Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
RAGHUBANS NARAIN SINGH
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE UTTAR PRADESH GOVERNMENT THROUGH COLLECTOR OF BIJNOR
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
23/09/1966
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
BENCH:
SHELAT, J.M.
WANCHOO, K.N.
MITTER, G.K.
CITATION:
1967 AIR 465 1967 SCR (1) 489
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1977 SC1128 (9,14)
RF 1979 SC 472 (23,24)
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, Ss. 11, 18, 23 and 28-
Compensation for land acquired-based on an earlier offer to
purchase the land-evidence relating to such offer not
challenged as not genuine or bona fide-whether proper basis
for compensation-Valuation based on ’market value’-or on
income from land-when appropriate-Court exercising
discretion to pay interest under s. 28-whether can award
interest at a rate less than 6 per cent.
HEADNOTE:
For the purpose of building a school hostel., a piece of
grove land belonging to the appellant and situated just
outside the town of Nehtaur, in U.P., was notified for
acquisition under s. 4 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, in
December 1945 and possession was taken from the appellant on
July 4, 1947. The Collector in his award under s. II of the
Act fixed the total compensation-which included compensation
for the trees on the land, for the land itself and the 15
per cent solatium-at Rs. 2,218.
In a reference under s. 18 made at the instance of the
appellant to the District Judge, both the appellant and the
Government led oral evidence and also adduced evidence of
certain specimen sales to establish the proper value of the
land. A Deputy Collector, who had recently retired, gave
evidence for the appellant to the effect that during 1945 he
had offered to purchase the land in question for Rs. 18,000
with a view to build a residential house for himself so that
he could live- there after his retirement; but that the
offer was not accepted as the appellant wanted Rs. 24,000.
Evidence was also led about the state of development of the
area in which the land was situated; and of the fact that
the income from the land at the time was approximately Rs.
700 per annum, with the prospect of its increasing to Rs.
1,200 per annum when all the trees that had been planted
started bearing fruit.
The District Judge discarded the evidence of specimen %ales
produced by both sides as being of no assistance for
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determining the compensation payable for the land. But he
accepted the evidence (if the offer made by the Deputy
Collector as genuine and bona fide and on that basis
assessed the value of the land at Rs. 18,000. Adding to
that the solatium of 15 per cent, he awarded Rs. 20,700 -,is
compensation. He also held that the appellant was entitled
to interest under s. 28 but allowed interest only at 3 per
cent on the ground that since the acquisition was for an
educational institution, interest at that rate was proper.
In an appeal against this decision the High Court took the
view that it was not possible to say whether the offer made
by the Deputy Collector was a genuine one or not. Having
rejected also the evidence of the specimen sales the High
Court determined compensation for the land at Rs. 13,000 by
estimating the annual income from the land at Rs. 650 and
multiplying it by 20. After adding the solatium of 15 per
cent, the total compensation was fixed at Rs. 15,000. The
High Court rejected the
490
appellant’s contention that he was entitled to interest at
the rate of 6 per cent on two grounds, viz., (1) that the
question as to the rate of interest was not specifically
raised in his cross objections; and (2) that s. 28 was
discretionary; therefore the District Judge could award
interest at any rate up to 6 per cent.
In the appeal to this Court it was also contended on behalf
of the appellant that the High Court judgment suffered from
an infirmity in that it failed to take into account the
potential value of the land as a-building site in view of
the evidence as to the town’s recent development.
HELD : The judgment and order of the District Judge by which
he fixed the compensation at Rs. 20,700 must be restored and
interest on the excess amount of Rs. 18,482 paid to the
appellant at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from July 4,
1947 up to the time of payment. [498 B]
The evidence on record did not constitute an ascertainable
trend of development of the town in the direction of the
acquired land or of any active building activity nearby.
Compensation could not therefore be determined on the basis
of the potentialities of the land as a building site. South
Eastern Rail Co. v. L.C.C., (1915) 2 Ch. 252 and N. B.
Jeejabhoy v. The District Collector, Thana, C.A. Nos. 313 to
315 of 1963 decided on August 30, 1965 : referred to.[494 F]
As the evidence of the Deputy Collector was not challenged
either on the ground that his offer was not bona fide or
that he offered to buy under compulsion or under any special
circumstances, there was no valid reason why the High Court
should have refused to accept the appreciation of his
evidence by the District Judge and -resort to a method of
valuation not always adequate i.e. the annual crop value.
