Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
KRISHNA BHIMRAO DESHPANDE
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
LAND TRIBUNAL, DHARWAD AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/11/1992
BENCH:
[LALIT MOHAN SHARMA AND K. JAYACHANDRA REDDY, JJ.]
ACT:
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 252 read with Schedule VII, List n Entry 18-
Legislation by Parliament Requirement-Central Law on ceiling
on urban immovable property in pursuance of Resolution of
State Legislature State Laws on other matters relating to
the subject-matter of resolution-Legality of.
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 252, Schedule VII, list II, Entry 18-Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 and Karnataka Land
Reforms Act as amended in 1974 Object and application of-
Whether any conflict between the Acts.
HEADNOTE:
In the year 1972 the Karnataka Legislature passed a
resolution under Article 252 of the Constitution imposing a
ceiling on urban immovable property and the acquisition of
such property in excess of the ceiling is limit for public
purposes and all the matters connected therewith shall be
regulated in the State by Parliament by law.
On 1.4.74 the Karnataka Land Reforms (Amendment) Act
was enacted and under the Act the tenant of the land covered
by the Act was entitled to the grant of occupancy rights
after making an application under the Act. The Act came
Into force with effect from 2.1.85. But for the purpose of
grant of occupancy rights, 1.4.74 was the relevant date.
In the year 1975 the Karnataka Urban Agglomeration
Ordinance was passed, whereunder all lands between the
periphery of 8 K.Ms. of the municipal limits of Hubli
Dharwad were declared as urban agglomeration land.
The Parliament passed the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 for imposition of ceiling on urban
properties and the Ceiling Act was made applicable to
Karnataka also in view of the resolution passed by the State
Government.
The lands involved in the present cases were covered by
the development plan by the Belgaum City Town Planning
authority as per the Master Plan and they were included and
declared as urban agglomeration in the City of Hubli under
the provisions of the Ceiling Act.
The owners of the agglomeration lands challenged the
order of the Land Tribunal under the Land Reforms Act
conferring occupancy rights on the tenants before the High
Court. They contended that the lands involved in the cases
were within the purview of the Ceiling Act and therefore
the provisions of the Land Reforms Act had no application to
such lands on the ground that the provisions of the Ceiling
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Act.
The writ petitions were dismissed by the High Court.
The owner’s writ appeals were also dismissed by a common
judgment by the Division Bench of the High Court. The
Division Bench held that there was no conflict between the
two enactments.
The judgment of the Division Bench was challenged in
S.L.P. (Civil) No. 16041-42/88.
Many of the similar writ petitions that were pending
before the High Court were transferred to the Land Reforms
Appellate Tribunal.
The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the petitions by a
common order following the judgment of the Division Bench of
the High Court. Several Civil revision petitions filed by
the land owners against the order of the Appellate Tribunal
were dismissed by the High Court. Some of the special leave
petitions were filed against the order of the High Court in
the said civil revision petitions.
The petitioners-land owners contended that when in
pursuance of the resolution of the State Legislature passed
under Article 252 of the Constitution the Parliament
legislated in respect of the topic covered by the
resolution. The Parliamentary law repealed or superseded the
existing State legislation on the topic and therefore such
law could not be enforced thereafter; and that vesting of
tenanted land in the State and conferment of occupancy
rights under the provisions of the State Act directly fall
under the subject of imposing ceiling on land holding and
other matters incidental or ancillary to the main topic of
imposing ceiling and therefore they were fully covered by
the Ceiling Act passed by the Parliament and the same
superseded the State enactment in respect of such lands.
The respondents submitted that "imposition of ceiling"
was a distinct and separately identifiable subject and the
Parliament was empowered to legislate; that the power of the
State to legislate in respect of the remaining part of the
subject-matter was unaffected; that when two distinct
powers came into existence, vesting law making competence in
the State and Parliament, the pith and substance of the laws
made by each of them had to be examined to see whether any
one of them encroached the field set apart as falling within
the competence of the other body; that in any event the
provisions of Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act
had nothing to do with the imposition of ceiling on the
urban land and that conferring of occupancy rights etc. to
the tenants under Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms
Act did not come under the category of "the matters
connected therewith or ancillary or incidental to the
imposition of ceiling" on urban immovable property.
Dismissing the special leave petitions, this Court,
HELD: 1.01. Article 252 empowers the Parliament to
legislate for two or more States on any of the matters with
respect of which the Parliament has no power to make law
except as provided under Articles 249 and 250. This power to
legislate is vested in the Parliament only if two or more
State Legislatures think it desirable to have a law enacted
by Parliament on such matters in List II, i.e. with respect
to which the Parliament has no power to make law for the
State. The passing of the resolutions by the State
Legislatures is a condition precedent for vesting the
Parliament with such power. [339-C-D]
1.02. The scope of Entry 18 is very wide and the land
mentioned therein may be agricultural or non-agricultural
and may be rural or urban. The subject-matter carved out of
Entry 18 under the resolutions passed by The various State
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Legislatures related to only "urban immovable property" and
by virtue of the resolution the law that can be enacted by
the Parliament should be a law "imposing a ceiling on such
urban immovable property." [340-B, C]
1.03. From the resolution it is clear that the subject-
matter that was resolved to be entrusted to the Parliament
was the one imposing a ceiling on urban immovable property
and acquisition of such property in excess of the ceiling.
This subject-matter is the topic that falls within Entry 18
of List II of Schedule VII to the Constitution and the
subject-matter of Entry 18 has been originally kept apart
for the State Legislature to make law and Parliament had no
competence in respect of those matters falling under the
wide scope of Entry 18. By virtue of this resolution a part
of the area falling under Entry 18 is transferred to the
domain of Parliament to make law relating to the matters
within the transferred area. [339-G, H; 341-A]
2.01. The primary object and the purpose of the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 is to provide for
the imposition of ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomeration and for acquisition of such lands in excess
of the ceiling limit and to regulate the construction of
buildings on such lands and for matters connected therewith.
[340-H; 341-A]
2.02. The Karnataka Land Reforms Act as amended in 1974
is a welfare legislation. The object of the Act was to have
a uniform law in the State of Karnataka relating to
agrarian reforms, conferment of ownership on tenants,
ceiling on land holdings and for certain other matters
contained therein. [342-D]
2.03. In respect of imposing ceiling on the land under
urban agglomeration the provisions of the Ceiling Act alone
are applicable and to that extent the provisions of Chapter
IV of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act which also deal with
the imposition of ceiling would not be applicable.
[344-C]
2.04. The land in the instant case comes under the
urban agglomeration the imposition of the ceiling should
naturally be under the provisions of the Urban Ceiling Act
and not under the Karnataka Land Reforms Act. [344-B, C]
2.05. Imposition of ceiling on urban land is a distinct
and independent subject as compared to imposition of ceiling
on owning or to hold agricultural land or any other kind of
property which do not attract the Urban Ceiling Act. These
are two distinct powers and therefore the law making
competence can be in two different legislative bodies.
Consequently it is difficult to hold that the provisions of
Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act are outside
the legislative competence of the State Legislature.
[350-C, D]
2.06. The one topic that is transferred in the
resolution passed under Article 252 as distinct and
separately identifiable and does not include the remaining
topics under Entry 18 in respect of which the State alone
has the power to legislate. [351-D]
2.07. The legislative power of the State has to be
reconciled with that of the Parliament and that in their
respective fields each is supreme. Even assuming that the
State enactment has same effect on the subject-matter
falling within the Parliament’s legislative competence that
by itself will not render such law invalid or inoperative.
[350-G-H]
2.08. There is no conflict between the Ceiling Act and
the State Act. The imposition of ceiling on urban immovable
property is an independent topic and cannot be construed as
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to nullify the other subject left in the domain of the State
Legislature under Entry 18 inasmuch as imposition of ceiling
is a distinct and separately identifiable subject and does
not cover the other measures such as regulation of
relationship of landlord and tenant in respect of which the
State Legislature has competence to legislate. [351-C-D]
2.09. There is a ceiling provision under Section 45(2)
of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act providing for computation
of the area in respect of which the tenant may be granted
occupancy rights. But it is clear that ceiling on the
area in this context is only for the purpose of Section 45.
[351-F]
2.10. Provisions in the Chapters II, III, V, VI to XI
of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act deal with the conferment
of occupancy rights on the respective tenants and they do
not in any way conflict with the subject matter transferred
to the Parliament by the resolution passed under Section
252. [351-E,F]
Thumati Venkaiah and others v. State of Andhra Pradesh
and of others, [1980] 4 SCC 295; Union of India and others
v. Valluri Basavaiah Chowdhary and others, [1979] 3 SCC 324;
Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietory) Ltd. v. State of West
Bengal and others, AIR 1962 SC 1044 and Kannan Devan Hills
Produce Company Ltd. v. The State of Kerala etc., AIR
1972 SC 2301 referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) Nos. 16041-42/88.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.7.1988 of the
Karnataka High Court in W.P. No 9173/86 and W.A. No
2707/85.
WITH
SLP (C) Nos. 12258, 12254, 12260/90 & 8608/91
R.N. Narasimhamurthy, S.S. Javali, S.N. Bhat and Ravi
P. Wadhwani for the Petitioners.
M.S. Nesargi, R. Jagannath Goulay, M.K. Dua, M.
