( 4 ) 
The registered title vests in the proprietor 
only a surface right. No right to mine is 
granted by a title under the Land Enactment 
and the State consequently retains all property 
in minerals below the surface of land alienated 
under the Land Enactment. 
The timber and all other jungle produce on 
the surface may be removed from alienated land 
by the proprietor, if he takes out a license and 
under license he may remove from his land 
gravel, stone, coral, shell, guano, sand, loam, 
clay, or anything, such as bricks or lime, manu- 
factured from these materials. But he has the 
right to use all these within his own boundaries 
without license. 
Though no right to mine is given by any 
title under the Land Enactment, it is possible 
for its proprietor to mine land which has been 
alienated for agricultural purposes, if the sanc- 
tion of the Ruler of the State in Council is 
obtained and the Land Enactment title surren- 
dered in exchange for a lease for mining land 
under the Mining Enactment. 
• 
Rules under the Land Enactment provide 
as to how application for land and payment 
therefor may be made, how land is to be sold 
at auction, what are the premium, the rent and 
the fees, how rice land is to be cultivated and 
prohibiting the planting of any specified product 
or the planting of such under conditions pre- 
scribed. 
For the purpose of carrying out the Enact- 
ment there are a number of Collectors of 
