Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 12
PETITIONER:
STATE OF KERALA & ORS. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
T.N. PETER & ANR. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/04/1980
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BENCH:
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
CITATION:
1980 AIR 1438 1980 SCR (3) 290
1980 SCC (3) 554
CITATOR INFO :
F 1982 SC1214 (7)
RF 1986 SC 468 (34,35)
ACT:
Cochin Town Planning Act-S.34(1) validity of,
HEADNOTE:
The Cochin Town Planning Act in particular contemplates
the creation of a town planning trust, the preparation of
town planning schemes (section 12) acquisition of lands in
this behalf (section 32) compensation for such compulsory
taking (section 34) and modifications in the manner of
acquisition and the mode of compensation in the Kerala Land
Acquisition Act.
The petitioners’ writ petitions challenging the
validity of the Town Planning Act were allowed by the High
Court on the ground that the provisions of Section 34(1) and
34(2A) were unconstitutional being violative of article 14
of the Constitution.
In appeal to this Court it was contended that by the
use of the provisions for making schemes under section 8 or
section 10, the authority may indefinitely immobilize the
owner’s ability to deal with his land since section 15
clamps restrictions and this is unreasonable.
^
HELD: 1. City improvement schemes have facets which
mark them out from other land acquisition proposals. To miss
the massive import of the 15 specialised nature of important
schemes is to expose one’s innocence of the dynamics of
urban development. The statute has left it to the government
to deal expeditiously with the scheme and there are
sufficient guidelines in the Act not to make the gap between
the draft scheme and governmental sanction too
procrastinatory to be arbitrary. [294 G-H]
2. Section 12(6) imparts finality to The scheme and
this corresponds to the declaration under section 6 of the
Land Acquisition Act. A conspectus of the relevant
provisions of the Act makes it clear that improvement scheme
cannot hang on indefinitely and an outside limit of two
years is given for the preparation and publication- of draft
schemes from the time the initial resolution to make or
adopt the scheme is passed by the Municipal Council.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 12
Conceptwise and strategy-wise development schemes stand on a
separate footing and classification of town planning schemes
differently from the routine projects demanding compulsory
acquisition may certainly be justified as based on rational
differentia which has a reasonable relation to the end in
view namely improvement of towns and disciplining their
development. [295 F-G]
3. There is no substance in the argument that if the
land is acquired under the Town Planning Act no solatium is
payable while if the land is acquired under the Land
Acquisition Act it is a statutory obligation of the
acquiring government to pay solatium. The Town Planning Act
is a special statute where lands have to be acquired on
large scale and as early and as quickly as possible so that
schemes may be implemented with promptitude. There is in
addition a specific and purposeful provision excluding some
sections of the
291
Kerala Land Acquisition Act. In such circumstances it is
incredible that the authority acting under the Act will
sabotage chapter VII, in particular section 34, by resorting
to the Kerala Land Acquisition Act in derogation of the
express provision facilitating acquisition of lands on less
onerous terms. [299C-D]
Maganlal v. Municipal Corporation, [1975] 1 S.C.R. p.
23, referred to.
4. The amount of compensation payable has no bearing on
the distinction whether the lands are acquired for housing
or hospital, irrigation schemes or town improvement, school
building or police station. 5(a) The exclusion of section 25
of the Land Acquisition Act from section 34 of the Act is
unconstitutional. But it is severable. [302G]
(b) The only discriminatory factor as between section
34 of the Act and section 25 of the Land Acquisition Act
vis-a-vis quantification of compensation is the non-payment
of solatium in the former case because of the provisions of
section 34(1) and that section 25 of the Land Acquisition
Act shall have no application. To achieve the virtue of
equality and eliminate the vice of inequality what is needed
is the obliteration of section 25 of the Land Acquisition
Act from section 34(1) of the Town Planning Act. The whole
of section 34(1) does not have to be struck down. Once the
discriminatory and void part in section 34(1) of the Act is
excised equality is restored. The owner will then be
entitled to the same compensation including solatium that he
may be eligible under the Land Acquisition Act. [303E-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 848-
850 of 1977.
