Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SHYAM BEHARI AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MADHYA PRADESH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
03/02/1964
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
BENCH:
WANCHOO, K.N.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
GUPTA, K.C. DAS
SHAH, J.C.
AYYANGAR, N. RAJAGOPALA
CITATION:
1965 AIR 427 1964 SCR (6) 636
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1965 SC 646 (10)
R 1966 SC1408 (3)
D 1972 SC2290 (4)
F 1980 SC 367 (8,10)
ACT:
Land Acquisition-Whole compensation to be paid by the
company No declaration that the land was needed for a
company-Validity--Test- Land Acquisition Act, (1 of 1894),
ss. 4, 6(1).
HEADNOTE:
The Government issued a notification on December 3, 1960
under s. 6 of the Land Acquisition Act stating that the land
described in the annexure to the notification was required
fora public purpose, namely, for the construction of
buildings for godownsand administrative office.The
appellants challenged the validity of thenotification in
the High Court contending that the notification unders. 6
of the Act did not describe the land to be acquired with
sufficient particularity and that although the notification
mentioned that the land was required for a public purpose,
in fact it was required for a company, which was entirely
different from Government and was therefore invalid. Soon
after the writ petition was filed, the State Government
issued a fresh notification on April 19. 1961 mainly under
s. 17(1) read with s. 17(4) of the Act. The notification
stated that it was declared under s. 6 of the Act that the
land was required for a public purpose, namely, "for the
Premier Refractory Factory and work connected therewith." At
the time of hearing of the writ petition in the High Court,
it was urged on behalf of the appellants that both the
notifications under s. 6 of the December 3, 1960 and April
19.
637
1961 were invalid because the acquisition was not for a
public purpose as stated therein; in fact it was for a
company which was entirely different from Government. The
High Court dismissed the writ petition and held that the
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notifications under s. 6 must in substance and in law be
demed to be for acquisition of land for a company in the
present case.
Held: Where the ’entire compensation is to be paid by a
company. the notification under s. 6 must contain a
declaration that the land is needed for a company. No
notification under s. 6 can be made where the entire
compensation is to be paid by a company declaring that the
acquisition is for a public purpose, for, such a declaration
requires that either wholly or in part, compensation must
come out of public revenues ,or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority.
Pandif Jhandu Lal v. State of Punjab, [1961] 2 S.C.R. 459,
followed.
In the present case, the whole compensation was to be paid
by the company, therefore the notification under s. 6 had to
declare that the land was needed for a company. There was
nothing in either of the two notifications of December 3,
1960 and April 19, 1961 to show that the land was needed for
a company, therefore they were invalid in view of the
proviso to s. 6 (1) of the Act and all proceedings following
on such notifications would be of no effect under the Act.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 177 of 1962.
Appeal by special leave from the judgment and order dated
August 8, 1961, of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc.
Petition No. 81 of 1961.
Naunit Lal, for the appellant.
I.N. shroff for respondents Nos. 14.
Rajani Patel and 1. N. Shroff, for the Intervener.
February 3, 1964. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
WANCHOO J.-This is an appeal by special leave against the
judgment of the Madhya Pradesh High Court. The appellants
filed a writ petition in the High Court challenging the
validity of a notification issued under s. 6 ,of the Land
Acquisition Act, No. 1 of 1894 (hereinafter referred to as
the Act), Their case was that they were ,owners of certain
lands in Chhaparwah. On July 8, 1960. a notification was
issued under s. 4 of the Act to the effect that certain land
in village Chhaparwah was required for a
638
public purpose, namely, "for the construction of buildings,
for godowns and administrative office". Thereafter proceed-
ings appear to have been taken under s. 5-A of the Act and
an inquiry was made by the Collector. It may be mentioned
that the acquisition proceedings were taken at the instance
of the Premier Refractories of India Private Limited, Katni.
which is a company. The Collector reported that the land
was essential for the company and was needed for a public
purpose and the objections of the land-owners has no subst-
ance. He therefore recommended that a declaration under s.
6 of the Act might be made. He also reported that a draft
agreement to be executed between the company and the
Government as required by s. 41 of the Act was being sub-
mitted along with a draft notification under s. 6. This
report was made on October 17, 1960. On December 3. 1960,
the notification under s. 6 was issued stating that the
State Government was satisfied that the land described in
the annexure to the notification was required for a public
purpose, namely, for the construction of buildings for
godowns and administrative office, and hence the
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notification was issued. It may be noticed that the
notification under s. 6 did not say that the land was
required for a company. Thereupon the appellants filed a
writ petition in the High Court on March 20, 1960, and their
main contentions were two, namely. (1) that the notification
under s. 6 did not describe the land to be acquired with
sufficient particularity and was therefore of no effect, and
(2) that the notification mentioned that the land was
required for a public purpose, though in actual fact the
land was required for a company, which was entirely
different from Government and therefore was invalid. Soon
after the writ petition was filed, the State Government
issued a fresh notification on April 19, 1961. This
notification was mainly under s. 17 (1) read with s. 17(4)
of the Act, which provides that in case of urgency, the
State Government may direct the Collector before the award
is made under certain circumstances to take possession of
any waste or arable land needed for a public purpose or for
a company. Curiously enough this notification stated that
the State Government also directed that the provisions of s.
5-A would not apply, though as we have already stated,. an
inquiry under s. 5-A had already been made before the noti-
fication of December 3, 1960 was issued. The notification
639
further stated that it was declared under s. 6 of the Act
that the land was required for a public purpose, namely,
"for the Premier Refractory Factory and work connected
therewith". It appears however that the real reason for
issuing this notification in this form was to make good the
lacuna which appeared in the notification of December 3,
1960 inasmuch as the property to be acquired was not
specified with sufficient particularity in that
notification. It may be noticed that this notification of
April 19, 1961, treating it as a notification under s. 6 as
well, nowhere specified that the land was required for a
company; it only stated that the land was required for a
public purpose, namely, for the Premier Refractory Factory
and work connected therewith.
