Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
H. D. VORA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/02/1984
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
BENCH:
BHAGWATI, P.N.
MUKHARJI, SABYASACHI (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 866 1984 SCR (2) 693
1984 SCC (2) 337 1984 SCALE (1)353
CITATOR INFO :
E 1984 SC1707 (9,12,18,22)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950. Article 31 (2) & Seventh
Schedule, List III Entry 42. Acquisition and requisition of
property-Differences-What are.
Power of requisition-When exercisable-For a public
purpose of transitory character.
Bombay Land Requisition Act 1948 Section 6(4)(a)-
Requisition of residential flat-Whether could continue for
an indefinite period-Tenant paying rent directly to
landlord-Tenant whether becomes direct tenant of landlord-
Whether requisition order should set out explicitly the
public purpose.
Practice and Procedre: Writ Petition-Challenging order
of requisition of flat after a lapse of thirty years-Whether
maintainable.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant applied to the Accommodation Department
of the State Government for allotment of a flat. The State
Government urged down the request but requisitioned the
flat by an order dated 9th April, 1948 under clause (a) of
sub-section(4) of section 6 of the Bombay Land Requisition
Act, 1948. This order of requisition, did not set out the
public purpose for which the flat was requisitioned. The
Assistant Controller of Accommodation by an order dated 25th
April, 1951 allotted the requisitioned flat to the appellant
who entered into occupation and paid rent to the landlady
from time to time but as he was irregular and committed
several defaults the Controller of Accommodation sought to
terminate the allotment.
The 3rd respondent, on 30th May, 1973 purchased the
building in which the requisitioned flat was situated, and
requested the State Government to de-requisi-
694
tion the flat, as the allotment of the flat in favour of the
appellant could not be said to be for a public purposes. The
State Government did not pay any heed to this request.
The 3rd respondent, thereupon filed a Writ Petition in
the High Court challenging the validity of the order or
requisition, contending that it could not survive for such a
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long period of time and that the State Government was
therefore bound to de-requisition the flat. The High Court
allowed the Writ Petition and directed the State Government
and the Controller of Accommodation to de-requisition the
flat, take steps to evict the appellant, and hand over
vacant possession.
In appeal this Court, it was contended inter alia on
behalf of the appellant-tenant that even the order of
requisition was invalid as having been made for a purpose
other than a public purpose, the 3rd respondent was not
entitled to challenge the order of requisition after a lapse
of over 30 years and that the Writ Petition should have been
dismissed by the High Court.
Dismissing Appeal,
^
HELD: 1. The order of requisition even if it was valid
when made, ceased to be valid and effective after expiration
of a reasonable period of time What period of time must be
regarded as reasonable for the continuance of an order of
requisition depends on the facts and circumstances of each
case. [700 H]
In the instant case, the order of requisition was made
as far back as 9th April 1951 and even if it was made for
housing a homeless person, and the appellant at that time,
fell within that category, it cannot be allowed to continue
for such an inordinately long period as thirty years. [700
G]
2. Requisitioning must be made for a public purpose,
and so long as there is a public purpose for which an order
of requisition is made, it would be valid irrespective of
whether such public purpose is recited in the order of
requisition or not. But if the order is challenged, the
State Government would have to satisfy the Court by placing
the necessary facts showing the public purpose for which the
order of requisition was made. [698 B,G]
3. There is a basic and fundamental distinction
recognised by law between requisition and acquisition. The
Constitution itself in Entry 42 of List III of Seventh
Schedule makes a distinction between acquisition and
requisitioning of property. The original Article 31 clause
(2) of the Constitution and recognised this distinction
695
between compulsory acquisition and requisition of property..
The two concepts, one of requisition and the other of
acquisition are totally distinct and independent.
