Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2338 of 2002
PETITIONER:
MUNITHIMMAIAH
APPELLANT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ORS. RESP
ONDENTS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 22/03/2002
BENCH:
Doraiswamy Raju & Ashok Bhan
JUDGMENT:
RAJU, J.
Special leave granted.
This appeal has been filed against the judgment dated 2.3.2000 of a
Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court in Writ Petition No.2083 of 1996,
wherein the relief sought in the nature of a writ of certiorari to quash the entire
acquisition proceedings pertaining to Survey No.81/6 in Agrahara Dasarahalli
Village, Yeswanthapura Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk, and the Award said to
have been passed by the Special Land Acquisition Officer, Bangalore
Development Authority, on 22.2.1995, came to be rejected on the ground that the
matter is covered against the appellant by an earlier Division Bench Judgment
reported in Khoday Distilleries Limited Vs. State of Karnataka [ILR 1997 KAR.
1419]. For appreciating the points raised as well as the grievance sought to be
made out, it would be necessary to advert to certain salient factual details
pertaining to the matter.
The appellant claims to be the owner in possession of the land comprised
in Survey No.81/6, Agrahara Dasarahalli Village, Yeswanthapur Hobli, Bangalore
North Taluk. Permission was said to have been obtained by the appellant on
2.8.1969 from the Deputy Commissioner, Bangalore, sanctioning conversion of
one acre 16 guntas in the said Survey number into non-agricultural use, leaving
the remaining 20 guntas as ‘Kharab’ land. The permission was subject to certain
conditions, which, among other things, included compliance with the formalities
prescribed by and obligations to the City Improvement Trust Board or need to
secure the approval for the layout and building plans from the said Board and
obtaining of necessary licences, etc. from the competent authority before the
commencement of any construction work on the said land. The appellant also
claims to have substantially commenced construction. While the matter stood
thus, a preliminary Notification was said to have been published in the Official
Gazette dated 25.7.1974 proposing the acquisition of the land belonging to the
appellant in Survey No.81/6 along with some other lands in Survey Nos.81/1,
81/2., 81/3, 81/4 and 81/5 for the formation of a layout known as the "West of
Chord Road-IV Stage". The appellant claims to have filed objections, among
other things, stating that already a proposal dated 12.8.1974 for formation of a
private layout under Section 25 of the City Improvement Trust Board Act was
submitted by him and the same was pending with the CIT Board. Once again,
the appellant claims that the portions of the land were sold to various purchasers
and buildings were put up leaving no vacant land for formation of any site in
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Survey No.81/2 and only 27 guntas of land in Survey No.81/2 was used by the
owners of the buildings in the area as Kacha Road.
By a Gazette Notification on 31.1.1980 the Government of Karnataka
published a Notification under Section 19(1) of the Bangalore Development
Authority Act, 1976 [hereinafter referred to as ‘the Act’] making known about the
sanction of an improvement scheme for the formation of layout called "West of
Chord Road, IV Stage", and the publication of preliminary Notification on
25.7.1974 and the declaration then made under Section 19 of the Act that the
lands specified in the said Notification, noticed supra, are needed for a public
purpose for the formation of the layout in question. Thereafter, an Award was
also said to have been passed on 19.3.1981 in respect of Survey No.81/2
measuring 27 guntas and possession of the same was also taken for forming a
road. The Special Land Acquisition Officer, B.D.A., was also appointed to
perform the functions of the Deputy Commissioner under the Land Acquisition
Act in exercise of the powers conferred under Section 36 of the Act read with
sub-section (2) of Sections 6 and 7 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 as
amended and extended from time to time by the Land Acquisition (Karnataka
Extension and Amendment) Act, 1961. The appellant claims that the
Commissioner of the Bangalore Development Authority also informed on
19.8.1982 that the land comprised in Survey No.81/6, noticed above, was not
really required by the CIT Board for its Schemes. When the appellant
approached the Commissioner, B.D.A., he was also informed about the
Notification of the lands measuring one acre 36 guntas for acquisition for the
Scheme in question and the pendency of those proceedings. Finally, as noticed
earlier, the Award came to be made under Section 11 of the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894 on 22.12.1995. Since the appellant seems to have mainly challenged
the proceedings placing reliance on Section 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act
inserted into the main Act by the Land Acquisition (Amendment) Act, 1984 and
the very question similar to the one raised, was dealt with elaborately and held
against the stand of the petitioner in the decision reported in Khoday Distilleries
Limited case (supra), the Writ Petition of the appellant came to be dismissed
necessitating this appeal.