From the Judgment and Order dated 16-7-1976 of the
Kerala High Court in W.A. Nos. 910, 194 and 253/75.
AND
CIVIL APPEAL Nos. 666-669 of 1978.
From the Judgment and decree dated 8-6-1977 of the
Kerala High Court in W.A. Nos. 364-365, 472 and 473 of 1975.
P. Govindan Nair and K. R. Nambiar for the Appellants
in CAs. 848/77 and 666-667/78 and for Respondents 2 to 4 in
CA 849/77 and 2-3 in CA 850/77.
M. M. Abdul Khader and N. Sudhakaran for the Appellant
in CAs. 849-850/77 and Respondent 2 in CA 848/77 and RR1 in
CA 666/78, 667/78 and RR 2 in CA 668-669/78.
T. S. Krishnamoorthy Iyer, T.P. Sundara Rajan and P. K.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 12
Pillai for Respondent No. 1 in 848/77.
T. L. Vishwanath Iyer, and S. Balakrishnan for the
Respondent No. 1 in CAs. 668-669/78 and RR 2 in CAs. 666-
667/78.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
292
KRISHNA IYER, J. Law and development, as yet a
Cinderella of our corpus juris, is a burgeoning branch of
creative jurisprudence which needs to be nourished with
judicious care, by courts in developing countries. The Town
Planning Act, a developmental legislation amended and
updated by the Kerala Legislature, was designed to draw up
plans and to execute projects for the improvement of the
towns and cities of that over-crowded State with its
populous multitudes uncontrollably spiralling, defying
social hygiene and economic engineering. Although the Act is
of 1932 and originally confined to the Travancore portion of
the Kerala State, it has received amendatory attention and
now applies to the whole of Kerala with beneficial impact
upon explosive cities like Cochin. This legislation,
naturally, has made some deviation from the Kerala Land
Acquisition Act, 1961, but having received insufficient
attention from the draftsman on constitutional provisions,
has landed the Act in litigation through a challenge in the
High Court where it met with its judicial Waterloo when a
Division Bench invalidated Section 31(1) and 34(2A) which
were the strategic provisions whose exit from the statute
would virtually scotch the whole measure. The State of
Kerala has come up in appeal, although the immediate victim
is the Cochin Town Planning Trust.
The schematic projection of the Town Planning Act (the
Act, for short) may be a good starting point for the
discussion of the sub missions made at the Bar. The Act,
with a prophetic touch, envisions explosive urban
developments leading to terrific stresses and strains,
human, industrial and societal. Land is at the base of all
development, and demand for the limited space available in
the cities may so defile and distort planned progress as to
give future shock unless scientific social engineering takes
hold of the situation. The State of its specialized agencies
must take preemptive action and regulate the process of
growth. The Act fills this need and contemplates the
creation of a Town Planning Trust, preparation of town
planning schemes, acquisition of lands in this behalf,
compensation for betterment by citizens and other
miscellaneous provisions, apart from creation of development
authorities. While this is the sweep of the statute, our
concern is limited to schemes sanctioned by Section 12,
acquisition of lands for such schemes under Section 32,
compensation for such compulsory taking under Section 34 and
the modifications in the manner of acquisition and the mode
of compensation wrought into the - Land Acquisition Act by
the above provisions of the Town Planning Act. It is
indisputable that the compensation payable and certain other
matters connected therewith, differ as between the
provisions in this Act and the Land Acquisition Act. The
latter is more beneficial
293
to the owner and the challenge, naturally, has stemmed from
this allegedly invidious discrimination. In two separate
cases, two judges upheld the challenge and, on appeal, the
High Court affirmed the holdings that the provisions of Sub-
section 34(1) and 34(2A) were unconstitutional, being
violative of Article 14. Hence these appeals.
We will now proceed to scan the substance of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 12
submissions and the reasoning in the High Court’s judgment.
