Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF PUNJAB & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
RAJA RAM & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/01/1981
BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
BENCH:
ISLAM, BAHARUL (J)
KOSHAL, A.D.
CITATION:
1981 AIR 1694 1981 SCR (2) 712
1981 SCC (2) 66 1981 SCALE (1)218
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, section 3(e) read with
section 4-Whether the Food Corporation, created by section 3
of the Food Corporation Act, 1964, is a company within the
meaning of section 3(e) of the Land Acquisition Act.
HEADNOTE:
Dismissing the State appeal on certificate, the Court
^
HELD: (1) The acquisition of land for the Food
Corporation of India is not in accordance with law for the
reason that compliance with the provisions of Chapter VII of
the Land Acquisition Act had not been made.
[717 A-B]
(2) The Food Corporation of India is a Company within
the meaning of the term appearing in clause (e) of section 3
of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. Section 3 (e) mentions in
unmistakable terms that a company incorporated by an Indian
law would be a "Company" for the purposes of the Land
Acquisition Act. The Corporation was admittedly created by
section 3 of the Food Corporation Act, 1964. Sub-section (2)
of section 3 of the Food Corporation Act, 1964 is an Indian
Law and clothes the Corporation with the attributes of a
company. [715A-E]
(3) A Government department has to be an organisation
which is not only completely controlled and financed by the
Government but has also no identity of its own. The money
earned by such a department goes to the exchequer of the
Government and losses incurred by the department are losses
of the Government. The Corporation, on the other hand, is an
autonomous body capable of acquiring, holding and disposing
of property and having the power to contract. It may also
sue or be sued by its own name and the Government does not
figure in any litigation to which it is a party. It is true
that its original share capital is provided by the Central
Government and that 11 out of the 12 members of its Board of
Directors are appointed by the Central Government but then
these factors may at the most lead to the conclusion that
the Corporation is an agency or instrumentality of the
Central Government. [715E-H]
Even the conclusion, however, that the Corporation is
an agency or instrumentality of the Central Government does
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not lead to the further inference that the Corporation is a
Government department. The reason is that the Food
Corporation Act has given the Corporation an individuality
apart from that of the Government. In any case the
Corporation cannot be divested of its character as a
"Company" within the meaning of the definition in clause (e)
of section 3 of the Land Acquisition Act, for it completely
fulfils the requirements of that clause. [716G-H, 717A-B]
Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. The International Authority of
India and Ors., [1969] 3 SCR 1014, applied.
713
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2063 of
1970.
From the Judgment and Order dated 26-2-1970 of Punjab
and Haryana High Court in L.P.A. No. 283/69.
O. P. Sharma and M. S. Dhillon for the Appellant.
S. K. Mehra, P. N. Puri, E. M. S. Anam and M. K. Dua
for Respondents Nos. 1-3.
K. J. John for Respondent No. 4.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BAHARUL ISLAM, J.-This appeal by the State of Punjab
and two others, namely, the Collector, Rupar District and
the Sub-Divisional Officer (Civil-cum-Land Acquisition
Collector, Rupar, is on a certificate granted by a Division
Bench of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana in respect of
its judgment in a Letters Patent Appeal holding the
acquisition of the land in question to be bad in law on the
grounds that the Food Corporation of India for which the
Land in question was sought to be acquired was not a
"Company" within the meaning of section 3(e) of the Land
Acquisition Act that the land had also not been acquired for
a public purpose and that the State could acquire the land
under that Act only for a public purpose or for the purpose
of a Company.
2. The material facts of the case may be stated thus:
Nine biswas of the disputed land situated within the
municipal area of Morinda in the District of Rupar was owned
by respondent No. 1, Raja Ram, Respondents No. 2 and 3 are
Raja Ram’s sons. The State of Punjab issued a notification
dated December 17, 1968 under section 4 read with section 17
of the Land Acquisition Act of 1894 (hereinafter called "the
L.A. Act"). The notification related to 15 different plots
of land including the land of the present acquisition
proceedings. The material portion of the notification is as
follows:
"Whereas it appears to the President of India that the
land is likely to be needed by Government, at public
expense, for a public purpose, namely, for the
construction of godowns for storage of food-grains at
Morinda, it is hereby notified that the land in the
locality described below is likely to be required for
the above purpose..........................."
"Further in exercise of the powers conferred by the
said Act, the President of India is pleased to direct
that the action under Section 17 shall be taken in this
case on the
714
grounds of urgency and provisions of Section 5 (A)
shall not apply in regard to this acquisition."
On the same day another notification under Sections 6
and 7 read with Section 17(2)(c) of the L.A. Act was issued.
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The material portion of this notification runs thus:
"Whereas the President of India is satisfied that the
land specified below is needed by Government at the
public expense for a public purpose, namely, for the
construction of godowns for storage of food grains at
Morinda, it is hereby declared that the land described
in the specification below is required for the
aforesaid purpose. This declaration is made under the
provisions of Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894................"
3. Against the aforesaid notification a writ petition
was filed by respondents No. 1 to 3. The writ petition was
heard by a single Judge of the High Court and was dismissed.
The learned Single Judge, inter alia, found that the
provisions of Part VII of the L.A. Act relating to the
acquisition of land for Companies were not applicable to the
present case as the Food Corporation of India (hereinafter
called the Corporation) was a department of Government and
not a Company within the meaning of Section 3(e) of the L.A.