Such a method of valuation is not adequate at least for two
reasons : (1) that the owner may not so far have put his
property to its best use or in the most lucrative manner;
and (2) in a case like the present the grove had not yet
started giving maximum yield. Valuation of the land by
ascertaining the annual value of the produce can and should
be resorted to only when no other alternative method is
available. Government of Bombay v. Merwanji Muncherji 10
Bom. L.R. 907 and Governor-General in Council v. Ghis-
suddin, 30 P.L.R. 212, ’referred to. [496 A-C]
There was nothing wrong in permitting the appellant to raise
the point as to the rate of interest as the question
depended only upon the construction of s. 28. Connecticut
Fire Insurance Co. v. Kayanagh [1892], A.C. 473, referred
to. [496 H]
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By s. 28 as it applies in U.P., where the Court exercises
its discretion and grants interest, the interest has to be
at the ’rate of 6 per cent. By the plain language of the
Section the discretion that is conferred on the Court is
whether in the given circumstances of a particular case the
Court should award interest or not. The words "may direct"
me-an that it is discretionary on the part of the court to
grant or to refuse to grant interest. But the words
following those words i.e. "the Collector shall pay interest
on such excess at the rate of 6 per centum per annum" would
mean that once the discretion to grant interest is
exercised, there is no further discretion and the interest
if awarded has to be at the rate of’ 6 per centum per annum.
[497 C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 82 of 1964.
491
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated March 13, 1959 of
the Allahabad High Court in First Appeal No. 74 of 1949.
B. C. Misra, and M. V. Goswami for the appellant.
N. D. Karkhanis and O. P. Rana, for the respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shelat, J. This appeal by certificate from the High Court at
Allahabad involves the question as to the valuation of a
piece of land belonging to the appellant and situate outside
the town Nehtaur, in District Bijnor, U.P. The land
admeasures 6 pucca bighas and is grove land having in all
123 trees of which a number are mango and naspati trees.
The notification under s. 4 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1,
of 1894 was issued on December 22, 1945 in which it was
stated that the land was being acquired for a public
purpose, viz., the construction of a hostel etc., of
S.N.S.M. High School at Nehtaur. Possession of the land was
taken from the appellant on July 4, 1947. The Collector of
Bijnor made his award under s. II of the Act fixing Rs.
1167-4-0 as compensation for the trees, Rs. 1050-12-0 as
compensation for the land and adding 15% solatium awarded
the total sum of Rs. 2218/-. A reference was thereafter
made under s. 18 at the instance of the appellant to the
District Judge, Bijnor. Both the appellant and the
Government led oral evidence and also adduced evidence of
certain specimen of exemplar sales. Besides the oral
evidence, the appellant relied on two sale deeds, one dated
March 20, 1926 and another dated January 5, 1934. He also
led the evidence of one Syed Nisar Haider Zaidi, a Deputy
Collector who had just retired and who prior to his
retirement had written two letters to the appellant dated
October 14, 1945 and November 20, 1945 expressing his desire
to purchase the land in question with a view to build a
residential house for himself so that he could live therein
after his retirement. In these letters he had offered Rs.
18,000/- but that offer was not accepted by the appellant as
he wanted Rs. 24,000/as the price of the land. On behalf of
the Government also reliance was placed on three specimen
sales being Exhibits Al, A2’ and A3. The evidence disclosed
that the land acquired was at a distance of about 2 furlongs
from the town Nehtaur which at that time had a population of
about 18,000 souls. The land abuts on the main road from
Moradabad to Bijnor and is next to the said school. Nearby
is a fairly large size pond. The evidence of Murari Singh,
one of the witnesses examined by the Government, was that
besides the appellant’s grove there were some other groves
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nearby on the other side of the road, that the town was a
growing town in the sense that electricity was available,
there was a branch of the Bharat Bank and there were 5 or 6
mills and
492
a crusher working in the town since the last few years. The
mills referred to by the witness obviously must be some
small scale industries. The witness however stated that
only 2 or 4 new houses had been constructed in the town
during the last about 10 years, though one more school had
been opened in the town about 3 years ago. As against his
evidence there was some evidence, that some houses were
constructed in the grove lands nearby. But there was no
evidence to show that there was any building activity nearby
of any substantial nature or that there was any definite
trend of development in the direction of the acquired land.
As regards the income from the land there was the evidence
of Pushkar Nath that the fruit trees grown in the land
yielded approximately an annual income of Rs. 500/-,about 49
mango and naspati trees being fruit bearing at that time.
