Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 6986 of 1999
PETITIONER:
Cement Corporation of India Ltd.
RESPONDENT:
Purya & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/10/2004
BENCH:
N.Santosh Hegde S.N.Variava B.P.Singh, H.K.Sema & S.B.Sinha
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
With
C.A. No. 3599/2003
C.A. No. 6987/1999
C.A. No. 9779/2003
C.A. No. 9781/2003
C.A. No. 9782/2003
C.A. Nos. 9783-9784/2003
C.A. No. 9785/2003
C.A. No. 9786/2003
C.A. Nos. 9787-9791/2003
C.A. Nos. 9792-9798/2003
C.A. No. 9799/2003
C.A. Nos. 9800-9801/2003
C.A. No. 9802/2003
C.A. No. 9803/2003
C.A. Nos. 9804-9805/2003
C.A. No. 9806-9807/2003
C.A. No. 9808/2003
C.A. Nos. 9809-9810/2003
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C.A. Nos. 9821-9822/2003
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C.A. No. 9864/2003
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C.A. No. 9865/2003
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C.A. No. 9899/2003
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C.A. No. 10090/2003
C.A. No. 10103/2003
C.A. No. 10105/2003
SANTOSH HEGDE, J.
Noticing a conflict between two 3-Judge Benches of this
Court in the case of Special Deputy Collector & Anr. vs. Kurra
Sambasiva Rao & Ors. (1997 (6) SCC 41) and Land Acquisition
Officer & Mandal Revenue Officer vs. V.Narasaiah (2001 (3)
SCC 530), another 3-Judge Bench of this Court on 31st of July,
2001 considered it appropriate to place C.A.No.6986/99 for
consideration by a larger Bench. It is in this background, the above
appeal and other connected appeals are now before us.
In Kurra Sambasiva Rao’s case (supra), this Court held that
by introducing Section 51A in the Land Acquisition Act, 1894
(hereinafter LA Act) the Legislature only facilitated the parties
concerned to produce a certified copy of a sale transaction in
evidence and nothing more. This is what the Court observed in the
said case.
"Section 51-A only dispenses with the
production of the original sale deed and
directs to receive certified copy for the
reason that parties to the sale transaction
would be reluctant to part with the original
sale deed since acquisition proceedings
would take long time before award of the
compensation attains finality and in the
meanwhile the owner of the sale deed is
precluded from using the same for other
purposes vis-a-vis this land. The marking of
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the certified copy per se is not admissible in
evidence unless it is duly proved and the
witnesses, viz., the vendor or the vendee, are
examined." (Emphasis supplied)
According to the above judgment Section 51A only
dispenses with the production of the original sale deed and permits
the receiving of a certified copy of such document in evidence. It is
further held that the marking of certified copy per se does not make
the contents of such document admissible in evidence unless it is
duly proved and witnessed, that is, by the examination of the
vendor or the vendee.
In the subsequent case of V.Narasaiah (supra), though this
Court did not notice earlier judgment in Kurra Sambasiva Rao’s
case noticing certain other judgments which took similar view
disagreed with the said view and held that the object of the Act
was not only to permit the production of certified copy of the sale
transactions but was also to accept the same as evidence of the
transactions. This is what the courts had to say in V.Narasaiah’s
case in regard to the insertion of Section 51A in the LA Act.
"If the only purpose served by Section 51A is to
enable the court to admit the copy of the
document in evidence there was no need for a
legislative exercise because even otherwise the
certified copy of the document could have been
admitted in evidence. Section 64 of the
Evidence Act says that "documents must be
proved by primary evidence except in the cases
hereinafter mentioned". Section 65 mentions
the cases in which secondary evidence can be
given of the existence, condition or contents of a
document. One of the cases included in the list
is detailed in clause (f) of the section which
reads thus :
"65 (f) When the original is a
document of which a certified copy is
permitted by this Act, or by any other
law in force in India, to be given in
evidence",
Section 57 of the Registration Act, 1908
enables anyone to apply for a copy of the
entries in Book No. 1 (the said Book is meant
for keeping the register of the documents as
well as non-testamentary documents relating to
immovable property). When any person applies
for a copy of it the same shall be given to him.
Sub-section (5) of Section 57 of that Act says
that:
"57.(5) All copies given under this
section shall be signed and sealed by
the registering officer and shall be
admissible for the purpose of proving
the contents of the original
documents."