Veerappa, K.H. Nobin Singh, S.K. Kulkarni and Surya Kant for
the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered by
K. JAYACHANDRA REDDY, J. In all these special leave
petitions the common question that arises for consideration
is whether the provisions of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act,
1961 as amended in 1974 (‘Act’ for short) cease to be
applicable in all respects to the lands which came within
the purview of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act,
1976 (’Ceiling Act’ for short). The lands involved in these
matters are covered by the development plan by the Belgaum
City Town Planning authority as per the Master Plan for the
said City and they are included and declared as urban
agglomeration in the City of Hubli under the provisions of
the Ceiling Act. In the year 1972 the Karnataka Legislature
passed a resolution under Article 252 of the Constitution to
the effect that imposing a ceiling on urban immovable
property and the acquisition of such property in excess of
the ceiling limit for public purposes and all the matters
connected therewith shall be regulated in the State by
Parliament Qby law. The State Legislature thus divested
itself of the legislative competence to enact law in respect
of subject-matter of the resolution. On 1.4.74 the amended
Karnataka Land Reforms Act was enacted and under the said
Act the tenant of the land covered by the Act is entitled to
the grant of occupancy rights after making an application
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under the Act. This Act came into force with effect from
2.1.85. But for the purpose of grant of occupancy rights
1.4.74 was the relevant date. While so in the year 1975 the
Governor of Karnataka passed the Urban Aggolmeration
Ordinance whereunder all lands between the periphery of 8
K.Ms. of the municipal limits of Hubli Dharwad were declared
as urban agglomeration land. In the year 1976 the Parliament
passed the Ceiling Act for imposition of ceiling on urban
properties and the Act was made applicable to Karnataka also
in view of the resolution passed by the State Government
referred to above. The order of the Land Tribunal under the
Act conferring occupancy rights on the tenants was
challenged before the High Court contending that the lands
involved in these cases were within the purview of the
Ceiling Act and therefore the provisions of the Land Reforms
Act had no application to such lands on the ground that the
provisions of the State Act were repugnant to the provisions
of the Central Act namely the Ceiling Act. The writ petition
was dismissed by the High Court. The owners preferred writ
appeals and they were also dismissed by a common judgment in
Writ Appeal Nos. 2707 and 2361/85 etc. The Division Bench
held that there is no conflict between the two enactment in
certain respect i.e. atleast so far as the implementation of
the provisions of Chapter III of the Act are concerned and
that provisions of this Chapter of the Act do not cease to
apply to the agricultural lands coming within the meaning of
urban agglomeration in the Ceiling Act. The judgment of the
Division Bench is challenged in S.L.P.(Civil) No. 16041-
42/88. Many of the similar writ petitions that were pending
before the High Court were transferred to the Land Reforms
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the
petitions by a common order following the judgment of the
Division Bench of the High Court in Writ Appeal No.2707/85
and connected matters. Several civil revisions petitions
filed by the land owners against the order of the Appellate
Tribunal were dismissed by the High Court. Some of the
special leave petitions are filed against the order of the
High Court in the said civil revision petitions. Therefore
all these special leave petitions can be disposed of by a
common order.
It was urged before us that the resolution of the State
Legislature passed under Article 252 of the Constitution
shifted the topic covered by the resolution from List II of
Schedule VII to the Constitution and vested the competence
to make the law in respect of the said topic in the
Parliament and that thereafter the State enactment ceased to
have efficacy in respect of said topic. Alternatively it was
urged that, when in pursuance of the resolution the
Parliament legislates in respect of the topic covered by the
resolution, the Parliamentary law, repeals or supersedes any
existing State legislation on the topic and therefore such
law cannot be enforced thereafter.
We shall first extract some of the relevant provisions
of the Constitution of India and the respective enactments.
Article 246 of the Constitution reads thus:
"246. Subject-matter of laws made
by Parliament and by the
Legislatures of States-(l)
Notwithstanding anything in
clauses (2) and (3), Parliament has
exclusive power to make laws with
respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List I in the
Seventh Schedule (in this
Constitution referred to as the
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"Union List").
(2) xx xx xx
(3) Subject to clauses (1) and (2),
the Legislature of any State has
exclusive power to make laws for
such State or any part thereof
with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List II in the
Seventh Schedule (in this
Constitution referred to as the
"State List").
(4)xx xx xx "
2
Entry 18 in List II namely the State List of the VII
Schedule to the Constitution is in the following terms:
"18. Land, that is to say, rights
in or over land, land tenures
including the relation of landlord
and tenant, and the collection of
rents, transfer and alienation of
agricultural land; land improvement
and agricultural loans;
colonization."
Article 252 of the Constitution reads
thus:
"252. Power of Parliament to
legislate for two or more States
by consent and adoption of such
legislation by any other State-(1)
If it appears to the Legislatures
of two or more States to be
desirable that any of the matters
with respect to which Parliament
has no power to make laws for the
States except as provided in
Articles 249 and 250 should be
regulated in such States by
Parliament by law, and if
resolutions to that effect are
passed by all the Houses of the
Legislatures of those States, it
shall be lawful for Parliament to
pass an Act for regulating that
matter accordingly, and any Act so
passed shall apply to such States
and to any other State by which it
is adopted afterwards by resolution
passed in that behalf by the House
or, where there are two Houses, by
each of the Houses of the
Legislature of that State.
(2) Any Act so passed by Parliament
may be amended or repealed by an
Act of Parliament passed or adopted
in like manner but shall not, as
respects any State to which it
applics, be amended or repcaled by
an Act of the Legislature of that
State."
Article 252 empowers the Parliament to legislate for
two or more States on any of the matters with respect of
which the Parliament has no power to make law except as
provided under Articles 249 and 250. This power to legislate
is vested in the Parliament only if two or more State
Legislatures think it desirable to have a law enacted by
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Parliament on such matters in List II i.e. with respect to
which the Parliament has no power to make law for the State.
The passing of the resolutions by the State Legislatures is
a condition precedent for vesting the Parliament with such
power. The relevant portion of the resolution passed by the
State Legislature under Article 252 reads thus:
"Now, therefore, in pursuance of
clause (1) of Article 252 of the
Constitution, this Assembly hereby
resolves that the imposition of a
ceiling on urban immovable property
and F acquisition of such property
in excess of the ceiling and all
matters connected therewith or
ancillary and incidental thereto
should be regulated in the State of
Karnataka by Parliament by law."
The resolution states that the imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property and the acquisition of such
property in excess of the ceiling limit with a view to
utilising such excess property for public purposes and all
other matters connected therein or incidental thereto shall
be regulated in this State by Parliament by law. The basic
question that arises is what is the actual content of the
subject-matter that was resolved to be entrusted to
Parliament by the State Legislature under Article 252 of the
Constitution. From the resolution it is clear that the
subject-matter that was resolved to be entrusted to the
Parliament was the one imposing a ceiling on urban immovable
property and acquisition of such property in excess of the
ceiling. It is true that this subject-matter is the topic
that falls within Entry 18 of List 11 of Schedule VII to the
Constitution and the said subject-matter of Entry 18 has
been originally kept apart for the State Legislature to make
law and Parliament had no competence in respect of those
matters falling under the wide scope of Entry 18. Now by
virtue of this resolution a part of the area falling under
Entry 18 is transferred to the domain of Parliament to make
law relating to the matters within the transferred area. The
scope of Entry 18 is very wide and the land mentioned
therein may be agricultural or non-agricultural and may be
rural or urban. The subject-matter carved out of Entry 18
under the resolutions passed by the various State
Legislatures related to only- "urban immovable property" and
by virtue of the resolution the law that can be enacted by
the Parliament should be a law "imposing a ceiling on such
urban immovable property. The learned counsel for the
petitioners, however, urged that vesting of tenanted land in
the State and conferment of occupancy rights under the
provisions of the State Act directly fall under the subject
of imposing ceiling on and holding and other matters
incidental or ancillary to the main topic of imposing
ceiling and therefore they are fully covered by the Ceiling
Act passed by the Parliament and the same supersedes the
State enactment in respect of this land. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondents on the contrary submitted that
"imposition of ceiling" is a distinct and separately
identifiable subject and is the power carved out of Entry 18
and vested in the Parliament to legislate and that the power
of the State to legislate in respect of the remaining part
of the subject-matter is unaffected and that when two
distinct powers have come into existence, vesting law making
competence in the State and Parliament, the pith and
substance of the laws made by each of them has to be
examined to see whether any one of them encroaches the field
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set apart as falling within the competence of the other
body. The learned counsel for the respondents, however,
submitted that in any event the provisions of Chapter III of
the Act have nothing to do with the imposition of ceiling on
the urban land and that conferring of occupancy rights etc.
to the tenants under Chapter 111 of the Act do not come
under the category of "the matters connected therewith or
ancillary or incidental to the imposition of ceiling" on
urban immovable property.
Now we shall refer to the provisions of the Urban
Ceiling Act. The Statement of Objects and Reasons under
Preamble to the said Act would show that the primary object
and the purpose is to provide for the imposition of ceiling
on vacant land in urban agglomeration and for acquisition of
such lands in excess of the ceiling limit and to regulate
the
Marwaha and others. [1974] 1 SCR
165; Miss Neelima Shangla v. State
of Haryana and others, [1986] 4 SCC
268, or Jitendra Kumar and others
v. State of Punjab and others:
[1985] 1 SCR 899."
