Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SPECIAL DEPUTY COLLECTOR & ANR. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KURRA SAMBASIVA RAO & ORS. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/04/1997
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, S. SAGHIRAHMAD, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NOS. 3795-3814OF 1997
[Arising out os SLP (C) No.15841/95 and SLP (C) No. 11355-
373/96 (CC-702)
O R D E R
Delay condoned.
Substitution ordered.
Leave granted.
This batchof appeals relates to the acquisition of the
lands of 97 acres 42 cents of land situated in the outskirts
of the Tenali town of Guntur District in the State of Andhra
Pradesh. The lands were acquired for the development of the
colony for theweakersections-middleincome group persons
etc. The notification underSection 4(1) of theland
Acquisition Act was publishedon December 9,1980. TheLand
Acquisition officer awarded compensation Rs. 22,940/- per
acre for levelled up land and Rs. 21,700/-per acre for
unlevelled land. On reference, the Subordinate judge, Tenali
by hisaward and decree, dated February 26,1991 award
uniformcompensation atthe rate of Rs.1,00,000/- per acre.
On appeal by the appellantsas well as the claimants
respondents, the High court by judgment and decree dated
March 23,1994,furtherenhanced the compensation to Rs.
23.50 per sq. yard; thus it allowed the appeals of the
respondent-claimants and dismissed those of the appellants.
Thus, these appeals by special leaveand cross appeals by
the respondent-claimants for further enhancement of
compensation. They are disposedof by common order.
The High Court, after rejecting the entire evidence
adducedby theclaimants relied only on a saledeed, Ex. A-
12 dated May 19,1978 relatingto a piece ofland of an
extent of 250 sq. yardwith a thatchedhouse. It worked out
compensation at the rate of Rs. 48/- per sq. yard; onthat
basis, it gavemarginof deduction of 50% of the awarded
compensation, namely, at the rate of Rs. 23.50per sq.yrd.
The question for consideration is; whether the principle
laid down by the HighCourt is correct in law? Theland
Acquisition officer in his award had referred to the
topographical features of the land thus.
"The landsunder acquisition form a
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compact block surrounded on the
north by Tenali-Guntur Railway
Track, onthe east by lands owned
bySouth Central Railways. On the
south by landswhich abut the
Tenali-Guntur highway roadand also
built up area in T.S. No.22 (in the
case for T.S. No.27) and on the
west by Agril lands. T.S. No. 26
and 29 which fall in the compact
block have already been acquired.
The beneficiaries have raised a few
huts here and there. R.S. No. A-250
also formspart ofthe block and it
is under acquisition for house
sites for weakersections
separatelyunder aseparate scheme.
All the lands in the block
under acquisitionbarringa few I
velled up fields are similar
because ofthe following reasons
(1) All the landsare more or less
equally inaccessible from the
township.
(2) All the lands (excepting few
levelled up fields) are read as wet
paddy fields similar in soil
fortility and productivity.
(3) Excepting the few levelled on
plots to level each of the under
acquisition, similar levelling up
cost is requiredto beincurred
which works out to approximately
Rs. 60,000/-per acre in the most
conservative estimate. All the
lands under acquisition have equal
potentiality or otherwiseof being
used as house sites.
In between the blockof lands
under acquisition,there is channel
running in North-south direction
and it touches theGuntur Narakodur
Tenali Road. The channel is now not
inuse.
A metal roadhas been formed
along with the channel bythe side
ofTS. 15 to make across from truck
road to the built up area in T.S.
Nos. 23 and 22.
T.S. No. 142 and T.S.Nos. 12,
13, 14 and 16 which are not under
acquisition fieldin between the
lands under acquisitionand the
Guntur-Narakodur Tenali Road.
Unless these fields are developed
into Township, there is noprospect
of the lands under acquisition
features of a township.
Onlya few fields stand
classifiedin accounts as semidry
and all others stand classified as
wet. Notwithstanding the variation
inclassification, all the lands
under acquisitionexecuting a few
levelled up plots are wet paddy
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fields onground. The few lands
which were not grown with paddy
were cultivated with dry crops like
banana, sugar and chillies. To make
the lands under acquisition
suitable for house sites, the
levels have to be raised by about 2
to3 feetto make themfit for
building purposes. There can be no
two opinions about the difficulty
that is presently being experienced
by personswhopurchase
Agricultural lands in Tenali Town
ingetting earth rooted to those
lands forlevelling themup. From
the experience of the Municipality
which understood levellingwork for
provisionof houses to weaker
sections of the society, it can be
said withcertainty thatthe cost
involved in levelling up these
lands to makethem fit for
residential purposes would be not
less than Rs. 60,000/- peracre.’
