Judgment :- 1. Petitioner, who is the land owner, has filed this original petition challenging the order of the Land Tribunal No.1 Cannanore, dated 29th June, 1984 in O.A. No. 63 of 1983. Petitioner has filed an appeal against this order before the Appellate Authority (Land Reforms), Cannanore. 2. By the said order the Land Tribunal had allowed the application filed by the 3rd respondent for purchase of kudikidappu rights. Infer alia the Land Tribunal had also ordered the kudikidappukaran to be shifted to another portion of the property in exercise of the powers conferred on it under S.80A(9) of the Land Reforms Act, 1963 (the Act, in brief). The land owner is aggrieved in the first instance by the order in so far as it holds that the 3rd respondent is a kudikidappukaran It is not disputed that this part of the order is appealable under S.102 of the Act, and admittedly an appeal has been filed before the second respondent. The grievance of the petitioner in regard to this matter was that there was no incumbent in the office of the Appellate Authority in Cannanore and one of the prayers in the original petition was to issue a writ of mandamus directing the State to make immediate appointment of an Appellate Authority for Cannanore, as envisaged in S, 99A of the Act. It is now stated by Sri. Govind Bharathan for the petitioner and Sri. P V. Narayanan Nambiar for the 3rd respondent that an officer has been appointed to hold the office of the Appellate Authority and that it has therefore become unnecessary to consider this relief claimed in the original petition. 3. The other part of the order Ext. P1 relates to the shifting of the kudikidappu under S.80A(9) of the Act. Petitioner had made an application under S.80A(9) for shifting the kudikidappukaran. This was made in the alternative, without admitting that the 3rd respondent was a kudikidappukaran, to provide against the contingency of the Land Tribunal holding him to be a kudikidappukaran. Petitioner is aggrieved in relation to the particular portion of the property to which the kudikidappukaran is directed to be 'shifted'. Petitioner has challenged that part of the order in this original petition as according to him an order pertaining to S.80A(9) is not appealable under S.102. 4.
Petitioner is aggrieved in relation to the particular portion of the property to which the kudikidappukaran is directed to be 'shifted'. Petitioner has challenged that part of the order in this original petition as according to him an order pertaining to S.80A(9) is not appealable under S.102. 4. I am not inclined to accept the submission of counsel for the petitioner that an order relating to 'shifting' under S.80A(9) is not appealable. The application under S.80A(9) arises in relation to proceedings for purchase of kudikidappu rights under S.80B. It has to be filed within the prescribed time after receipt of notice of the application for purchase under S.80B. What S.80A(9) provides is the substantive right of a land owner to 'shift' a kudikidappukaran to another portion of the same land if the portion to be purchased is so located as to cause inconvenience to him. The Land Tribunal may then require the kudikidappukaran, to purchase another portion of that land. S.80A(9) also details the rights of the kudikidappukaran in relation to the matter of shifting including an option to choose the particular portion of the property to be purchased by him. S.80A(10) provides that if the kudikidappukaran refuses to exercise the option which inheres in him under S.80A(9), his application under S.80B shall be dismissed. While S.80A(9) prescribes the substantive right of shifting the kudikidappukaran, the procedure to be followed in relation to the shifting and for the purchase of the rights of the landowner over the property to which the kudikidappukaran is shifted is laid down in S.80B. It has to be remembered that the kudikidappukaran is entitled to purchase in the ordinary course the kudikidappu occupied by him, and the result of the shifting is that he becomes liable to purchase another portion of the same land, instead of this one. The procedure for such purchase is under S.80B, so that even where there is a shifting under S.80A(9) the final order in the proceeding, which has its origin under S.80B, is only under S.80B. Even in cases where there is shifting under S.80A(9), it has ultimately to culminate in an order of purchase under S.80B. An order under S.80B is appealable under S.102 so that petitioner's apprehension voiced in the Original Petition that the order in so far as it relates to 'shifting' cannot be challenged in his appeal pending before the second respondent, is misplaced.
An order under S.80B is appealable under S.102 so that petitioner's apprehension voiced in the Original Petition that the order in so far as it relates to 'shifting' cannot be challenged in his appeal pending before the second respondent, is misplaced. I hold that he is entitled to raise the correctness or otherwise of the order relating to the interlocutory proceedings under S.80A(9) also in the appeal that he has filed before the Appellate Authority. 5. In this view of the matter, all the contentions regarding Ext P1 are open for decision by the Appellate Authority. The petitioner is free to agitate all those points before the 2nd respondent. The original petition is disposed of clarifying the above point. Issue carbon copy of this judgment to the parties on usual terms.