Counsel for the State, Shri P. Govindan Nair, supported
by counsel for the Trust, Shri Abdul Khader, have canvassed
the correctness of the reasons which have appealed to the
High Court, and some decisions of this Court have been
brought to our notice in this connection. The owners of the
lands acquired have been represented before us by Sri T. C.
Raghavan who has, in his short submission, supported the
judgment under appeal. One of the appeals has become
infructious, because the State, after the High Court
invalidated Section 34 of the Act, proceeded under the Land
Acquisition Act, acquired the land, paid compensation and
took possession thereof, thus completely satisfying the land
owner. Shri T. S. Krishnamurthi Iyer, appearing for the
owner, pointed out this circumstance and so we dismissed
that appeal but mention it here because Shri T. C. Raghavan
has relied on this fact in support of one of his arguments,
as we will presently disclose. Before entering into the
merits, we may recall the submissions of Shri T. L.
Viswanathan, a young lawyer from Kerala, who made us feel
that orality, marked by pointed brevity and suasive
precision, is more telling than advocacy with counter-
productive prolixity. Although the responsible scrutiny that
a bench decision of the High Court deserves has been
bestowed, we are unable to support the judgment under appeal
or the arguments of counsel in support.
The controversy regarding the vires of Sec. 34 revolved
round a few points. Before us, Art. 14 has loomed large and
a submission has been made that by use of the provisions for
making schemes under Sec. 8 or Sec. 10 the authority may
indefinitely immobilize the owner’s ability to deal with his
land since Sec. 15 clamps restrictions, and this is
unreasonable.
We agree that it is a hardship for the owner of the
land if his ability to deal with his property is either
restricted or prevented by a notification, and nothing
happens, thereafter, leaving him guessing as to what the
State may eventually do. Indeed, if such a state of
suspense continues for unlimited periods, it may be
unreasonable restriction on the right to property, although
currently the right to pro-
294
perty itself has been taken away from Part III. That apart,
we must see whether there is any justifiable classification
between common cases of compulsory acquisition under the
Land Acquisition Act and the special class of acquisitions
covered by the Town Planning Act which may furnish a
differentia sufficient to repel the attack of Article 14.
Section 15 of the Act forbids dealings by the owner in many
ways, once the publication of a notification is made. The
grievance particularised by Shri Raghavan is that after a
draft scheme has been prepared by the municipal council and
published, it becomes operational only on the sanction by
Government but there is no time limit fixed in Sec. 12
within which Government shall sanction. Supposing it takes
several years for Government to express its approval or
disapproval, the owner may suffer.
We regard this grievance as mythical, not real, for
more than one reason. The scheme is for improvement of a
town and, therefore, has a sense of urgency implicit in it.
Government is aware of this import and it is fanciful
apprehension to imagine that lazy insouciance will make
Government slumber over the draft scheme for long years.
Expeditious despatch is writ large on the process and that
is an in-built guideline in the statute. At the same time,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 12
taking a pragmatic view, no precise time scale can be fixed
in the Act because of the myriad factors which are to be
considered by Government before granting sanction to a
scheme in its original form or after modification. Section
12 and the other provisions give us some idea of the
difficulty of a rigid time-frame being written into the
statute especially when schemes may be small or big, simple
or complex, demanding enquiries or provoking discontent. The
many exercises, the differences of scale, the diverse
consequences, the overall implications of developmental
schemes and projects and the plurality of considerations,
expert techniques and frequent consultations, hearings and
other factors, precedent to according sanction are such that
the many-sided dimension of the sanctioning process makes
fixation of rigid time limits by the statute an impractical
prescription. As pointed out earlier, city improvement
schemes have facets which mark them out from other land
acquisition proposals. To miss the massive import and
specialised nature of improvement schemes is to expose one’s
innocence of the dynamics of urban development. Shri
Raghavan fairly pointed out that, in other stages, the Act
provides for limitation in time (for example, sec. 33 which
fixes a period of three years between the date of
notification and the actual acquisition). Only in one
minimal area where time-limit may not be workable, it has
not been specified. The statute has left it to Government to
deal expeditiously with the scheme and we see sufficient
guideline in the Act not to make the gap between the
295
draft scheme and governmental sanction too procrastinatory
to be arbitrary. We need hardly say, that the court is not
powerless to quash and grant relief where, arbitrary
protraction or mala fide inaction of authorities injures an
owner.
