Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
THE STATE OF WEST BENGAL
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
MRS. BELA BANERJEE AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/12/1953
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
BENCH:
SASTRI, M. PATANJALI (CJ)
MAHAJAN, MEHR CHAND
DAS, SUDHI RANJAN
HASAN, GHULAM
JAGANNADHADAS, B.
CITATION:
1954 AIR 170 1954 SCR 558
CITATOR INFO :
R 1955 SC 504 (82)
E 1959 SC 648 (39)
R 1962 SC1753 (20)
RF 1965 SC 190 (4,5)
E&D 1965 SC1017 (7,14)
R 1965 SC1096 (8)
F 1967 SC 637 (8)
RF 1967 SC1643 (179,227)
RF 1968 SC 377 (8,13,16)
RF 1968 SC 394 (17)
R 1968 SC1138 (9,30,31,58)
R 1968 SC1425 (8)
D 1969 SC 453 (5,7)
RF 1969 SC 634 (18,33,35,36,38,40,43,47,49)
RF 1970 SC 564 (96,98,196,200)
RF 1973 SC1461 (601,706,707,1059,1175,1754,19
R 1978 SC 215 (15)
RF 1979 SC 248 (10,11)
RF 1980 SC1789 (97)
ACT:
The West Bengal Land Development and Planning Act, 1948
(West Bengal Act XX-T of 1948)-Provisions of s. 8-(i) Decla-
ration under s. 6-Conclusive evidence-Land-Subject matter
,of declaration needed for a public purpose-(ii)
Compensation of land acquired under the Act not to exceed
market value of land as on December 31, 1946-ultra vires the
Constitution and void-Constitution of India, art. 31(2).
HEADNOTE:
The West Bengal Land Development and Planning Act, 1948,
passed primarily for the settlement of immigrants who had
migrated into West Bengal due to communal disturbances in
East Bengal provides for the acquisition and development of
land for public purposes including the purpose aforesaid:
Held, that the provisions of s. 8 of the West Bengal Act XXI
of 1948 making the declaration of the Government. conclusive
as to the public nature of the purpose of the acquisition
and the limitation of the amount of compensation so as not
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to exceed the market value of the land on December 31, 1946,
are ultra vires the Constitution and void
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(i)inasmuch as art. 31(2) of the Constitution made the
existence of a public purpose a necessary condition of
acquisition, the existence of such a purpose as a fact must
be established objectively ;
(ii)that in view of the fact that the impugned Act is a
permanent enactment and lands may be acquired under it many
years after it came into force, the fixing of the market
value on December 31, 1946, as the coiling on compensation
without reference to the value of the land at the time of
acquisition, is arbitrary and cannot be regarded as due
compliance in letter and spirit with the
requirements of art. 31(2)
(iii)the Act is not saved by art. 31(5) from the operation
of art. 31(2) as it was not certified by the President as
provided
for by art. 31(6).
Held, further, that while entry No. 42 of List III of the
Seventh Schedule confers on the legislature the
discretionary power of laying down the principles which
should govern the determination of the amount to be given to
the owner of the property appropriated, art. 31(2) requires
that such principles must ensure that what is determined as
payable must be "compensation", that is, a just equivalent
of what the owner has been deprived of. Whether such
principles take into account all the elements which make up
the true value of the property appropriated and exclude
matters which are to be neglected is a justiciable issue to
be adjudicated by the Court.
JUDGMENT:
CiviL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 123 of 1952.
Appeal against the Judgment and Order, dated the 22nd March,
1951, of the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta (Harries
C.J. and Banerjee J.) , in Reference No. 2 of 1951 in Civil
Rules Nos. 20 and 21 of 1950.
1953. December 11. The Judgment of the Court was delivered
by
PATANJALI SASTRI C.J.--This is an appeal from a judgment, of
the High Court of Judicature at Calcutta declaring certain
provisions of the West Bengal Land Development and Planning
Act, 1948, (hereinafter referred to as the "impugned Act ")
unconstitutional and void.