When the matter came to be argued before the High Court, the
main point that was urged was that both the notifications
under s. 6 of December 3, 1960 and April 19, 1961 were
invalid, because +,he acquisition was not for a public
purpose as started therein; in fact the acquisition was for
a company which was entirely different from Government. The
High Court apparently held that the substance of the
notifications showed that the land was being required for a
public purpose as well as for the purpose of a company. The
High Court was further of the view that insofar as the
declaration spoke of the acquisition of land for a public
purpose it was ineffective, as admittedly the compensation
for the property was to be paid wholly by the company and no
part of it was to be paid out of public funds. Even so, the
High Court held that the declaration must be read in
substance and in law as one for acquisition of land for a
company, namely, the Premier Refractories of India Private
Limited. In this view of the matter, the High Court
dismissed the writ petition.
The only question that has been urged before us on behalf of
the appellants is that the High Court was in error in
reading the two notifications as in substance amounting to a
declaration that the land was required for a company.
Section 6(1) of the Act requires that whenever any land
isneeded for a public purpose or for a company, a
declaration shall be made to that effect.Further the proviso
to s.6(1)provides that no such declaration shall be made
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unless the
640
compensation to be awarded for such property is to be paid
by a company, or wholly or partly out of public revenues or
some fund controlled or managed by a local authority. This
clearly contemplates two kinds of declarations. In the
first place, a declaration may be made that land is required
for a public purpose, in which case in view of the proviso,
the compensation to be awarded for the property to be
acquired must come wholly or partly out of public revenues
or some fund controlled or managed by a local authority. No
declaration under s. 6 for acquisition of land for a public
purpose can be made unless either the whole or part of the
compensation for the property to be acquired is to come out
of public revenues or some fund controlled or managed by a
local authority; see Pandit Jhandu Lal v. State of
Punjab(1). In the second place, the declaration under s. 6
may be made that land is needed for a company in which case
the entire compensation has to be paid by the company. It
is clear therefore that where the entire compensation is to
be paid by a company, the notification under G. 6 must
contain a declaration that the land is needed for a company.
No notification under s. 6 can be made where the entire
compensation is to be paid by a company declaring that the
acquisition is for a public purpose, for such a declaration
requires that either wholly or in part, compensation must
come out of public revenues or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority. In the present case it is not
in dispute that no part of the compensation is to come out
of public revenues or some fund controlled or managed by a
local authority; on the other hand the whole compensation
was to be paid by the company. Therefore the notification
under s. 6 if it was to be valid in the circumstances of the
present case had to declare that the land was needed for a
company. No valid notification under s. 6 could be made in
the circumstances of this case declaring that the land was
needed for a public purpose, for no part of compensation was
to be paid out of public revenues or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority. That is why the High Court
felt that the notification under s. 6 declaring that the
land was needed for a public purpose
(1) [1961] 2 S.C.R. 359.
641
would in the circumstances of this case be ineffective. But
the High Court went on to hold that the notifications under
s. 6 must in substance and in law be deemed to be for
acquisition of land for a company in the present case. We
are of opinion that this view of the High Court is
incorrect. There is nothing in either of the two
notifications dated December 3, 1960 and April 19, 1961 to
show that the land was needed for a company. The
notification of December 3, 1960 says in so many words that
it was required for a public purpose, namely, for the
construction of buildings for godowns and administrative
office. No one reading this notification can possibly think
that the land was needed for a company. Similarly the
notification of April 19, 1961 says that the land was needed
for a public purpose, namely, for the Premier Refractory
Factory and work connected therewith. Now the company for
which the land in this case was in fact required is the
Premier Refractories of India Private Limted, Katni. There
is nothing in the notification of April 19, 1961 to show
that the land was needed for this company or any other
company. All that the notification of April 19, 1961 says
is that the land was needed for a public purpose, and the
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public purpose mentioned there was that the land was
required for the Premier Refractory Factory and work
connected therewith. The High Court thought that in
substance this purpose showed that the land was required for
the company mentioned above. But we do not see how, because
the purpose specified was for the Premier Refractory Factory
and work connected therewith, it can be said that the
notification declared that the land was needed for the
company. It is not impossible for the Government or for a
local body to own such a factory and construct works in
connection therewith. The mere fact that the public purpose
mentioned was for the Premier Refractory Factory and work
connected therewith, therefore, cannot mean that the land
was needed for a company; as one reads the notification of
April 19, 1961 one can only come to the conclusion that the
land was needed for a public purpose, namely, for the
construction of some work for a factory. There is no
mention of any company anywhere in this notification and it
cannot necessarily be concluded that the Premier Refractory
Factory was a com-
134-159 S.C.-41
642
pany, for a "factory" is something very different from a "
company" and may belong to a company or to Government or to
a local body or even to an individual. The mere fact that
the public purpose declared in the notification was for the
Premier Refractory Factory and work connected therewith
cannot therefore lead to the inference that the acquisition
was for a company. It follows that when the two
notifications declared that the land was needed for a public
purpose in a case where no part of the compensation was to
come out of public revenues or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority, they were invalid in view of
the proviso to s. 6(1) of the Act. All proceedings
following on such notifications would be of no effect under
the Act.
We therefore allow the appeal and set aside the order of the
High Court and quash the notifications under s. 6 of the Act
and restrain the respondents from taking any steps towards
the acquisition of the land notified thereunder. As however
the point on which the appellants have succeeded was not
specifically taken in the writ petition, we direct the
parties to bear their own costs throughout.
Appeal allowed.