If we have regard to the above enunciation that a
candidate who finds a place in the select list as a
candidate selected for appointment to a civil post, does not
acquire an indefeasible right to be appointed in such
posting the absence of any specific Rule entitling him for
such appointment and he could be aggrieved by his non-
appointment only when the Administration does so either
arbitrarily or for no bona fide reasons, it follows as a
necessary concomitant that such candidate even if has a
legitimate expectation of being appointed in such posts due
to his name finding a place in the select list of
candidates, cannot claim to have a right to be heard before
such select list is cancelled for bona fide and valid
reasons and not
arbitrarily: In the instant case, when the Chandigarh
Administration which received the complaints about the
unfair and injudicious manner in which select list of
candidates for appointment as conductors in CTU was prepared
by the Selection Board constituted for the purpose, found
those complaints to be well founded on an enquiry got made
in that regard, we are unable to find that the Chandigarh
Administration had acted either arbitrarily or without bona
fide and valid reasons in cancelling such 0dubious select
list. Hence, the contentions of the learned counsel for the
Respondents as to the sustainability of the Judgment of CAT
under appeal on the ground of non-affording of an
opportunity of hearing to the Respondents (candidates in the
select list) is a misconceived one and is consequently
rejected.
In the result, we allow this appeal, set aside the
Judgment under appeal, and reject the applications made by
Respondents before CAT, Chandigarh. However, in the facts
and circumstances of this appeal, we make no order as to
costs.
G.N. Appeal allowed.
FOOD CORPORATION OF INDIA
V.
KAMDHENU CATTLE FEED INDUSTRIES
NOVEMBER 3, 1992
[J.S. VERMA, YOGESHWAR DAYAL AND
N. VENKATACHALA, JJ.]
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 14-Contractual transactions of State or its
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instrumentality-Essential requisites-Non-arbitrariness,
fairness in action and due consideration of legitimate
expectation-Ignoring the highest bid- Negotiations for
higher offer and acceptance thereof-Validity of.
Administrative Law:
Doctrine of legitimate expectation-Forms part of non
arbitrariness and Rule of Law- To be determined in the
larger public interest Open to judicial review.
The appellant-Corporation invited tenders for sale of
stocks of damaged food-grains. The respondent’s bid was the
highest. Since the appellant was not satisfied about the
adequacy of the amount offered even in the highest tender,
it invited all the tenders to participate in the
negotiations, instead of accepting the highest tender.
During the course of negotiations, the respondent refused to
revise the rates in its offer. On the basis of the highest
bid made during the negotiations, the appellant disposed of
the stocks of damaged foodgrains, rejecting the highest
tenders. The respondent, whose tender was the highest,
challenged the decision of the appellants by filing a Writ
Petition before the High Court. It was contended that the
action of the appellant was arbitrary and hence violative of
Art. 14 of the Constitution. The High Court accepted the
contention and allowed the Writ Petition. Being aggrieved by
the High Court’s decision the appellant-Corporation
preferred the present appeal.
It was contended on behalf of the appellant that there
being no right in the person submitting the highest tender
to claim acceptance thereof, and since all tenderers were
given equal opportunity to participate in the negotiations
and to revise the bid before acceptance, the action of the
appellant was not arbitrary.
The Respondent contended that since no cogent reasons
were indicated for rejecting all the tenders and for
deciding to dispose of the stock by negotiating with the
tenderers for procuring a higher price, such a decision was
arbitrary.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1.1. In contractual sphere as in all other State
actions, the State and all its instrumentalities have to
conform to Article 14 of the Constitution of which non-
arbitrariness is a significant facet. There is no unfettered
discretion in public law. A public authority possesses
powers only to use them for public good. This imposes the
duty to act fairly and to adopt a procedure which is
‘fairplay in action’. Due observance of this obligation as a
part of good administration raises a reasonable or
legitimate expectation in every citizen to be treated fairly
in his interaction with the State and its instrumentalities,
with this element forming a necessary component of the
decision making process in all State actions. To satisfy
this requirement of non-arbitrariness in a State action, it
is necessary to consider and give due weight to the
reasonable-or legitimate expectations of the persons likely
to be affected by the decision or else that unfairness in
the exercise of the power may amount to an abuse or excess
of power apart from affecting the bona fides of the decision
in a given case. The decision so made would be exposed to
challenge on the ground of arbitrariness. Rule of law does
not completely eliminate discretion in the exercise of
power, as it is unrealistic, but provides for control of its
exercise by judicial review. [328-A-D]
12. The mere reasonable or legitimate expectation of a
citizen, in such a situation, may not by itself be a
distinct enforceable right, but failure to consider and give
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due weight to it may render the decision arbitrary, and this
is how the requirement of due consideration of a legitimate
expectation forms part of the principle of non-
arbitrariness, a necessary concomitant of the rule of law.
Every legitimate expectation is a relevant factor requiring
due consideration in a fair decision making process. Whether
the expectation of the claimant is reasonable or legitimate
in the context is a question of fact in each case. Whenever
the question arises, it is to be determined not according to
the claimant’s perception but in larger public interest
wherein other more important considerations may outweigh
what would otherwise have been the legitimate expectation of
the claimant. A bona fide decision of the public authority
reached in this manner would satisfy the requirement of non-
arbitrariness and withstand judicial scrutiny. [328-E-G]
2.1. Even though the highest tenderer can claim no
right to have his tender accepted, there being a power
while inviting tenders to reject all the tenders, yet that
power cannot be exercised arbitrarily and must depend for
its validity on the existence of cogent reasons for such
action. The object of inviting tenders for disposal of a
commodity is to procure the highest price while giving equal
opportunity to all the intending bidders to compete.
Procuring the highest price for the commodity is undoubtedly
in public interest since the amount so collected goes to the
public fund. Accordingly, inadequacy of the price offered in
the highest tender would be a cogent ground for negotiating
with the tenderers giving them equal opportunity to revise
their bids with a view to obtain the highest available
price. Retaining the option to accept the highest tender, in
case the negotiations do not yield a significantly higher
offer would be fair to the tenderers besides protecting the
public interest. A procedure wherein resort is had to
negotiations with the tenderers for obtaining a
significantly higher bid during the period when the offers
in the tenders remain open for acceptance and rejection of
the tenders only in the event of a significant higher bid
being obtained during negotiations would ordinarily satisfy
this requirement. This procedure involves giving due weight
to the legitimate expectation of the highest bidder to have
his tender accepted unless outbid by a higher offer, in
which case acceptance of the highest offer within the time
the offers remain open would be a reasonable exercise of
power for public good. [329-E-H; 330-A]
Shanti Vijay & Co. etc. v. Princess Fatima Fouzia &
Ors. etc., [1980] I S.C.R. 459, relied on.
Council of Civil Service Unions and Others v. Minister
for the Civil Service, 1985 A.C. 374 (H.L.), and In re
Preston, 1985 A.C. 835 (H.L.), referred to.
22. In the instant case, the respondent’s highest
tender was super seded only by a significantly higher bid
made during the negotiations with all tenderers giving them
equal opportunity to compete by revising their bids. The
fact that it was a significantly higher bid obtained by
adopting the right course is sufficient to demonstrate that
the action of the appellant satisfied the requirement of
non-arbitrariness, and it was taken for the cogent reason of
inadequacy of the price offered in the highest tender, which
reason was evident to all tenderers invited to participate
in the negotiations and to revise their bids. The High Court
was in error in taking the contrary view. [330-D-E]
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4731 of
1992.
From the Judgment and Order dated 21.7.92 of the C.W.N.
7419 of 1992.
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Y.P. Rao for the Appellant.
Ashok Sen, H.L. Aggarwal, and K.K. Gupta (NP) for the
Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VERMA, J. Leave granted.
The appeal by special leave under Article 136 of the
Constitution is against the judgment and order dated 21.7.92
by which the Civil Writ Petition No. 7419 of 1992 has been
allowed by the Punjab & Haryana High Court directing the
appellant Food Corporation of India to allot to the
respondent the necessary stocks of damaged rich for which
the tenders had been invited by the appellant, since the
respondent was the highest bidder.
The appellant invited tenders for sale of stocks of
damaged foodgrains in accordance with the terms and
conditions contained in the tender notice (Annexure ‘A’).
The tenders were required to be submitted upto 2.45 p.m. on
18.5.92; the tenders were to be opened on 18.5.92 at 3.00
p.m.; and offers were to remain open for acceptance upto and
inclusive of 17.7.92. The respondent submitted its tender
for a stock of damaged rice within the time specified, but
the respondent’s tender was conditional and the full amount
of earnest money required by the terms was also not
deposited. It is, however, not necessary to mention the
particulars of these two deficiencies in respondent’s tender
since they appear to have been waived by the appellant and
are not relied on before us to support the appellant’s
action. The respondent’s bid in the tender was admittedly
the highest as found on opening, the tenders. lt appears
that the appellant was not satisfied about the adequacy of
the amount offered in the highest tenders for purchase of
the stocks of damaged foodgrains and, therefore. instead of
accepting any of the tenders submitted, the appellant
invited all the tenderers to participate in the negotiation
on 9.6.92. The respondent refused to revise the rates
offered in its tender. It was Rs. 245 per quintal for
certain lots of this stock;, while the highest offer made
during the negotiations was Rs. 275.72 per quintal.