Onthe basis of the above factual material collected,
the land Acquisition officer passed his award.The question
arises:whether the acquired lands possessedof potential
value for being used as building sites? The High Court has
found, as pointed out by Shri Sudhir Chandra, learned senior
counselfor the claimants, that the lands arepossessed of
potential value for being used for building purpose. It is
well settled legal position that the claimantsstand in the
position of plaintiffs. Burden of proof is always on the
claimants to prove byadduction of cogent and acceptable
evidence that the lands are capableof fetching higher
compensation than what is determined bythe land Acquisition
officer, whichis only an offer. If the award is accepted
withoutprotest, it binds theparties. It is the bounden
duty of the court to evaluatethe evidence onthe basis of
the human conduct, even if no rebuttalevidence is produced
by theLand Acquisition Officer, to assess themarket value
applying the relevant tests laid down by this Court inbead
role of decisions. InPeriyarand PareekanniRubbersltd.
V/s. State of Kerala [(1991) 4 SCC 195], this Court
considered theentire case law as onthat date, on the
principle of determination of market value andthe relevant
test laid in that behalf. The burdenof proof that the
amount awardedby the land AcquisitionOfficer/Collector is
not adequate is always on the claimant. Theburden is to
adduce relevant and material evidence to establish that the
acquired landsare capable offetching highermarket value
than the amount awarded by the land Acquisition
officer/Collector or that the land Acquisition
Officer/Collector proceeded ona wrongpremiseor applied a
wrong principle of law. The object of the enquiry in a
reference under Section 18 of the Act is to bring on record
the price which the land under acquisition was capable of
fetching in the open market as on the date of the
notification. The relative situation of the acquiredland
which is the subject of the sale transaction, the nature of
the land, its suitability, nature ofthe useto which the
lands are put to on the dateof thenotification, income
derivedor derivable from or any other special distinctive
feature whichthe land is possessed of and thesale
transactions in respect of lands covered by thesame
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notification, are all relevant factors to be takeninto
consideration in determiningthe market value. It is,
therefore, theparamount dutyof thecourts of facts to
subjectthe evidence to very close scrutiny, objectively
assess the evidence tenderedby the parties on proper
consideration thereof in correct perspective to arrive at
adequate and reasonable market value.The attending facts
and circumstances in each case wouldfurnishguidance to
arrive at the market value of the acquired lands. it is
equallyrelevant to consider the neighbourhoodlands as are
possessed ofsimilar potentiality or anyadvantageous
features or any special circumstances available ineach
case. The Court is required to take into account all the
relevant considerations. The Court isrequired to Keep at
the back of its mind that the object of assessment is to
arrive at reasonable and adequate market value of the lands.
In thatprocess, thoughsome guess workis involve, feats of
imagination should be eschewedand mechanical assessment of
the evidence should beavoided. Even in the absence oforal
evidence adduced by the land Acquisition officer or the
beneficiaries the judges are to draw from their experience
the normal human conduct of the parties and bona fide and
genuinesale transactions are guiding star in evaluating the
evidence. Misplaced sympathiesor undue emphasis solely on
the claimants’right to compensation would place very heavy
burden on the public exchequer to which other everyone
contributes by direct or indirect taxes.
Whether fair and reasonable and adequatemarket value
is always a question of fact depends on the evidence
adduced, circumstantial evidence, and probabilities arising
in each case. The guiding star or the acid test would be
whethera hypotheticalwillingvendor would offer the lands
and a willing purchaser in normal human conduct would be
willingto buyas a prudent man in normal human conduct
would be willing to buy as aprudentman in normal market
conditions prevailing in the open market in the locality in
which the acquired lands are situated as on the date of the
notification under Section 4 (1) of the Act; but not an
anxiousbuyer dealing at arm’s length with throw away price,
nor facade of sale orfictitious sales brought about in
quick succession or otherwiseto inflate the market value.
The judge should sit in the arm chair of thesaid willing
buyer and seekan answer to the question whether in the
given set of circumstances as aprudentbuyer he would offer
the same market valuewhich the court proposed to fix for
the acquired lands inthe available market conditions. The
court is therefore, enjoined with the bounden duty of public
function and judicial dispensation indetermination of the
marketvalueof the acquired land and compulsory
acquisition.