An aside: We are surprised at the obsolescent and
obscurantist vocabulary surviving in the Town Planning Act
because there are many B feudal and incongruous expressions
such as ’our Governments and references to a Land
Acquisition Act which has already been repealed by the
Kerala Land Acquisition Act, 1961. Modernisation is a
process necessary even for the statute book and yet it has
not been done, despite opportunity for the legislature,
while amending later, to carry out such simple, verbal and
yet necessary changes. Be it remembered that the Town
Planning Act did undergo an extensive amendment as late as
1976 when, surely, some of the verbal replacements could
easily have been made. Medievalism lingering in legislations
is hardly a tribute to the awareness of our legislators.
Section 12 of the Act provides for publishing the draft
schemes so that objections or suggestions may be put forward
by affected persons. The scheme is then passed by the
Municipal Council, of course, after considering objections
and suggestions. Thereupon, it is submitted to the
Government for sanction and the fact of such submission is
also published so that the public may still raise objections
or make suggestions to Govt. which will consider them, make
further inquiries, if necessary, and ultimately sanction the
scheme with or without modifications or may even refuse
sanction or return the scheme to the Council for fresh
consideration. Once the scheme is sanctioned by the
Government, it is again published. Section 12(6) imparts
finality to the scheme and this virtually corresponds to the
declaration under sec. 6 of the Land Acquisition Act.
Chapter III of the Act is comprehensive and complex because
the subject of scheme-making demands expert attention and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 12
affects community interest. A Director of Town Planning is
appointed who shall be consulted by Municipal Councils in
matters of town planning. Developmental schemes are not
sudden creations. On the other hand, the Municipal Council
first decides to prepare a scheme, adopts a draft scheme, if
any, made by the owners of the lands, prepares the necessary
plan of the lands which is proposed to be included in the
scheme and notify its resolution for public information. A
copy of the plan is kept for the inspection of the public.
Since all improvement schemes are matters of public concern,
on the passing of a resolution and its notification under
sec. 8, a time-bound obligation is cast on the Municipal
Council by s. 9, which reads thus :
296
"S. 9: Publication of draft scheme:
(1) If the resolution is to make a scheme, municipal
council shall, within twelve months from the date
of the notification under s.8 or within such
further period not exceeding twelve months, as our
Government may allow, and after consulting, in the
prescribed manner, the owners of lands and
buildings in the area affected, prepare and
publish a draft scheme."
It is apparent that improvement schemes cannot hang on
indefinitely and an outside limit of 2 years is given for
the preparation and publication of draft schemes from the
initial resolution to make or adopt the scheme is passed by
the Municipal Council. Government itself may step in and
direct the Municipal Council to prepare schemes and sec. 10
empowers it in this behalf. Sec. 11 contains detailed
provisions regarding the material to be included in the
draft scheme. These are preparatory exercises, and then
comes the sanction of the scheme by the Government under
Sec. 12. We indicate the elaborate character of the
strategy, stages, contents and character of schemes for
improvement and the opportunities for objections and
suggestions to the public and the consultation with
technical experts and Government, time and again, only to
emphasise the complex nature of modern urban development
schemes which makes it a different category altogether from
the common run of ’public purposes’ for which compulsory
acquisition is undertaken by the State. Conceptwise and
strategywise, development schemes stand on a separate
footing and classification of town planning schemes
differently from the routine projects demanding compulsory
acquisition may certainly be justified as based on a
rational differentia which has a reasonable relation to the
end in view viz., improvement of towns and disciplining
their development.