It appears that the grove had been laid only about two or
three years ago. But the evidence of the Village Patwari
clearly disclosed that the grove would yield about Rs.
1,000/- a year when all the trees started bearing fruits.
Besides the income from the trees the land also yielded an
income of about Rs. 200/- a year by way of sale of Bind
pullas.
The District Judge discarded the evidence of specimen sales
produced by both the sides as being of no assistance for the
reasons stated by him. It is not necessary to examine those
reasons as there is no dispute that he was right in
rejecting them and the High Court also agreed with him that
that evidence was of no help in arriving at the correct
valuation. The District Judge, however, was impressed with
the evidence of witness Zaidi and accepting the offer
conveyed by him as genuine and bona fide held on the basis
of that offer that the value of the land could be safely
assessed at Rs. 18,000/-; and adding to that sum the sola-
tium at 15%. he awarded Rs. 22,700/- as compensation. He
also held that the appellant was entitled to interest under
s. 28 but allowed interest at 3 % per annum observing that
since the acquisition was for an educational institution,
interest at that rate was proper.
Against the said judgment and order the Government filed an
appeal before the High Court at Allahabad and the appellant
also filed his cross-objections. As already stated the High
Court agreed with the District Judge that the evidence of
specimen sales was of no assistance. But regarding the
evidence of witness Zaidi it commented as follows :-
"It is not possible for us to say as to
whether the approach made by Syed Nisar Haider
Zaidi was a genuine one or not; but even if we
take it to have been a genuine approach there
can be no doubt that the price that he was
going to offer was a price which he fixed
493
because of the peculiar circumstances in which
he was placed the circumstances having been
that he was, upon retirement, desirous of
going back to his native place and to take up
residence there and to build a house outside
the populated area. The price which such an
exceptional purchaser is going to offer will
not afford a true test about the value of the
property."
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Having thus rejected the evidence of the specimen sales and
also the offer evidence of witness Zaidi the High Court fell
back on the net annual income from the land which it
estimated at Rs. 650/- and multiplying it by 20 fixed the
value of land at Rs. 13,000/-. Adding to that figure the
solatium at 15 %, the High Court awarded in all Rs.
15,0001/-. As regards interest the High Court rejected the
appellant’s contention that he was entitled to interest at
the rate of 6 Y. per annum on two grounds : (1) that the
question as to the rate of interest was not specifically
raised in his cross-objections and (2) that s. 28 was
discretionary, and therefore the District Judge could fix
the rate of interest up to 6 % per annum and that it was not
incumbent upon the court to award interest at 6 % per annum
as contended by the appellant. The appellant has challenged
in this appeal the correctness of the judgment and the order
of the High Court both on the question of valuation and the
rate of interest.
The first contention raised on behalf of the appellant is
that the High Court’s Judgment suffered from an infirmity in
that it failed to take into account the potential value of
the land as a building site in view of the evidence as to
the town’s recent development. This contention, in our
view, has no substance. Market value on the basis of which
compensation is payable under s. 23 of the Act means the
price that a willing purchaser would pay to a wilting seller
for a property having due regard to its existing condition,
with all its existing advantages, and its potential possi-
bilities when laid out in its most advantageous manner,
excluding any advantage due to the carrying out of the
scheme for the purposes for which the property is
compulsorily acquired. As observed in South Eastern Rail
Co. v. L.C.C(1).
"The value to be ascertained is the price to
be paid for the land with all its
potentialities, and with all the use made of
it by the vendor."
Dealing with the doctrine of potential value this Court in
N. B. Jeejabhoy v. The District Collector, Thana(2) observed
as follows :-
"A vendor willing to sell his land at the
market value will take into consideration a
particular poten-
(1) [1915] 2 Ch. 252.
(2) C.A. Nos. 313 to 315 of 1965, decided, Aug. 30, 1965.
494
tiality or special adaptability of the land in
fixing the price. It is not the fancy or the
obsession of the vendor that enters the market
value, but the objective factor namely
, whether
the said potentiality can be turned to account
within a reasonably near future...... The
question therefore turns upon the facts of
each case. In the context of building
potentiality many questions will have to be
asked and answered : whether there is pressure
on the land for building activity, whether the
acquired land is suitable for building
purposes, whether the extension of the said
activity is towards the land acquired, what is
the pace of the progress and how far the said
activity has extended and within what time,
whether buildings have been put up on lands
purchased for building purposes, what is the
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distance between the built-in-land and the
land acquired and similar other questions will
have to be answered. It is the overall
picture drawn on the said relevant
circumstances that affords the solution."
