Definition
Black’s Law
Dictionary defines ‘escheat’ as:
1. The
reversion of land ownership back to the lord when the immediate tenant dies
without heirs.
2. Reversion
of property (especially real property) to the state upon the death of an owner
who has neither a will nor any legal heirs.
3.
Property that has so reverted.
Thus we see that
Doctrine of Escheat is a common law doctrine which transfers the
property of a person who dies without heirs to the crown or the state. It
serves to ensure that property is not left in ‘limbo’ without recognized
ownership.
Doctrine of Escheat also finds mention in Article
296 of the Constitution.
“Article 296 –
Subject as hereinafter provided, any property in the territory of India which,
if this Constitution had not come into operation, would have accrued to His
Majesty or, as the case may be, to the Ruler of an Indian State by escheat
or lapse, or as bona vacantia for want of a rightful owner, shall, if it
is property situate in a State, vest in such State, and shall, in any other
case, vest in the Union.”
Doctrine of
Escheat or bona vacantia in India
The Doctrine of bona
vacantia or Escheat was declared to be a part of the law in
India by the Privy Council as early as in 1860 in Collector of
Masulipatam v. Cavary Vancata Narrainappah[1]. This case also held that
the General Law of universal application and that General Law was that “private
ownership not existing, the State must be the owner as the ultimate Lord”.
The right to acquire by way of escheat or as bona
vacantia is not a creature of any Private Law of Succession but is an
attribute of Sovereignty. It is true that Statutory provisions of
Private Law of Succession such as Section 29 of Hindu Succession Act
sometimes expressly recognise right of the State to acquire properties by escheat
or as bona vacantia. But that right would have been very much there even
without any such provisions[2].
The case of Pierce
Leslie and Co. Ltd. v. Violet Ouchterlong Waoshare[3] categorically states that:
“Property of
an intestate dying without leaving lawful heirs and the property of a dissolved
Corporation passes to the Government by escheat or as bona vacantia".
And relying on this decision, the Supreme Court in Narendra Bahadur Tandon
v. Shanker Lal[4], has reiterated
that "in India the law is well-settled that the property of an intestate
dying without leaving lawful heirs, and the property of a dissolved
Corporation, passes to the Government by escheat or as bona vacantia" and
that "if the Company had a subsisting interest in the lease on the date of
dissolution, such interest much necessarily vest in the Government by escheat
or as bona vacantia.”
It is not only
the tangible property that comes within the ambit of Doctrine of Escheat or bona
vacantia. The word ‘property’, when used without any qualification
or limitation, as above, is a term of the widest import. In the case of J.K.
Trust v. Commissioner of Income Tax[5], it was stated that “Property
signifies every possible interest which a person may acquire”. There
should, therefore, be no doubt that the expression ‘property’ used
without any qualification or limitation would even include a tenant's
interest in the demised land or premises. The interest of a Tenant is
usually heritable as well as transferable and it would be trite to say that
only owner of a property, however limited, can transfer or transmit the same[6]. This reasoning was upheld
in the case of Municipal Corporation of Greater Bombay v. Lala Pancham[7], wherein it was held that
the tenant has, under the Transfer of Property Act or the Rent Control
Legislations, an interest in the demised premises which would squarely fall
within the expression ‘property’.
Previous: Doctrine of Delegated Legislation and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Territorial Nexus and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Territorial Nexus and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Occupied Field and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Pith and Substance and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Colorable Legislation and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Pith and Substance and the Constitution of India
Previous: Doctrine of Colorable Legislation and the Constitution of India
[1] (1859-61)
8 Moo Ind App 500 at PP. 525.
[2] Biswanath
Khan And Ors. v. Prafulla Kumar Khan, AIR 1988 Calcutta 275.
[3]
AIR 1969 SC 843.
[4] AIR
1967 Allahabad 405. This ruling was upheld by the Supreme Court in AIR 1980 SC
575.
[5]
AIR 1957 SC 846.
[6]
AIR 1988 Calcutta 275.
[7]
AIR 1965 SC 1008.
Thank you for your post. This is excellent information. It is amazing and wonderful to visit your site.
ReplyDeleteFlats for sale in Adyar
Builders in Chennai
Properties in Chennai
Flasts for sale in Chennai
Why is this the same as a research paper by Marupaka Venkateshwarlu? Link is here http://www.thelegal.co.in/TheLegal.co.in/llb%20notes/law%20book%20s%20file%201/land_law.pdf
ReplyDeleteGO WRITE SOMETHING OF YOUR OWN!