Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
U.P. AVAS EVAM VIKAS PARISHAD
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
JAINUL ISLAM & ABR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 21/01/1998
BENCH:
S.C. AGRAWAL, B.N. KIRPAL, V.N. KHARE
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
[WITH CIVIL APPEALS NOS. 6383/95,
6358/95, 6368/95, 6353/95,
6370/95, 6369/95, 6371/95, 6363/95,
6357/95, 6361/95, 6356/95, 6376/95,
6359/95, 7645/95, 7361/95, 7362/95,
7363/95, 6373/95, 6374/95, 6375/95,
6382/95, 6382/95, 6347/95, 6354/95,
6344/95, 6345/95, 6355/95, 6350/95,
6362/95, 6364/95, 7357/95, 7358/95,
7360/95, 7359/95, 7356/95, 7644/95,
7364/95, 7365/95, 6351/95, 6349/95,
6377/95, 6372/95, 6365/95,
13191/96, 222/97, WRIT PETITIONS
NOS. 224/97, 339/97, CIVIL APPEALS
NOS. 363, 336-362,335,364/98
{arising out of Special Leave
Petitions (Civil) Nos. 11170/95,
10512-10538/95, 10147/95 and
9549/95} AND SPECIAL LEAVE
PETITIONS (CIVIL) NOS. 20601 and
20599 of 1995]
J U D G M E N T
S.C. AGRAWAL, J. :
(A) CIVIL APPEALS NOS. 6343/95, 6383/95, 6358/95, 6368/95,
6353/95, 6370/95, 6369/95, 6371/95, 6363/95, 6357/95,
6361/95, 6356/95, 6376/95,6359/95, 7646/95, 7361/95,
7362/95, 7363/95, 6373/95, 6374/95, 6375/95, 6352/95,
6382/95, 6347/95, 6354/95, 6344/95, 6345/95, 6355/95,
6350/95, 6362/95, 6364/95, 7357/95, 7358/95, 7360/95,
359/95, 7356/95, 7644/95, 7364/95, 7365/95, 6351/95,
6349/95, 6377/95, 6372/95, 6365/95, 6360/95, AND CIVIL
APPEALS NOS. .............{arising out of Special leave
Petitions (Civil) Nos. 11170/95, 10512-10538/95,
101047/95, and 9549//95}
Leave granted in Special Leave Petitions (Civil) Nos.
1170/95, 10512-10538/95, 10147/95, and 9549/95.
These appeals are directed against the judgment of the
Allahabad High Court dated December 7, 1994 in appeals
arising out of proceedings for acquisition of land in
connection with the housing scheme framed by the U.P. Avas
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Evam Vikas Parishad [hereinafter referred to as ‘the
Parishad’] under the provisions of The Uttar Pradesh AVas
Evam Vikas Parishad Adhiniyam, 1965 [hereinafter referred to
as ‘the Adhiniyam]. They raise common questions relating to
the applicability of the provisions contained in the Land
Acquisition (Amendment) Act, 1984 [hereinafter referred to
as ‘the 1984 Act] to acquisition of land for executing the
sald scheme. The amendment in Sections 23(2) and 28 the
solatium payable under Section 23(2) has been enhanced from
15% to 30% and the interest payable under Section 28 has ben
enhanced from 6% to 9% and 15%.
The Parishad is a housing and development board
established under Section 3 of the Adhiniyam. Under Section
15 of the Adhiniyam one of the functions of the Board is "to
frame and execute housing and improvement schemes and other
projects". In accordance with the provisions of the
Adhiniyam the Parishad framed the "Bhomi Vikas Evam
Grihasthan Yojana No 10 between Meerut-Hapur and Meerut-
Delhi Road in Meerut". By Notification dated July 23, 1983
(published in the U.P. Government Gazette dated August 27,
1983) issued under Section 28 of the Adhiniyam the Parishad
notified the said scheme. The scheme was prepared with a
view to solving the acute housing problem in the Meerut city
and it covered lands lying in the outskirts of Meerut city.
The said notification was followed by Notification dated
July 15, 1985 (published in the U.P. Government Gazette
dated August 3, 1985) issued under Section 32(1) of the
Adhiniyam. The said notification dated July, 15,1985 was in
respect of land covering 202.48 acres equivalent to 9,07,954
sq. yards which was to be acquired under Section 55 of the
Adhiniyam whereby the provisions of the L.A. Act, as
modified by the Schedule to the Adhiniyam, have been made
applicable to acquisition of land for the purposes of the
Adhiniyam. After the issuance of the said notifications, the
Land Acquisition Officer initiated proceedings to determine
the compensation to be paid to the land owners whose lands
were acquired in accordance with provisions of the L.A. Act
as modified under the Schedule to the Adhiniyam. The Land
Acquisition Officer determined the market value of the land
so acquired at Rs. 30/- per sq, yard and the compensation
was offered to the land owners on that basis. The land
owners claimed compensation at a higher rate of Rs. 150/-
per sq yard and sought reference under Section 18 of the
L.A. Act and thereupon references were made to the Civil
Court for determination of such claims of the land owners.
By judgment dated December 12, 1991, the Civil Court,
namely, the Additional District Judgment Meerut determined
the marked value of the land at Rs. 150/- per sq yard but he
made a deduction of 10% out of it since the land acquired
constituted a large area. Feeling aggrieved by the said
determination made by the Civil Court the Parishad and the
State of Uttar Pradesh jointly filed appeals before the
Allahabad High Court. Some of the land owners filed cross-
objections wherein they confined their challenge to the
deduction of 10% that was made by the Civil Court. By the
impugned judgment dated December /, 1994 the High Court has
partly allowed the appeals filed by the Parishad and has
assessed the market value of the land at Rs. 110/- per sq
yard and, instead of a deduction of 10% made by the Civil
Court on account of the large area of the land. The High
Court has, therefore, fixed the market value f the land at
Rs. 73/- per sq. yard. The cross-objections filed by the
land owners have been dismissed. The High Court has,
however, held that the amendments introduced in the L.A. Act
by the 1984 Act are applicable to acquisition of land for
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the purposes of the Adhiniyam and the land owners are
entitled to all the statutory benefits under the L.A. Act as
amended by the 1984 Act so far as applicable to them.
Feeling aggrieved by the said decision of the High Court,
the Parishad has filed Civil Appeals Nos. 6343/95, 6383/95,
6358/95, 6368/95, 6353/95, 6370/95, 6369/95, 6371/95,
6363/95, 6357/95, 6361/95, 6356/95, 6376/95, 6359/95,
7646/95, 7361/95, 7362/95, 7363/95, 6373/95, 6374/95,
6375/95, 6352/95, 6382/95, 6347/95, 6354/95, 6344/95,
6345/95, 6355/95, 6350/95, 6362/95, 6364/95, 7357/95,
7358/95, 7360/95, 7359/95, 7356/95, 7644/95, 7364/95,
7365/95, 6351/95, 6349/95, 6377/95, 6372/95, 6365/95, and
6360/95, before this Court. Felling aggrieved by the
reduction in the market value by the High Court some of the
claimants have filed Civil Appeals arising out of Special
Leave Petitions (Civil) Nos. 11170/95, 105112-10538/95, and
9579/95. The claimants, who are respondents in Civil Appeals
Nos. 6353/95, and 6363/95, filed by the Parishad, have
filed Writ Petitions Nos. 224/95, and 339/95, under Article
32 of the Constitution wherein they have challenged the
validity of the provisions contained in the L.A. Act as
applicable in the matter of acquisition of land for the
purposes of the Adhiniyam by virtue of Section 55 read with
the Schedule to the Adhiniyam.
