus lay on the landlords to rebut the presumption of correctness attaching to this entry; and this contention was negatived, and it was held that the onus was on the defendants to show that they had been relieved of the obligation to pay rent and to establish their right to a rent-free grant.