The main and substantial question raised by Shri D.P. Chaturvedi, learned
counsel for the appellant, before us is that the High Court erred in following the
earlier decision in Khoday Distilleries Ltd. case (supra) and that having regard
to the provisions contained in Section 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, the
Award passed beyond the stipulated period of limitation is illegal and that after
the expiry of the stipulated period under Section 11-A, the acquisition
proceedings stood lapsed and, therefore, the claim of the appellant ought to have
been sustained. Though, the learned counsel for the appellant tried to urge that
the lands of the appellant are not really required to be acquired for
implementation of the Scheme in question, we are not adverting to such
contentions in detail since no such ground seems to have been argued before
the High Court and strong objection is also taken by the learned Senior Counsel
for the respondents for such pleas being raised in this Court. To complete the
sequence of narration of facts and particularly the grievance sought to be made
about the delay by the appellant in this Court, it is useful to refer to the fact that
under the pretext of alleged trespass into the land in question pursuant to the
allotments made by the B.D.A. in favour of certain third parties, the appellant filed
O.S. No.3361 of 1989 seeking a declaration that the land was not acquired for
any public purpose and also for an injunction restraining interference with his
possession of the land. Though the appellant was able to secure interim orders
in his favour, which came to be confirmed at that stage by the High Court also
ultimately, the Civil Suit came to be dismissed only on 20.1.1995 holding that the
appellant was not in possession and that the Civil Court cannot declare the
Notification for acquisition, to be null and void. The appellant appears to have
filed an appeal in R.F.A. No.90/95 as well as an overlapping Writ Petition. It is at
that stage that taking leave of the Court, the Award came to be passed and the
matter was brought to the notice of the High Court on 6.12.1996 in the pending
proceedings.
Per contra, Shri Altaf Ahmad, learned Additional Solicitor General, as also
the other counsel following his submissions, submitted that the decision rendered
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in Khoday Distilleries Ltd. (supra) by a Division Bench of the Karnataka High
Court, which came to be followed and applied in the present case, lays down the
correct position of law and the decision does not suffer from any infirmity to call
for interference in this appeal.
Strong reliance has been placed for the appellant on the decisions
reported in The Special Land Acquisition Officer, City Improvement Trust
Board, Mysore vs P. Govindan (AIR 1976 SC 2517) and Mariyappa and
Others vs State of Karnataka and Others [1998 (3) SCC 276].
In the first of the above decisions, this Court, after adverting to an earlier
decision reported in The Land Acquisition Officer, City Improvement Trust
Board, Bangalore vs H. Narayanaiah Etc. Etc. (AIR 1976 SC 2403), observed
as follows:
"6. It is true that it can be more plausibly argued, with
regard to the provisions of Mysore Act of 1903, that
the market value for acquisitions under this Act should
be determined with reference to the Acquisition Act as
it stood in 1903. After carefully considering this point
of view, we think that such a departure from the
generally accepted procedure which regulates
acquisition and compensation for it under similar Acts
in the State of Mysore as well as under Land
Acquisition Act today has to be justified by something
more explicit, express and substantial than the mere
date of enactment of the Mysore Act. If Section 23(1)
of the Acquisition Act lays down, as we think it does,
the only procedure for award of compensation, it has
to be followed as it exists at the time of acquisition
proceedings. No one has a vested right in a particular
procedure. It is a fair interpretation of Section 23 of
the Mysore Act of 1903 to hold that it means that,
whatever may be the procedure there, with regard to
matters regulating compensation under the
Acquisition Act, at the time of acquisition proceedings
will apply to acquisitions under the Mysore Act."
Proceeding further, and placing also reliance on Section 6 of the Mysore
General Clauses Act, it was ultimately held that in substance Section 23 of the
City of Mysore Improvement Act, 1903 provided for the application of the general
procedure found in the Land Acquisition Act except to the extent it was
inapplicable, meaning thereby that the amendments of the procedure in the Land
Acquisition Act, will apply "if it is capable of application". In Narayanaiah’s case
(supra) this Court, while construing the words "so far as they are applicable" in
Section 27 of the City of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945, observed that the
intention in using these words was to exclude only those provisions of the Land
Acquisition Act which become inapplicable because of any special procedure
prescribed under the Bangalore Act and those words sufficiently bring in or make
applicable, so far as it is reasonably possible, the general provisions like Section
23 of the Land Acquisition Act laying down the principles for the determination of
compensation payable. In that context, it was specifically observed, "They
cannot be reasonably construed to exclude the application of any general
provisions of the Acquisition Act. They amount to laying down the principle that
what is not either expressly, or by a necessary implication, excluded must be
applied."