If the position regarding admissibility of the
contents of a document which is a certified
copy falling within the purview of Section
57(5) of the Registration Act was as
adumbrated above, even before the introduction
of Section 51A in the LA Act, could there be
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any legislative object in incorporating the said
new provision through Act 68 of 1984? It must
be remembered that the State has the burden to
prove the market value of the lands acquired by
it for which the State may have to depend upon
the prices of lands similarly situated which
were transacted or sold in the recent past,
particularly those lands situated in the
neighbouring areas. The practice had shown
that for the State officials it was a burden to
trace out the persons connected with such
transactions mentioned in the sale deeds and
then to examine them in court for the purpose
of proving such transactions. It was in the
wake of the aforesaid practical difficulties that
the new Section 51A was introduced in the LA
Act."
From the above, we notice that in the latter judgment of
V.Narasaiah, this Court interpreted the scope of Section 51A to
include the production of certified copy of sale transaction and to
make the same admissible in evidence without having to examine
the vendor or the vendee of the said document to prove the
contents of the document.
In these appeals, Shri Sandeep Sethi, learned senior counsel
appearing for the appellant in CA No.6986-87/99 contended that
this Court in Kurra Sambasiva Rao’s case did not notice the words
"may be accepted as evidence" because of which it fell in error in
construing the scope of the Section very narrowly. He submitted
that in V.Narasaiah’s case, this Court having noticed the said
words in Section 51A, correctly came to the conclusion that the
object of inserting Section 51A was to do away with the formality
of examining oral evidence in support of the contents of the
documents in question.
Interestingly, Shri G.V.Chandrashekhar, learned counsel
appearing for the claimant-respondent in the said appeals
supported the argument of Shri Sandeep Sethi and went one step
further and contended that in view of the definition given to the
word "conclusive proof" in Section 4 of the Evidence Act read
with the beginning words of Section 79 of the Evidence Act which
starts with the words "the court shall presume" the Land
Acquisition Officer or the Court, as the case may be, will have to
start with the presumption that the contents of the documents
produced under Section 51A are proved and it must place reliance
on the same on the basis that the said transaction is a bona fide
transaction and the value stated therein reflected true value. He
submitted that Section 51A by the use of the words "may be
accepted as evidence" has mandated the authority empowered to
fix the market value of the property to proceed with the conclusive
presumption that the contents of the documents establish that fact.
Shri V.K. Garg, learned counsel appearing for the State of
Haryana in some of the connected appeals contended that in view
of Sections 74, 76 and 77 of the Evidence Act a certified copy of
private document also can be treated for evidentiary purpose as a
public document. He submitted that the presumption can be
drawn as to the correctness and the contents of the documents as
contemplated by Section 79 of the Evidence Act. In support of
his contention, he placed reliance on judgment of this Court in
Madamanchi Ramappa & Anr. vs. Muthaluru Bojjappa AIR
1963 (Vol 50) SCC 1633.
The above three counsels thus contended that the judgment
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of this Court in. V. Narasaiah’s case lays down the correct law.
Dr. Aman Hingorani and Shri A.K. Matta, learned counsel
appearing for the respective parties in the connected appeals
submitted that the interpretation given by the three Judge Bench in
the V. Narasaiah’s case goes far beyond the object of
introducing Section 51A which according to them only provides
for acceptance of the certified copy in evidence as contemplated in
Section 3 of the Evidence Act and nothing beyond that.
They also contended that the certified copy of the registered
document does not become a public document under Section 74
of the Evidence Act nor would it be primary evidence as argued
by the appellant under Section 62 of the Evidence Act. The
learned counsel who opposed the view in V. Narasaiah’s case
also brought to our notice certain other judgments of this Court
wherein this Court had taken a similar view as taken by the three
Judge Bench in Kurra Sambasiva Rao (supra) . In fairness , we
think it is necessary to refer to those judgments also.
In Inder Singh & Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors. 1993 (3)
SCC 240 two Judge Bench of this Court speaking through K.
Ramaswamy, J. held :-
" Under Section 51A of the Act as amended
in 1984 the certified copies have been
permitted to be brought on record as
evidence of sale transaction recorded
therein. The examination of the witnesses is
to find that the sale transactions are bonafide
and genuine transactions between willing
vendor and willing vendee as reasonable
prudent men and the price mentioned is not
throw away price at arms length or
depressed sales or brought into existence to
inflate market value of the lands under
acquisition and the sales are
accommodating one will have to be
established de-hors and the contents of the
document by other evidence."