Acquisiting means the acquiring of the entire title of the
expropriated owner what ever the nature and extent of that
title may be. The entire of rights which was vested in the
original holder passes on acquisition to the acquire leaving
nothing to the former. The concept of acquisition as an aim
of permanence and finality in that there is a transference
of the title of the original holder to the acquiring
authority. But the concept of requisition involves merely
taking of "domain or control over property without acquiring
rights of ownership" and must by its very nature be of
temporary duration. [699 F-H]
4. If the Government wants to take over the property
for and indefinite period of the Government must acquire the
property but it cannot use the power of requisition for
achieving that object. The power of requisition is
exercisable by the Government only for a public purpose
which is of a transitory character. If the public purpose
for which the premises are required is of a perennial or
permanent character from the very inception, no order can be
passed requisitioning the premises and in such a case the
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order or requisition, if passed, would a fraud upon the
statute. What ever be the public purpose for which an order
of requisition made, it is by its very nature temporary in
character and it cannot endure for an indefinite period
time. The period of time for which an order of requisition
may be continued cannot be an unreasonably long period such
as thirty years and it must therefore be held that the order
of requisition, even if valid when made, ceased to be valid
and effective. The Writ Petition challenging the order of
requisition after a lapse of over thirty years was therefore
maintainable.[700 C-F,701 A]
5. The appellant was an allottee of the flat under the
order of requisition and he was liable to pay compensation
for the use and occupation of the flat to the State
Government and the State Government was in its turn liable
to pay compensation for the requisitioning of the flat. If,
instead of the appellant paying compensation to the State
Government and the State Government and the State Government
making payment of an identical amount to the owner, the
appellant paid directly to the owner with the express or
implied assent of the State Government, the order of
requisition could not cease to be valid and effective. It
did not matter whether the appellant described the amount
paid by him to the owner as rent, because whatever was done
by him was under the order of requisition and so long as the
order of requisition stood, his possession of the flat was
attributable only to the order of requisition and no payment
of amount described as rent could possible after the nature
of his occupation of the flat or make him a tenant in
respect of the flat.[701 F-H]
State of Bombay v. Bhanji Munji & Anr. [1955] 1 S.C.R.
777; Chiranjital’s case [1950]S.C.R. 869; referred to.
696
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1212 of
1984.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and order
dated the 20th October, 1983 of the Bombay High Court in W.
Appeal No.779 of 1983.
P.R.Mridul, G. Vishwanath & Parijat Sinha, for the
Appellant.
Ram Jethmalani & Soli J. Sorabjee, M.N. Shroff,
Talegankar & B.V. Desai. for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
BHAGWATI, J. Special Leave Granted.
This appeal by special leave raises a short question of
law as to whether an order of requisition of premises can be
continued for an indefinite period of time or it must
necessarily be of temporary duration. The facts giving rise
to this appeal are few and may be briefly stated as follows:
One Rukmanibai was the owner of a building bearing
House No. 65, Police Station Road, Ville Parle West, Bombay.
The ground floor of this building comprised of a flat which
was in the occupation of one N.C. Shah as a tenant and since
N.C. Shah was going to vacate the flat, Rukmanibai gave
intimation of the proposed vacancy to the State Government
and requested the State Government to allot the premises to
the appellant who was her nearest relative. The appellant
also addressed a letter dated 12th March 1951 to the Chief
Officer of the Accommodation Department of the Government of
Bombay requesting that he should be allotted the flat which
was going to be vacated by N.C. Shah. It appears however
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that the request of the appellant was turned down by the
State Government and ultimately the flat was requisitioned
by an order dated 9th April 1951 made by the State
Government in exer-
697
cise of the powers conferred under clause (a) of sub-section
(4) of section 6 of the Bombay Land Requisition Act 1948.
This order of requisition did not set out the public purpose
for which the flat was requisitioned. Now curiously enough,
though it was decided by the State Government not to allot
the flat to the appellant and his application for allotment
was specifically reacted the Assistant Controller of
Accommodation passsed an order on 25th April 1951 allotting
the requisitioned flat to the appellant and pursuant to the
order of allotment, the appellant entered into occupation of
the flat. The appellant thereafter paid rent to Rukmanibai
from time to time but the payment of rent was very irregular
and the appellant committed several defaults in payment of
rent with the result that not less than seven owners had to
be passed by the Accommodation Department of the Government
of Bombay directing the appellant to vacate the flat because
his chronic defaults. Ultimately, however, each time no
action for eviction was taken by the Controller of
Accommodation, presumably because the appellant must have
paid up the rent. It is significant to note that in the year
1964 the appellant requested the Controller of Accommodation
to derequistion the flat and to allow him to become direct
tenant of Rukmani Bai but his application was rejected by
letter dated 25th March 1964. The appellant also thereafter
in the year 1979 applied to the Controller of Accommodation
for sanction to erect a kitchen platform in the flat but
this application was turned down by a letter dated 20th
March 1979 addressed by the Controller of Accommodation. The
appellant throughout this period continued to occupy the
flat as an allottee under the order of requisition and paid
rent to Rukmanibai from time to time. thought irregularly.
