Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HITKARINI SABHA, JABALPUR
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF JABALPUR & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT03/05/1972
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
BENCH:
GROVER, A.N.
HEGDE, K.S.
CITATION:
1972 AIR 2017 1973 SCR (1) 495
1972 SCC (3) 325
CITATOR INFO :
D 1991 SC 14 (7)
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act 1894--Apportionment of
compensation--Unauthorised lease by Municipal corporation to
local College-lease deed Containing renewal clause-Since
lease is ineffective renewal clause cannot be taken into
consideration for purpose of apportionment-Quantum of
compensation-This Court will not interfere when lower courts
have taken all factors into consideration.
HEADNOTE:
The Municipal Corporation of Jabalpur purporated to grant a
leave of certain land to the appellant Sabha. According to
the document the period of lease was 30 years. The
appellant was entitled on the expiry of the lease to, have
the same renewed on such terms and conditions as might be
agreed between the parties, The appellant made a college
hostel on the aforesaid land and had also used the attached
ground as playground for students. A portion of the said
land was sought to be acquired by the State Government under
the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 for constructing the Home
Science College. The Collector of Jabbulpur by his award
dated July 18, 1955 dealt with the claims filed by the
appellant and the Municipal Corporation and assessed the
compensation at As. /8/- per sq. ft. Apportionment was
made between the appellant and the Corporation on the
footing that the appellant was not merely a tenant at will
as contended by the Corporation but was a lessee for the
terms mentioned in lease. The appellant and the Corporation
made applications for reference under s. 18(1) of the Act.
The Additional District Judge held that the price should be
As. /10/- per. sq ft. and that the appellant and’ the
Municipal Corporation were entitled to equal compensation.
The Corporation and the appellant filed appeals to the High
Court. The decision of the Addl. District Judge fixing the
price of the land As. /10/- per sq. ft. was affirmed. As
regards the dispute regarding apportionment the High Court
held that the lease deed having been exempted by the
Administrator during the time when the Corporation stood
superseded was ineffective to convey the leasehold interest
to the appellant. However, the appellant was paying the
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rent which had been accepted for a long time by the
Corporation. there was thus a tenancy by necessary
implication. The High Court further held that the lease was
to continue for the period of 30 years mentioned in the deed
but there was no valid contract for renewal of least--
because the clause relating to that was vague and uncertain.
The apportionment was made on acturial basis between the
appellant and the Corporation in the ratio of 1038 : 962.In
appeal before the Court the quest-ions relating to quantum
of compensation and the apportionment between the
appellant and the Corporationfell for consideration.
HELD : (1) No lease could be spelt out of the deed dated
August 31, 1940 for a period of 30 years
containing the renewal clause. If th officer who
executed the lease deed had no power to lease out the
property in question the grant of the lease was wholly null
and void. It is true that by the acceptance of rent from
the appellant the relationship of landlord and tennant came
into xistence. But that did not show that a lease deed for a
period of 30 years with a renewal clause had come into
existence. [497E]
Since the lease deed was ineffective the lease could be
under the provisions of section 106- of the ’transfer of
’Pro@y Act, only from. mouth
494
to month because the immovable property had not been leased
out for agricultural or manufacturing purpose in which case
it would have been from year ’Lo year. Therefore the
:contention that the renewal clause was effective and should
have been taken into consideration while making the
apportionment between the appellant and the Corporation
could not be accepted. (The question whether the High Court
was right in holding that the period of lease was 30 years
was not gone into because the Corporation had filed no
appeal against that portion of the decision. [497H]
Dagdulal v. Municipal Committee, Burhar, (19’60) M.P.L.J.
627 and H. V. Ranan v. G. N. Gopat & Ors. A. I. R. 1961
Mys. 29, referred to.
(2) The value which was fixed by the Addl. District Judge
and the High Court was fixed by reference to sales of plots
of comparable nature. There was no doubt that the High
Court had taken all the factors into consideration while as
essing the value and there was no reason to interfere in
this regard. [499A-C]
Raja Vyigheria Narayana Gajapatiraju v.. The Revenue
Divisional Officer Vizagapatam, 66 I.A. 104, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 702 and
703 of 1967.
Appeals from the judgment and order dated September 28, 1960
of the Madhya Pradesh High Court in Misc. First Appeals
Nos. 12 and 16 of 1958.
M. C. Chagla, Rameshwar Nath and Swaranjit Ahuja, for the
appellant (in both the appeals).
S. T. Desai and D. N. Mukherjee, for respondent No. 1 (in
both the appeals).
I. N. Shroff, for respondents Nos. 2 and 3 (in C.A. No.
703 of 1967) and respondent No. 2 (in C.A. No. 702 of 1967).
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Grover, J. These appeals which have been brought by cer-
tificates from a common judgment of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court arise out of certain acquisition proceedings.
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The facts may be stated. Plots Nos. 670, 671 and 735
situate in Madan Mahal Extension area, Jabalpur were
acquired by the State Government under the Land Acquisition
Act 1894, hereinafter called the ’Act’, for constructing the
Home Science College. In the present appeals we are
concerned mainly with Plot No. 670. On August 31, 1940, a
deed of lease had been executed on behalf of the Municipal
Corporation granting a lease free of premium to the
Hitkarini Sabha, Jabalpur, which is the appellant before us.