The impugned Act was passed on October 1, 1948, primarily
for the settlement of immigrants who had migrated into the
Province of West Bengal due to communal disturbances in East
Bengal,and it
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provides for the acquisition and development of land for
public purposes’ including the purpose aforesaid. A
registered Society called the West Bengal Settlement
Kanungoe Co-operative Credit Society Ltd., respondent No. 4
herein, was authorised to undertake a development scheme,
and the Government of the State of West Bengal, the
appellant herein, acquired and made over certain lands to
the society for purposes of the development scheme on
payment of the estimated- cost of the acquisition. On July
28, 1950, the respondents I to 3, the owners of the lands
thus acquired, instituted a suit in the Court of the
Subordinate Judge, 11 Court at Alipore, District 24-
Parganas, against the society for a declaration that the
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impugned Act was void as contravening the Constitution and
that all the proceedings taken thereunder for the
acquisition aforesaid were also void, and of no effect and
for other consequential reliefs. The State of West Bengal
was subsequently impleaded as a defendant. As the suit
involved questions of interpretation of the Constitution
respondents 1 to 3 also moved the High Court under article
228 of the Constitution to withdraw the suit and determine
the constitutional question. The suit was accordingly
transferred to the High Court and the matter was heard by a
Division Bench (Trevor Harries C.J. and Banerjee J.) who, by
their final judgment, held that the impugned Act as a whole
was not .unconstitutional or void save as regards two of the
provisions contained in section 8 which, so far as it is
material here, runs as follows:-
"A declaration under section 6 shall be conclusive evidence
that the land in respect of which the declaration is made is
needed for a public purpose and, -after making, such
declaration, the Provincial Government may acquire the land
and thereupon the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894, (hereinafter in this section referred to as%, the said
Act), shall, so far as may be, apply:
Provided that-
(b) in determining the amount of compensation to be awarded
for land acquired in pursuance of this
561
Act the market value referred to in clause first of sub-
section (1) of section 23 of the said Act shall be deemed to
be the market value of the land on the date of publication
of the notification under sub-section (1) of section 4 for
the notified area in which the land is included subject to
the following condition, that is to say-
if such market value exceeds by any amount the market value
of the land on the 3 1 st day of December, 1946, on the
assumption that the land had been at that date in the state
in which it in fact was on the date of publication of the
said notification, the amount of such excess shall not be
taken into consideration. "
The provision making the declaration of the Government
conclusive as to the public nature of the purpose of the
acquisition and the limitation of the amount of compensation
so as not to exceed the market value of the land on December
31, 1946, were declared ultra vires the Constitution and
void.
The Attorney-General, appearing for the appellant, rightly
conceded that inasmuch as article 31(2) made the existence
of a public purpose a necessary condition of acquisition the
existence of such a purpose as a fact must be established
objectively and the provision in section 8 relating to the
conclusiveness of the declaration of Government as to the
nature of the purpose of the acquisition must be held
unconstitutional but he contended that the provision was
saved by article 31(5)of the Constitution which provides:
"Nothing in clause (2) shall affect-(a) the provisions of
any existing _ law other than a law to which the provisions
of clause (6) apply, or.................. " Clause (6) reads
thus:
"Any law of the State enacted not more than eighteen months
before the commencement of this Constitution may within
three months from such commencement be submitted to the
President for his certification; and, thereupon, if the
President public notification so certifies, it shall not be
called question in any court on the ground that it contract
the provisions of clause (2) of this article,
562.
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contravened the provisions of sub-section (2) of section 299
of the Government of India Act, 1935."
It was argued that the impugned Act having been passed
within 18 months before the commencement of the Constitution
and not having been submitted to the President for his
certification, it was a law to which the provisions of
clause (6) did not apply and, therefore, as an existing law,
the impugned Act was not affected by clause (2) of that
article. The argument is manifestly unsound. Article 31(6)
is intended to save a State law enacted within 18 months
before the commencement of the Constitution provided the
same was certified by the President while, article 31(5)
saves all existing laws passed more than 18 months before
the commencement of the Constitution. Reading the two
clauses together, the intention is clear that an existing
law passed within 18 months before January 26, 1950, is not
to be saved unless it was submitted to the President within
three months from such date for his certification and was
certified by him. The argument, if accepted, would reduce
article 31(6) to ameaningless redundancy.
The only serious controversy in the appeal centred round the
constitutionality of the " condition " in proviso (b) to
section 8 limiting the compensation payable so as not to
exceed the market value of the land on December 31, 1946.
