Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NATIONAL COAL DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MANMOHAN MATHUR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
15/01/1970
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
SHELAT, J.M.
VAIDYIALINGAM, C.A.
GROVER, A.N.
RAY, A.N.
CITATION:
1970 AIR 1223 1970 SCR (3) 409
1970 SCC (1) 208
ACT:
Retrospective Legislation-Acquisition held invalid by High
Court as notification required under s. 7 Coal Bearing Areas
(Acquisition and Development) Act (20 of 1957) not issued-
Notification deemed to have been issued by provisions of
Amending Act 23 of 1969-Effect.
HEADNOTE:
A notification stating that the respondent’s lands were
needed for prospecting coal, was issued under s. 4(1) of the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894. No objection under s. 5A of the
Act was made by the respondent. Thereafter the Coal Bearing
Areas (Acquisition and Development) Act, 1957, came into
force. Under s. 28 of the 1957-Act, all notifications and
objections made under the Land Acquisition Act were deemed
to be notifications and objections under the 1957-Act.
Section 7 of 1957-Act requires the issue of a notification
before acquisition under s. 9(1) of that Act. In the
present case, the Central Government acquired a certain area
on behalf of the appellant under s. 9 of the 1957-Act, from
the area notified under s. 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act
without issuing the s. 7 notification. The respondent
challenged the acquisition by a writ petition and the High
Court allowed it. While the appeal against the judgment of
the High Court was pending in this Court, the 1957-Act was
amended by the Coal Bearing Areas (Acquisition and
Development) Amendment Act, 1969. The consequences of the
amendments introduced by the Amendment Act are that if no
objection had been preferred under s. 5A of the Land
Acquisition Act within the period specified, then it shall
be deemed that a notification under s. 7 of the Act 1957-Act
has been issued; that no objection to the acquisition of the
land under s. 8 of the 1957-Act has been preferred; and that
the Government could therefore make the acquisition under s.
9 of the 1957Act. Also, the effect of a decision of a court
was removed as if the amended Act was in force at all
material time.
HELD : Legislation making obligatory notifications fictional
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may not be proper, but since Parliament was competent to
make such fictions, the acquisition could not be questioned.
[414 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1639 of
1966.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated November 15, 1965
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. Petition No. 66
of 1965.
Jagadish Swarup, Solicitor-General, S. K. Dholakia and R. H.
Dhebar, for the appellants.
W. S. Barlingay, D. D. Verma, R. Mahalingier and Ganpat
Rai, for the respondent.
410
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Hidayatullah, C.J. The National Coal Development Corporation
Ltd. appeals against the judgment and decree of the High
Court of Madhya Pradesh, November 15, 1965, in an
application under Art. 226 of the Constitution. By the
judgment under appeal the appellants are restrained from
carrying on depillaring operations underneath the land of
the respondent Manmohan Mathur in village Chirimiri in
District Surguja in Madhya Pradesh.
The facts are as follows: Chirimiri is a coal-bearing area.
On February 1, 1957 the Government of Madhya Pradesh, acting
in exercise of the functions of the Central Government under
the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 entrusted to it by the
President under Art. 258(1) of the Constitution, issued
notification under s. 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act
stating that the lands specified in Chirimiri village were
needed for the prospecting of coal seams for development of
collieries, by the Central Government. On June 8, 1957 the
Coal Bearing Areas (Acquisition, and Development) Act (XX of
1957) was enacted and was brought into force. On August 7,
1958 the Central Government purporting to act under s. 9(1)
of Act XX of 1957 issued a notification acquiring land
measuring 145-75 acres described in the notification. In
that notification it was stated that no objection was
received after the notification under s. 4 of the Land
Acquisition Act. On April 16,
1964 the appellant gave notice to the respondent that he
should vacate the said land within 30 days of the receipt of
the notice and any super-structure and material that may be
on that land be removed. It was also stated that the mining
rights in village Chirimiri acquired by the Central
Government had been vested in the appellant under an order
of the Government dated September 30, 1958. The respondent
was also informed that there were coal mines underneath his
land and that the appellant would soon cornmence depillaring
operations. The petition under Art. 226 was then filed in
the Madhya Pradesh High Court to restrain the appellant from
enforcing the provisions of Act XX of 1957 against the
respondent.
Many arguments were advanced against the action of the Cen-
tral Government and the appellant. One of them succeeded on
the basis of which the appellant was restrained by a
mandamus from proceeding under Act XX of 1957. The
objection which succeeded was that no notification under S.
7 of Act XX of 1957 had been issued by the Central
Government and that the subsequent, action was, therefore,
invalid.
To understand the objection which was sustained by the High
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Court it is necessary to refer briefly to a part of the
scheme of Act XX of 1957. It will be noticed that the
initial notification was under
411
s. 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. That
notification was issued at a time when Act XX of 1957 was
not enacted. Subsequently under s. 28 of Act XX of 1957 it
was provided that every notification issued under’s. 4(1) of
the Land Acquisition Act before the commencement of Act XX
of 1957 whether by the Central Government or by a State
Government should be deemed to be a notification under s. 4
of Act XX of 1957. Similarly, it was provided that every
notification issued under s. 6 of the Land Acquisition Act,
before the commencement of Act XX of 1957, whether by the
Central Government or by a State Government, should be
deemed to be issued under s. 9 of Act XX of 1957 and lastly
it was provided that any objection preferred under s. 5A of
the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 in respect of any land
covered by any notification under s. 4 should be deemed to
be, an objection preferred under s. 8 of Act XX of 1957. In
other words, all notifications and objections etc. made
-under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 were by a fiction
brought under Act XX of 1957. It may be pointed out here
that no objection under s. 5A of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894 was made by the present respondent.