Once this basic factor is recognised, the raison detre
of a separate legislation for and separate treatment of town
planning as a special subject becomes clear. It was pointed
out that under the Kerala Land Acquisition Act, there is a
time limit of 2 years written into Section 6 by engrafting a
proviso thereto through an amendment of 1968 Act (Act 29 of
1968). Section 6 deals with a declaration that land is
required for a public purpose and the relevant proviso
thereto reads:
"S.6(i) Proviso :
Provided that no declaration in respect of any
particular land covered by a notification under sub-
section (1) of
297
Sec. 3 shall be made after the expiry of two years from
the date of publication of such notification."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 12
An argument was put forward that under the Land Acquisition
Act there is thus a protection against unlimited uncertainty
for the owners once lands are frozen in the matter of
dealing with them by an initial notification. This
protection against protraction and inaction on the part of
the State and immobilisation of ownership is absent in the
Town Planning Act. According to Mr. T. C. Raghavan,
appearing for some respondents, this makes for arbitrariness
and discrimination invalidatory of the relevant provisions
of the Town Planning Act. In our view there is no substance
in this submission, having regard to the specialised nature
of improvement schemes and the democratic a participation in
the process required in such cases. We repel the submission.
Much argument was addressed on the ’either or’
arbitrariness implicit in s. 33 of the Act. The precise
contention is that it is open to the Trust to acquire either
under the Kerala Land Acquisition Act or under Chapter VII
of the Town Planning Act. In the latter event, no solatium
is payable while under the former statute it is a statutory
obligation of the acquiring Govt. Thus, if an Authority has
an option to proceed under one statute or the other and the
consequences upon the owner are more onerous or less, such a
facultative provision bears the lethal vice of arbitrariness
in its bosom and is violative of Art. 14 and is therefore,
void. Section 32 of the Act is the foundation for this
argument and reads thus:
32. Modification of Land Acquisition Act:
Immovable property required for the purpose of town
planning scheme shall be deemed to be land needed for a
purpose within the meaning of the Land Acquisition Act,
XI of 1089, and may be acquired under the said (Act)
modified in the manner provided in this chapter.
What is spun out of the words used is that for the purposes
of town planning schemes an immovable property "may be
acquired under the said Act (The Land Acquisition Act)
modified in the manner provided in this Chapter". Of course,
Chapter VII, particularly sub-sec. (1) of s. 34 thereof,
relates to compensation and does not provide for payment of
solatium. Moreover, it is mentioned that the provisions of
ss. 14, 22 and 23 (both sides agree, this should be read as
Sec. 25) of the Land Acquisition Act shall have no
application in the acquisition of property for the purpose
of the Town Planning Act.
298
We do not accept the argument that there is a legal
option for the authority to acquire either under the Land
Acquisition Act or under the Town Planning Act when land is
needed for a scheme. Theoretically, yes, but practically,
no. Which sensible statutory functionary, responsible to the
Treasury and to the community, will resort to the more
expensive process under the Land Acquisition Act as against
the specially designed and less costly provision under s.
34? Fanciful possibilities, freak exercise and speculative
aberrations are not realistic enough for constitutional
invalidation on the score of actual alter. natives or alive
options, one more onerous than the other. In Magan lal’s
case, the Court pointed out :
"The statute itself is the two classes of cases before
us clearly lays down the purpose behind them, that is
premises belonging to the Corporation and the
Government should be subject to speedy procedure in the
matter of evicting unauthorised persons occupying them.
This is a sufficient guidance for the authorities on
whom the power has been conferred. With such an
indication clearly given in the statutes one expects
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 12
the officers concerned to abail themselves of the
procedures prescribed by the Acts and not resort to the
dilatory procedure of the ordinary Civil Court. Even
normally one cannot imagine an officer having the
choice of two procedures, one which enables him to get
possession of the property quickly and the other which
would be a prolonged one, to resort to the latter.