It would be convenient, at this stage, to briefly refer
to the relevant provisions of the Adhiniyam.
The Adhiniyam has been enacted by the U.P. State
Legislature to provide of the Adhiniyam.
The Adhiniyam has been enacted by the U.P. State
Legislature to provide for the establishment, incorporation
and functioning of a housing and development Board in the
State of Uttar Pradesh. It had received the assent of the
President. Section 3 of the Adhiniyam provides for
constitution of the Board and in accordance with the said
provision the Parishad had been constituted by the State
Government as a Board under the Adhiniyam. By virtue of
Section 3(3) of the Adhiniyam the Parishad is a local
authority for the purposes of the L.A. Act. Section 15 of
the Adhiniyam enumerates the functions of the Board and one
of the function thus enumerated is to frame and execute
housing and improvement schemes and other projects. Section
16 provides that the Board may on its own motion or at the
instance of a local authority frame a housing or improvement
scheme and the Board shall frame such a scheme when so
direct by the State Government. Section 17 prescribed the
matters whish are required to be provided for in such a
scheme. One of the matters to be provided is "the
acquisition by purchase, exchange or otherwise of any
property necessary for or affected by the execution of the
scheme". Sub-section (1) of Section 28 provides that when
any housing or improvement scheme has been framed the Board
shall prepare a notice to that effect specifying the matters
mentioned in clauses (a) to (a). Sub-section (2) of Section
28 requires such notice to be published in the manner laid
down therein. Section 29 provides for service on the persons
or classes of persons of a notice stating that the Board
proses to acquire any specified land or building for the
execution of the scheme. Section 30 makes provision for
filling of objections against the scheme. Section 31
provides for sanctioning of the scheme, with or without
modifications after considering the objections received
under the Section 30, by the Board if the estimated cost of
the scheme does not exceed twenty lakhs of rupees and by the
State Government if it exceeds the said amount. Sub-Section
(1) of Section 32 provides that whenever the Board or the
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State Government sanctions a housing or improvement scheme,
it shall be notified in the Gazette and sub-section (2) lays
down that the notification under Sub-Section (1) in respect
of any scheme shall be conclusive evidence that the scheme
has been duly framed and sanctioned. In cases where the
scheme is sanctioned by the Board an appeal lies to the
State Government against the decision of the Board under
Sub-Section (3) of Section 32 and if the scheme is altered
or cancelled by the State Government on such appeal the
cancellation of alteration is altered or cancelled by the
State Government on such appeal the cancellation or
alteration is required to be notified in the Gazette under
sub-section (4) of Section 32. In Section 38 provision is
made for transfer to the Board of any building or land or
any street, or any part thereof, vested in a local authority
which lies within the area comprised in any housing or
improvement scheme and for payment by the Board to the local
authority, as compensation, a sum equal to the market value
of such land or building or both, as the case may be, as on
the date on which the scheme comes into force. Section 39
makes provision for transfer of any private street or square
or part thereof which the public or any section of the
public has right to pass along or use and which is not
vested in the Board or in any local authority for executing
any housing or improvement scheme and for payment to the
previous owner compensation determined on the basis of the
market value, on the date of vesting, of his rights therein.
Section 55 of the Adhiniyam makes the following provisions
regarding acquisition of land that is required by the Board
for any of the purposes of the Adhiniyam :-
Section 55. Power to acquire land.-
(1) Any land or any interest
therein required by the Board for
any of the purposes of this Act,
may be acquired under the
provisions of the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894 (Act No.1 of 1894), as
amended in its application to Uttar
Pradesh, which for this purpose
shall be subject to the
modifications specified in the
Schedule to this Act.
(2) If any land is respect of which
betterment fee has been leveled
under this Act is subsequently
required for any of the purposes of
this Act, such levy shall not be
deemed to prevent the acquisition
of the land under the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (Act No. 1 of
1894)."
Section 56 empowers the Board, by agreement with any
person, to purchase, lease or exchange any land or any
interest therein required by it for any of the purposes of
the Adhiniyam. Section 64 makes provision for the
constitution of one or more Tribunals for the purposes of,
inter alia, performing the functions of the Court with
reference to the acquisition of land for the Board under the
L.A. Act, as modified by the Schedule to the Adhiniyam.
The Schedule to the Adhiniyam sets out the
modifications in the L.A. Act, as amended, in its
application to the State of Uttar Pradesh. As per the said
modifications :-
(i) Clause (i) has been inserted in Section 3 of the
L.A. Act to define "local authority" as including "the
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Board".
(ii) The first publication in the Official Gazette of a
notice of any housing or improvement scheme under
Section 28 or under clause (a) of sub-section (3) of
Section 31 of the Adhiniyam has been substituted for
and shall have, in relation to any land proposed to be
acquired under the Scheme, the same effect as
publication in the Official Gazette of a notification
under sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the L.A. Act.
(iv) The publication of a notification under sub-
section (1) or, as the case may be, under sub-section
(4) of Section 32 of the Adhiniyam in the case of land
acquired under any housing or improvement scheme under
the Adhiniyam has been substituted for and shall have
the same effect as a declaration by the State
Government under Section 6 of the L.A. Act.
(v) Sub-section (1) of Section 17 of the L.A. Act has
been substituted. In Sub-Section (1), so substituted,
it is provided that whenever the State Government so
directs in the interest of the expeditious execution of
housing or improvement scheme under the Adhiniyam, the
Collector, though no such award has been made, may on
the expiration of fifteen days from the publication of
the notice mentioned in sub-section (1) of Section 9
take possession of any land needed for the purposes of
the Adhiniyam and such land shall thereupon vest
absolutely in the Government free from all
encumbrances.
(vi) Section 17-A has been inserted in the L.A. Act.
The said provision reads as under:-
"Section 17-A Transfer of land to
Board,- In every case referred to
in Section 16 or Section 17, the
Collector shall upon payment of the
cost of acquisition make over
charge of the land to the Housing
Commissioner, or an officer
authorised in this behalf under the
Uttar Pradesh Avas Evam Vikas
Parishad Adhiniyam, 1965, and the
land shall, thereupon vest in the
Board subject to the liability of
the Board to pay any further costs
which may be incurred on account of
its acquisition."
(vii) In Section 23 of the L.A. Act for existing
explanation to the clause "firstly" the following
provision has been substituted :-
"Explanation.- In judging the
market value aforesaid in any case
where a land is acquired under a
housing or improvement scheme under
the Uttar Pradesh Avas Evam Vikas
Parishad Adhiniyam, 1965, If any
building has been erected, re-
erected, added or altered in
contravention of the provisions of
clause (a) of Sub-Section (3) of
Section 24, or Section 35 of the
said Adhiniyam, any increase in the
market value of resulting from
such erection, re-erection,
addition or alteration shall be
disregarded."
(viii) After the existing sub-section (1) in Section 23
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of the L.A. Act the following sub-section (2) has been
added :-
"(2) In addition to be market value
of the land as above provided, the
court shall in every case award a
sum of fifteen percentum of such
marked value in consideration of
the compulsory nature of the
acquisition."
(ix) In Section 49 after sub-section (1) the following
sub-section (1-a) has been added :-
"(1-a) For the purposes of sub-
section (1), land which is held
with and attached to a house and is
reasonable required for the
enjoyment and use of the house
shall be deemed to be part of the
house."