Similarly, as against the respondent’s offer of Rs. 201 per
quintal in respect of some other lots, the highest offer
made during the negotiation was Rs. 271.55 per quintal. On
this basis, the appellant was to receive an additional
amount of Rs. 8 lakhs by accepting the highest offer made
during the negotiations over the total amount offered by the
respondent for the stock of damaged rice. Overall, the
appellant was offered an excess amount of Rs. 20 lakhs for
the entire stock of damaged foodgrains in the highest offer
made during the negotiations, inasmuch as against the total
amount Rs.90 lakhs which the appellant would have received
by acceptance of the highest tenders, the appellant was to
receive the amount of Rs. 1 crore 10 lakhs by accepting the
highest offers made during the negotiations in which all the
tenderers, including the respondent, were given equal
opportunity to participate.
The respondent filed the above Writ Petition in the
High Court challenging the appellant’s refusal to accept the
highest tender submitted by it for the stock of damaged rice
claiming that the appellant having chosen to invite tenders,
it could not thereafter dispose of the stocks of damaged
foodgrains by subsequent negotiations rejecting the highest
tenders on the ground that a higher bid was obtained by
negotiations. This action of the appellant, was alleged to
be arbitrary and, therefore, in substance, violative of
Article 14 of the Constitution. The High Court by its
impugned order accepted this contention of the respondent
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and allowed the Writ Petition. Hence, this appeal.
It is not disputed that according to the terms and
conditions on which the appellant had invited tenders, the
appellant had reserved the right to reject all the tenders
and, therefore, the highest tender was not bound to be
accepted. Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that
there being no right in the person submitting the highest
tender to claim acceptance of the tender, in a case like the
present. where all the tenderers including the respondent,
were invited for negotiation and given equal opportunity to
participate and to revise the bid before acceptance of the
highest bid offered during negotiation which resulted in
obtaining an additional amount of Rs. 8 lakhs for the stock
relating to respondent’s tender and an overall gain of Rs.
20 lakhs in disposal of the entire stock of damaged
foodgrains, the action of the appellant could not be termed
arbitrary. In reply, Shri A.K. Sen, learned counsel for the
respondent contended that even though the appellant had the
right to reject any tender, including the highest tender,
and thereafter negotiate with all the tenderers to procure
the highest price for the commodity, yet this right has to
be exercised reasonably and not arbitrarily, otherwise, the
credibility of the procedure of sale by inviting tenders
would be lost. Shri Sen submitted that the decision not to
accept any tender and to negotiate thereafter for obtaining
a higher price than that quoted in the highest bid, cannot
be taken on the whim and caprice of the concerned authority
and can be only for cogent reasons indicated while taking
the decision, or else, the decision would be arbitrary. On
this basis, Shri Sen further submitted that in the present
case, no cogent reasons were indicated for rejecting all the
tenders and deciding to dispose of the commodity by
negotiation with the tenderers for procuring a higher price.
He also added that the mere fact that a higher price was
obtained by negotiation would not justify the decision if it
was not taken in the manner permissible. This was the only
submission of Shri Sen to support the decision of the High
Court.
In our view, Shri A.K. Sen is right in the first part
of his submission. However, in the present case, the
respondent does not get any benefit therefrom. The High
Court’s decision is based on the only ground that once
tenders have been invited and the highest bidder has come
forward to comply with the conditions stipulated in the
tender notice, it is not permissible to switch over to
negotiation with all the tenderers and thereby reject the
highest tender. According to the High Court, such a
procedure is not countenanced by the rule of law. This is
not the same, as the submission of Shri Sen which is limited
to permissibility of such a course only on cogent grounds
indicated while deciding to switch over to the procedure of
negotiation after receiving the tenders to satisfy the
requirement of non arbitrariness, a necessary concomitant of
the rule of law. The proposition enunciated by the High
Court which forms the sole basis of its decision is too wide
to be acceptable and has to be limited in the manner
indicated hereafter.
In contractual sphere as in all other State actions,
the State and all its instrumentalities have to conform to
Article 14 of the Constitution of which non-arbitrariness is
a significant facet. There is no unfettered discretion in
public law: A public authority possesses powers only to use
them for public good. This impose the duty to act fairly and
to adopt a procedure which is ‘fairplay in action’. Due
observance of this obligation as a part of good
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administration raises a reasonable or legitimate expectation
in every citizen to be treated fairly in his interaction
with the State and its instrumentalities, with this element
forming a necessary component of the decision making process
in all State actions. To satisfy this requirement of non-
arbitrariness in a State action, it is, therefore, necessary
to consider and give due weight to the reasonable or
legitimate expectations of the persons likely lo be affected
by the decision or else that unfairness in the exercise of
the power may amount to an abuse or excess of power apart
from affecting the bona fides of the decision in a given
case. The decision so made would be exposed to challenge on
the ground of arbitrariness. Rule of law does not completely
eliminate discretion in the exercise of power, as it is
unrealistic, but providers for control of its exercise by
judicial review.
The mere reasonable or legitimate expectation of a
citizen, in such a situation, may not by itself be a
distinct enforceable right, but failure to consider and
give due weight to it may render the decision arbitrary, and
this is how the requirement of due consideration of a
Legitimate expectation forms part of the principle of non-
arbitrariness, a necessary concomitant of the rule of law.
Every legitimate expectation is a relevant factor requiring
due consideration a fair decision making process. Whether
the expectation of the claimant is reasonable or legitimate
in the context is a question of fact in each case. Whenever
the question arises, it is to be determined not according to
the claimant’s perception but in larger public interest
wherein other more important considerations may outweigh
what would otherwise have been the legitimate expectation of
the claimant. A bona fide decision of the public authority
reached in this manner would satisfy the requirement of
non-arbitrariness and withstand judicial scrutiny. The
doctrine of legitimate expectation gets assimilated in the
rule of law and operates in our legal system in this manner
and to this extent.
In Council of Civil Service Unions and Others v.
Minister for the Civil Service, 1985 A.C. 374 (H.L.) the
House of Lords indicated the extent to which the legitimate
expectation interfaces with exercise of discretionary
power. The impugned action was upheld as reasonable, made on
due consideration of all relevant factors including the
legitimate expectation of the applicant, wherein the
considerations of national security were found to outweigh
that which otherwise would have been the reasonable
expectation of the applicant. Lord Scarman pointed out that
‘the controlling factor in determining whether the exercise
of prerogative power is subject to judicial review is not
its source but its subject-matter’. Again in In re preston
1985 A.C. 835 (H.L.) it was stated by Lord Scarman that ‘the
principle of fairness has an important place in the law of
judicial review’ ant ‘unfairness in the purported exercise
of a power can be such that it is an abuse of excess of
power’. These decisions of the House of Lords give a similar
indication of the significance of the doctrine of legitimate
expectation. Shri A.K. Sen referred to Shanti Vijay & Co.
etc. v. Princess Fatima Fouzia & Ors. etc., [1980] 1 S.C.R.
459, which holds that court should interfere where
discretionary power is not exercised reasonably and in good
faith.
From the above, it is clear that even though the
highest tenderer can claim no right to have his tender
accepted, there being a power while inviting tenders to
reject all the tenders, yet the power to reject all the
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tenders cannot be exercised arbitrarily and must depend for
its validity on the existence of cogent reasons for such
action. The object of inviting tenders for disposal of a
commodity is to procure the highest price while giving equal
opportunity to all the intending bidders to compete.
Procuring the highest price for the commodity is undoubtedly
in public interest since the amount so collected goes to the
public fund. Accordingly, inadequacy of the price offered in
the highest tender would be a cogent ground for negotiating
with the tenderers giving them equal opportunity to revise
their bids with a view to obtain the highest available
price. The inadequacy may be for several reasons known in
the commercial field. Inadequacy of the prince quoted in the
highest tender would be a question of fact in each case.
Retaining the option to accept the highest tender, in case
the negotiations do not yield a significantly higher offer
would be fair to the tenderers besides protecting the public
interest. A procedure wherein resort is had to negotiations
with the tenderers for obtaining a significantly higher bid
during the period when the offers in the tenders remain open
for acceptance and rejection of the tenders only in the
event of a significant higher bid being obtained during
negotiations would ordinarily satisfy this requirement. This
procedure involves giving due weight to the legitimate
expectation of the highest bidder to have his tender
accepted unless outbid by a higher offer, in which case
acceptance of the highest offer within the time the offers
remain open would be a reasonable exercise power for public
good.
In the present case, the last date upto which the offer
made in the tender was to remain open for acceptance was
17.7.92. After opening the tenders on 18.5.92, the appellant
decided to negotiate with all the tenderers on 9.6.92 when
significantly higher amount, as indicated earlier, was
offered above the amount quoted in the highest tender. In
such a situation, if the negotiations did not yield the
desirable result of obtaining a significantly higher price,
the appellant had the option to accept the highest tender
before the last date, viz., 17.7.92 upto which the offer
made therein was to remain open for acceptance. In this
manner, the respondent’s higher tender was superseded only
by a significantly higher bid made during the negotiations
with all tenderers giving them equal opportunity to compete
by revising their bids. The fact that it was a significantly
higher bid obtained by adopting this course is sufficient in
the facts of the present case to demonstrate that the action
of the appellant satisfied the requirement of non-
arbitrariness, and it was taken for the cogent reason of
inadequacy of the price offered in the highest tender, which
reason was evident to all tenderers invited to participate
in the negotiations and to revise their bids. The High Court
was in error in taking the contrary view.
Consequently, this appeal is allowed. The impugned judgment
of the High Court is set aside, resulting in dismissal of
the respondent’s writ petition, No costs,
G.N. Appeal allowed.
KRISHNA BHIMRAO DESHPANDE
v.
