Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. ATIA MOHAMMADI BEGUM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT15/03/1993
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
BENCH:
VERMA, JAGDISH SARAN (J)
KASLIWAL, N.M. (J)
CITATION:
1993 AIR 2465 1993 SCR (2) 295
1993 SCC (2) 546 JT 1993 Supl. 544
1993 SCALE (2)167
ACT:
Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976: Section 2(o),
Explanation (C)--Urban Land--Determination of--Land
specified in master plan for a purpose other than
agriculture--Whether means land so specified in the master
plan which was in existence at the time of the commencement
of the Act--Vacant land entered into revenue or land records
as for purpose of agriculture before commencement of the Act
and prior to declaration of the masterplan--whether could be
excluded from the ambir of ’urban land’.
HEADNOTE:
The Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976, came into
force in the respondent-State on 17.2.1976. The appellant
claimed exclusion of vacant land owned by her, from the
ambit of ’urban land’ on the ground that it was mainly used
for the purpose of agriculture, as defined in Section 2(o)
of the Act. The land in question was entered in the revenue
or land records before the commencement of the Act as for
the purpose of agriculture. At the time when the Act came
into force there was no master plan for the city in which
the appellant’s land was situated. However, a master plan
for the city was made on 24.2.1980, wherein the land in
dispute was shown.
The competent authority declared that the appellant had
19813.83 sq. mts. of vacant land in excess of the ceiling
limit, but the District Judge reduced the area of the excess
land to 6738.23 sq. mts. Against the order of the District
Judge, both sides filed writ petitions. The High Court
dismissed appellant’s writ petition and partly allowed the
writ petition of the State Government. It held that the
appellant’s land could not be treated as mainly used for the
purpose of agriculture by virtue of Explanation (C) because
it was shown in the master plan made on 24.2.1980.
In the appeals before this Court the correctness of the High
Court’s view was challenged by the appellant and restoration
of the District Judge’s order was sought.
296
Allowing the appeals, this Court,
HELD:1.1. Explanation (C) in Section 2(o) of the Urban Land
(Ceiling & Regulation) Act, 1976 means that if the land has
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been specified in the master plan existing at the time of
commencement of the Act for a purpose other than
agriculture, then the land should not be deemed to be mainly
used for the purpose of agriculture by virtue of the
Explanation and not if the land is specified in a master
plan prepared after the commencement of the Act The plain
language of Explanation (C) bears this construction and
requires it to be so construed in order to harmonise it with
the other provisions and scheme of the Act, eg. Sections 3
and 5. The master plan defined in Section 2(h) and referred
in the definition of ’urban laud’ in Section 2(o), including
Explanation (C) therein, is a master plan prepared and in
existence at the time of commencement of the Act when by
virtue of Section 3 of the Act, rights of the holder of the
land under the Act get ’crystallised and extinguish his
right to hold any vacant land in excess of the ceiling
limit. The proceedings for determining the vacant land in
excess of the ceiling limit according to the machinery
provisions in the Act is merely for quantification, and to
effectuate the rights and liabilities which have
crystallised at the time of commencement of the Act. Just
as the holder of the land cannot by his subsequent actions
reduce the area of the vacant land in excess of the celing
limit, the authorities too cannot by any subsequent action
increase the area of the excess vacant land by a similar
action. [298G-H, 299A-C]
1.2.The construction made of these provisions by the High
Court cannot, therefore, be accepted. Accordingly, the
order passed by the District Judge determining the area of
6738.23 sq. mts. only as the vacant land in excess of the
ceiling limit is restored. [299D-E]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 297 & 298
of 1993.
From the Judgment and Order dated 12.11.1984 of the
Allahabad High Court in Civil Appeal Nos. 4018/80 and 5174
of 1980.
R.K. Khanna, Ms. Abha R. Sharma, Manoj Goel and Pankaj Kalra
for the Appellant.
Ms. Alka Aggrawal, R.C. Verma, Ashok K. Srivastava for the
297
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VERMA, J. These appeals by special leave are against the
judgment and order dated 12.11.1984 of the Allahabad High
Court in Writ Petition Nos. 4018 of 1980 and 5174 of 1980
which were filed by the appellant and the State of Uttar
Pradesh against the Judgment dated 12.2.1980 of the District
Judge, Aligarh in Land Ceiling Appeal No.24 of 1978. The
competent authority declared that the appellant had 19813.83
sq. mts. of vacant land in Aligarh in excess of the ceiling
limit but the District Judge reduced the area of the excess
land to 6738.23 sq. mts. Against the order of the District
Judge, both sides filed writ petitions. The High Court
dismissed appellant’s writ petition and partly allowed the
writ petition of the State Government. This has led to the
filing of these appeals against the High Court’s order made
in these two writ petitions against the appellant.