In this context, it may be mentioned that prior to the
enactment of the Adhiniyam the Uttar Pradesh State
Legislature had enacted the Land Acquisition (U.P.
Amendment) Act, 1954 [U.P. Act 22 of 1954] [hereinafter
referred to as ‘the 1954 Act’ where by the L.A. Act in its
application to the State of Uttar Pradesh, in so far as it
relates to acquisitions of land except for the purposes of
the Union, had been amended and it was to have effect in the
State subject to the amendments specified in the Schedule to
the 1954 Act. One of amendments that was so introduced was
in Section 23 of the L.A. Act whereby the following
explanation was added in clause (1) of Section 23 :-
"Explanation.- In judging the
market value aforesaid in any case
where the land acquired for or in
connection with sanitary
improvement or any kind or planned
development due regard shall be had
to the insanitary and unhygenic
conditions of the land on the date
aforesaid."
The other amendment was the deletion of sub-section (2) of
Section 23.
By the Land Acquisition (U.P. Amendment) Act, 1972
(U.P. Act, No. 28 of 1972) [hereinafter referred to as ‘the
1972 Act] the L.A. Act, as applicable in the State of Uttar
Pradesh, was further amended and the Explanation that was
inserted in sub-section (1) of Section 23 by the 1954 Act
was omitted and sub-section (2) of Section 23 which was
deleted by the 1954 Act was restored. This would show that
in 1965 when the Adhiniyam was enacted solatium @ 15% was
not payable under Section 23 of the L.A. Act in respect of
acquisition of land in the State of Uttar Pradesh when such
acquisition was not for the purposes of the Union and while
enacting the Adhiniyam the Legislature made provision for
payment of such solatium. Thus there was disparity in the
matter of payment of solatium in respect acquisition of
land for the purposes of the Adhiniyam and acquisitions of
land under the provision of the L.A. Act as applicable in
the State of Uttar Pradesh where such acquisition was not
for the purposes of the Union. This disparity stood removed
after the enactment of the 1972 Act whereby sub-section (2)
was introduced in the L.A. Act as applicable in the State of
Uttar Pradesh.
By the 1984 Act the L.A. Act has been amended and
amongst the amendments that have been made the following are
relevant:
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(i) Sub-section (1-A_ was inserted
in Section 23 whereby an additional
amount calculated at the rate of
12% per annum on the market value
of land as determined under sub-
section (1) of Section 23 has to be
awarded by the Court for the period
commencing on and from the date of
the publication of notification
under Section 4(1) in respect of
such land to the date of the award
of the Collector or to the date of
taking possession of land,
whichever is earlier.
(ii) The rate of solatium payable
under Section 23(2) had been
enhanced from 15% to 30%.
(iii) The rate of interest payable
of the excess amount of
compensation under Section 28 had
been enhanced from 6% to 9% per
annum when the excess amount is
paid within one year of the date on
which the Collector took possession
of the land and where the excess
amount is paid after the expiry of
the period of one year interest
would be payable @ 15% per annum
from the date of expiry of the
period of one year.
The 1984 Act, being a subsequent parliamentary
enactment, overrides the 1972 Act by virtue of Article
254(2) of the Constitution and as a result in the State of
Uttar Pradesh in the event of land being acquired under the
provisions of the L.A. Act, as applicable in the said State,
the land owner is entitled to payment of compensation and
interest in accordance with the provisions of Sections 23
and 28. as amended by the 1984 Act. Since there has been no
corresponding amendment in the Adhiniyam the question has
arisen whether the benefit of the amendments introduced in
the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act can be extended to land owners
whose land is acquired for the purposes of the Adhiniyam on
the basis of the provisions of the L.A. Act as modified by
the Adhiniyam.
In Gauri Shankar Gaur and Ors. vs. State of U.P. and
Ors.,1994 (1) SCC 92, a bench of two Judges of this Court
(K. Ramaswamy and R.M. Sahai ]].) has dealt with the
question regarding the applicability of the 1984 Act to
acquisition of land under the provisions of the Adhiniyam in
the context of the first proviso it had been prescribed that
no declaration in respect of any particular land covered by
a notification under Section 4(1) published after the
commencement of the Land Acquisition (Amendment and
Validation) Ordinance, 1967, but before the commencement of
the 1984 Act, shall be made after the expiry of the three
years from the date of the publication of the notification.
In that case the notification under Section 28(1) of the
Adhiniyam was published in the Gazette on September 8, 15
and 22 of 1973 and the notification under Section 32(1) of
the Adhiniyam was published on August 27, 1977, i.e., after
the expiry of three years. A contention was raised that the
notification under Section 32 was required to be issued
within three years from the date of the notification under
Section 28(1) on the basis of the first proviso to Section 6
of the earlier Act. It was urged that the amendment
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introduced in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act, including the
first proviso to Section 6, are applicable to acquisition of
land under the Adhiniyam. Although both the learned Judges
have concurred in upholding the validity of the acquisition,
but there was difference of opinion between them on some of
the questions that came up for consideration. One of the
questions arising for consideration was whether the
provision of the L.A. Act have been incorporated by
reference in the Adhiniyam by virtue of Section 55 read with
the Schedule to the Adhiniyam and as a consequence any
amendment made in the earlier Act after the enactment of the
Adhiniyam does not, ipso facto, apply to an acquisition of
the purposes of the Adhiniyam on the basis of the provisions
of the L.A. Act as modified by the Adhiniyam.
Ramaswamy J. was of the view that Section 55 of the
Adhiniyam read with the Schedule made an express
incorporation of the provisions of Section 4(1) and Section
6 as modified and incorporated in the Schedule and that the
Schedule effected necessary structural amendments to
Sections 4,5,17 and 23 incorporation therein the procedure
and principles with necessary modifications and that it is a
complete code in itself. He, therefore, held that Section 55
and the Schedule adopted only by incorporation Sections 4(1)
and 6(1) and the subsequent amendments to Section 6 did not
become part of the Adhiniyam and they have no effect on the
operation of the provisions of the Adhiniyam. Sahai J.,
however, took a contrary view. He was of the opinion that
whether a legislation was by way of incorporation or by was
of reference is more a matter of construction by the courts
keeping in view the language employed by the enactment, the
purpose of referring or incorporating provisions of an
existing Act and the effect of it on the day to day working.
According to the learned Judge such legislation by
incorporation is subject to exceptions and that one such
situation where legislation by incorporation is excluded is
if it creates difficulty in day to day working. The learned
Judge was of the view that in our constitutional set up the
exception can be extended further and the Courts should lean
against a construction which may result in discrimination.
He, therefore, held that the amendments introduced in the
L.A. Act was applicable to acquisition for the purposes of
the Adhiniyam also. The learned Judge, however, took note of
the fact that the Parishad had entered into possession and
had constructed housing colonies as there was no interim
order in favour of the land owners during pendency of the
writ petitions in the High Court and observed that larger
social interest requires this Court to mould the relief in
such manner that justice may not suffer. He, therefore, held
that even though publication of declarations under the Act
were beyond the period of three years it was not in the
interest of justice to quash the proceedings but the land
owners should be paid compensation of the land acquired on
market value prevalent in the year in which the declaration
analogous to Section 6 of the earlier Act was
published/issued by fictionally assuming that fresh
notification under the Act analogous to Section 4 was issued
in that year.