The building in which the requisitioned flat was
situate, was purchased by the 3rd respondent from Rukmanibai
on 30th May 1973. The 3rd respondent, after purchase of the
building, requested the State Government to derequisition
the flat inasmuch as the allotment of the flat in favour of
the appellant could not be for a public purpose. The State
Government did not pay any heed to this request of the 3rd
respondent with the result that the 3rd respondent was
constrained to file writ petition No. 1210 of 1980 in the
High Court of Bombay challenging the validity of the order
of requisition and contending that it could not survive for
such a long period of time and the State Government was
therefore bound to derequisition the flat.
698
One of the grounds on which the validity of the order
of requisition was challenged was that the order of
requisition did not set out the public purpose for which it
was made. This ground of challenge was negatived by the High
Court and, in our opinion, rightly, because it is not
necessary that the order of requisition must explicitly set
out the public purpose for which it is made. The only
requirement of the law is that the requisitioning must be
made for a public purpose and so long as there is a public
purpose for which an order of requisition is made, it would
be valid irrespective whether such public purpose is recited
in the order of requisition or not. It has, in fact, been so
held by this Court in State of Bombay v. Bhanji Munji & Anr.
(1) where Bose, J. speaking on behalf of the Court observed:
"In our opinion, it is not necessary to set out
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the purpose of the requisition in the order. The
desirability of such a course is obvious because when
it is not done, proof of the purpose must be given in
other ways and that exposes the authorities to the kind
of charges we find here and to the danger that the
courts will consider them well founded. But in itself
an omission to set out the purpose in the order is not
fatal so long as the facts are established to the
satisfaction of the court in some other way."
The order of requisition could not therefore be
successfully attacked on the ground that it did not set out
the public purpose for which it was made. But, as pointed
out by Bose, J. in the above dassage quoted from this
judgment in Bhanji Munji’s case (supra), the State
Government would have to show that the order of requisition
was made for a public purpose and the necessary facts
showing the public purpose for which the order of
requisition was made would have to be established by the
State Government to the satisfaction of the court. The High
Court held in the present case that no material was placed
before it to show what was the public purpose for which the
order of requisition was made and in fact, there was no
denial on the part of the State Government or the appellant
of the averment made on behalf of the 3rd respondent that
the appellant was neither a government servant nor a
homeless person. This view taken by the High Court appears
to be well-founded and it is not
699
possible to hold on the material placed before us that the
order of requisition was made for a public purpose.
But it was contended on behalf of the appellant that
even if the order of requisition was invalid as having been
made for a purpose other than a public purpose, the 3rd
respondent was not entitled to challenge the same after a
lapse of over 30 years and the writ petition should
therefore have been dismissed by the High Court. Now if the
only ground on which the order of requisition was challenged
in the writ petition was that it was not made for a public
purpose and was therefore void, perhaps it might have been
possible to successfully repel this ground of challenge by
raising an objection that the High Court should not have
entertained the writ petition challenging the order of
requisition after a lapse of over 30 years. But we find that
there is also another ground of challenge urged on behalf of
the 3rd respondent and that is a very formidable ground to
which there is no answer. The argument urged under this
ground of challenge was that an order of requisition in the
present case therefore ceased to be valid and effective
after the expiration of a reasonable period of time and that
it could not, under any circumstances, continue for a period
of about 30 years and hence it was liable to be quashed and
set aside or in any event the State Government was bound to
revoke the same and to derequisition the flat. This
contention has, in our opinion, great force and must be
sustained. There is a basic and fundamental distinction
recognised by law between requisition and acquisition. The
Constitution itself in Entry 42 of List III of the Seventh
Schedule makes a distinction between acquisition and
requisitioning of property. The original Article 31 clause
(2) of the Constitution also recognised this distinction
between Compulsory acquisition and requisitioning of
property. The two concepts, one of requisition and the other
of acquisition are totally distinct and independent.