LAND TRIBUNAL, DHARWAD AND ORS.
NOVEMBER 3, 1992
[LALIT MOHAN SHARMA AND K. JAYACHANDRA REDDY, JJ.]
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 252 read with Schedule VII, List n Entry 18-
Legislation by Parliament Requirement-Central Law on ceiling
on urban immovable property in pursuance of Resolution of
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State Legislature State Laws on other matters relating to
the subject-matter of resolution-Legality of.
Constitution of India, 1950:
Article 252, Schedule VII, list II, Entry 18-Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 and Karnataka Land
Reforms Act as amended in 1974 Object and application of-
Whether any conflict between the Acts.
In the year 1972 the Karnataka Legislature passed a
resolution under Article 252 of the Constitution imposing a
ceiling on urban immovable property and the acquisition of
such property in excess of the ceiling is limit for public
purposes and all the matters connected therewith shall be
regulated in the State by Parliament by law.
On 1.4.74 the Karnataka Land Reforms (Amendment) Act
was enacted and under the Act the tenant of the land covered
by the Act was entitled to the grant of occupancy rights
after making an application under the Act. The Act came
Into force with effect from 2.1.85. But for the purpose of
grant of occupancy rights, 1.4.74 was the relevant date.
In the year 1975 the Karnataka Urban Agglomeration
Ordinance was passed, whereunder all lands between the
periphery of 8 K.Ms. of the municipal limits of Hubli
Dharwad were declared as urban agglomeration land.
The Parliament passed the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 for imposition of ceiling on urban
properties and the Ceiling Act was made applicable to
Karnataka also in view of the resolution passed by the State
Government.
The lands involved in the present cases were covered by
the development plan by the Belgaum City Town Planning
authority as per the Master Plan and they were included and
declared as urban agglomeration in the City of Hubli under
the provisions of the Ceiling Act.
The owners of the agglomeration lands challenged the
order of the Land Tribunal under the Land Reforms Act
conferring occupancy rights on the tenants before the High
Court. They contended that the lands involved in the cases
were within the purview of the Ceiling Act and therefore
the provisions of the Land Reforms Act had no application to
such lands on the ground that the provisions of the Ceiling
Act.
The writ petitions were dismissed by the High Court.
The owner’s writ appeals were also dismissed by a common
judgment by the Division Bench of the High Court. The
Division Bench held that there was no conflict between the
two enactments.
The judgment of the Division Bench was challenged in
S.L.P. (Civil) No. 16041-42/88.
Many of the similar writ petitions that were pending
before the High Court were transferred to the Land Reforms
Appellate Tribunal.
The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the petitions by a
common order following the judgment of the Division Bench of
the High Court. Several Civil revision petitions filed by
the land owners against the order of the Appellate Tribunal
were dismissed by the High Court. Some of the special leave
petitions were filed against the order of the High Court in
the said civil revision petitions.
The petitioners-land owners contended that when in
pursuance of the resolution of the State Legislature passed
under Article 252 of the Constitution the Parliament
legislated in respect of the topic covered by the
resolution. The Parliamentary law repealed or superseded the
existing State legislation on the topic and therefore such
law could not be enforced thereafter; and that vesting of
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tenanted land in the State and conferment of occupancy
rights under the provisions of the State Act directly fall
under the subject of imposing ceiling on land holding and
other matters incidental or ancillary to the main topic of
imposing ceiling and therefore they were fully covered by
the Ceiling Act passed by the Parliament and the same
superseded the State enactment in respect of such lands.
The respondents submitted that "imposition of ceiling"
was a distinct and separately identifiable subject and the
Parliament was empowered to legislate; that the power of the
State to legislate in respect of the remaining part of the
subject-matter was unaffected; that when two distinct
powers came into existence, vesting law making competence in
the State and Parliament, the pith and substance of the laws
made by each of them had to be examined to see whether any
one of them encroached the field set apart as falling within
the competence of the other body; that in any event the
provisions of Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act
had nothing to do with the imposition of ceiling on the
urban land and that conferring of occupancy rights etc. to
the tenants under Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms
Act did not come under the category of "the matters
connected therewith or ancillary or incidental to the
imposition of ceiling" on urban immovable property.
Dismissing the special leave petitions, this Court,
HELD: 1.01. Article 252 empowers the Parliament to
legislate for two or more States on any of the matters with
respect of which the Parliament has no power to make law
except as provided under Articles 249 and 250. This power to
legislate is vested in the Parliament only if two or more
State Legislatures think it desirable to have a law enacted
by Parliament on such matters in List II, i.e. with respect
to which the Parliament has no power to make law for the
State. The passing of the resolutions by the State
Legislatures is a condition precedent for vesting the
Parliament with such power. [339-C-D]
1.02. The scope of Entry 18 is very wide and the land
mentioned therein may be agricultural or non-agricultural
and may be rural or urban. The subject-matter carved out of
Entry 18 under the resolutions passed by The various State
Legislatures related to only "urban immovable property" and
by virtue of the resolution the law that can be enacted by
the Parliament should be a law "imposing a ceiling on such
urban immovable property." [340-B, C]
1.03. From the resolution it is clear that the subject-
matter that was resolved to be entrusted to the Parliament
was the one imposing a ceiling on urban immovable property
and acquisition of such property in excess of the ceiling.
This subject-matter is the topic that falls within Entry 18
of List II of Schedule VII to the Constitution and the
subject-matter of Entry 18 has been originally kept apart
for the State Legislature to make law and Parliament had no
competence in respect of those matters falling under the
wide scope of Entry 18. By virtue of this resolution a part
of the area falling under Entry 18 is transferred to the
domain of Parliament to make law relating to the matters
within the transferred area. [339-G, H; 341-A]
2.01. The primary object and the purpose of the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 is to provide for
the imposition of ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomeration and for acquisition of such lands in excess
of the ceiling limit and to regulate the construction of
buildings on such lands and for matters connected therewith.
[340-H; 341-A]
2.02. The Karnataka Land Reforms Act as amended in 1974
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is a welfare legislation. The object of the Act was to have
a uniform law in the State of Karnataka relating to
agrarian reforms, conferment of ownership on tenants,
ceiling on land holdings and for certain other matters
contained therein. [342-D]
2.03. In respect of imposing ceiling on the land under
urban agglomeration the provisions of the Ceiling Act alone
are applicable and to that extent the provisions of Chapter
IV of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act which also deal with
the imposition of ceiling would not be applicable.
[344-C]
2.04. The land in the instant case comes under the
urban agglomeration the imposition of the ceiling should
naturally be under the provisions of the Urban Ceiling Act
and not under the Karnataka Land Reforms Act. [344-B, C]
2.05. Imposition of ceiling on urban land is a distinct
and independent subject as compared to imposition of ceiling
on owning or to hold agricultural land or any other kind of
property which do not attract the Urban Ceiling Act. These
are two distinct powers and therefore the law making
competence can be in two different legislative bodies.
Consequently it is difficult to hold that the provisions of
Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act are outside
the legislative competence of the State Legislature.
[350-C, D]
2.06. The one topic that is transferred in the
resolution passed under Article 252 as distinct and
separately identifiable and does not include the remaining
topics under Entry 18 in respect of which the State alone
has the power to legislate. [351-D]
2.07. The legislative power of the State has to be
reconciled with that of the Parliament and that in their
respective fields each is supreme. Even assuming that the
State enactment has same effect on the subject-matter
falling within the Parliament’s legislative competence that
by itself will not render such law invalid or inoperative.
[350-G-H]
2.08. There is no conflict between the Ceiling Act and
the State Act. The imposition of ceiling on urban immovable
property is an independent topic and cannot be construed as
to nullify the other subject left in the domain of the State
Legislature under Entry 18 inasmuch as imposition of ceiling
is a distinct and separately identifiable subject and does
not cover the other measures such as regulation of
relationship of landlord and tenant in respect of which the
State Legislature has competence to legislate. [351-C-D]
2.09. There is a ceiling provision under Section 45(2)
of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act providing for computation
of the area in respect of which the tenant may be granted
occupancy rights. But it is clear that ceiling on the
area in this context is only for the purpose of Section 45.
[351-F]
2.10. Provisions in the Chapters II, III, V, VI to XI
of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act deal with the conferment
of occupancy rights on the respective tenants and they do
not in any way conflict with the subject matter transferred
to the Parliament by the resolution passed under Section
252. [351-E,F]
Thumati Venkaiah and others v. State of Andhra Pradesh
and of others, [1980] 4 SCC 295; Union of India and others
v. Valluri Basavaiah Chowdhary and others, [1979] 3 SCC 324;
Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietory) Ltd. v. State of West
Bengal and others, AIR 1962 SC 1044 and Kannan Devan Hills
Produce Company Ltd. v. The State of Kerala etc., AIR
1972 SC 2301 referred to.
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CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Special Leave Petition
(Civil) Nos. 16041-42/88.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.7.1988 of the
Karnataka High Court in W.P. No 9173/86 and W.A. No
2707/85.
WITH
SLP (C) Nos. 12258, 12254, 12260/90 & 8608/91
R.N. Narasimhamurthy, S.S. Javali, S.N. Bhat and Ravi
P. Wadhwani for the Petitioners.
M.S. Nesargi, R. Jagannath Goulay, M.K. Dua, M.