In P. Ram Reddy & Ors. vs. Land Acquisition Officer,
Hyderabad & Ors. 1995 (2) SCC 305 two Judge Bench of this
Court held :-
"Section 51A of the Land Acquisition Act,
as seen therefrom, is enacted to enable the
parties in land acquisition cases, to produce
certified copies of documents to get over
the difficulty of parties, in that, persons in
possession of the original documents would
not be ready to put them in courts.
However, the mere fact that a certified copy
of the document is accepted as evidence of
the transaction recorded in such document
does not dispense with the need for a party
relying upon the certified copies of such
documents produced in court in examining
witnesses connected with the documents to
establish their genuineness and the truth of
their contents. Therefore, the certified
copies of registered documents, though
accepted as evidence of transactions
recorded in such documents, the court is not
bound to act upon the contents of those
documents unless persons connected with
such documents give evidence in court as
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regards them and such evidence is accepted
by the court as true."
In Kummari Veeraiah & Ors. vs. State of A.P. 1995 (4)
SCC 136 another two Judge Bench of this Court
held ;
"it is true that the certified copies of the sale
deeds are admissible in evidence as secondary
evidence under Section 51A of the Act since
owners would be reluctant to part with their
original sale deeds. But unless either the
vendor or the vendee has been examined as
witness to testify not only the consideration
paid but also their specific knowledge and the
circumstances in which the sale deed came to
be executed, nearness to the lands, etc. the sale
deeds cannot be relied on to determine market
value of the acquired lands."
In Indore Development Authority vs. Satyabhama Bai
(SMT) & Ors. 1996 (10) SCC 751, this Court following the
earlier judgment of two Judge Bench in P. Ram Reddy vs. Land
Acquisition Officer, Hyderabad & Ors. held :
" that filing of the certified copies of the
sale deeds and marked thereof under
Section 51-A is only to enable the claimants
to dispense with the obligation to produce
the original sale deed from the owners who
are disinclined to part with their valuable
title deed during long pendency of the
proceeding. However, the claimants are
enjoined to call as witnesses the vendor or
vendee to prove the transactions as genuine
in nature \005\005\005\005"
In the case of Meharban & Ors. vs. State of U.P. and Ors.
1997 (6) SCC 54, a Bench of 3 Judges (which is not noticed by
this Court in the case of V. Narasaiah (supra) ) this Court held :-
"Since none connected with the sale deeds was
examined, the sale deeds are inadmissible in
evidence though certified copies marked under
Section 51A are available. So, all the sale
deeds stand excluded. It is the duty of the
Court to take all the relevant factors into
account before determination of the
compensation\005\005\005
In A.P. State Road Transport Corporation, Hyderabad vs.
P. Venkaiah & Ors. (1997) 10 SCC 128, this Court held :
"Acceptance of certified copy of the sale deed
under Section 51A relates only to the
production of the original sale deeds but it
does not dispense with proof of the contents of
the documents, relative features vis-‘-vis
Section 193 (sic), the land under acquisition.
All is needed to be proved by examining the
persons connected with the same and parties
to the document."
From the above, it is seen that till the judgment of the three
Judge Bench in V. Narasaiah’s case (supra), the consensus of
judicial opinion was that Section 51A was enacted for the limited
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purpose of enabling a party to produce certified copy of a
registered sale transaction in evidence only and for proving the
contents of the said document the parties had to lead oral
evidence as contemplated in the Evidence Act.
A careful perusal of the judgment in Kurra Sambasiva
Rao’s case and other cases which fall in line with the said view
discloses that they proceeded on the basis that prior to the
insertion of Section 51A in the LA Act, the Evidence Act did not
permit the production of a certified copy of the registered sale
transaction in evidence. Therefore, by the insertion of Section 51A
the legislature merely enabled a party to get over that problem.
Thereafter, according to the said judgments, the party concerned
had to prove the contents of the document by adducing oral
evidence separately to prove the contents of the document.
