LAW FOR ALL
advocatemmmohan@gmail.com .
LawforAll
(Move to ...)
Home
▼
Saturday, February 28, 2026
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 — Section 123 — Regularisation of occupation by members of SC/ST — Deeming fiction — Effect on private title. (Paras 2, 4.4–4.6, 8–10) The dispute concerned Plot No. 2362, Shamli, Muzaffarnagar. The appellants purchased the land in 1984 and obtained a declaration under Section 143 converting its use from agricultural to abadi. The private respondents, members of Scheduled Caste/Scheduled Tribe community, were in occupation since 1976–1977 and had constructed houses prior to 30.06.1985. The Sub-Divisional Officer, acting under Section 123, directed recording of the occupants’ names. The High Court upheld the order, holding that Section 123(2) creates a statutory deeming fiction whereby land is deemed settled with eligible house-owners in possession as on 30.06.1985. Consent or lack thereof of the tenure-holder is immaterial. The Supreme Court affirmed that the purchase by the appellants was subject to the statutory rights available to occupants under Section 123. Ratio Decidendi: Where eligible persons belonging to SC/ST categories had constructed houses on land prior to 30.06.1985, Section 123 creates a statutory deeming settlement in their favour, and subsequent purchasers cannot defeat such statutory regularisation.
›
U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950 — Section 123 — Regularisation of occupation by members of SC/ST — Deeming fiction — Eff...
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 60(5) — Jurisdiction of NCLT — Challenge to attachment under Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 — Maintainability. (Paras 16, 20–20.8, 26) The question was whether provisional attachment and confirmation orders passed under the Prohibition of Benami Property Transactions Act, 1988 (“Benami Act”) could be assailed before the NCLT/NCLAT by invoking Section 60(5) of the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 (“IBC”). The Court held that the Benami Act is a complete and self-contained code with its own adjudicatory and appellate hierarchy. The NCLT, being a creature of statute under IBC, cannot sit in appeal over attachment or confiscation proceedings undertaken under a distinct public law enactment. Section 60(5) does not extend to reviewing sovereign actions undertaken under penal statutes. Permitting such adjudication would amount to elevating NCLT into a judicial review forum over statutory authorities under the Benami Act, which is impermissible. Ratio Decidendi: Orders of attachment and confiscation under the Benami Act cannot be challenged before NCLT/NCLAT under IBC; the exclusive remedy lies within the statutory framework of the Benami Act.
›
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 60(5) — Jurisdiction of NCLT — Challenge to attachment under Prohibition of Benami Property T...
Contract of Guarantee — Sections 133 and 139 — Indian Contract Act, 1872 — Overdrawing beyond sanctioned limit without surety’s consent — Extent of discharge. (Paras 3–4.4, 7–7.4) The principal debtor was sanctioned a cash-credit facility of ₹4,00,000/-. The sureties executed guarantees limited to this amount. Subsequently, the bank permitted withdrawals far exceeding the sanctioned limit without the sureties’ consent. The High Court held that the sureties must either be liable for the entire outstanding amount or not liable at all. The Supreme Court reversed this view. Under Section 133, any variance in the terms of the contract between the creditor and the principal debtor, made without the surety’s consent, discharges the surety only in respect of transactions subsequent to the variance. The discharge is not absolute. Ratio Decidendi: Where a creditor permits overdrawing beyond the sanctioned limit without the surety’s consent, the surety stands discharged only qua the excess amount constituting variance; liability continues to the extent originally guaranteed.
›
Contract of Guarantee — Sections 133 and 139 — Indian Contract Act, 1872 — Overdrawing beyond sanctioned limit without surety’s consent — Ex...
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 — Section 173 — Compensation — Deduction of financial assistance under Haryana Compassionate Assistance to Dependents of Deceased Government Employees Rules, 2006 — Overlapping pecuniary benefit — Double recovery impermissible. (Paras 5–6.3, 8) The issue was whether amounts received by the claimants under the 2006 Rules are deductible from compensation awarded under the Motor Vehicles Act, 1988. Relying upon Reliance General Insurance v. Shashi Sharma, the Court held that financial assistance under the 2006 Rules, to the extent it corresponds to “pay and allowances” substituting loss of income, must be deducted to prevent double recovery. However, benefits not overlapping with loss of income (e.g., pension, provident fund, insurance) are not deductible. The subsequent decision in National Insurance Company Ltd. v. Birender does not dilute this principle; it clarifies only the procedural stage and evidentiary requirement for deduction, namely that actual receipt or eligibility must be established before adjustment. Ratio Decidendi: Amounts received or receivable under the 2006 Rules, insofar as they represent compensation equivalent to pay and allowances lost due to death, are liable to deduction from motor accident compensation to avoid double recovery; however, deduction must be based on proof of receipt or entitlement.
›
Motor Vehicles Act, 1988 — Section 173 — Compensation — Deduction of financial assistance under Haryana Compassionate Assistance to Dependen...
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 7 — Scope of adjudication — Financial debt and default — Pre-existing dispute irrelevant. (Paras 12, 18, 22–23) For admission of an application under Section 7, the Adjudicating Authority is required only to satisfy itself that a financial debt exists and that default has occurred. The concept of “pre-existing dispute”, relevant under Section 9 in proceedings by an operational creditor, has no application to proceedings under Section 7. The NCLT and NCLAT erred in proceeding on considerations extraneous to the limited jurisdiction under Section 7, including alleged restructuring discussions and equitable considerations. Ratio Decidendi: In proceedings under Section 7 of the Code, once existence of financial debt and default is established, admission must follow; pre-existing disputes or restructuring negotiations do not defeat a financial creditor’s statutory right unless the debt is not due in law.
›
Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code, 2016 — Section 7 — Scope of adjudication — Financial debt and default — Pre-existing dispute irrelevant. (Pa...
‹
›
Home
View web version