Veerappa, K.H. Nobin Singh, S.K. Kulkarni and Surya Kant for
the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered by
K. JAYACHANDRA REDDY, J. In all these special leave
petitions the common question that arises for consideration
is whether the provisions of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act,
1961 as amended in 1974 (‘Act’ for short) cease to be
applicable in all respects to the lands which came within
the purview of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act,
1976 (’Ceiling Act’ for short). The lands involved in these
matters are covered by the development plan by the Belgaum
City Town Planning authority as per the Master Plan for the
said City and they are included and declared as urban
agglomeration in the City of Hubli under the provisions of
the Ceiling Act. In the year 1972 the Karnataka Legislature
passed a resolution under Article 252 of the Constitution to
the effect that imposing a ceiling on urban immovable
property and the acquisition of such property in excess of
the ceiling limit for public purposes and all the matters
connected therewith shall be regulated in the State by
Parliament Qby law. The State Legislature thus divested
itself of the legislative competence to enact law in respect
of subject-matter of the resolution. On 1.4.74 the amended
Karnataka Land Reforms Act was enacted and under the said
Act the tenant of the land covered by the Act is entitled to
the grant of occupancy rights after making an application
under the Act. This Act came into force with effect from
2.1.85. But for the purpose of grant of occupancy rights
1.4.74 was the relevant date. While so in the year 1975 the
Governor of Karnataka passed the Urban Aggolmeration
Ordinance whereunder all lands between the periphery of 8
K.Ms. of the municipal limits of Hubli Dharwad were declared
as urban agglomeration land. In the year 1976 the Parliament
passed the Ceiling Act for imposition of ceiling on urban
properties and the Act was made applicable to Karnataka also
in view of the resolution passed by the State Government
referred to above. The order of the Land Tribunal under the
Act conferring occupancy rights on the tenants was
challenged before the High Court contending that the lands
involved in these cases were within the purview of the
Ceiling Act and therefore the provisions of the Land Reforms
Act had no application to such lands on the ground that the
provisions of the State Act were repugnant to the provisions
of the Central Act namely the Ceiling Act. The writ petition
was dismissed by the High Court. The owners preferred writ
appeals and they were also dismissed by a common judgment in
Writ Appeal Nos. 2707 and 2361/85 etc. The Division Bench
held that there is no conflict between the two enactment in
certain respect i.e. atleast so far as the implementation of
the provisions of Chapter III of the Act are concerned and
that provisions of this Chapter of the Act do not cease to
apply to the agricultural lands coming within the meaning of
urban agglomeration in the Ceiling Act. The judgment of the
Division Bench is challenged in S.L.P.(Civil) No. 16041-
42/88. Many of the similar writ petitions that were pending
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before the High Court were transferred to the Land Reforms
Appellate Tribunal. The Appellate Tribunal dismissed the
petitions by a common order following the judgment of the
Division Bench of the High Court in Writ Appeal No.2707/85
and connected matters. Several civil revisions petitions
filed by the land owners against the order of the Appellate
Tribunal were dismissed by the High Court. Some of the
special leave petitions are filed against the order of the
High Court in the said civil revision petitions. Therefore
all these special leave petitions can be disposed of by a
common order.
It was urged before us that the resolution of the State
Legislature passed under Article 252 of the Constitution
shifted the topic covered by the resolution from List II of
Schedule VII to the Constitution and vested the competence
to make the law in respect of the said topic in the
Parliament and that thereafter the State enactment ceased to
have efficacy in respect of said topic. Alternatively it was
urged that, when in pursuance of the resolution the
Parliament legislates in respect of the topic covered by the
resolution, the Parliamentary law, repeals or supersedes any
existing State legislation on the topic and therefore such
law cannot be enforced thereafter.
We shall first extract some of the relevant provisions
of the Constitution of India and the respective enactments.
Article 246 of the Constitution reads thus:
"246. Subject-matter of laws made
by Parliament and by the
Legislatures of States-(l)
Notwithstanding anything in
clauses (2) and (3), Parliament has
exclusive power to make laws with
respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List I in the
Seventh Schedule (in this
Constitution referred to as the
"Union List").
(2) xx xx xx
(3) Subject to clauses (1) and (2),
the Legislature of any State has
exclusive power to make laws for
such State or any part thereof
with respect to any of the matters
enumerated in List II in the
Seventh Schedule (in this
Constitution referred to as the
"State List").
(4)xx xx xx "
2
Entry 18 in List II namely the State List of the VII
Schedule to the Constitution is in the following terms:
"18. Land, that is to say, rights
in or over land, land tenures
including the relation of landlord
and tenant, and the collection of
rents, transfer and alienation of
agricultural land; land improvement
and agricultural loans;
colonization."
Article 252 of the Constitution reads
thus:
"252. Power of Parliament to
legislate for two or more States
by consent and adoption of such
legislation by any other State-(1)
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If it appears to the Legislatures
of two or more States to be
desirable that any of the matters
with respect to which Parliament
has no power to make laws for the
States except as provided in
Articles 249 and 250 should be
regulated in such States by
Parliament by law, and if
resolutions to that effect are
passed by all the Houses of the
Legislatures of those States, it
shall be lawful for Parliament to
pass an Act for regulating that
matter accordingly, and any Act so
passed shall apply to such States
and to any other State by which it
is adopted afterwards by resolution
passed in that behalf by the House
or, where there are two Houses, by
each of the Houses of the
Legislature of that State.
(2) Any Act so passed by Parliament
may be amended or repealed by an
Act of Parliament passed or adopted
in like manner but shall not, as
respects any State to which it
applics, be amended or repcaled by
an Act of the Legislature of that
State."
Article 252 empowers the Parliament to legislate for
two or more States on any of the matters with respect of
which the Parliament has no power to make law except as
provided under Articles 249 and 250. This power to legislate
is vested in the Parliament only if two or more State
Legislatures think it desirable to have a law enacted by
Parliament on such matters in List II i.e. with respect to
which the Parliament has no power to make law for the State.
The passing of the resolutions by the State Legislatures is
a condition precedent for vesting the Parliament with such
power. The relevant portion of the resolution passed by the
State Legislature under Article 252 reads thus:
"Now, therefore, in pursuance of
clause (1) of Article 252 of the
Constitution, this Assembly hereby
resolves that the imposition of a
ceiling on urban immovable property
and F acquisition of such property
in excess of the ceiling and all
matters connected therewith or
ancillary and incidental thereto
should be regulated in the State of
Karnataka by Parliament by law."
The resolution states that the imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property and the acquisition of such
property in excess of the ceiling limit with a view to
utilising such excess property for public purposes and all
other matters connected therein or incidental thereto shall
be regulated in this State by Parliament by law. The basic
question that arises is what is the actual content of the
subject-matter that was resolved to be entrusted to
Parliament by the State Legislature under Article 252 of the
Constitution. From the resolution it is clear that the
subject-matter that was resolved to be entrusted to the
Parliament was the one imposing a ceiling on urban immovable
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property and acquisition of such property in excess of the
ceiling. It is true that this subject-matter is the topic
that falls within Entry 18 of List 11 of Schedule VII to the
Constitution and the said subject-matter of Entry 18 has
been originally kept apart for the State Legislature to make
law and Parliament had no competence in respect of those
matters falling under the wide scope of Entry 18. Now by
virtue of this resolution a part of the area falling under
Entry 18 is transferred to the domain of Parliament to make
law relating to the matters within the transferred area. The
scope of Entry 18 is very wide and the land mentioned
therein may be agricultural or non-agricultural and may be
rural or urban. The subject-matter carved out of Entry 18
under the resolutions passed by the various State
Legislatures related to only- "urban immovable property" and
by virtue of the resolution the law that can be enacted by
the Parliament should be a law "imposing a ceiling on such
urban immovable property. The learned counsel for the
petitioners, however, urged that vesting of tenanted land in
the State and conferment of occupancy rights under the
provisions of the State Act directly fall under the subject
of imposing ceiling on and holding and other matters
incidental or ancillary to the main topic of imposing
ceiling and therefore they are fully covered by the Ceiling
Act passed by the Parliament and the same supersedes the
State enactment in respect of this land. The learned counsel
appearing for the respondents on the contrary submitted that
"imposition of ceiling" is a distinct and separately
identifiable subject and is the power carved out of Entry 18
and vested in the Parliament to legislate and that the power
of the State to legislate in respect of the remaining part
of the subject-matter is unaffected and that when two
distinct powers have come into existence, vesting law making
competence in the State and Parliament, the pith and
substance of the laws made by each of them has to be
examined to see whether any one of them encroaches the field
set apart as falling within the competence of the other
body. The learned counsel for the respondents, however,
submitted that in any event the provisions of Chapter III of
the Act have nothing to do with the imposition of ceiling on
the urban land and that conferring of occupancy rights etc.
to the tenants under Chapter 111 of the Act do not come
under the category of "the matters connected therewith or
ancillary or incidental to the imposition of ceiling" on
urban immovable property.