The best evidence of the value of propertyare thesale
transaction inrespectof theacquired land to which the
claimant himself is a party; the time at whichthe property
comes to be sold; nature of theconsideration and the manner
in which the transaction cameto be brought out. They are
all relevant factors. In the absenceof such a saledeed
relating to the acquired land, the saletransactions
relating to the neighbouring lands in the vicinity of the
acquired land.In that case, the features required to be
presentare ; it mustbe within a reasonable time of the
date of thenotification;it must be a bonafide
transaction; itshould be a sale of land similar to theland
acquired or land adjacent to the land acquired; and it
should possesssimilar advantageous features. These are
relevant features to be takeninto consideration to prove
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the market value of the acquired land as on the date of the
notification publishedunder Section 4(1) of the Act.This
would be established by examining either the vendor or the
vendee.If it is proved thatthey are not available, the
scribe of the documentmay also be examined inthat behalf.
Sect 51-A of the act only dispenses with the production of
the original sale deed and directs to receive certifiedcopy
for thereason that parties to the saletransaction would be
reluctant topart with the original sale deed since
acquisition proceedingswould take longtime before award of
the compensation attains finality andin the meanwhile the
owner of the sale deedis precluded from usingthe same for
other purposesvis-a-vis thisland. The marking of the
certified copyis perse is not admissiblein evidence
unless it is duly proved and the witnesses, viz., the vendor
or the vendee, are examined. Thisprinciple hasbeen
repeated in a catena ofsubsequent decisions ofthis Court.
InBasant Kumar & Ors. V/s. Union of India& Ors. [1996
(11) SCC 542], this Court pointed out thatdoctrine of
equality in determination of the payment ofsame
compensation to allclaimants covered by thesame
notification, is not a good principle. Treating the entire
villageas oneunit and uniformly determiningcompensation
that basis is not sustainable in law. The Court must always
determine market value prevailing as on the date of
notification under Section 4 (1) of theAct andnot what was
claimedby theparties. Even estimate of claimant is not
decisive. The status of the claimant is irrelevant. It was
reiterated that while determining the compensation under
section23 (1), the Court should sit in the arm chairof a
prudentwilling purchase in the open market and see whether
he would be willing to offer the sameprice as is proposed
to be fixed bythe Land Acquisition Officer asmarket value
for the same or similar lands possessedof all the
advantageous features.This test should always be kept in
mind in analysing theevidence and the Court should answer
affirmatively taking into consideration all the relevant
factors. If feats of imagination are allowed the sway, the
land Acquisition Officer/collector would overstep judicial
decisions/quasi-judicial ordersand would land in misconduct
amenable to disciplinary law. In that case, thecompensation
as fixed by the Land Acquisition officer was reduced. In
Special landAcquisition Officer,Dharwad V/s. Tajar
Hanifabi (Smt.)[(1996)10 SCC 627], the question related to
determination of the market value in respect of 6 acres of
land. When theland in factwas used foragricultural
purpose, no prudent andwiling vendee would offer the market
value on square foot basis. Thus determination of
compensation on the basis of square foot basis on thefoot
of a small saletransaction washeld tobe a wrong principal
of lawand according the determination of compensation was
reducedfrom Rs. 1,96,20\- per acre to 45,000/-per acre.
InAgricultural Produce Market Committee V/s.Land
Acquisition officer and Asstt. Commissioner &Anr. [(1996)
10 SCC 629], same view was reiterated. It was held thatwhen
a total7 acresand oddof landwas sought to be acquired no
prudentpurchaser in the open market would offer to purchase
the open land on square foot basis that too onthe basis of
a few small sale transactions. This court pointed outthat
such fixation of the market value wasillegal and
accordingly reduced themarket value.
Itwould thus b be settled lawthat the court is
enjoined to determine the market value on an objective
assessment of the conditions prevailing in theopen market;
the nature of the user of the land to which theland was put
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on the dateof the notification,the income derived
therefrom and all other relevant attending circumstances.
The market value so determinedshould be just,adequate and
reasonable. Inother words, it must be just equivalent to
what the land is capable of fetching inthe open marketfrom
a willing and prudent buyer, Therefore, the court is
required to sit in thearm chair of a bona fide willing and
prudentpurchaser in the openmarket and seekan answer to
the question whether in the conditions prevailing in the
market he would offerthe same market value as the court
has proposed.
The HighCourt has relied upon the oral evidence
adducedby theclaimants in support ofthe Claim. It is not
in dispute, aseven pointed out by the Land Acquisition
Officer, that there is colony and railway shed etc. near the
acquired lands. But the question is: whether on the date of
the notification, the lands possessed of potential value and
were fit foruse asbuilding site?On thebasis of the
evidence adduced beforethe land Acquisition officer and the
contents of theaward which is always part of the record and
material evidence, it is difficult to accept the contention
of ShriSudhir Chandra that thelands possessedof potential
value for being used for building purpose. Except a small
fraction of land, the elands are agricultural lands. Tomake
them fit for construction, evenaccording to the
conservative estimate,an amount of Rs. 23.50 per acre to
level up the same. Itwould be figment of imagination to
believethat aprudent builder woulddo that. TheHigh
Court, therefore, is clearly in error in treating the lands
as fitfor building purpose and on that basis determining
the compensation after giving the deduction.