Another question that came up for consideration in
Gauri Shankar Gaur (supra) was whether the provisions
contained in the L.A. Act, as amended by Section 55 read
with the Schedule to the Adhiniyam, have ceased to operate
after the enactment of the 1984 Act in view of Article 254
of the Constitution for the reason that the provisions
contained in the Adhiniyam are repugnant to the provisions
contained in the L.A. Act as amended by the 1984 Act.
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Ramaswamy J. has dealt with this question and has held that
the Adhiniyam was a law made under Entry 6, Entry 5 and
Entry 66 of List 11 (State List) and incidentally it took
recourse to Entry 42 of List III (Concurrent List) and that
since the main purpose of the Adhiniyam was not the
acquisition of the property, as the provisions do indicate
in pith and substance that they did not occupy the same
field, it was not fully inconsistent and were not absolutely
irreconcilable with the L.A. Act as amended by the 1984 Act
and that the Adhiniyam and the earlier Act both do co-exist
independently with out in any was colliding with the earlier
Act and, therefore, Section 55 and the Schedule did not
become void under the proviso to Article 254 (2) of the
Constitution. Sahal.J. has, however, not considered the said
question of repugnancy of the Adhiniyam to the L.A. Act as
amended by the 1984 Act.
Since there was difference of opinion between the
learned Judges the question regarding the applicability of
the 1984 Act to acquisitions for the purpose of the
Adhiniyam in Gauri Shankar Gaur (supra), these matters have
bee n directed to be heard by a Bench of three Judges and
that is how these matters have come up before us.
Shri S.B. Sanyal, the learned senior counsel appearing
for the Parishad, has placed reliance on the judgment of
Ramaswamy ]. in Gauri Shankar Gaur (supra) and has urged
that the provisions of the L.A. Act, as modified by the
Schedule to the Adhiniyam, have been incorporated into the
Adhiniyam and as a consequence of such incorporation the
provisions of the L.A. Act as modified must be read as a
part of the Adhiniyam itself and any amendment made in the
L.A. Act after the enactment of the Adhiniyam would not,
ipso facto, apply so as to have the effect of modifying
those provisions contained in the Adhiniyam and, therefore,
the amendments introduced in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act
would not apply to an acquisition made for the purposes of
the Adhiniyam on the basis of the provisions of L.A. Act as
modified by the Adhiniyam. On behalf of the land owners
reliance has been placed on the judgment of Sahai J. in
Gauri Shankar Gaur (supra) and has been submitted that the
amendments introduced in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act are
applicable to an acquisition for the purposes of the
Adhiniyam.
A subsequent legislation of ten makes a reference to an
earlier legislation so as to make the provision of the
earlier legislation applicable to matters covered by the
later legislation. Such a legislation may either be (i) a
referential legislation which merely contains a reference to
or the citation of the provisions of the earlier statute; or
(ii) a legislation by incorporation where under the
provisions of the earlier legislation to which reference is
made are incorporated into the late legislation by
reference. If it is a referential legislation the provisions
of the earlier legislation to which reference is made in the
subsequent legislation would be applicable as it stands on
the date of application of such earlier legislation to
matters referred to n the subsequent legislation. In other
words, any amendment made in the earlier legislation after
the date of enactment of the subsequent legislation would
also be applicable. But if it is a legislation by
incorporation the rule of construction is that repeal of the
earlier statute which is incorporated does not affect
operation of the subsequent statue in which it has been
incorporated. So also any amendment in the statue which has
been so incorporated that is made after the date of
incorporation of such statute does not affect the subsequent
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statute in which it is incorporated and the provisions of
the statue which have been incorporated would remain the
same as they were at the time of incorporation and the
subsequent amendments are not to be read in the subsequent
legislation. In the words of Lord Esher, M.R. the legal
effect of such incorporation by reference "is to write those
sections into the new Act just as if they had been actually
written in it with the pen or printed in it, and, the moment
you have those clauses in the later Act, you have no
occasion to refer to the former Act at all."
[See : Wood’s Estate, Re, (1886) 31 Ch D 607. at p. 615]. as
to whether a particular legislation falls in the category of
referential legislation or legislation by incorporation
depends upon the language used in the statute in which
reference is made to the earlier legislation and other
relevant circumstances. The legal position has been thus
summed up by this Court in State of Madhya Pradesh v. M.V.
Narasimhan 1976 (1) SCR 6, :-
"where a subsequent Act incorporates provisions of a
previous Act. Then the borrowed provisions become an
integral and independent part of the subsequent Act and
are totally unaffected by any repeal or amendment in
the previous Act. This principle, however, will not
apply in the following cases :
(a) Where the subsequent Act and
the previous Act are
supplemental to each other;
(b) where the two Acts are in pari
materia;
(c) where the amendment in the
previous Act, if not imported
into the subsequent Act also,
would render the subsequent
Act wholly unworkable and
ineffectual; and
(d) where the amendment of the
previous Act, either expressly
or by necessary intendment,
applies the said provisions to
the subsequent Act." [p. 14]
Section 55 of the Adhiniyam makes a reference to the
provisions of the L.A. Act, as amended in its application to
Uttar Pradesh, and has laid down that any land or any
interest therein required by the Parishad for any of the
purposes of the Adhiniyam may be acquired under the
provisions of the L.A. Act as a amended in its application
to Uttar Pradesh which for this purpose has to be subject to
the modifications specified in the Schedule to the
Adhiniyam. A number of modifications have been made in the
various provisions of the L.A. Act that have been made
applicable in respect of acquisition for the purposes of the
Adhiniyam. The publication of the notification under Section
28(1) of the Adhiniyam has been equated with a notice under
sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the L.A. Act and the
publication of a notification under Section 32(1) of the
Adhiniyam has been equated with a declaration under Section
6 of the L.A. Act. As regards compensation modification has
been made by inserting sub-section (2) in Section 23 of the
L.A. Act, as it was applicable in the State of Uttar
Pradesh. As pointed out earlier, in the L.A. Act, in its
application to the State of Uttar Pradesh, in so far as it
related to acquisitions of land except for the purposes of
the Union, sub-section (2) was inserted in Section 23 of the
L.A. Act in its application to acquisition for the purposes
of the Adhiniyam.
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Previous similar to Section 55 of the Adhiniyam are
found in other enactments providing for urban improvement.
One such enactment was the Calcutta Improvement Act, 1911,
where under the Board to Trustees of the Calcutta
Improvement Trust was entrusted with very wide powered for
the purpose of carrying improvements schemes within the
municipal limits of Calcutta. The said powers included the
power of compulsory acquisition of land. In Part 4 of the
said Act it was provided that the Trustees may make such
acquisitions under the L.A. Act but the L.A. Act was
modified for the purposes of the Calcutta Improvement Trust.
The modifications were contained partly in the body of the
Improvement Act and partly in a Schedule attached to the
Improvement Act. One of the departures from the L.A. Act was
that under the Improvement Act a Tribunal was constituted to
take the place of a Court under the L.A. Act except for the
purposes of Section 54 of the said Act and as a consequence
there was no general right of appeal to the High Court which
right was available under the L.A. Act. By an amendment made
contemporaneously by Act 18 of 1911 passed by the Governor-
General in Council the Calcutta Improvement Act was amended
and a right of appeal to the High Court from the Tribunal
was conferred. Subsequently by Act 19 of 1921 an amendment
was introduced in the L.A. Act whereby a right of appeal to
His Majesty in Council from any decree passed by the High
Court on appeal from an award of the Court was conferred. In
Secretary of State v. Hindustan Co-operative Insurance
Society Ltd., Air 1931 PC 149, a question arose whether the
said amendment in the L.A. Act was applicable so as to
confer a right of appeal to the Privy Council against the
judgment of the High Court in an appeal from the Tribunal.