It is clear that there is no evidence on record of any
building activity of a substantial nature being carried on
’in the neighbourhood of the acquired land at about the time
when the notification was issued in 1945. There is equally
no evidence of any trend of development of the town in the
direction of the acquired land. The only evidence was as to
the existence of the school nearby, of the land abutting on
the road and of some houses having been built on the
opposite side of the road in some of the grove lands. Such
evidence however would not constitute an ascertainable trend
of development of the town in the direction of the acquired
land or of any active building activity nearby. Clearly,
therefore, no question of the valuation having to be made on
the basis of the potentiality of the land as building site
can possibly arise. The contention of Mr. Mishra in this
regard therefore must be rejected.
But the next contention urged by him is a substantial one
and requires consideration. He argued that the High Court
fell into error in rejecting the evidence of witness Zaidi
accepted as reliable by the District Judge and in
substituting that finding by its own estimate of the annual
income derived from the land. The evidence of witness Zaidi
being the evidence of an offer made by him cannot of course
be equated in importance with the evidence of proper
specimen sales of properties in the neighbourhood.
Obviously an offer does not come within the category of
sales and purchases but nonetheless if a person who had made
an offer himself gives evidence such evidence is relevant in
that it is evidence, that in his opinion the land was of a
certain value.
495
But the evidence that the owner refused an offer so made
amounts to this only that in his opinion his land was worth
more than the figure of value named or that the offer was
for some other reason such that he was not willing to
accept. (cf. Government of Bombay v. Merwanji Muncherji(1).
It has also been held that an agreement to sell is a
relevant matter and can be used in relation to fixing the
value of the acquired land. (cf. Governor-General in
Council v. Ghiasuddin)(2). There can however be no doubt
that apart from Zaidi’s offer being relevant it was not an
offer similar to an offer made by an irresponsible broker as
commented in Government of Bombay v. Merwanji Muncherji(1).
There is nothing also to show, that he or the appellant knew
that a notification for acquisition was about to be issued
or that he colluded with the appellant to fabricate evidence
of an offer to enable the appellant to get better
compensation. There is not even a faint suggestion in the
cross examination on behalf of the Government that his offer
was not genuine or that it was irresponsible. What is more
significant is that no suggestion was made in his cross-
examination that the offer was excessive or that it was not
bonafide or that he had made it without properly considering
it or without regard to the situation and the suitability of
the land. There was therefore no justification in the
remark made by the High Court that it could not be said
whether his offer was genuine or not. The District Judge
accepted it as genuine and if the High Court did not agree
with his assessment of his evidence it ought to have given
reasons for such disagreement. It is impossible thus to
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treat the evidence of Zaidi either as unacceptable or
irrelevant. The second criticism by the High Court of
Zaidi’s evidence that his offer was made in exceptional
circumstances and therefore cannot be regarded as one of a
willing prospective purchaser is also not correct. At the
time when Zaidi made his offer he was about to retire. He
wanted to retire in his native place and desired to have
a house which would be situate outside the town. His offer
was for a grove-land with plenty of trees some of which were
already bearing fruits and the rest were likely to yield
fruit in the near future. The land abutted on the road, was
next to the school and some houses had already been built on
the other side of the road. In these circumstances it is
difficult to appreciate why the High Court thought that the
offer was not of a willing prospective buyer. There were
other groves nearby and Zaidi had therefore an opportunity
to select, if he wanted to, there being nothing to show that
the owners of the other such lands were not willing to sell.
Probably he selected this land because it was situated next
to the school and abutted on the road. In view of these
facts it is difficult to see how the High Court came to the
conclusion that he made the said offer in special
circumstances, agreeing to purchase the land under
(1) 10 Bom. L. R. 907.
(2) 3. P. L. R. 212.
496
compulsion or stress of circumstances. Since his evidence
was not challenged either on the ground that his offer was
not bona fide or that he offered to buy under compulsion or
under any special circumstances there was no valid reason
why the High Court should have refused to accept the
appreciation of his evidence by the District Judge and
resort to a method of valuation not always adequate, viz.,
the annual crop value. Such a method of valuation is not
adequate at least for two reasons : (1) that the owner may
not have so far put his property to its best use or in the
most lucrative manner and (2) in a case like the present the
grove had not yet started giving the maximum yield. Such a
method of valuation by ascertaining the annual value of the
produce can and should be resorted to only when no other
alternative method is available. We are of the view that
the District Judge was right in accepting the evidence of
Zaidi and in treating his offer as one of a willing
prospective purchaser. The valuation made by the District
Judge rested on a better footing in the circumstances of the
case and ought to have been accepted by the High Court.