It is not only relevant but necessary to notice even at this stage that the
Division Bench of the Karnataka High Court, while deciding the case reported in
Khoday Distilleries Ltd. (supra) specifically referred to and only applied the
ratio of the above noticed decisions of this Court as well as the one rendered in
Farid Ahmed Abdul Samad & Another vs The Municipal Corporation of the
City of Ahmedabad & Another (AIR 1976 SC 2095). A detailed and meticulous
comparative analysis of the relevant provisions of the Bangalore Development
Authority Act, 1976 and the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, as amended by the
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Amending Act of 1984, was made by the Division Bench of the High Court and it
was observed as hereunder:
".The two sets of provisions under Sections 4, 5A
and 6 of the L.A. Act are comparable with the
provisions of Sections 17 and 18 of the B.D.A. Act.
Under the provisions of the L.A. Act, if the final
notification is not issued within the period mentioned
therein and if any award is not made within the time
prescribed under Section 11-A of the Act, the
acquisition proceedings would lapse. In the case of
schemes covered by the B.D.A. Act, the authority has
to execute the schemes within a period of 5 years and
if the authority fails to execute the scheme
substantially, the scheme shall lapse and the
provisions of Section 36 shall become inoperative.
Thus in substance there are provisions under the
B.D.A. Act to indicate the proposals for acquisition,
considering the objections thereto, sanctioning the
proposal for acquisition on consideration of such
objections and if such acts do not take place within a
period of 5 years the proceedings would lapse. The
Supreme Court in several decisions where questions
of delay in the implementation of the proposals made
under the L.A. Act for purpose of completion of the
acquisition proceedings occurs, has taken the view
that if the same is unreasonable, the acquisition
proceedings could be quashed, prior to the
introduction of Section 6 and 11-A of the L.A. Act
prescribing limitation on the powers and the time
within which such action should be taken. It would be
a matter of policy for the Legislature to indicate the
time within which such acts should be taken. In the
case of B.D.A. Act, considering the nature and
complexity of the implementation of the scheme, a
period of 5 years has been fixed for purpose of
completion of the scheme from the date of issue of
the notification under Section 19 of the B.D.A. Act on
sanction of the scheme. Therefore, when the
Legislature itself has taken note of within what period
the schemes have to be implemented and prescribes
an authority thereto and also provides for as to what
consequence would follow on non-implementation of
the scheme within that period, we do not think this
Court can take a view that such implementation of the
scheme is in any way discriminatory when compared
to the provisions of the L. A. Act. In substance, both
the provisions provided for identical situation may
be in case of L.A. Act more details are set forth such
as the period within which final notification has to be
issued and the period within which award has to be
passed. But in case of the B.D.A. Act implementation
of the scheme has been limited to a period of 5 years
as provided in Section 27 of the B.D.A. Act.
9. Section 27 of the B.D.A. Act provides that where
within a period of 5 years from the date of the
publication in the official gazette of the declaration
under Section 19(1), the authority fails to execute the
scheme substantially, the scheme shall lapse and the
provisions of Section 36 shall become inoperative. In
the L.A. Act certain period has been fixed which is
considered to be reasonable within which the final
notification will have to be issued and award has to be
passed and if such acts are done beyond the time
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prescribed therein, the acquisition of land will lapse.
To the same effect is Section 27 of the B.D.A. Act. If
the B.D.A. Act provides for 5 years to be reasonable
period for substantial compliance with the scheme, we
cannot state that the said provision is unreasonable of
not proper. Thus the scheme of the L.A. Act as
modified by the B.D.A. Act would be applicable by
reason of the provisions of Sections 17, 18, 27 and 36
of the B.D.A. Act."
After adopting such process of reasoning only the High Court held in para
12 of the report, "we hold therefore that the provisions of Section 6 and Section
11-A of the Land Acquisition Act, which provide for the period of Limitation within
which the final notification can be made and award could be passed are excluded
from the application to acquisition made under B.D.A. Act by necessary
implication. The rest of the provisions other than those relating to the issue of
preliminary notification, final notification or period within which the award should
be passed and lapsing of proceedings under the B.D.A. Act, of the L.A. Act would
certainly be applicable." Thus, a decision as to the inapplicability of the
provisions of Section 6 and 11-A where the period of limitation is prescribed
respectively for the issue of final notification and for passing the Award, in
relation to proceedings for acquisition under the B.D.A. Act came to be rendered
on a mere construction of the relevant provisions in the light of the very principles
laid down by this Court in the earlier decisions, noticed supra, even without
reference to the general question as to whether the reference in the B.D.A. Act to
the provisions of the L.A. Act amount to legislation by reference or incorporation.