Administrative officers, no less than the courts, do
not function in a vacuum. It would be extremely unreal
to hold that an administrative officer would in taking
proceedings for eviction of unauthorised occupants of
Govt. property or Municipal property resort to the
procedure prescribed by the two Acts in one case and to
the ordinary Civil Court in the other. The provisions
of these two Acts cannot be struck down on the fanciful
theory that power would be exercised in such an
unrealistic fashion. In considering whether the
officers would be discriminating between one set of
persons and another, one has got to take into account
normal human behaviour and not behaviour which is
abnormal. It is not every fancied possibility of
discrimination but the real risk of discrimination that
we must take into account. This is not one of those
cases where discrimination is writ large on the face of
the statute. Discrimi-
299
nation may be possible but is very improbable. And if
there is discrimination in actual practice this Court
is not powerless. Furthermore, the fact that the Legis-
lature considered that the ordinary procedure is
insufficient or ineffective in evicting unauthorized
occupants or Govt. and Corporation property and
provided a special speedy procedure therefor is a clear
guidance for the authorities charged with the duty of
evicting unauthorised occupants. We therefore, find
ourselves unable to agree with the majority in the
Northern India Caterers’ case."
The same reasoning applies to the present situation.
The Town Planning Act is a special statute where lands have
to be acquired on a large scale and as early and quickly as
possible so that schemes may be implemented with
promptitude. What is more, there is a specific and
purposeful provision excluding some sections of the Kerala
Land Acquisition Act. In such circumstances, it is
incredible that the authority acting under the Act will
sabotage Chapter VII, in particular s. 34, by resorting to
the Kerala Land Acquisition Act in derogation of the express
provision facilitating acquisition of lands on less onerous
terms. He functions under the Town Planning Act, needs Lands
for the schemes under that Act, has provisions for
acquisition under that Act. Then would be, by reckless
action, travel beyond that Act and with a view to oblige the
private owner betray the public interest and resort to the
power under the Land Acquisition Act, disregarding the non
obstante provision in Sec. of the Act? Presumption of
perversity cannot be the foundation of unconstitutionality.
Moreover, the expression, used in the context of s. 32,
clearly (does not bear the meaning attributed to it by the
counsel for the respondents. All that it means is that when
immovable property is found necessary for the purpose of a
’scheme’ it may be acquired by the compulsory process
written into s. 32. It is, as if there were only one option,
not two. If the scheme is to be implemented, the mode of
acquisition shall be under s. 32 and the manner of such
acquisition is the same under the Land Acquisition Act minus
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 12
ss. 14, 22 and 25 thereof. A slight reflection makes it
clear that the mode prescribed is only one, and so the
theory of alternatives one of which being mere onerous than
the other, and the consequent inference of arbitrariness,
cannot arise. We overrule that argument.
We must notice, before we part with this point, the
argument of Sri Raghavan for the respondents that the
existence of alternatives is not theoretical nor chimerical
but real, and proof of the pudding is in the eating. He
pointed to one of the appeals in this batch where the
proceedings under sec. 34 of the Act were given up, the
provision
300
of the Land Acquisition Act used, and full compensation and
solatium paid to the owner. This instance gave flesh and
blood to the submission about discrimination. Shri Khader,
for the trust countered this argument by-stating that
because the High Court struck clown the Act and the land was
needed. the only statute then available to the State was the
Land Acquisition Act. So, the authority was reluctantly
constrained to notify and acquire under the Land Acquisition
Act. Had Sec. 34 of the Act been available, this step would
not have been taken and absent Sec. 34 the argument of
alternatives has no basis. We agree with this reasoning and
repel the submission of arbitrary power to pick and choose.
At worst, a swallow does not make a summer but we must warn
that prodigal state action to favour some owner when sec. 34
has been resuscitated will be betrayal of public interest
and invalidated as mala fide even at the instance of a
concerned citizen. The legislature cannot be stultified by
the suspicious improvidence, or worse, of the Executive.
The more serious submission pressed tersely but
clearly, backed by a catena of cases, by Shri Viswanathan
merits our consideration. The argument is shortly this. As
between two owners of property. the presence of public
purpose empowers the State to take the lands of either or
both. But the differential nature of the public purpose does
not furnish a rational ground to pay more compensation for
one owner and less for another and that impertinence
vitiates the present measure. The purpose may be slum
clearance, flood control or housing for workers, but how
does the diversity of purposes warrant payment of
differential scales or quantum of compensation where no
constitutional immunity as in Art. 31A, or applies? Public
purpose sanctions compulsory acquisition, not discriminatory
compensation, whether you take A’s land for improvement
scheme or irrigation scheme, how can you pay more or less,
guided by an irrelevance viz. the particular public purpose?