The laese was in respect of 10 Acres of land comprising
Plot No. 670 and another strip of land measuring 0.621 Acres
as described in the deed and delineated in the plan annexed
thereto. The period of the lease was 30 years and the
purpose for which the land was to be used was for locating
and running the Hitkarini City College. Amongst other terms
and conditions the, appellant was to pay a yearly rent of
Rs. .5 / , for 1 0 acres and Re. 1 / for the other strip
of land besides, paying, and discharging all rates and
taxes-etc. The appellant, on the expiry of the lease, was
entitled
495
to have the same renewed on-, such terms and conditions as
might be agreed between the parties. The appellant had
built a, college hostel on the aforesaid land and had also
used the attached ground as playground for students.
The Collector of Jabalpur, by his award dated July 18, 1955
dealt with the claims filed by the appellant and the
Municipal Corporation and after disposing of certain
preliminary objections he assessed the compensation for the
lands in all the three plots at As.0/8/-per sq. ft.
According to the Collector the appellant was not merely a
lessee or tenant-at-will as contended by the Corporation but
was a lessee for the term mentioned in the lease-deed dated
August 31, 1940, the lease having been made for a specific
purpose, i.e. for locating and running a City College. As
regards Plot No. 670 the apportionment was made between the
appellant
The appellant and the Corporation were dissatisfied with the
award of the Collector. Applications for reference were
made under s. 18 (1) of the Act. The Additional District
Judge held that the price should be 10 As. per sq. ft. and
that the appellant and the Municipal Corporation were
entitled to equal compensation for plot No. 670. The
Corporation and the appellant filed appeals to the High
Court. The decision of the Additional District Judge,
fixing the price of the land at As. 0/8/- per sq. ft. was
affirmed. As regards the dispute regarding apportionment
the High Court held, following a decision of a Division
Bench of the same court in Dagdulal v. Municipal Committee,
Burhar(1), that the lease deed having been executed by the
Administrator during the time when the Corporation stood
superseded was ineffective to convey the lease hold interest
to the appellant. However, the appellant had been paving
refit at the stipulated rate which had been accepted for a
long time by the Corporation. It amounted, therefore, to
the creation of a tenancy by necessary implication and the
relationship of landlord and tenant came into existence. On
the character of tenancy, whether it should be deemed to be
from year to year or whether it should be on terms contained
in the lease deed, the High Court held that the tenancy
continued on the terms contained in the lease deed. The
High Court then proceeded to say :-
"The lease deed in this case was executed on 31- 8 1940 and
was for a period of thirty years. It was, therefore to
remain in force for 15 years more after the date of
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acquisition. There is a renewal clause which has been
already quoted above. The lessee is entitled for renewal
"on such terms and conditions as, may be agreed to between
the parties". It appears to. us that the clause
(1) 1960 M. P. L. J. 627
496
is uncertain and vague and does not form a valid contract
for renewal of the lease. Normally in a covenant for
renewal there is an express agreement that the lease would
be continued on the same terms and conditions
subject to a reservation that the rent way be
enhanced under certain circumstances. In the
instant, case, ill the terms and conditions
have been left to the agreement of patties
which may not take place at all. Although a
renewal is contemplated no terms on which it
can be granted have been fixed between the
parties. Under section 29 of the Indian
Contract Act such a contract cannot be
enforced., It has been held in Ramaswami v.
Rjajagopala (I.L.R. I I Mad. 260) that a lease
whereby a tenant agreed to pay whatever rent
the Landlord might fix was void for
uncertainty".
The apportionment was made on acturial basis between the
appellant and the Corporation in the ratio of 1038 : 962.
Before us two matters have been sought to be raised. One
one relates to the quantum of compensation awarded by the
learned Additional District Judge and the other to the
apportionment between the appellant and the Corporation. We
shall first deal with apportionment. It has been argued
that since the High Court had held that the tenancy
continued on the terms contained in the lease deed benefit
should have been given of the renewal clause also. The High
Court had taken the view that that clause was uncertain and
vague and did not form a valid contract for the renewal of
the lease. Our attention has been invited to a judgment of
the Mysore High Court in H. V. Rajan v. C. N.Gopal &
Others.(1) There the relevant portion of the renewal clause
was "lessee shall have the option of five years but subject
only to such terms and conditions as may be mutually agreed
upon". It was observed that ordinarily the renewal clause
in a lease deed was an important term of the agreement and
the courts would be reluctant to ignore that clause on the
ground that it was vague unless on a reasonable construction
no meaning could be attached to it. An agreement to renew
the lease, without more, must be deemed to be an agreement
to renew as per the original terms. Even if the renewal
provided was dependent on the agreement between the parties
the clause merely provided for an agreement on reasonable
terms. If the parties could not agree as to those terms the
courts could step in.