The question, therefore, arises:what is the market
value the lands were capable to fetch?In a reference under
Section18, asheld earlier, the burden of proof always is
on theclaimants to establishthat the lands are possessed
of advantageous features and are, therefore, capable of
fetching higher marketvalue than whatis determined by the
Land Acquisition Officer in his awardunder Section 11. In
view ofthe fact that the High Court itself hasrejected all
the sale deedsexcept Ex. A-12which we are now constrained
to reject, andas no other evidence isavailable, we cannot
allow the appeals anddismissthe reference. The Court,
insteadof indulging into feats of imagination, should sit
in thearm chair of a prudent willing purchaser in the
normal conditions of the market and seek answer to the
question whether he would be willingto offer the amount
proposed by the court, after taking into consideration all
the features of the land existing ason thedate of the
notification . In view of the material collected by theland
Acquisition officer himself as referred in the award, we
think that after taking into consideration allthe relevant
factors, the reasonable compensation should beRs. 50.000/-
per acre. The compensation is accordingly awarded.
The question thenis: whether the claimants arealso
entitled to additionalamountunder Section 23(1-A)? The
notification under Section 4(1) of the Act was issued on
December 9, 1980. The possession was taken on June 20,1981.
The Amendment Act 68 of 1984 was introduced onthe floor of
the House onApril 30, 1982. Thus it is clearthat
possession wastaken prior to the introductionof Amendment
Act. However, award under Section 11 was made onJune
19,1982, i.e., after the introduction of the bill but
before the Actcame into force. It would be beneficial to
refer to the transitional provisions contained in Section
30(1) (a) of the Amendment Act which reads as under:
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"30. Transitional Provisions. - (1)
The provisions of sub-section (1-A)
ofSection 23 ofthe principal
Act, as inserted by clause (a) of
Section 15 of this Act, shall
apply, and shall be deemed to have
applied, also to,and inrelation
to,-
(a) every proceeding for the
acquisition of any land
under the principal Act
pending on the 30th day
of April, 1982 (the date
of introduction of the
Land Acquisition
(Amendment) Bill, 1982,
in the Houseof the
People, in whichno award
has been made by the
Collector before that
date;"
InK.S. Paripoornan V/s. state of Kerala &Ors. [(1994)
5 SCC 593] the Constitution Bench considered the effect of
the transitional provisions in section 30 (1) (a). The right
to additional amount 12 per cent per annumon enhanced
compensation was heldto bepart of the component of
determination of compensation. If the proceedingswere
pendingas on the date the notification underSection4(1)
came into force, the provisions of the Amendment Act 68 of
1984 would apply. By operation of the transitional provision
in Sections 30(1) (a), the claimant isentitled to
additional amount @12 per cent per annum to be paid from the
date ofthe notification under Section 4(1) till the date of
depositinto court and where the possessionwas already
taken, from the date of the notification till taking of
possession. Similar view was reiteratedin special Tahsildar
(LA) P.W.D. Schemes, Vijaywada V/s. M.A. Jabbar [(1995) 2
SCC 142] and Khanna Improvement Trust V/s. Land Acquisition
Tribunal & Ors. [(1995) 2 SCC 142]. Accordingly, the
respondent-claimants are entitled to payment of additional
amount@12 per centper annum from the date of the
notification till date of the taking possessionas mentioned
hereinabove.
Payment ofadditional amount underSection23(1-A)is a
substantive right. Under those circumstances,by operation
of thetransitional provisions in Section 30(1)(a), the
claimants are entitledto theadditional amount at 12% per
annum under Section 23 (1-A) from thedate ofnotification
under Section 4(1) till that date of taking possession.
Insteadof Rs.1,00,000/- peracre, they are entitled to
compensation atthe rate of Rs.50,000/- per acre in respect
of allacquired landswith solatium at 30% onthe enhanced
compensation and interest @ 9% for one year from June 20,
1981 and on expiry thereof, @ 15% tilldate ofdepositinto
the court; andadditional amount. Consequently, the award
and decree ofthe referenceCourt stand modified. The
judgment of theHigh court Stands set aside.
The appeals are accordingly allowed. As a result, the
cross appeals of the respondent-claimants stand dismissed.
No costs.