Now we shall refer to the provisions of the Urban
Ceiling Act. The Statement of Objects and Reasons under
Preamble to the said Act would show that the primary object
and the purpose is to provide for the imposition of ceiling
on vacant land in urban agglomeration and for acquisition of
such lands in excess of the ceiling limit and to regulate
the
construction of buildings on such lands and for matters
connected therewith. Section 21(n) of the Urban Ceiling Act
defines "urban agglomeration" and the material part of it
reads thus:
"(n) "urban agglomeration"
(A) in relation to any State or
Union territory specified in column
(1) of Schedule 1, means (i) the
urban agglomeration specified in
the corresponding entry in column
(2) thereof and includes the
peripheral area specified in the
corresponding entry in column (3)
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thereof; and
xx xx xx"
Section 2(o) defines "urban land" which reads thus:
"(o) "urban land" means, -
(i) any land situated within the
limits of an urban agglomeration
and referred to as such in the
master plan; or
(ii) in a case where there is no
master plan, or where the master
plan does not refer to any land as
urban land, any land within the
limits of an urban agglomeration
and situated in any area included
within the local limits of a
municipality (by whatever name
called), a notified area committee,
a town area committee, a city and
town committee, a small town
committee, a cantonment board or a
panchayat,
but does not include any such land
which is mainly used for the
purpose of agriculture.
Explanation- For the purpose of
this clause and clause (q)-
(A) xx xx xx
(B) land shall not be deemed to be
used mainly for the purpose of
agriculture, if such land is not
entered in the revenue or land
records before the appointed day as
for the purpose of agriculture;
xx xx xx
(C) notwithstanding anything
contained in clause (B) of this
Explanation, land shall not be
deemed to be mainly used for the
purpose of agriculture if the land
has been specified in the master
plan for a purpose other than
agriculture;"
For the purpose of the instant case it is enough to
note that Hubli-Dharwad is shown in the Schedule and there
is also a master plan prepared for the area and the land in
question also is undoubtedly within the urban agglomeration
and therefore there is no doubt that in respect of
imposition of ceiling on this area comes within the purview
of the Urban Ceiling Act. But the question is whether
granting occupancy rights under Chapter III of the Act are
in any manner affected. The Karnataka Land Reforms Act as
amended in 1974 is a welfare legislation. The object of the
Act was to have a uniform law in the State of Karnataka
relating to agrarian reforms, conferment of ownership on
tenants, ceiling on land holding and for certain other
matters contained therein. Section 34 of the Act defines
"tenant" thus:
"(34) "tenant" means an
agriculturist who cultivates
personally the land he holds on
lease from a landlord and
includes,-
(i) a person who is deemed to be a
tenant under Section 4;
(ii) a person who was protected
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from eviction from any land by the
Karnataka Tenants (Temporary
Protection from Eviction) Act,
1961;
(iia) a person who cultivates
personally any land on lease under
a lease created contrary to the
provisions of section 5 and before
the date of commencement of the
Amendment Act;
(iii) a person who is a permanent
tenant; and
(iv) a person who is a protected
tenant.
Explanation- A person who takes up
a contract to cut grass, or to
gather the fruits or other produce
of any land, shall not on that
account only be deemed to be a
tenant."
The provisions of Chapter III of the Karnataka Land
Reforms Act deal with conferment of ownership on tenants.
Section 45 occurring in this Chapter in particular deals
with conferring of occupancy rights on the tenants subject
to certain conditions. The relevant portion of Section 45
reads as under:
"45. Tenants to be registered as
occupants of land on certain
conditions-(1) Subject to the
provisions of the succeeding
sections of this Chapter, every
person who was a permanent tenant,
protected tenant or other tenant or
where a tenant has lawfully sublet,
such sub-tenant shall with effect
on and from the date of vesting be
entitled to be registered as an
occupant in respect of the lands of
which he was a permanent tenant,
protected tenant or other tenant or
sub-tenant before the date of
vesting and which he has been
cultivating personally.
(2) If a tenant or other person
referred to in sub-section (1)-
(i) holds land partly as owner and
partly as tenant but the area of
the land held by him as owner is
equal to or exceeds a ceiling area
he shall not be entitled to be
registered as an occupant of the
land held by him as a tenant before
the date of vesting;
(ii) does not hold and cultivate
personally any land as an owner,
but holds land as tenant, which he
cultivates personally in excess of
a ceiling area, he shall be
entitled to be registered as an
occupant to the extent of a ceiling
area;
(iii) holds and cultivates
personally as an owner of any land
the area of which is less than a
ceiling area, he shall be entitled
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to be registered as an occupant to
the extent of such area as will be
sufficient to make up his holding
to the extent of a ceiling area.
xx xx xx
The provisions under Chapter III which exclusively deal
with conferment of occupancy rights on tenants have nothing
to do with the imposition of ceiling on holdings of
agricultural land under the Act. It is only Chapter IV of
the said Act which deals with ceiling on land holdings. Now
that the land in the instant case comes under the urban
agglomeration the imposition of the ceiling should naturally
be under the provisions of the Urban Ceiling Act and not
under the Karnataka Land Reforms Act. The High Court,
however, did not deal with this aspect. Perhaps it is
necessary for us to make it clear that in respect of
imposing ceiling on the land under urban agglomeration the
provisions of the Ceiling Act alone are applicable and to
that extent the provisions of Chapter IV of the Act which
also deal with the imposition of ceiling would not be
applicable. As a matter of fact in Thumati Venkaiah and
Others v. State of Andhra Pradesh and Others, [1980] 4 SCC
295 to which we will refer to at a later stage in detail on
the main point, this Court observed thus:
"It is no doubt true that if the
Andhra Pradesh Act seeks to impose
ceiling on land falling within an
urban agglomeration, it would be
outside the area of its legislative
competence, since it cannot provide
for imposition of ceiling on urban
immovable property."
However, the crucial question in
the instant case with which we are
concerned is whether the provisions
of Chapter III of the Act also
become inoperative by virtue of the
resolution passed under Article 252
and particularly on the ground that
it is a matter of imposition of
ceiling on urban land or other
matters connected therewith or
ancillary and incidental thereto.
A plain reading of the above provisions in the
background of the objects underlying these two enactments
clearly shows that the two Acts operate in two different
fields to a large extent. This Court had an occasion to
consider these aspects in a few cases. In Union of India and
others v.Valluri Basavaiah Chowdhary and others, [1979] 3
SCC 324 this Court, in respect of effect of passing a
resolution under Article 252 of the Constitution by the
Andhra Pradesh Legislature, observed thus:
"The effect of the passing of a
resolution under clause (1) of
Article 252 is that Parliament
which has no power to legislate
with respect to the matter which is
the subject of the resolution,
becomes entitled to legislate with
respect to it. On the other hand,
the State Legislature ceases to
have a power to make a law relating
to that matter."
It was further observed that:
"....It is not disputed that the
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subject-matter of Entry 18, List II
of the Seventh Schedule i.e. ‘land’
covers ‘land and buildings’ and
would, therefore, necessarily
include ‘vacant land’. The
expression ‘urban immovable
property’ may mean, land and
buildings or ‘buildings’ or
‘lands’. It would take in lands of
every description i.e.,
agricultural land, urban land or
any other kind and it necessarily
includes vacant land."
With regards the concept of ceiling on urban immovable
property and the object underlying in passing the resolution
by the several State Governments under Article 252 it was
further observed in the above judgment thus:
"....A Working Group was
constituted under the Chairmanship
of the Secretary, Ministry of
Works, Housing and Urban
Development. The report of the
Working Group shows that the
proposal was to impose a ceiling on
urban immovable property. In the
report the said Working Group
defined ‘urban area’ to include the
area within the territorial limits
of municipalities or other local
bodies and also the peripheral area
outside the said limits. Such
inclusion of the peripheral limits
in an urban area was accepted by
the Government and a model bill
prepared in pursuance thereof also
contained such a definition. A copy
of each of the report of the
Working Group and the Model Bill
referred to was placed on the table
of the Parliament on December 15,
1970 and March 22, 1972
respectively. The said documents
were forwarded to the State
Government of Andhra Pradesh,
besides other State Governments,
for consideration by the State
Legislatures before they passed a
resolution authorising the
Parliament to make a law in respect
of urban immovable property. Their
intention was to include the lands
within the territorial area of an
urban area and also its peripheral
areas. The concept of ceiling on
urban immovable property and the
nature and content of urban
agglomeration ultimately defined by
Section 2(n) of the impugned Act
was, therefore, fully, under stood
by the State Governments."
Some more observations in the above judgment read thus:
"It is but axiomatic that once the
legislatures of two or more States,
by a resolution in terms of Article
252(1), abdicate or surrender the
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area, i.e. their power of
legislation on a State subject, the
Parliament is competent to make a
law relating to the subject. It
would indeed be contrary to the
terms of Article 252(1) to read the
resolution passed by the State
legislature subject to any
restriction. The resolution,
contemplated under Article 252(1)
is not hedged in with conditions.
In making such a law, the
Parliament was not bound to exhaust
the whole field of legislation. It
could make a law, like the present
Act, with respect to ceiling on
vacant land in an urban
agglomeration, as a first step
towards the eventual imposition of
ceiling on immovable property of
every other description."
One other decision also arose from State of Andhra
Pradesh. In Thumati Venkaiah’s case Andhra Pradesh Land
Reforms (Ceiling on Agricultural Holdings) Act which is
analgous to Karnataka Land Reforms Act was challenged on the
ground that the subject matter of the said law was covered
by the topic of the legislation transferred to Parliament by
the resolution under Article 252 passed by the Andhra
Pradesh Legislative Assembly and that provisions of the
Ceiling Act alone covered that subject and therefore Andhra
Pradesh Land Reforms (Ceiling on Agricultural Holdings) Act
was unenforceable. In this context Supreme Court again
reiterated the same in the said decision. This Court
proceeded to observe as under:
"The effect of passing of
resolutions by the Houses of
Legislature of two or more States
under this constitutional provision
is that Parliament which has
otherwise no power to legislate
with respect to a matter, except as
provided in Articles 249 and 250,
becomes entitled to legislate with
respect to such matter and the
State legislatures passing the
resolutions cease to have power to
make law relating to that matter.