The said question was answered in the negative by the Privy
Council. After referring to Part 4 of the Calcutta
Improvement Act and the modifications that were made in the
L.A. Act, their Lordships observed:-
"The modifications are contained
partly in the body of the Act and
partly in a schedule to the Act.
They are numerous and substantial
and the effect is, in their
Lordships’ opinion to enact for the
purposes of the local Act a special
law for the acquisition of land by
the trustees within the limited
area over which their powers
extend. [pp. 150, 151]
"Their Lordships’ regard the local
Act as doing nothing more than
incorporating certain provisions
from an existing Act, instead of
setting out for itself at length
the provisions which it was desired
to adopt" [p.152]
It was held that the amendment that was introduced in
the L.A. Act in 1921 could not be regarded as incorporated
in the Calcutta Improvement Act because the same was not
part of the L.A. Act when the Calcutta Improvement Act was
passed, nor in adopting the provisions of the L.A. Act was
there anything to suggest that the Bengal Legislature
intended to bind themselves to any future additions which
might be made the L.A. Act and that Act 19 of 1921 also did
not contain any provision that the amendments enacted by it
were to be treated as in any way retrospective or were to be
regarded as affecting any other enactment than the L.A. Act
itself.
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The provisions of Section 55 read with the Schedule to
the Adhiniyam are on the same lines as those contained in
the Calcutta Improvement Act, 1911 and the principles laid
down in Secretory of State v. Hindustan Co-operative
Insurance Society Ltd. (supra) are equally applicable to the
present case. The amendments introduced in the L.A. Act by
the 1984 Act were not part of the L.A. Act, as applicable in
the State of Uttar Pradesh, at the time of passing of the
Adhiniyam. The provisions of the L.A. Act, as amended in its
application to U.P., with the modifications specified in
the Schedule to the Adhiniyam, have, therefore, to be
treated to have been incorporated by reference into the
Adhiniyam and became an integral part of the Adhiniyam and
the said provisions would remain unaffected by any
subsequent repeal or amendment in the L.A. Act unless any of
the exceptional situations indicated in State of Madhya
Pradesh v. M.V. Narasimhan (supra) cam be attracted.
In Gauri Shankar Gaur (supra) Sahai J. has stated that
the language of Section 55 of the Adhiniyam permitting
acquisition on under the provisions of the L.A. Act, as
amended in its application to Uttar Pradesh, with
modifications specified in the Schedule to the Adhiniyam, is
widely different from the language used in the Calcutta
Improvement Act and further that the decision of the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Secretary of
State v. Hindustan Co-operative Insurance Society Ltd
(supra) turned on the principle that specific excludes
general. We find it difficult to agree with the said view of
the learned Judge. As noticed earlier by Part 4 of the
Calcutta Improvement Act, 1911, which dealt with the
acquisition of land for the purposes of that Act, the L.A.
Act had been modified for the purposes of the Calcutta
Improvement Act and the said modifications were contained
partly in the body of the Calcutta Improvement Act and
partly in the Schedule attached to the Act and on that basis
it was held by the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
that the effect of the said provisions was to enact for the
purposes of the Calcutta Improvement Act a special law for
acquisition of land by the trustees within the limited area
over which their powers tended and the Calcutta Improvement
act was regarded as doing nothing more than incorporating
certain previsions from an existing Act and for convenience
of drafting doing so by reference to that Act, instead of
setting out for itself at length the provisions which it was
desired to adopt. The scheme of Section 55 read with the
Schedule to the Adhiniyam is not very different.
As regards the exceptional situations referred to in
State of Madhya Pradesh v. M.V. Narasimhan (supra), it may
be stated that the Adhiniyam and the L.A. Act cannot be
regarded supplemental to each other. The Adhiniyam contains
provisions, regarding acquisition of land which are complete
and self-contained. Nor can the provisions in the Andhiniyam
be said to be in pari materia with the L.A. Act because the
Adhiniyam also deals with matters which do not fall within
the ambit of the L.A. Act. It cannot also be said that the
1984 Act, expressly or by necessary intendment, applies the
said amendments to the Adhiniyam. Can it be said that if the
amendments made in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act are not
incorporated in the Adhiniyam. Can it be said that if the
amendments made in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act are not
incorporated in the Adhiniyam it would be rendered
unworkable ? Sahai J. has expressed the view that the
exceptional situations referred to in State of Madhya
Pradesh v. M.V. Narasimhan (supra) can be extended further
in our constitutional set up and that the courts should lean
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against a construction which may result in discrimination.
In the impugned judgment the High Court has observed that
while persons whose lands were acquired under the Land
Acquisition Act were entitled to all statutory benefits
under Section 23(1-A) and Section 23(2) and interest got the
said benefits as per the 1984 Act, similar benefits are
denied in the matter of determination of market value of
the land acquired by application of provision of the
Adhiniyam and that it would be discriminatory and violative
of Article 14 of the Constitution and that the court should
interpret the provisions of a law to favour
constitutionality rather than interpret it so as to be
violative of he fundamental rights guaranteed under the
Constitution.
The learned counsel for the land owners have urged that
if the provisions of the L.A. Act, as they stood on the date
of enactment of the Adhiniyam without the amendments
introduced by the 1984 Act relating to determination
payment of compensation are held to be incorporated in the
Adhiniyam the provisions of the Adhiniyam incorporating the
provisions of the L.A. Act would be rendered
unconstitutional as being violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. Reliance has been placed on the decision of
this Court in Nagpur Improvement Trust & Anr. v. Vithal Rao
& Ors. 2973 (3) SCR 3. On behalf of the Parishad it has,
however, been urged that in proceedings arising from a
reference under Section 18 it is not open to the claimants
to raise the question regarding constitutional validity of
the provisions of the Adhiniyam under which the reference
has been made. it has been pointed out that the L.A. Act was
enacted by Parliament while the Adhiniyam was enacted by the
Uttar Pradesh State Legislature and that Article 14 cannot
be invoked when the alleged discrimination arises on the
basis of laws made by two different legislative bodies. It
has also been urged that merely because under the provisions
of the L.A. Act, as modified by the Schedule to the
Adhiniyam which care applicable in the matter of acquisition
of land for the purposes f the Adhiniyam, solatium is
payable @ 9% and 5%, as provided in the L.A. Act as amended
by the 1984 Act, would not endear the acquisition
proceedings taken under the Adhiniyam to be
unconstitutional. In support of the said submissions
reliance has been placed on the decision of this Court in
State of Madhya Pradesh v. G.C. Mandawar, 1955 (1) SCR 599;
Prakash Amichand Shah v. State of Gujarat & Ors., 1985 Supp
(3) SCR 1025; and Union of India v. Hari Krishan Khosla
(dead) by LRs., 1993 Supp. (2) SCC 149.