The State must act equally when it takes property unless
there is an intelligent and intelligible differentia between
two categories of owners having a nexus with the object,
namely the scale of compensation. It is intellectual
confusion of constitutional principle to regard
classification good for one purpose, as obliteration of
differences for unrelated aspects. This logic is neatly
applied in a series af cases of this Court.
It is trite that the test to rebuff Art. 14 turns of
the differentia vis-a-vis the object of the classification.
In Vajarveu Mudaiar’s case, the Court took the view, (on
this aspect the decision is not shown to have been
overruled) that where there is no rational relation in the
301
matter of quantum of compensation between one public purpose
and another you cannot differentiate between owners. Whether
you acquire for a hospital or university, for slum clearance
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 12
or housing scheme, compensation cannot vary in the rate or
scale or otherwise.
"Out of adjacent lands of the same quality and
value, one may be acquired for a housing scheme under
the Amending Act and the other for a hospital under the
Principal Act, out of two adjacent plots belonging to
the same individual and of the same quality’ and value,
one may be acquired under the Principal and the other
under the Amending Act. From whatever aspect the matter
is looked at, the alleged differences have no
reasonable relation to the object sought to be
achieved.
In Durganath Sharma’s case, a special legislation for
acquisition of land for flood control came up for
constitutional examination. We confine ourselves to the
differentiation in the rate of compensation based on the
accident of the nature of the purpose where the Court struck
a similar note. In the Nagpur Improvement Trust case and in
the Om Prakash case, this Court voided the legislation which
provided differential compensation based upon the purpose.
In the latter case the Court observed :
"There can be no dispute that the Govt. can
acquire land for a public purpose including that of the
Mahapalika or other local body, either under the
unmodified Land Acquisition Act, 1894, or under that
Act as modified by the Adhiniyam. If it chooses the
first course, then the land-owners concerned will be
entitled to better compensation including 15% solatium,
the potential value of the land etc. nor will there be
any impediment or hurdle such as that enacted by s.
372(a) of the Adhiniyam in the way of such land owners,
dissatisfied by the Collector’s award, to approach the
Court under s. 18 of that Act.
....It is not necessary to dilate further on this
point at this matter stands concluded by this Court’s
decision in Nagpur Improvement Trust’s case by the
ratio of which we bound. It will be sufficient to close
the discussion by extracting here what Sikri C.J.,
speaking for the Court in Nagpur Improvement Trust’s
case said:
"Can the Legislature say that for a hospital land
will be acquired at 50% of the market value, for a
school at 60 % of the value and for a Govt. building at
70 % of the
302
market value? All three objects are public purposes and
as far as the owner is concerned it does not matter to
him whether it is one public purpose or the other. Art.
14 confers an individual right and in order to justify
a classification there should be something which
justifies a different treatment to this individual
right. It seems to us that ordinarily a classification
based on the public purpose is not permissible under
Art. 14 for the purpose of determining compensation.
The position is different when the owner of the land
himself is the recipient of benefits from an
improvement scheme, and the benefit to him is taken
into consideration in fixing compensation. Can
classifications be made on the basis of authority
acquiring the land? In other words can different
principles of compensation be laid if the land is
acquired for or by an Improvement Trust or Municipal
Corporation or the Government? It seems to us that the
answer is in the negative because as far as the owner
is concerned it does not matter to him whether the land
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 12
is acquired by one authority or the other.
It is equally immaterial whether it is one
Acquisition Act or another Acquisition Act under which
the land is acquired. If the existence of two Acts
could enable the State to give one owner different
treatment from another equally situated the owner who
is discriminated against, can claim the protection of
Article 14."