The resolutions operate as
abdication or surrender of the
powers of the State legislatures
with respect to the matter which is
the subject of the resolutions and
such matter is placed entirely in
the hands of Parliament and
Parliament alone can then legislate
with respect to it. It is as if
such matter is lifted out of list
II and placed in List I of the
Seventh Schedule to the
Constitution."
It was further observed that:
"The result was that at the date
when the Andhra Pradesh Act was
enacted, Parliament alone was
competent to legislate with respect
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to ceiling on urban immovable
property and acquisition of such
property in excess of the ceiling
and all connected, ancillary or
incidental matters, and the Andhra
Pradesh Legislature stood denuded
of its power to legislate on that
subject."
On the effect of ceiling this Court
stated thus:
"It will thus be seen that the
Central Act imposes a ceiling on
holding of land in urban
agglomeration other than land which
is mainly used for the purpose of
agriculture and agriculture in this
connection includes horticulture,
but does not include raising of
grass, dairy farming, poultry
farming, breeding of live-stock and
such cultivation or the growing of
such plants as may be prescribed by
the Rules, and moreover, in order
to fall within the exclusion, the
land must be entered in the revenue
or land record before the appointed
day for the purpose of agriculture
and must also not have been
specified in the master plan for a
purpose other than agriculture."
Considering the contention that the whole of Andhra
Pradesh Land Reforms Act was ultra vires this Court held
thus:
"The argument of the landholders
was that the Andhra Pradesh Act
sought to impose ceiling on land in
the whole of Andhra Pradesh
including land situate in urban
agglomeration defined in Section
2(n) of the Central Act was an
expansive concept and any area with
an existing or future population of
more than one lakh could be
notified to be an urban
agglomeration, the whole of the
Andhra Pradesh Act was ultra vires
and void as being outside the
legislative competence of the
Andhra Pradesh Legislature. This
argument, plausible though it may
seem, is in our opinion,
unsustainable. It is not doubt true
that if the Andhra Pradesh Act
seeks to impose ceiling on land
falling within an urban
agglomeration, it would be outside
the area of its legislative
competence, since it cannot provide
for imposition of ceiling on urban
immovable property. But the only
urban agglomerations in the State
of Andhra Pradesh recognised in the
Central Act were those referred to
in Section 2(n)(A)(i) and there can
be no doubt that, so far as these
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urban agglomerations are concerned,
it was not within the legislative
competence of the Andhra Pradesh
Legislature to provide for
imposition of ceiling on land
situate within these urban
agglomerations. It is, however,
difficult to see how the Andhra
Pradesh Act could be said to be
outside the legislative competence
of the Andhra Pradesh Legislature
insofar as land situate in the
other areas of the State of Andhra
Pradesh is concerned. We agree that
any other area in the State of
Andhra Pradesh with a population of
more than one lakh could be
notified as an urban agglomeration
under Section 2(n) (A) (ii) of the
Central Act, but until it is so
notified it would not be an urban
agglomeration and the Andhra
Pradesh Legislature would have
legislative competence to provide
for imposition of ceiling on land
situate within such area. No sooner
such area is notified to be an
urban agglomeration, the Central
Act would apply in relation to land
situate within such area, but until
that happens, the Andhra Pradesh
Act would continue to be applicable
to determine the ceiling on holding
of land in such area. It may be
noted that the Andhra Pradesh Act
came into force on January 1, 1975
and it was with reference to this
date that the surplus holding of
land in excess of the ceiling area
was required to be determined and
if there was any surplus, it was to
be surrendered to the State
Government. It is therefore clear
that in an area other than that
comprised in the urban
agglomerations referred to in
Section 2(n)(A)(i), land held by a
person in excess of the ceiling
area would be liable to be
determined as on January 1, 1975
under the Andhra Pradesh Act and
only land within the ceiling area
would be allowed to remain with
him. It is only in respect of land
remaining with a person, whether an
individual or a family unit, after
the operation of the Andhra Pradesh
Act, the Central Act would apply,
if and when the area in question is
notified to be an urban
agglomeration under Section
2(n)(A)(ii) of the Central Act. We
fail to see how it can at all be
contended that merely because an
area may possibly in the future be
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notified as an urban agglomeration
under Section 2(n)(A)(ii) of the
Central Act, the Andhra Pradesh
Legislature would cease to have
competence to legislate with
respect to ceiling on land situate
in such area, even though it was
not an urban agglomeration at the
date of enactment of the Andhra
Pradesh Act. Undoubtedly, when an
area is notified as an urban
agglomeration under Section
2(n)(A)(ii), the Central Act would
apply to land situate in such area
and the Andhra Pradesh Act would
cease to have application, but by
that time the Andhra Pradesh Act
would have already operated to
determine the ceiling on holding of
land falling within the definition
of Section 3(j) and situate within
such area. It is therefore not
possible to uphold the contention
of the landholders that the Andhra
Pradesh Act is ultra vires and void
as being outside the Legislative
competence of the Andhra Pradesh
Legislature."
The above observations throw a flood of light on the
question involved before us. It can be seen that entire
power to legislate in respect of several matters falling
under the wide scope of Entry 18 List II is not transferred.
The power transferred is only in respect of imposition of
ceiling on urban immovable property. There can be several
topics in respect of the subject matters of regulatory
legislations governing the lands or other immovable
properties. The imposition of ceiling on owning property is
one such topic and there can be laws regulating ceiling on
owing the property, relationship of lessor and lessee,
payment of rent, manner of granting the lease, conferment of
ownership on the lessee etc. It is the concept of a welfare
State which is the underlying object in such welfare
legislations. When viewed from that angle it is axiomatic
that imposition of ceiling on urban land is a distinct and
independent subject as compared to imposition of ceiling on
owning or holding agricultural land or any other kind of
property which do not attract the Urhan Ceiling Act.
Likewise it cannot be said that the pith and substance of
the law governing the conferment of ownership of land on the
tenant is a law regulating the imposition of ceiling on land
holding. Equally it cannot be said that the pith and
substance of the law imposing the ceiling on land holding
covers the subject of conferring ownership of land on the
tenant. These are two distinct powers and therefore the law
making competence can be in two different legislative
bodies. Consequently it is difficult to hold that the
provisions of Chapter III of the Karnataka Land Reforms Act
are outside the legislative competence of the State
Legislature. In Calcutta Gas Company (Proprietory) Ltd. v.
State of West Bengal and others, AIR 1962 SC 1044 this Court
observed as under:
"The entries in the three Lists are
only legislative heads or fields of
legislation; they demarcate the
area over which the appropriate
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Legislatures can operate. It is
also well settled that widest
amplitude should be given to the
language of the entries. But some
of the entries in the different
Lists 1 or in the same Lists may
overlap and sometimes may also
appear to be in direct conflict
with each other. It is then the
duty of this Court to reconcile the
entries and bring about harmony
between them."
It is well settled that the legislative power of the
State has to be reconciled with that of the Parliament and
that in their respective fields each is supreme. Even
assuming that the State enactment has same effect on the
subject matter falling within the Parliament’s legislative
competence, that by itself will not render such law invalid
or inoperative. In Kannan Devan Hills Produce Company Ltd.
v. The State of Kerala etc., AIR 1972 SC 2301 this Court
held as under:
"It seems to us clear that the
State has legislative competence to
legislate on Entry 18, List II and
Entry 42 List III. This power
cannot be denied on the ground that
it has some effect on an industry
controlled under Entry 52 List 1.
Effect is not the same thing as
subject matter. If a State Act,
otherwise valid, has effect on a
matter in List I it does not cease
to be a legislation with respect to
an entry in List II or List III."
However, in the instant case, we are clearly of the
view that there is no conflict. The imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property is an independent topic and cannot
be construed as to nullify the other subject left in the
domain of the State Legislature under Entry 18 inasmuch as
imposition of ceiling is a distinct and separately
identifiable subject and does not cover the other measures
such as regulation of relationship of landlord and tenant in
respect of which the State Legislature has competence to
legislate. Thus the one topic that is transferred in the
resolution passed under Article 252 is distinct and
separately identifiable and does not include the remaining
topics under Entry 18 in respect of which the State alone
has the power to legislate. An examination of the various
provisions of the State Act makes this aspect clear. The
object underlying the Act is to make a uniform law in the
State of Karnataka relating to agrarian relations,
conferment of ownership on tenants, ceiling on land holdings
etc. Chapter II of the Act contains general provisions
regarding tenancy, deemed tenancy, regulation of
relationship between landlord and tenant etc. Sections 44 to
62 of Chapter III provide for vesting of tenanted lands in
the State Government with effect from 1.3.74 and conferment
of occupancy rights on the tenants. Chapter V controls the
eligibility to purchase or possess agricultural lands.
Chapters VI to XI have many other provisions regarding
agrarian reforms. We, however, find a ceiling provision
under Section 45(2) providing for computation of the area in
respect of which the tenant may be granted occupancy rights.
But it is clear that ceiling on the area in this context is
only for the purpose of Section 45. These are all topics
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regarding the conferment of occupancy rights on the
respective tenants and they do not in any way conflict with
the subject matter transferred to the Parliament by the
resolution passed under Section 252. Consequently these
Special Leave Petitions are dismissed.
Petitions dismissed.