Act although, undoubtedly, according to the learned Judge,
there was no manner of doubt about the fact that the land in
dispute was in fact being acquired for the Corporation and
that the purpose for which the land had been acquired was a
public purpose.
Against the aforesaid Order of the learned Single Judge
a Letters Patent Appeal, being L.P.A. No. 1283 of 1969, was
filed by respondents No. 1 to 3 before the Division Bench,
that allowed the appeal and quashed the land acquisition
proceedings as stated earlier.
4. With respect we find it difficult to agree with the
learned division bench when it held that the Corporation was
not a "Company" within the meaning of section 3(e) of the
L.A. Act which runs thus:
"3. In this Act, unless there is something repugnant in
the subject or context-
(e) the expression "Company" means a Company
registered under the Indian Companies Act, 1882 or
under the (English) Companies Act, 1862 to 1890 or
incorporated by an Act of Parliament of the United
Kingdom or by an Indian law or by Royal Charter or
Letters Patent and includes a
715
society registered under the societies Registration
Act, 1860, and a registered society within the meaning
of the Co-operative Societies Act, 1912 or any other
law relating to co-operative societies for the time
being in force in any State."
The section mentions in unmistakable terms that a
company incorporated by an Indian law would be a ’Company’
for the purposes of the L.A. Act. Now the corporation was
admittedly created by section 3 of the Food Corporation Act,
1964 (hereinafter called the F.C. Act). That section states
:
"3. (1) With effect from such date as the Central
Government may, by notification in the Official
Gazette, specify in this behalf, the Central Government
shall establish for the purposes of this Act a
Corporation known as the Food Corporation of India.
(2) The Corporation shall be a body corporate with
the name, aforesaid, having perpetual succession and a
common seal with power, subject to the provisions of
this Act, to acquire, hold and dispose of property and
to contract, and may, by that name, sue and be sued."
Sub-section (2) which we need hardly say, is an Indian
law, clothes the Corporation with the attributes of a
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company. It cannot, therefore, be contended with any
plausibility that the Corporation is not a ’Company’ within
the meaning of the definition of that term appearing in
clause (e) of section 3 of the L.A. Act.
5. Learned counsel for the appellant then urged that
the Corporation is a Government department. We are unable to
accept this submission also. A Government department has to
be an organisation which is not only completely controlled
and financed by the Government but has also no identity of
its own. The money earned by such a department goes to the
exchequer of the Government and losses incurred by the
department are losses of the Government. The Corporation, on
the other hand, is an autonomous body capable of acquiring,
holding and disposing of property and having the power to
contract. It may also sue or be sued by its own name and the
Government does not figure in any litigation to which it is
a party. It is true that its original share capital is
provided by the Central Government (section 5 of the F.C.
Act) and that 11 out of the 12 members of its Board of
Directors are appointed by that Government (section 7 of the
F.C. Act) but then these factors may at the most lead to the
conclusion (about which we express no final opinion) that
the Corporation is an agency or instrumentality of the
Central Government. In this connection we may cite
716
with advantage the following observations of this Court in
Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. The International Authority of
India and Ors.
"A Corporation may be created in one of two ways.
It may be either established by statute or incorporated
under a law such as the Companies Act, 1956 or the
Societies Registration Act, 1860. Where a corporation
is wholly controlled by government not only in its
policy making but also in carrying out the functions
entrusted to it by the law establishing it or by the
Charter of its incorporation, there can be no doubt
that it would be an instrumentality or agency of
Government. But ordinarily where a corporation is
established by statute, it is autonomous in its working
subject only to a provision, often times made, that it
shall be bound by any directions that may be issued
from time to time by Government in respect of policy
matters. So also a Corporation incorporated under law
is managed by a Board of Directors or committee of
management in accordance with the provisions of the
statute under which it is incorporated. When does such
a corporation become an instrumentality or agency of
Government ? Is the holding of the entire share capital
of the Corporation by Government enough or is it
necessary that in addition, there should be a certain
amount of direct control exercised by Government and,
if so what should be the nature of such control? Should
the functions which the Corporation is charged to carry
out possess any particular characteristic or feature,
or is the nature of the functions immaterial ? Now, one
thing is clear that if the entire share capital of the
Corporation is held by Government it would be a long
way towards indicating that the Corporation is an
instrumentality or agency of Government. But, as is
quite often the case the Corporation established by
statute may have no share or shareholders in which case
it would be a relevant factor to consider whether the
administration is in the hands of a Board of Directors
appointed by Government though this consideration also
may not be determinative, because even where the
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directors are appointed by Government, they may be
completely free from governmental control in the
discharge of their functions."
Even the conclusion, however, that the Corporation is
an agency or instrumentality of the Central Government does
not lead to the further inference that the Corporation is a
Government department. The reason is that the F.C. Act has
given the Corporation an individuality apart
717
from that of the Government. In any case the Corporation
cannot be divested of its character as a ’Company’ within
the meaning of the definition in clause (e) of section 3 of
the L.A. Act, for it completely fulfils the requirements of
that clause, as held by us above.
6. The Corporation being a ’Company’, compliance with
the provisions of Chapter VII of the L.A. Act had to be made
in order to lawfully acquire any land for its purpose. It is
not denied that such compliance is completely lacking in the
present case.
7. As a result of the foregoing discussion it must be
held that the land in dispute has not been acquired in
accordance with law, although our reasons in that behalf are
different from those forming the basis of impugned judgment.
This appeal is thus found to be without merit and is
dismissed but with no order as to costs.
S.R. Appeal dismissed.
718