Land reform constitutes the most important package of measures to improve the economic condition of agricultural tenants. It aims at the redistribution of agricultural land ownership in favour of the cultivating class, regulation and rationalization of rent, improving the size of farms and providing security to tenure holders in order to raise traditional agricultural produce.
Areas of land reform are very vast and there has been a lot of improvement in its implication ever since. Some of them are land acquisition, requisition, ceiling, abolition of zamindari and intermediaries, tenure and tenancy etc. Consolidation is also a major facet of land reform scope. Land consolidation is a planned readjustment and rearrangement of fragmented land parcels and their ownership. It is usually applied to form larger and more rational land holdings. It can be used to improve rural infrastructure and to implement developmental and environmental policies.
In the state of UP and Uttarakhand, the UP Consolidation of Holdings Act, 1953 is the statutory law on this area of land reform.
Uttar Pradesh is the rainbow land where the multi-hued Indian culture has blossomed from times immemorial. Right from the beginning of the efforts at planned economic development, land reforms were assigned a high priority with a view to remove obstacles in the transformation of agriculture imposed by the exploitative and defective land tenure system in country. However, land reforms in the country have remained content with the objective of the creation of individual proprietary rights and granting security of tenure to the actual tiller of land and did not attempt any basic transformation of the agrarian relations on socialist lines.
UP which had seen the political mobilization of the peasantry during the independence struggle on a large scale was among the more progressive states of the country during first phase of land reforms inititated after independence. In the second phase, attention was focused on the consolidation of the fragmented holdings.
The Uttar Pradesh Consolidation of Holdings Act, 1953 (UP Act No. 5 of 1954) received the assent of the President on 4th March 1954 and was published in UP Gazette Extraordinary, dated 8th March 1954.
The Preamble- Whereas it is expedient to provide for the consolidation of agricultural holdings in Uttar Pradesh for the development of agriculture; it is hereby enacted.
It has V Chapters and 54 Sections.
Land consolidation is the reallocation of parcels with the aim the landowners to obtain larger parcels at one or more places in exchange of their former smaller and fragmented land plots. The word land consolidation comes from the Latin commassatio (grouping). Land consolidation has always been something more than only the simple rearrangement of parcels to remove effects of fragmentation seeking higher agricultural productivity and lower costs.[i]
Land consolidation is sometimes incorrectly interpreted to be only the simple reallocation of parcels to remove effects of fragmentation. In reality, land consolidation has been associated with broader social and economic reforms from the time of its earliest applications in Western Europe. The first consolidation initiatives of Denmark in the 1750s were part of a profound social reform to free people from obligations to noble landlords by establishing privately-owned family farms. The consolidation of fragmented holdings did result in improved agricultural productivity but this was not the only objective of these reforms.[ii]
Consolidation means re-arrangement of holdings in a unit amongst several tenure-holders in such a way as to make their respective holdings more compact;
Section 3 (4C) defines holding. 'Holding' means a parcel or parcels of land held under one tenure by a tenure-holder singly or jointly with other tenure-holders];
In Mahabeer vs State Of U.P. Through Consolidation Commissioner decided on 8 February, 2017, it was observed that notification under Section 4 of the Act is issued in a case where an appeal against the preliminary decree, was not pending the latter, viz, he preliminary decree, will remain unaffected and will not abate but if the preliminary decree had been assailed in appeal, and the appeal is pending on the date of Notification, the latter namely, the Notification, will have the effect of abating the entire suit/proceedings including the preliminary decree passed therein. On the contrary, if an appeal is filed against the final decree without there being any appeal against the preliminary decree and the preliminary decree becomes "unassailable" on account of Sec. 97, C.P.C. the Notification under Section 4 would abate the proceedings relating to the final decree without in any way touching, impairing or affecting the preliminary decree.[iii]
Under Section 5, Upon the publication of the notification under sub-section (2) of Section 4 in the Official Gazette, the consequences, as hereinafter set forth, shall, subject to the provisions of this Act, from the date specified thereunder till the publication of notification under Section 52 or sub-section (1) of Section 6, as the case may be, ensue in the area to which the notification under Section 4(2) relates, namely:
(a) the district or part thereof, as the case may be, shall be deemed to be under consolidation operations and the duty of maintaining the record-of-rights and preparing the village map, the field-book and the annual register of each village shall be performed by the District Deputy Director of Consolidation, who shall maintain or prepare them, as the case may be, in manner prescribed;
(c) notwithstanding anything contained in the U.P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950, no tenure-holder, except with the permission in writing of the Settlement Officer, Consolidation, previously obtained shall-
(i) use his holding or any part thereof for purposes not connected with agriculture, horticulture or animal husbandry including pisciculture and poultry farming; or
Provided that a tenure-holder may continue to use his holding, or any part thereof, for any purpose for which it was in use prior to the date specified in the notification issued under sub-section (2) of Section 4.