There was, however, one other section, namely, s. 7 in Act
XX of 1957 to the following effect :
"7. Power to acquire land or rights in or over land notified
under section 4.
(1) If the Central Government is satisfied that coal is
obtainable in the whole or any part of the land notified
under sub-section (1) of section 4, it may, within a period
of two years from the date of the said notification or
within such further period not exceeding one year in the
aggregate as the Central Government may specify in this
behalf, by notification in the Official Gazette, give notice
of its intention to acquire the whole or any part of the
land or of any rights in or over such land, as the case may
be.
(2) If no notice to acquire the land or any rights in or
over such land is given under sub-section (1) within the
period allowed thereunder, the notification issued under
sub-section (1) of section 4 shall cease to have effect on
the expiration of three years from the date thereof."
It is this notification which the High Court found missing
and therefore all subsequent action under Act XX of 1957 was
held to be invalid.
It is not necessary to discuss the correctness or otherwise
of the view of the High Court because on August 11, 1969
Coal
412
Bearing Areas (Acquisition and Development) Amendment Act
XXIII of 1969 was enacted. By this amending Act s. 28(3)
was amended by removal of certain words and substitution
retrospectively of other words. The amending Act also added
a new subSection, numbered 3A and also enacted S. 3 by which
the validation of acquisitions found ineffective by-the
Courts was made. It is necessary to refer to the, amending
Act.
Sub-section 3. of s. 28, as amended by Act 51 of 1957 (to
which Act detailed reference is not necessary), reads as
follows
"Any objection preferred under s. 5A of the said Act (Land
Acquisition Act,, 1894) in respect of any land covered by
any notification issued under section 4 of the said Act
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(Land Acquisition Act, 1894) shall be deemed to be an
objection preferred under section 8 of this Act to the
relevant competent authority and may be disposed of by him
as if the objection had been made in relation to a
notification issued under section 7 of this Act in respect
of such land; and the Central Government may at any time
make a declaration under s. 9 of this Act (Act XX of 1957)
in respect of such land or any part thereof."
By the amending Act XXIII of 1969 the portion beginning with
"in respect of such land" and ending with "or any part
thereof" were substituted retrospectively by the words-
"in respect of such land or of any rights in or over such
land; and the Central Government may at any time make a
declaration under section 9 of this Act in respect of land
or any part thereof or any rights in or over such land or
part."
Simultaneously sub-section 3-A was introduced and that reads
"3A. Where in respect of any land covered by any
notification issued under section 4 of the said Act, no
objection has been preferred under section 5A thereof within
the period specified in that section, then it shall be
deemed that a notification had, been issued under section 7
of this Act in respect of such land or of any rights in or
over such land and that no objection to the acquisition of
the land or any rights in or over land had been preferred
under section 8 of this Act, and accordingly the Central
Government may at any time make a declaration under section
9 of this Act in respect of the land or any part thereof or
any rights in or over such land or part."
413
Finally by section 3 of the Amending Act acquisitions were
validated. Section 3 reads :-
"3. Validation of certain acquisitions.
Notwithstanding any judgment, decree or order of any court,
every acquisition of land or the rights in or over land made
by the Central Government in pursuance of the, notifications
of the Government of India in the late Ministry of Steel,
Mines and Fuel (Department of Mines and Fuel) Nos. S.O.
1759 and S.O. 25, dated the 7th August, 1958, and the 22nd
December, 1959 respectively, made under section 9 of the
principal Act, shall be, and shall be deemed always to have
been, as valid as if the provisions of section 28 thereof as
amended by this Act were in force at all material times when
such acquisition was made and shall not be called in
question in -any court of law on the ground only that before
issuing such notifications no notification was issued under
section 7 of the principal Act in relation to the land or
rights in or over such land ’Covered by the said
notifications Nos. S.O. 1759 and S.O. 25".
In view of this amendment it is obvious that now under the
scheme of Act XX of 1957, as amended by Act 51 of 1957 and
Act XXIII of 1969 a notification under s. 4(1) of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 is by fiction a notification under s.
4 of Act XX of 1957; an objection under s. 5A of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 is deemed to be an objection under s.
8 of Act XX of 1957. It is also provided that if no
objection had been preferred under s. 5A of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 within the period specified in that
Act, then it shall be deemed that a notification has been
issued under s. 7 of this Act in respect of the land and
further that no objection to the acquisition of the land or
any rights in or over that, land has been preferred under s.
8 of the Act and accordingly the Central Government may at
any time make a declaration under s. 9 of Act XX of 1957 in
respect of that land. By section 3 the effect of a decision
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of a court is removed as if the provisions of s. 28 of Act
XX of 1957, as amended by Act XXIII of 1969 were in force at
all material times.
Learned counsel for the respondent could not point to
anything by which the amending Act could be called in
question. It was conceded that it was within the competence
of Parliament to create the fictions it has created in the
original Act XX of 1957 and again by the amending Act XXIII
of 1969. Learned counsel, however, said that we must take a
humane view of the position of a person like the respondent
who would lose his all by the acquisition and that too
through legislation which makes the provisions fictional
rather than real. As to the first part we can only say that
if the
414
law allows it, the court must award it and as to the second
part we say that this kind of legislation by making
obligatory notifications fictional does not accord with our
sense of propriety but we cannot say anything against it
since Parliament undoubtedly possesses the power to make
such fictions.
In the result the appeal must be allowed, but we make no
order about costs.
V. P. S. Appeal allowed.
415