We are in entire agreement with the reasoning and also affirm the ultimate
conclusions arrived at by the High Court in Khoday Distilleries Ltd case (supra)
which, in our view also, is squarely in conformity with the ratio of the earlier
decisions of this Court specifically noticed and relied upon, in support thereof.
The decision in Mariyappa and Others case (supra) has no relevance or
application to the case on hand for more than one reason. In para 40 of the
report it is found stated: "we are not to be understood as having said anything
with regard to the Bangalore Development Act, 1976". That apart, this Court, on
an analysis of the provisions of the Karnataka Acquisition of Land for Grant of
House Sites Act, 1972 in contrast to the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894, observed that not only the Karnataka Act, 1972 had a skeleton of only
seven sections without any full machinery for being treated as a complete Code
without depending on the Central Act, 1894, for being functional so far as the
inquiry, passing of Award, seeking reference and apportionment and payment of
compensation, etc. is concerned, but the Karnataka Act, 1972 and the Central
Act, 1894 are supplemental to each other and both the Acts are in pari materia
since the subject-matter of the 1972 Act could have otherwise also come within
the ambit of the Central Act and, therefore, the Karnataka Act, 1972 cannot be
considered to deal with any subject other than acquisition of land. On the
general question as to the principles of legislation by incorporation or referential
legislation, reference has been made to the decision reported in State of M.P.
Vs. M.V. Narasimhan and the principles contained therein are as hereunder :-
"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
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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."
Scanning through the nature of legislation, enacted as the Karnataka Act,
1972, it has been held that the said Act 1972 clearly comes within the exceptions
stated in M.V. Narasimhan’s case (supra) for the following reasons :
"Firstly there being no detailed machinery whatsoever
in the Karnataka Act, 1972, that Act cannot be treated
as a self-contained or complete code. Secondly, the
Karnataka Act, 1972 and the Central Act, 1894 (as
amended by the Karnataka Act, 1961) are
supplemental to each other for unless the Central Act
supplements the Karnataka Act, the latter cannot
function. Thirdly, these Acts are in pari materia
because the Karnataka Act, 1972 unlike the
Calcutta Act, 1911 and the U.P. Act, 1965 does not
deal with any other subject but deals with the same
subject of land acquisition which otherwise would
have fallen within the ambit of the Central Act, 1894.
For the aforesaid reasons, we are of the view that the
amendments made in 1984 to the Central Act, 1894
including Section 11-A have to be read into the
Karnataka Act, 1972, so far as enquiry, award,
reference to court, apportionment of amount and the
payment of amount in respect of land acquired under
the Act."
The decision in U.P. Avas Evam Vikas Parishad Vs. Jainul Islam & Anr.
[(1998) 2 SCC 467], which has also been noticed and distinguished in
Mariyappa’s case (supra), dealt extensively with the salient principles relevant
as well as governing the construction of legislation by reference and by
incorporation. On a review of the entire case-law on the subject, this Court
observed that in case of incorporation of provisions of an earlier legislation in a
subsequent statute they get frozen and atrophied and the repeal or amendment
of the earlier legislation does not affect the operation of the incorporating statute
and that the question as to whether a legislation is by incorporation or by
reference would invariably depend on the language used in the incorporating
statute and other relevant circumstances. Adverting to the provisions of U.P.
Avas Evam Vikas Parishad Adhiniyam, 1965 and the provisions of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894, as amended in 1984, it was held that the Adhiniyam and
the Land Acquisiton Act cannot be regarded as supplemental to each other since
the Adhiniyam contains provisions regarding acquisition of land which are
complete and self-contained and, therefore, the provisions of the Land
Acquisition Act as applicable in the State of U.P., at the time of passing of the
Adhiniyam in 1965 alone applied and the subsequent repeal or amendment in
the Central Land Acquisition Act unless any of the exceptional situations
indicated in M.V. Narasimhan’s case (supra) can be said to be attracted.