The Attorney-General, while conceding that the word "
compensation " taken by itself must mean a full and fair
money equivalent, urged that, in the context of article
31(2) read with entry No. 42 of List III of the Seventh
Schedule, the term was not used in any rigid sense importing
equivalence in value but had reference to what the legisla-
ture might think was a proper indemnity for the loss
sustained by the owner. Article 31(2) provides:
No property, movable or immovable, including any interest
in, or in any company owning, any commercial or industrial
undertaking, shall be taken sesion of or acquired for public
purposes under law authorising the taking of such possession
acquisition, unless the law provides for
563
compensation for the property taken possession of or
acquired and either fixes the amount of the compensation, or
specifies the principles on which, and the manner in which,
the compensation is to be determined and given.
and entry 42 of List III reads thus
Principles on which compensation for property acquired or
requisitioned for the purposes of the Union or of a State or
for any other public purpose is to be determined, and the
form and the manner in which such compensation is to be
given.
It is argued that the term " compensation " in entry 42
could not mean full cash equivalent, for then, the power
conferred on the legislature to lay down the principles on
which compensation is to be determined and the form and the
manner in which such compensation is to be given would be
rendered nugatory. On the other hand, the entry showed that
the compensation to be "given " was only " such compensation
" as was determined on the principles. laid down by the law
enacted in exercise of the power, and, as the concluding
words used in article 31(2) are substantially the same as in
the entry, the Constitution, it was claimed, left scope for
legislative discretion in determining the measure of the
indemnity.
We are unable to agree with this view. While it is true
that the, legislature is given the discretionary power of
laying down the principles which should govern the
determination of the amount to be given to the owner for the
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property appropriated, such principles must ensure that what
is determined as payable must be compensation, that is, a
just equivalent of what the owner has been deprived of.
Within the limits of this basic requirement of full
indemnification of the expropriated owner, the Constitution
allows free play to the legislative judgment as to what
principles should guide the determination of the amount
payable. Whether such principles take into account all the
elements which make up the true value of the property
appropriated and exclude matters which are
74
564
to be neglected, is a justiciable issue to be adjudicated by
the court. This, indeed, was not disputed.
Reference was made to certain Australian cases where the
opinion was expressed that the terms of compulsory
acquisition of property were matters of legislative policy
and judgment. The decisions largely turned on the absence
of any constitutional prohibition in regard to deprivation
of private property without compensation as in the Fifth
Amendment of the American Constitution and on the use of the
words " just terms " instead of " compensation " in section
51 (xxxi) of the Commonwealth Constitution which conferred
power on the Parliament to make laws with respect to " the
acquisition of property on just terms from any State or
person.......... " (cf. Grace Brothers Pty. Ltd. v. The
Commonwealth(1). Those decisions, therefore, are of no
assistance to the appellant here.
Turning now to the provisions relating to compensation under
the impugned Act, it will be seen that the latter part of
the proviso to section 8 limits the amount of compensation
so as not to exceed the market value of the land on December
31, 1946, no matter when the land is acquired. Considering
that the impugned Act is a permanent enactment and lands may
be acquired under it many years after it came in. to force,
the fixing of the market value on December 31,1946, as the
ceiling on compensat I ion, without reference to the value
of the land at the time of the acquisition is arbitrary and
cannot be regarded as due compliance in letter and spirit
with the requirement of article 31 (2). The fixing of an
anterior date for the ascertainment of value may not, in
certain circumstances, be a violation of the constitutional
requirement as, for instance, when the proposed scheme of
acquisition becomes known before it is launched and prices
rise sharply in anticipation of the benefits to be derived
under it, but the fixing of an anterior date, which might
have no relation to the value of the land when it is
acquired, may be, many years later, cannot but be regarded
as arbitrary. The learned Judges
(1) 72 C.L.R. 269.
565
below observe that it is common knowledge that since the end
of the war land, particularly around Calcutta, has increased
enormously in value and might still further increase very
considerably in value when the pace of industrialisation
increases. Any principle for determining compensation which
denies to the owner this increment in value cannot result in
the ascertainment of the true equivalent of the land
appropriated.
We accordingly hold that the latter part of proviso (b) to
section 8 of the impugned Act which fixes the market value
on December 31, 1946, as the maximum compensation for lands
acquired under it offends against the provisions of article
31 (2) and is unconstitutional and void. The appeal is
dismissed with costs.
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Appeal dismissed.
Agent for the appellant: P. K. Bose.
Agent for respondents Nos. 1, 2 and 3: S. C. Banerjee.
Agent for the intervener: G. H. Rajadhyaksha.