Special provision with respect of undisputed succession or transfer is given under Section 6A.
With a view to facilitate the revision of records of each village or part thereof in the unit and subject to the provisions of the Act, the District Deputy Director of Consolidation shall, before the provisional consolidation Scheme for a unit is prepared, cause to be revised the village maps of such unit.(Section 7). Similarly under Section 8, revision of the field book and the current annual register; determination of valuations and shares in joint holdings.
Section 8A states as, (1) The Assistant Consolidation Officer shall, in consultation with the Consolidation Committee, prepare, in respect of each unit under consolidation operations, a statement in the prescribed form (hereinafter called the Statement of Principles) setting forth the principles to be followed in carrying out the consolidation operations in the unit.
While reckoning with the matter relating to consolidation, the Apex Court in Mohd. Shakoor Mian v. Raj Mangal Mishra[iv] held in para 6 that the Consolidation authorities cannot be equated with regular courts.
Under Section 11, Any party to the proceedings under Section 9-A, aggrieved by an order of the Assistant Consolidation Officer or the Consolidation Officer under that section, may, within 21 days of the date of the order, file an appeal before the Settlement Officer, Consolidation, who shall after affording opportunity of being heard to the parties concerned, give his decision thereon which, except as otherwise provided by or under this Act, shall be final and not be questioned in any Court of law
(e) every tenure-holder is, as far as possible, allotted a compact area at the place where he holds the largest part of his holding :
Provided that no tenure-holder may be allotted more chaks than three, except with the approval in writing of the Deputy Director of Consolidation:
Provided further that no consolidation made shall be invalid for the reason merely that the number of chaks allotted to a tenure-holder exceeds three;
(f) every tenure-holder is, as far as possible, allotted the plot on which exists his private source of irrigation or any other improvement, together with an area in the vicinity equal to the valuation of the plots originally held by him there; and
(g) every tenure-holder is, as far as possible, allotted chaks in conformity with the process of rectangulation in rectangulation units.
(2) A Consolidation Scheme before it is made final under Section 23, shall be provisionally drawn up in accordance with the provisions of Section 19-A.
Section 24 deals with possession and accrual of compensation for trees etc. (1) The Settlement Officer, Consolidation, shall fix the date, to be notified in the unit, from which the final Consolidation Scheme shall come into force. On and after the said date a tenure-holder shall be entitled to enter into possession of the plots allotted to him.
(2) On and from the date of obtaining possession every tenure-holder getting trees, wells and other improvements existing on the plots allotted to him in pursuance of the enforcement of the final Consolidation Scheme shall be liable for the payment of and pay to the former tenure-holder thereof, compensation for the trees, wells and other improvements, allotted to him, to be determined in the manner hereinbefore provided.
New revenue records are to be prepared under Section 27. Under Section 28, the Assistant Consolidation Officer, on the application of the tenure-holder or the Land Management Committee, to whom chak or lands have been allotted under the final Consolidation Scheme, may, and where any land has been allotted to the State Government shall, without any application of the State Government, within six months of the date on which the said Scheme has come into force, put the tenure-holder or the Land Management Committee or the State Government, as the case may be, in actual physical possession of the allotted chak or lands,; and for so doing shall have all the powers, including powers as regards contempt, resistance and the like as are exercisable by a Civil Court in execution of a decree for delivery of possession of immovable property.
Compensation
Where possession over standing crops also is delivered under Section 28, the Assistant Consolidation Officer shall determine in the manner prescribed the compensation payable in respect of such crops by the tenure-holder put in possession. Any person aggrieved by an order may, within fifteen days of the date of the order, prefer an appeal before the Consolidation Officer, whose decision thereon shall be final.
Improvements in land quality through improved access to agricultural inputs, fertilizers and more improved access to agricultural inputs, fertilizing techniques; specially the inputs and initiative for distributing agricultural facilities must be made and proper farm design available.