Despite coming to such conclusions, on the principles of law governing the
category of referential legislation or legislation by incorporation those provisions
inserted by way of an amendment by the Land Acquisition (Amendment) Act of
1984 in the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 relating to determination and payment of
compensation, viz., Section 23(1-A) and Sections 23(2) and 28 would be
applicable to acquisition for the purpose of the Adhiniyam under Section 55 of the
Adhiniyam by applying the ratio of a seven-Judge Constitution Bench decision in
Nagpur Improvement Trust & Ors. Vs. Vithal Rao & Ors. [(1973) 1 SCC 500]
holding that there can be no differential treatment in the determination of the
principles of compensation payable merely on the distinction based upon who
acquires the property, namely, whether the land is acquired for or by an
Improvement Trust or Municipal Corporation or the Government, because as far
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as the owner is concerned, it does not matter to him whether the land is acquired
by one authority or the other for one or other of its purposes.
So far as the B.D.A. Act is concerned, it is not an Act for mere acquisition
of land but an Act to provide for the establishment of a Development Authority to
facilitate and ensure a planned growth and development of the city of Bangalore
and areas adjacent thereto and acquisition of lands, if any, therefor is merely
incidental thereto. In pith and substance the Act is one which will squarely fall
under, and be traceable to the powers of the State Legislature under Entry 5 of
List II of the VIIth Schedule and not a law for acquisition of land like the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 traceable to Entry 42 of List III of the VIIth Schedule to the
Constitution of India, the field in respect of which is already occupied by the
Central Enactment of 1894, as amended from time to time. If at all, the B.D.A.
Act, so far as acquisition of land for its developmental activities are concerned, in
substance and effect will constitute a special law providing for acquisition for the
special purposes of the B.D.A. and the same was not also considered to be part
of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. It could not also be legitimately stated, on a
reading of Section 36 of the B.D.A. Act that the Karnataka legislature intended
thereby to bind themselves to any future additions or amendments, which might
be made by altogether a different legislature, be it the Parliament, to the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894. The procedure for acquisition under the B.D.A. Act vis-Ã -
vis the Central Act has been analysed elaborately by the Division Bench, as
noticed supra, and, in our view, very rightly too, considered to constitute a special
and self-contained code of its own and the B.D.A. Act and Central Act cannot be
said to be either supplemental to each other, or pari materia legislations. That
apart, the B.D.A. Act could not be said to be either wholly unworkable and
ineffectual if the subsequent amendments to the Central Act are not also
imported into consideration. On an overall consideration of the entire situation
also it could not either possibly or reasonably stated that the subsequent
amendments to the Central Act get attracted or applied either due to any express
provision or by necessary intendment or implication to acquisitions under the
B.D.A. Act. When the B.D.A. Act, expressly provides by specifically enacting the
circumstances under which and the period of time on the expiry of which alone
the proceedings initiated thereunder shall lapse due to any default, the different
circumstances and period of limitation envisaged under the Central Act, 1894, as
amended by the amending Act of 1984 for completing the proceedings on pain of
letting them lapse forever, cannot be imported into consideration for purposes of
B.D.A. Act without doing violence to the language or destroying and defeating the
very intendment of the State Legislature expressed by the enactment of its own
special provisions in a special law falling under a topic of legislation exclusively
earmarked for the State Legislature. A scheme formulated, sanctioned and set
for implementation under the B.D.A. Act, cannot be stultified or rendered
ineffective and unenforceable by a provision in the Central Act, particularly of the
nature of Sections 6 and 11-A, which cannot also on its own force have any
application to actions taken under the B.D.A. Act. Consequently, we see no
infirmity whatsoever in the reasoning of the Division Bench of the Karnataka High
Court in Khoday Distilleries Ltd. case (Supra) to exclude the applicability of
Sections 6 and 11-A as amended and inserted by the Central Amendment Act of
1984 to proceedings under the B.D.A. Act. The submissions to the contra on
behalf of the appellant has no merit whatsoever and do not commend for our
acceptance.
The wail about the inordinate delay or laches in passing the Award cannot
be countenanced at the instance of the appellant who contributed mainly for the
same by institution of litigation causing through prohibitory orders obtained,
impediments in the expeditious implementation of the portion of the Scheme by
taking further course of action under the B.D.A. Act, including the passing of the
Award.
For all the reasons stated supra, we see no merit in the appeal and the
same shall stand dismissed, but with no costs.
..J.
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[Doraiswamy Raju]
J.
[Ashok Bhan]
March 22, 2002.