It is no doubt true that in an appeal arising from a
reference under Section 18 of the L.A. Act it is not open to
the claimants to challenge the validity of the provisions of
the law under whish the reference has been made. But, at the
same time, while construing the provisions of the Adhiniyam
providing for acquisition of land for the purposes of the
Adhiniyam, we cannot lose sight of the settled principle of
statutory construction that "if certain provisions of law,
construed in one way, would make them consistent with the
Constitution and another interpretation would render them
unconstitutional, the Court would lean in favour of the
former construction." [See : Kedar Nath Singh v. State of
Bihar, 1962 Supp. (2) SCR 769, at pp, 808, 809]. We would,
therefore, examine whether the provisions of the Adhiniyam
if they are so construed as to incorporate the provisions of
the L.A. Act as it stood on the date of enactment of the
Adhiniyam without the amendments introduced in the L.A. Act
by the 1984 Act relating to determination and payment of
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compensation would be violative of the provisions of Article
14 of the Constitution. In this context, it may be stated
that if the provisions are construed as indicated above an
owner whose land is acquired for the purpose of the
Adhiniyam would be entitled to payment of solatium under
Section 23(2) of the L.A. Act @ 15% and interest under
Section 28 of the L.A. Act @ 6% but an owner whose lands are
acquired under the provisions of the L.A. Act as amended by
the 1984 Act would be entitled to payment of solatium @ 30%
and interest @ 9% and 15% and would also be entitled to
payment of additional amount as per the provisions of
Section 23(1-A) of the L.A. Act, as amended. In other words,
the compensation payable to the owner whose land is acquired
for the purposes of the Adhiniyam would be less than the
compensation payable to the owner whose land is acquired
under the L.A. Act as amended by the 1984 Act. Is there any
national basis for treating the two land owners differently
in the matter of payment of compensation for the acquisition
of their lands?
This question came u for consideration in Nagpur
Improvement Trust & Anr. (supra) decided by a special Bench
of seven Judges of this Court. Section 59 of the Nagpur
Improvement Trust Act, 1936 provided that the Trust may,
with the previous section of the State Government, acquire
land under the provisions of the L.A. Act, as modified by
the provisions of the Improvement Trust Act, for carrying
out any of the purposes of the Improvement Trust Act. By
Section 6.1 certain express provisions were made in the
matter of acquisition for the purpose of acquisition of land
under the L.A. Act and it was also laid down that "the Act
shall be subject to the further modifications as indicated
in the Schedule". The Schedule to the Improvement Trust Act
contained various modifications. Among the modifications
made in the Schedule was the substitution of sub-section (2)
of Section 23 of the L.A. Act and as a result the
applicability of the provisions of the sub-section (2) of
Section 23 of the L.A. Act were made inapplicable to lands
other than those specified therein. The constitutional
validity of the provisions of the Improvement Trust Act, in
so far as the same felted to acquisition of land, was
challenged on the ground that same were violative of the
right to equality guaranteed under Article 14 of the
Constitution inasmuch as the said provisions empowered the
acquisition of land at prices lower than those that would
have been payable if the lands had been acquired under the
L.A. Act. The said challenge was upheld by the High Court
and the provision contained in the Improvement Trust Act,
whereby Section 23 of the L.A. Act, as applicable to
acquisition for the purpose of the Improvement Trust Act,
were struck down on the ground of violation of Article 14 of
the Constitution. The said decision of the High Court was
upheld by this Court. This Court has referred to Section 17-
A which had been inserted by way of modification as per the
Schedule to the Improvement Trust Act and wherein it was
provided that "in every case referred to in Section 16 or
Section 17, Collector shall, upon payment of the cost of
acquisition, make over charge of the land to the Trust and
the land shall thereupon vest in the Trust, subject to the
liability of the Trust to pay any further costs which may be
incurred on account of its acquisition". It was held that in
view Section 17-A, as inserted by Paragraph 6 of the
Schedule to the Improvement Trust Act, it was quite clear
that the acquisition will be by the Government that the
lands vest in the Trust and though the acquisition is for
the Trust and may be at its instance, but nevertheless the
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acquisition is by the Government. It was pointed out that
the Government could thus acquire for a housing
accommodation scheme either under the L.A. Act or under the
Improvement Trust Act and, if it were so, it would enable
the State Government to discriminate between one owner
equally situated from another owner. it was observed :-
"Article 14 confers an individual
right and in order to justify a
classification there should be
something which justifies a
different treatment to this
individual right. It seems to us
that ordinarily a classification
based on the public purpose is not
permissible under Art. 14 for the
purpose of determining
compensation. The position is
different when the owner of the
land himself is the recipient of
benefits from an improvement
scheme, and the benefits to him is
taken into consideration in fixing
compensation. Can classification be
made on the basis of the authority
acquiring the land ? In other words
can different principles of
compensation be laid if the land is
acquired for or by an Improvement
Trust or Municipal Corporation or
the Government ? It seems to us
that the answer is in the negative
because as far as the owner is
concerned it does not matter to him
whether the land is acquired by one
authority or the other."
"It is equally immaterial whether
it is one Acquisition Act or
another Acquisition Act under which
the land is acquired. If the
existence of two Acts enables the
State to give one owner different
treatment from another equally
situated the owner who is
discriminated against, can claim
the protection of Art. 14." [p.48]
The provisions of the Adhiniyam are very similar to
those contained in the Nagpur Improvement Trust Act. Section
55 of the Adhiniyam is similar to Section 59 of the Nagpur
Improvement Trust Act inasmuch as both the provisions
provide for modifications being made in the L.A. Act.
Section 17-A that has been inserted in the L.A. Act by the
modifications made by the Adhiniyam is in the same terms as
Section 17-A which was inserted by Paragraph 6 of the
Schedule to the Nagpur Improvement Trust Act. The reasons
which weighed with this Court in striking down the
provisions of the Nagpur Improvement Trust Act whereby
Section 23 of the earlier Act had been modified in its
application for the purpose of acquisition under the said
Act would. therefore, equally apply while considering the
constitutional validity of the provisions of the Adhiniyam
where under the provisions of Section 23 of the L.A. Act
have been modified under the Schedule to the Adhiniyam.
The principle laid down by this Court in State of
Madhya Pradesh v. G.C. Mandawar (supra) that Article 14
cannot be invoked when the alleged discrimination is on
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account of laws made by two different legislatures has no
application in the present case because under the L.A. Act
as well as under the provision of the Adhiniyam the
acquisition is to be made by the same authority, viz., the
State Government of Uttar Pradesh, and discrimination arises
on account of action taken by the same authority.
The decision in Prakash Amichand Shah v. State of
Gujarat & Ors. (supra) on which reliance has been placed by
Shri Sanyal on behalf of the Parishad, also does not lend
any assistance to his submissions. In that case this Court
was dealing with the provisions of the Bombay Town Planning
Act, 1954 as applicable in the State of Gujarat. Under the
said Act there were three modes for taking over land,
namely,(i) acquisition under Section 11 for developmental
purposes for which compensation was payable under the
provisions of the L.A. Act as amended by the provisions
contained in the Schedule to the said Act, (ii) transfer of
lands that takes place oncoming into force of the final
scheme under Section 53 of the said Act for which
compensation is payable in accordance with Section 67 of the
said Act, and (iii) acquisition of land under Section 84 of
the said Act which empowered the State Government to acquire
land included in the Town Planing Scheme at a subsequent
stage where amount was payable in accordance with provisions
of the L.A. Act as amended by the Schedule to the said Act.