Learned counsel for the appellant argued for restoration of
the District Judge’s order whereby an area of 6738.23 sq.
mts. was declared to be in excess of the ceiling limit as
against 19813.83 sq. mts. declared by the competent
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authority. The High Court set aside the District Judge’s
order on the construction it made of Explanation (C) in
Section 2(o) defining ’urban land’ in the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976. The definition of
’urban land’ in Section 2(o) excludes from its ambit, land
which is mainly used for the purpose of agriculture.
Thereafter, the Explanation for the purpose of clause (o)
defining ’urban land’ and clause (q) defining ’vacant land’
is given. Clause (A) of the Explanation defines
’agriculture’. There is no dispute that the vacant land of
which exclusion is claimed by the appellant on the ground
that it is mainly used for the purpose of agriculture is so
used according to the definition of ’agriculture’. There is
also no dispute that clause (B) of the Explanation is
satisfied by the appellant since the land was entered in the
revenue or land records before the appointed day as for the
purpose of agriculture. The only dispute is with regard to
clause (C) of the Explanation which reads as under:-
"(C) Notwithstanding anything contained in clause (B) of
this Explanation, land shall not be deemed to be mainly used
for the purpose of agriculture if the land has been
specified in the master plan for a purpose other than
agriculture;"
298
There is no dispute that the Act came into force in the
State of Uttar Pradesh on 17.2.1976 and there was no master
plan for that area in Aligarh at that time. However, a
master plan for Aligarh was made on 24.2.1980 wherein the
land in dispute was shown. The High Court has taken the
view that the appellant’s land could not be treated as
mainly used for the purpose of agriculture by virtue of
Explanation (C) because it was shown in the master plan made
on 24.2.1980. The correctness of this view has been
challenged in these appeals.
Some other provisions of the Act which are material for
deciding this question may now be referred. Section 2
enacts that except as otherwise provided in the Act, on and
from the commencement of the Act, no person shall be
entitled to hold any vacant land in excess of the ceiling
limit. Accordingly, the right of the person to hold any
vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit ceased on the
date of commencement of the Act even though determination of
the excess area had to be made under the machinery
provisions, thereafter, in accordance with the prescribed
procedure. The area of vancant land in excess of the
ceiling limit held by the appellant has, therefore, to be
determined as on 17.2.1976 when the Act came into force in
the State of Uttar Pradesh. Clause (a) of Section 2 defines
’appointed day’ to mean the date of introduction of the Bill
in Parliament in relation to any State to which this Act
applies in the first instance like the State of Uttar
Pradesh and that date to 28.1.1976. Section 5 of the Act
provides that any transfer made of vacant land in excess of
the ceiling limit at any time during the period commencing
on the appointed day and ending with the commencement of
this Act shall be ineffective and the land so transferred
shall be taken into account in calculating the extent of
vacant land held by such person. This is a further
indication that determination of the area of vacant land in
excess of the ceiling limit under the Act is to be made with
reference to the date of commencement of the Act and the
right and liability of the holder of the land for this
purpose under the Act crystallises on the date of commence-
ment of the Act unaffected by any subsequent events. The
scheme of the Act supports the construction that the
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aforesaid Explanation (C) means that if the land has been
specified in the master plan existing at the time of
commencement of the the Act for a purpose other than
agriculture, then the land shall not be deemed to be mainly
used for the purpose of agriculture by virtue of the
Explanation and not if the land is specified in a master
plan prepared after the commencement of the Act. The plain
299
language of Explanation (C) bears this construction and
requires it to be so construed in order to harmonise it with
the other provisions and scheme of the Act. Just as the
holder of the land cannot by his subsequent actions reduce
the area of the vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit
the authorities too cannot by any subsequent action increase
the area of the excess vacant land by a similar action. The
’master plan’ defined in Section 2(h) and referred in the
definition of ’urban land’ in Section 2(o), including
Explanation (C) therin, is obviously a master plan prepared
and in existence at the time of commencement of the Act when
by virtue of Section 2 of the Act, rights of the holder of
the land under the Act get ’crystallised and extinguish his
right to hold any vacant land in excess of the ceiling
limit. The proceedings for determining the vacant land in
excess of the ceiling limit according to the machinery
provisions in the Act is merely for quantification, and to
effectuate the rights and liabilities which have crys-
tallised at the time of commencement of the Act. The
contrary view taken on the construction made of these
provisions by the High Court cannot, therefore, be accepted.
On the above conclution, there is no dispute that the order
made by the District Judge has to be restored.
Consequently, the impugned orders made by the High Court in
the two writ petitions before it are set aside and the order
dated 12.2.1980 passed by the District Judge determing the
area of 6738.23 sq. mts. only as the vacant land in excess
of the ceiling limit is restored. The appeals are,
accordingly, allowed in this manner, to this extent. No
costs.
N.P.V.
Appeals allowed.
300