In our judgment it is altogether unnecessary to decide the
true scope and effect of the renewal clause contained in the
deed executed on August 31, 1940. At the time the lease was
executed
(1) A.I.R. 1961 Mys. 29.
497
there used to be a Municipal Committee in Jabalpur Aparently
it became a Corporation later. The Committee was superseded
in-Charge of the Committee Jabalpur as also Secretary of the
Municipal Committee had signed the lease on behalf of that
Committee. In the decision of the Madhya Pradesh High
Court in Dagdulal’s(1) case the view had been expressed that
so long as Municipal Committee was not reconstituted the
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ownership of the property stood transferred by operation of
law to the State Government and therefore the Administrator
had no power whatsoever to sell the property which had
vested in the Government. The Additional District Judge had
observed that the lease deed had been executed in pursuance
of a resolution which had already been passed by the
Municipal Committee. The High Court, however, found on the
evidence produced before the Additional District Judge that
the final resolution passed by the Municipal Committee was
only for the grunt of a license and not a lease to the
appellant. The deed of lease, therefore, was, held to be
ineffective for conveying any lease-hold interest to it.
But still the High Court held that the tenancy was to last
for a period of thirty years.
We are wholly unable to comprehend how any lease could be
spelt out of the deed dated August 31, 1940 for a period of
30 years containing the renewal clause which has already
been mentioned. If the officer who executed the lease deed
had no power to lease out the property in question the grant
of the lease was wholly null and void. It is true that by
acceptance of the rent from the appellant the relationship
of landlord and tenant came into existence between the
parties but Mr. Chagla for the appellant has not been able
to show how a lease for a period of 30 years together with a
renewal clause could be held to have been created or to have
come into existence. It may be mentioned that we are not
concerned with the period of 30 years which has already been
taken into consideration by the High Court because no appeal
has beep filed on that point by the Corporation. The only
matter which requires determination is whether the High
Court, while deciding the question of apportionment, should
have given due affect to the renewal clause. In our opinion
the High Court could riot have done so. If the so called
deed of lease dated August 31, 1940 was wholly ineffective
and void for the purpose of demising the land for a period
of 30 years one could only look at the provisions of the
Transfer of Property Act for determining the term for which
the tenancy came into existence. Under s. 106 of that Act
the ,tenancy, in the present case, could be only from month
to month because the immovable property had not been leased
out
(1) (1960) M..P.L.J. 627.
498
for agricultural or manufacturing purpose in which case the
lease would have been from year to year. We are therefore
unable to accede to the contention that the renewal clause
in the lease deed dated August 31, 1940 was effective and
should have been taken into consideration while making the
apportionment between the appellant and the Corporation.
The next question relating to quantum can be disposed of
shortly. The sole criticism of Mr. Chagla is that the
potential value of the plot in question was not taken into
consideration. It is true, as pointed out in Raja
Vyrigherla Marayana Gajapatiraju v. The Revenue Divisional
Officer Vizagapatam(1) that where the land to be valued
possesses some unusual or unique features as regards its
position or its potentialities the court determining the
market value will have to ascertain as best as it can from
the materials before it what a willing vendor might
reasonably expect to obtain from a willing purchaser for the
land in that particular position and with those particular
potentialities. It has been urged that Plot No. 670 had a
special situation or position in view of its size, locality,
nearness to business centre and the Madan Mahal Station.
But the value which was fixed by the Additional District
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Judge and the High Court was fixed by reference to sales of
plots of comparable nature. The following portion of the
judgment of the High Court shows how the matter was dealt
with
"We may observe that the two witnesses relied upon by the
appellants purchased small plots at the rate
of Re. 1/- per sq. ft. As the map of the
Wright Town Madan Mahal Extension area
produced by the Corporation before us shows,
these plots are in a fully developed lay out
having roads and drains round about. We had
asked the Corporation to calculate how much
area out of the acquired sites would be
required to be left open for roads and drains
and they have calculated that about 70,000 sq.
ft. would have to be left open for this pur-
pose. Obviously, therefore, it is only the
remaining plot which would have value as
building sites. Besides leaving so much area
open, costs will have to be incurred in
developing the roads, and drains for which the
Corporation has estimated the cost to be Rs.
8,500/-. Considering all these factors and
also calculating the built up area in the lay
outs surroundings the acquired land, we find
that it is only eighty per cent of the land
which can be sold as building site.
On these calculations if the average price of the plots sold
in the locality is taken to be /12/- per sq. ft. the
(1)66 I.A. 104.
499
overall price of the acquired land without roads and drains
would work out to a little less than / 9/ per sq. ft. To
put the matter, in a different way, the value of / 10/ per
sq. ft. found by the Additional Judge would work out to a
little over /12/- per sq. ft., if only the area which could
be built upon is considered saleable as building site.
We,therefore, find that the price at-/10/per sq. ft. allowed
by the Additional District judge, is not unreasonable; if
anything it errs on the generous side".
We have no manner of doubt that the High Court had taken all
the factors into consideration while assessing the value.
In the result the appeals fail and are dismissed. There
will be no order as to costs.
Appeals dismissed.
G.C.
500