In that case acquisition had been made under Section 53 of
the said Act and compensation was payable in accordance with
Section 67 of the said Act and there was no provision for
payment of solatium. While negativing the challenge to the
validity of the acquisition on the ground of discrimination
in the matter of payment of compensation, this Court, after
referring to the decision in Nagpur Improvement Trust & Anr,
(supra), has pointed out that the provision under
consideration in that case, viz., Section 59 of the Nagpur
Improvement Trust Act, corresponds to Section 11 or Section
84 of the Bombay Town Planning Act and that the provisions
under Section 53 of the said Act are not like acquisition
proceedings under the L.A. Act and the provisions of the
L.A. Act were not applicable with or without modifications
as in the case of the Nagpur Improvement Trust Act. Section
53 of the Bombay Town Planning Act contained provisions
which are similar to those contained in Sections 38 and 39
of the Adhiniyam which also provide for vesting of certain
public lands vested in a local authority or private street
or square and payment of compensation for such lands. A
provision similar to Section 55 of the Adhiniyam was
contained in Section 11 of the Bombay Town Planning Act
which provided that the L.A. Act as amended by the Schedule
to the said Act would apply to the determination of
compensation for the acquisition of such land. Since the
Court was not dealing with an acquisition under Section 11
of the Bombay Town Planning Act the decision in Prakash
Amichand shah (supra) has no application.
Union of India v. Hari Krishan Khosla (dead) by LRs.
(supra) related to acquisition under the provisions of
Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable Property Act,
1952. Section B(3) of the said Act did not provide for
payment of solatium @ 15% and interest @ 6% on acquisition
of requisitioned lands. The validity of Section 8(3) was
challenged on the ground that it was violative of Article 14
of the Constitution and reliance was placed on Nagpur
Improvement Trust & Anr. (supra). The said challenge was
negatived by the Court on the ground that "cases of
acquisition of land stood on a different footing than those
where such property is subject to prior requisition before
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acquisition". This decision also does not lend any
assistance to the submissions of Shri Sanyal.
Since the present case involves acquisition of land
under the provisions of the L.A. Act as applicable under the
Adhiniyam, it is fully covered by the law laid down by this
Court in Nagpur Improvement Trust & Anr. (supra). Keeping in
view the principles laid down in the said decision of this
Court, it has to be held that if the provisions of the
Adhiniyam are so construed as to mean that the provisions of
the L.A. Act, as they stood on the date of enactment of the
Adhiniyam, would be applicable to acquisition or land for
the purpose of the Adhiniyam and that the amendments
introduced in the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act relating to
determination and payment of compensation are not
applicable, the consequence would be that the provisions of
the L.A. Act, as applicable under the Adiniyam, would suffer
from the vice of arbitrary and hostile discrimination. Such
a consequence would has avoided if the provisions of the
L.A. Act as amended by the 1984 Act, relating to
determination and payment of compensation would apply to
acquisition of land for the purposes of the Adhiniyam. There
is nothing in the Adhiniyam which precludes adopting the
latter construction. On the other hand, the provisions of
the Adhiniyam show that the intention of the Legislature,
while enacting the Adhiniyam, was to confer the benefit of
solatium @ 15% by modifying Section 23(2) in the Schedule,
which benefit was not available under the provisions of the
L.A. Act as it was applicable in the State of Uttar Pradesh
at the time of enactment of the Adhiniyam. It cannot,
therefore, be said that the intention of the Legislature, in
enacting the Adhiniyam, was to deny to the landowners the
benefits relating to determination and payment of
compensation which would be available to them under any
amendment made in the L.A. Act after the enactment of the
Adhiniyam. We are, therefore, of the opinion that on a
proper construction of Section 55 of the Adhiniyam it must
be held that while incorporating the provisions of the L.A.
Act relating to determination and payment of compensation
would be applicable to acquisition of lands for the purposes
of the Adhiniyam. This and that the amendments introduced in
the L.A. Act by the 1984 Act relating to determination and
payment of compensation, viz, Section 23(1-A) and Section
23(2) and 28 as amendment by the 1984 Act would be
applicable to acquisitions for the purpose of the Adhiniyam
under Section 55 of the Adhiniyam.
In view of the construction placed by us on the
provisions of Section 55 of the Adhiniyam that the
provisions of the L.A. Act, as amended by the 1984 Act
relating to determination and payment of compensation, would
be applicable to acquisition of land for the purposes of the
Adhiniyam, it is not necessary to deal with the submission
that if the provisions of the 1984 Act are held to be not
applicable in the matter of acquisition of land for the
purposes of the Adhiniyam the provisions of the L.A. Act, as
applicable under the Adhiniyam, would be void on the ground
of repugnance under Article 254 of the Constitution.
As regards the determination of the market value of the
land sin question, it may be stated that the said market
value has to be determined with reference to August 27,
1983, the date of publication of the notification under
Section 28 of the Adhiniyam, which has been equated with a
notification under Section 4(1) of the L.A. Act. The area of
the land acquired is more than 200 acres. It lies within the
municipal limits of the city of Meerut and is adjacent to
Indira Nagar, Shiv Shakti Nagar and Shiv Sagar Colony. The
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Land Acquisition Officer determined the market value at Rs.
30/- per sq. yard. The land owners sought reference claiming
that the market value was Rs. 150/- per sq. yard. Seven
exemplars were filed. The exemplar relied upon by the
Parishad was a sale deed dated March 31, 1982 in respect of
16 biswas and 1 biswasanis of land situated in Mohalla
Indira Nagar which showed a price of about Rs. 40/- per sq,
yard. The exemplars filed on behalf of the land owners were
in respect of plots measuring from 22.22.sq yards to 260 sq
yards of land and the price ranged form Rs. 110/- per sq
yard to Rs. 150/- per sq yard. The Civil Court fixed the
market value at Rs. 150/- per sq, yard and made a deduction
of 10% for development. The Parishad in its appeals before
the High Court assailed the said determination of the market
value by the Civil Court. Some of the land owners filed
cross-objections assailing the 10% deduction. In the High
Court an application was submitted on behalf of the Parishad
for permission to file certain agreements to sell by way of
additional evidence. The said application was rejected by
the High Court on the view that there was no material that
the said agreements had matured into sale transactions even
after eight years of their execution and that the said
agreements were not of any assistance in the matter of
determination of the market value. The High Court has also
held that the exemplar submitted by the Parishad could not
be accepted for the reasons that therein it was
categorically provided that the purchaser would take the
risk of statutory prohibitions, if any, on the transfer and
that the vendor would not be responsible and that for
covering the risk, the purchaser will normally demand
reduction in the rate. Referring to the exemplars produced
by the land owners of any deficiency had been brought to its
notice. The High Court has pointed out that admittedly, the
acquired land was not developed and it may only have the
potentiality of development to be used as building sites and
while facilities for drainage, electricity supply, water
supply and pucca road are available in those developed
areas, the land which is acquired measuring more than 200
acres does not have such advantages. The High Court was,
however, of the view that as the acquired land is within the
municipal limits and is surrounded by the developed area
with buildings and pucca roads and other facilities and has
the advantage of road passing by the side, it has
potentiality of developing though it cannot be treated to
have similar advantage as the land in the developed areas.