Acquisition means the acquiring of the entire title of the
expropriated owner whatever the nature and extent of that
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title may be. The entire bundle of rights which was vested
in the original holder passes on acquisition to the acquirer
leaving nothing to the former. Vide: Observations of
Mukherjee, J. in Chiranjitlal’s case. The concept of
acquisition has an air of permanence and finality in the
there is transference of the title of the original holder to
the acquiring authority. But the concept of requisition
involves merely taking of "domain or control over pro-
700
perty without acquiring rights of ownership" and must by its
very nature be of temporary duration. If requisitioning of
property could legitimately continue for an indefinite
period of time, the distinction between requisition and
acquisition would tend to become blurred, because in that
event for all practical purposes the right to possession and
enjoyment of the property which constitutes a major
constituent element of the right of ownership would be
vested indefinitely without any limitation of time in the
requisitioning authority and it would be possible for the
authority to substantially take over the property without
acquiring it and paying full market value as compensation
under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. We do not think that
the government can under the guise of requisition continued
for an indefinite period of time, in substance acquire the
property, because that would be a fraud on the power
conferred on the government. If the government wants to take
over the property for an indefinite period of time, the
government must acquire the property but it cannot use the
power of requisition for achieving that object. The power of
requisition is exercisable by the government only for a
public purpose which is of a transitory character. If the
public purpose for which the premises are required is of a
perennial or permanent character from the very inception, no
order can be passed requisitioning the premises and in such
a case the order of requisition, if passed, would be a fraud
upon the statute, for the government would be requisitioning
the premises when really speaking they want the premises for
acquisition, the object of taking the premisses being not
transitory but permanent in character. Where the purpose for
which the premises are required is of such a character that
from the very inception it can never be served by
requisitioning the premises but can be achieved only by
acquiring the property which would be the case where the
purpose is of a permanent character or likely to subsist for
an indefinite period of time, the government may acquire the
premises but it certainly cannot requisition the premises
and continue the requisitioning indefinitely. Here in the
present case the order of requisition was made as far back
as 9th April 1951 and even if it was made for housing a
homeless person and the appellant at that time fell within
the category of homeless person, it cannot be allowed to
continue for such an inordinately long period as thirty
years. We must therefore hold that the order of requisition
even if it was valid when made, ceased to be valid and
effective after the expiration of a reasonable period of
time. It is not necessary for us to decide what period of
time may be regarded as reasonable for the continuance of an
order of requisition in a given case, because ultimately the
answer to this question must depend on the facts and
701
circumstances of each case but there can be no doubt that
whatever be the public purpose for which an order of
requisition is made the period of time for which the order
of requisition may be continued cannot be an unreasonably
long period such as thirty years. The High Court was,
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therefore, in any view of the matter, right in holding that
in the circumstances the order of requisition could not
survive any longer and the State Government was bound to
revoke the order of requisition and deregulation the flat
and to take steps to evict the appellant from the flat and
to hand over vacant possession of it to the 3rd respondent.
There was also one other contention urged on behalf of
the appellant in a desperate attempt to protect his
possession of the flat and that contention was, since he had
paid rent of the flat to Rukmanibai and such rent was
accepted by her, he had become a direct tenant of Rukmanibai
and the order of requisition had become totally irrelevant
so far as as his possession of the flat is concerned. This
contention is, in our opinion, wholly unfounded. The
appellant admittedly came into occupation of the flat as an
allottee under the order of requisition passed by the State
Government and even if any rent was paid by the appellant to
Rukmanibai and such rent was accepted by her, it did not
have the effect of putting an end to the order of
requisition. The appellant was an allottee of the flat under
the order of requisition and he was liable to pay
compensation for the use and occupation of the flat to the
State Government and the State Government was in its turn
liable to pay compensation to Rukmanibai for the
requisitioning of the flat and if, therefore, instead of the
appellant paying compensation to the State Government and
the State Government making payment of an identical amount
to Rukmanibai, the appellant paid directly to Rukmanibai
with the express or in any event implied assent of the State
Government, the order of requisition could not cease to be
valid and effective. It did not matter at all whether the
appellant described the amount paid by him to Rukmanibai as
rent, because whatever was done by him was under the order
of requisition and so long as the order of requisition
stood, his possession of the flat was attributable only to
the order of requisition and no payment of an amount
described as rent could possibly alter the nature of his
occupation of the flat or make him a tenant of Rukmanibai in
respect of the flat.
We are therefore of the view that the High Court was
right
402
in allowing the writ petition and directing the State
Government and the Controller of Accommodation to
deregulation the flat and to take steps to evict the
appellant and to hand over vacant and peaceful possession of
the flat to the 3rd respondent. We accordingly dismiss the
appeal, and confirm the order passed by the High Court but
in the circumstances of the case, the appellant shall not be
evicted from the flat until 28th February, 1985, provided
the appellant files an undertaking in this Court within two
weeks from today that he will vacate the flat and hand over
its vacant possession to the 3rd respondent on or before
that date. There will be no order as to costs of the appeal.
N.V.K. Appeal dismissed.
703