The principle that may be distilled from these rulings
and the basics of ’equality’ jurisprudence is that
classification is not permissible for compensation purposes
so long as the differentia relied on has no rational
relation to the object in view viz. reduction in recompense.
Is it rational to pay different scales of compensation,
as pointed out by Sikri, C.J. in the Nagpur Improvement
Trust case, depending on whether you acquire for housing or
hospital, irrigation scheme or town improvement, school
building or police-station? The amount of compensation
payable has no bearing on this distinction, although it is
conceivable that classification for purposes of compensation
may exist and in such cases the statute may be good. We are
unable to discern any valid discremen in the Town Planning
Act vis-a-vis the Land Acquisition Act warranting a
classification in the matter of denial of solatium.
We uphold the Act in other respects but not when it
deals invidiously between two owners based on an irrelevant
criterion viz. the acquisition being for an improvement
scheme. We are not to be
303
understood to mean that the rate of compensation may not
vary or must be uniform in all cases. We need not
investigate this question further as it does not arise here
although we are clear in our mind that under given
circumstances differentiation even in the scale of
compensation may comfortably comport with Art. 14. No such
circumstances are present here nor pressed. Indeed, the
State, realising the force of this facet of discrimination
offered, expilatory fashion, both before the High Court and
before us, to pay 15% solatium to obliterate the hostile
distinction.
The core question now arises. What is the effect even
if we read a discriminatory design in Sec. 34? Is plastic
surgery permissible or demolition of the section inevitable?
Assuming that there is an untenable discrimination in the
matter of compensation does the whole of s. 34 have to be
liquidated or severable portions voided? In our opinion,
scuttling the section, the course the High Court has chosen,
should be the last step. The Court uses its writ power with
a constructive design, an affirmative slant and a sustaining
bent. Even when by compulsions of inseverability, a
destructive stroke becomes necessary the court minimises the
injury by an intelligent containment. Law keeps alive and
"operation pull down" is de mode. Viewed from this
perspective, so far as we are able to see, the only
discriminatory factor as between s. 34 of the Act and s. 25
of the Land Acquisition Act vis-a-vis quantification of
compensation is the non-payment of solatium in the former
case because of the provision in s. 34(1) that s. 25 of the
Land Acquisition Act shall have no application. Thus, to
achieve the virtue of equality and to eliminate the vice of
inequality what is needed is the obliteration of s. 25 of
the Land Acquisition Act from s. 34(1) of the Town Planning
Act. The whole of s. 34(1) does not have to be struck down.
Once we excise the discriminatory and, therefore, void part
in Sec. 34(1) of the Act, equality is restored. The owner
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 12
will then be entitled to the same compensation, including
solatium, that he may be eligible for under the Land
Acquisition Act. What is rendered void by Art. 13 is only to
the extent of the contravention of Art. 14. The lancet of
the Court may remove the offending words and restore to
constitutional health the rest of the provision.
We hold that the exclusion of Sec. 25 of the Land
Acquisition Act from sec. 34 of the Act is unconstitutional
but it is severable and we sever it. The necessary
consequence is that s. 34(1) will be read omitting the words
’and s. 25’ . What follows then? Section 32 obligates the
state to act under the Land Acquisition Act but we have
struck down that part which excludes sec. 25 of the Land
Acquisition Act
304
and so, the ’modification’ no longer covers s. 25. It
continues to apply to the acquisition of property under the
Town Planning Act. Section 34(2) provides for compensation
exactly like s. 25(1) of the Land Acquisition Act and, in
the light of what we have just decided, s. 25(2) will also
apply and "in addition to the market value of the land as
above provided, the court shall in every case award a sum of
fifteen per cen tum on such market value in consideration of
the compulsory nature of the acquisition."
The upshot of this litigation thus is that the appeal
must be allowed except to the extent that solatium shall be
payable as under the Land Acquisition Act. Since the State
has always been willing to pay that component and has
repeated that offer even before us right from the beginning,
we direct the parties to bear their respective costs.
P.B.R. Appeal allowed.
305