The High Court has also taken note of the fact that the
entire acquired areas was used for the purpose of
agriculture even in 1983 when the surrounding areas had
already developed. In the light of aforesaid circumstances
the High court held that the rates available for land in
developed area could not be adopted for determination of
market value of the acquired land though they can be used
for guidance to determine the market value by taking note of
other circumstances as available on record. Referring to the
exemplar dated February 24, 1983 relied upon by the land
owners in respect of a plot measuring 260 sq. yards which
reflected a rate of Rs. 110/- per sq. yard, the High Court
has stated that the said land was below 4 to 5 ft. of road
level and that in the absence of any material as to any
other disadvantage, this disadvantage of a piece of land
could be give due weight to held that such small strips of
an area of 260 sq. yards in the acquired land would also
have to be valued at the rate of Rs. 110/- per sq. yard. The
High Court, therefore, fixed the value of the acquired land
at Rs. 110/- per sq. yard. As regards the development
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charges, the High Court held that normally when a big area
is acquired for housing project and rate for small strip of
land having equal advantage is available this Court normally
provides for deduction of one third from the rate and,
therefore, it would not be unreasonable to deduct one third
from Rs. 110/- to arrive at the market value. The High Court
has, therefore, fixed the market value of the acquired land
at Rs. 73/- per sq. yard. The said determination by the High
Court has been assailed by the learned counsel for the
Parishad as well as for the land owners.
Shri Sanyal has submitted that the High Court was in
error in rejecting the application for additional evidence
filed by the appellants. On behalf of the land owners the
learned counsel have urged that the High Court was in error
in reducing the market value from Rs. 150/- per sq. yard to
Rs. 110/- per sq. yard and in permitting the deduction of
one third. The learned counsel have placed reliance on the
decisions in Kaushalya Devi Bogra & Ors. v. The Land
Acquisition Officer, Aurangabad & Anr. 1984 (2) SCR 900;
Bhagwathula Samanna & Ors. v. Special Tahsildar & Land
Acquisition Officer Viskhapatham, 1991 (4) SCC 506 and
Meharbad & Ors. v. The State of U.P. & Ors., 1997 (4) SCALE
363.
We do not find any substance in the submissions urged
on behalf of the Parishad regarding rejection of the
application for adducing additional evidence of any material
that the agreements for sale relied upon had matured into
sale transactions not much assistance could be derived from
them in the matter of determination of the market value of
the acquired land.
As regards the grievance of the land owners regarding
the determination of the market value of the acquired land,
we are of the view that no case is made out for interference
with the said determination by the High Court. In fixing the
value of the acquired land at Rs. 110/- per sq. yard the
High Court has placed reliance on one of the exemplars
submitted by the land owners which was in respect of an area
of 260 sq. yards showing a price of Rs. 110/- per sq. yard.
We do not find and ground to interfere with the said
determination by the High Court fixing the value at Rs.
110/- per sq. yard.
The direction about deduction of one third of the said
price towards cost of development for the housing scheme
involving construction of roads and other amenities is in
consonance with the various decision of this Court wherein
this Court has allowed one third deduction in the price
towards cost of development [See : Tribeni Devi & Ors. v.
Collector of Rachi, 1972 (3) SCR 208; Vijay Kumar Moti Lal
v. State of Maharashtra. 1981 (2) SCR 719; Special Land
Acquisition Officer, Bangalore v. V.T. Velu & Ors. 1996 (2)
SCC 538; K.S. Shivadevamma & Ors. v. Assistant Commissioner
& Land Acquisition Officer & Anr. 1996 (2) SCC 62; Basant
Kumar v. Union of India 1996 (11) SCc 542].
In Kaushalya Devi Bogra & Ors (supra), on which
reliance has been placed by the learned counsel for the
claimants, this Court has laid down that for determining the
market value of a large property on the basis of sale
transactions for a small property a deduction should be
given and that while in Special Land Acquisition Officer,
Bangalore v. T. Adinarayam Setty, 1959 Supp. (1) SCR 404, a
deduction of 25% was Indicated, there were certain other
cases where the view taken is that the deduction should be
to the extent of one third. We are, therefore, unable to
uphold the contention that the deduction of one third which
has been allowed by the High Court on the value of Rs. 110
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per sq. yard. calls for interference by this Court. We,
therefore, do not find any merit in the appeals that have
been filed by the land owners assailing the determination of
the market value at Rs. 73/- per sq. yard by the High Court.
For the reasons aforementioned, the appeals field by
the Parishad as well as the appeals filed by the land owners
are dismissed. No order as to costs.
(B) WRIT PETITIONS NOS. 224/97 AND 339/97
These Writ Petitions have been filed under Article 32
of the Constitution by the Petitioners wherein they have
assailed the constitutional validity of the provisions
contained in the Adhiniyam as modified whereby the
provisions of the earlier Act as applicable to acquisition
under Section 55 of the Adhiniyam have been modified in so
far as it results in reduction of amount of compensation
payable to the petitioners-land owners.
The ground on which the validity of the said provisions
is challenged is that under the provisions of the earlier
Act as amended by the 1984 Act solution is payable at the
rate of 30% under Section 23(2) as amended and interest at
the rate of 9% and 15% under Section 28 as amended, while
under the earlier Act as modified by the Adhiniyam solatium
is payable at a lower rate of 15% and interest at a lower
rate of 6% and this amounts to denial of right to equality
and violative of the provisions of Article 14 of the
Constitution. In view of the construction place by us on the
provisions of the Adhiniyam relating to acquisition of land
for the purposes of the Adhiniyam, these writ petitions do
not survive and they are, therefore, dismissed. No costs.
(C) CIVIL APPEALS NOS. 13191 OF 1996 AND 222 OF 1997
These appeals are directed against the interim orders
passed by the Allahabad High Court pending appeals. Civil
Appeal No. 13191 of 1996 has been filed against order dated
August 3, 1986 where by High Court has dismissed the
application filed by the Parishad for modification of the
earlier order dated December 14, 1992. Civil Appeal No. 222
of 1997 has been filed against the order of the High Court
dated February 7, 1996 whereby the High Court has dismissed
the application for inter in relief submitted by the
Parishad.
It has been pointed out that while passing the said
orders the High Court has proceeded on the basis that the
provisions of the L.A. Act, as amended by the 1984 Act, as
amended by the 1984 Act, are applicable and enhanced
solatium @ 30% and interest @ 9% and 15% is payable in
respect of acquisition of lands by the Parishad on the basis
of notifications published under Section 28 of the
Adhiniyam.
In view of the construction placed by us on the
provision of Section 55 of the Adhibiyam relating to
acquisition of land for the purposes of the Adhiniyam, we do
not find merit in these appeals and the same are, therefore,
dismissed. No order as to costs.
(D) SPECIAL LEAVE PETITIONS (CIVIL) NOS, 20601 of 1995 AND
20599 OF 1995
These special leave petitions are directed against the
judgment of the Allahabad High Court dated October 28, 1994
whereby the appeals filed by the Parishad against the
judgment of the Additional District Judge, Meerut, in
reference under Section 18 of the L.A. Act have been
dismissed. In the impugned judgment the High Court has
proceeded on the basis that the acquisition of land had been
made under the L.A. Act on the basis of the notifications
issued under Section 4(1) of the L.A. Act. It has been
pointed out by the learned counsel appearing on behalf of
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the Parishad that the proceedings for acquisition were
initiated on the basis of notifications published under
Section 28 of the Adhiniyam and notifications were not
issued under Section 4(1) of the L.A. Act and that
compensation had to be determined in accordance with the
provisions of the L.A. Act as modified by Section 55 read
with the Schedule to the Adhiniyam and that under the said
provisions solatium was payable under Section 23(2) of the
L.A. Act @ 15% and not @ 30%.
Since in view of the construction placed by us on the
provisions of section 55 of the Adhiniyam there is no
difference in the amount of compensation payable under the
provisions of the L.A. Act as applicable to acquisition of
land for the purposes of the Adhiniyam and the compensation
payable for acquisition of land under the L.A. Act, the
special leave petitions are dismissed.