On the question of interest, Mr. Mishra contended that under
section 28 neither the District Judge nor the High Court had
any discretion in allowing interest at a rate less than 6%.
He argued that this question being purely one of
construction and not depending on any finding of fact even
though the question was not specifically raised in the
appellant’s cross-objections before the High Court the High
Court ought to have allowed interest at 6%. Mr. Karkhanis,
on the other hand, argued that what section 28 does is to
provide for a ceiling of the rate of interest. And even if
that is not so, since the section confers discretion on the
court to grant or not to grant interest that discretion
impliedly means that even where the court grants interest it
can do so at any rate up to 6%. The contention so put
forward resolves itself into two questions : (1) whether in
the absence of a specific objection as to interest in the
appellant’s cross-objections the High Court ought to have
gone into that question and (2) whether on a proper
interpretation of section 28 the Court has a discretion to
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grant interest at a rate less than 6 %. The first point
would not create any difficulty in the way of the appellant
because the High Court did in fact go into the question of
interest even though it was not specifically taken in the
cross-objections and decided the question also on
interpretation of section 28. Besides, the question is
purely one of law and as Lord Watson said in Connecticut
Fire Insurance Co., v. Kavanagh(1).
"When a question of law is raised for the
first time in a court of last resort upon the
construction of a do-
(1) [1892] A. C. 473.
497
.lm15
cument or upon facts either admitted or proved beyond
controversy, it is not only competent but expedient in the
interests of justice to entertain, the plea.,,
Section 28 reads as follows :-
"If the sum which, in the opinion of the
Court, the Collector ought to have awarded as
compensation is in excess of the sum which the
Collector did award as compensation, the award
of the Court may direct that the Collector
shall pay interest on such excess at the rate
of six per centum per annum" etc.
In its plain language the discretion that is conferred on
the Court is whether in the given circumstances of a
particular\ case the court should award interest or not.
The words "may direct" mean that it is discretionary on the
part of the court to grant or refuse to grant interest. But
the words following those words, viz., "the Collector shall
pay interest on such excess at the rate of six per centum
per annum" would mean that once the discretion to grant
interest is exercised there is no further discretion and the
interest if awarded has to be at the rate of six per centum
per annum. This also appears to be the construction of s.
28 so far understood. It is because the section leaves no
discretion as regards the rate of interest that the Central
Provinces Act XVII of 1939 by section 2 provides that the
rate of interest shall be at a rate which shall be not less
than 3 Y. per annum and not more than 6 % per annum in place
of the words "at the rate of six per centum per annum" in
section 28. Some of the other State legislatures such as
Madras, Gujarat, Maharashtra and Punjab have instead of
using the above mentioned phraseology substituted 6 % in s.
28 by "4 % per annum". The result of these amendments is
that whereas in the case of the Central Provinces (now
Madhya Pradesh) the Court has a discretion to grant interest
at anything between three,to six per cent, in the case of
the other States the court has to award interest at the rate
of 4 %. We are told that no such amendment has been carried
out in U.P. The consequence is that section 28 as it stands
must apply and therefore where the court exercises its
discretion and grants interest the interest has to be at the
rate of 6 %. The construction which we are inclined to place
on section 28 is to a certain extent supported by the same
expression used in section 34 which also deals with interest
and which provides that when the amount of compensation is
neither paid nor deposited before taking possession of the
acquired land "the Collector shall pay the amount awarded
with interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per
annum" etc. It is a well-settled rule of construction that
where the legislature uses the same expression in the same
statute at two places or more the same interpretation should
be given to that expression unless the context requires
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otherwise. That being so, there is nothing wrong in
permitting the appellant to raise the point
498
as to the rate of interest as that question depends only
upon the construction of section 28. In the view that we
have taken as to the interpretation of section 28 Mr. Mishra
must also succeed on this question.
In the result, the appeal must be allowed and the judgment
and order passed by the High Court set aside. The judgment
and order of the District Judge by which he fixed the
compensation at Rs. 20,700/- including solatium at the rate
of 15 % is restored. But we direct that the interest on the
excess amount of Rs. 18,482/should be paid to the appellant
at the rate of six per cent per annum from July, 4, 1947 up
to the time of payment. The ’respondent, will pay to the
appellant his costs throughout.
R.K.P.S. Appeal allowed.
499