The above view of the Court in Kurra Sambasiva Rao’s
case, in our opinion, is not the correct position in law. Even prior
to the insertion of Section 51A of the Act the provisions of the
Evidence Act and the Registration Act did permit the production of
a certified copy in evidence. This has been clearly noticed in the
judgment in Narsaiah’s case wherein the court relying on Sections
64 and 65(f) of the Evidence Act read with Section 57(5) of the
Registration Act held that production of a certified copy of a
registered sale document in evidence was permissible in law even
prior to insertion of Section 51A in the LA Act. We are in
agreement with the said view expressed by this Court in
Narasaiah’s case.
In the above background the question for our consideration
would be, what then is the real object of inserting 51A in LA Act ?
In the ordinary course a deed of sale is the evidence of a
transaction by reason whereof for a consideration mentioned therein
the title and interest in an immovable property specified therein is
transferred by the vendor to the vendee. Genuineness of such
transaction may be in question. In a given situation the quantum of
consideration or the adequacy thereof may also fall for adjudication.
The Courts, more often than not, are called upon to consider the
nature of the transaction. Whenever a transaction evidenced by a sale
deed is required to be brought on record, the execution thereof has
to be proved in accordance with law. For proving such transaction,
the original sale deed is required to be brought on record by way of
primary evidence. Only when primary evidence is not available, a
certified copy of the sale deed can be taken on record. Such certified
copies evidencing any transaction are admissible in evidence, if the
conditions precedent therefor in terms of Section 75 of the Indian
Evidence Act are fulfilled. The transaction evidenced by the sale
deed must be proved in accordance with law.
Evidences are of different types. It may be direct, indirect or
real evidence. The existence of a given thing or fact is proved either
by its actual production or by the testimony or admissible declaration
of someone who has himself perceived it. Such evidence would be
direct evidence. Presumptive evidence which is an indirect evidence
would mean that when other facts are, thus, proved, the existence of
the given fact may be logically inferred. Although the factum
probandum and the factum probantia connote direct evidence, the
former is superior in nature.
The terms ’primary and secondary evidence’ apply to the kinds
of proof that may be given to the contents of a document, irrespective
of the purpose for which such contents, when proved, may be
received. Primary evidence is an evidence which the law requires to
be given first; secondary evidence is evidence which may be given
in the absence of that better evidence when a proper explanation of
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its absence has been given. However, there are exceptions to the
aforementioned rule.
Section 51A of the Land Acquisition Act seeks to make an
exception to the aforementioned rule.
In the acquisition proceedings, sale deeds are required to be
brought on records for the purpose of determining market value
payable to the owner of the land when it is sought to be acquired.
Although by reason of the aforementioned provision the parties
are free to produce original documents and prove the same in
accordance with the terms of the rules of evidence as envisaged under
the Indian Evidence Act, the L.A. Act provides for an alternative
thereto by inserting the said provision in terms whereof the certified
copies which are otherwise secondary evidence may be brought on
record evidencing a transaction. Such transactions in terms of the
aforementioned provision may be accepted in evidence. Acceptance
of an evidence is not a term of art. It has an etymological meaning.
It envisages exercise of judicial mind to the materials on record.
Acceptance of evidence by a court would be dependent upon the facts
of the case and other relevant factors. A piece of evidence in a given
situation may be accepted by a court of law but in another it may not
be.
Section 51 A of the L.A. Act may be read literally and having
regard to the ordinary meaning which can be attributed to the term
’acceptance of evidence’ relating to transaction evidenced by a sale
deed, its admissibility in evidence would be beyond any question.
We are not oblivious of the fact that only by bringing a documentary
evidence in the record it is not automatically brought on the record.
For bringing a documentary evidence on the record, the same must
not only be admissible but the contents thereof must be proved in
accordance with law. But when the statute enables a court to accept a
sale deed on the records evidencing a transaction, nothing further is
required to be done. The admissibility of a certified copy of sale
deed by itself could not be held to be inadmissible as thereby a
secondary evidence has been brought on record without proving the
absence of primary evidence. Even the vendor or vendee thereof is
not required to examine themselves for proving the contents thereof.
This, however, would not mean that contents of the transaction as
evidenced by the registered sale deed would automatically be
accepted. The legislature advisedly has used the word ’may’. A
discretion, therefore, has been conferred upon a court to be exercised
judicially, i.e., upon taking into consideration the relevant factors.
In V.Narasaiah’s case, this Court correctly understood the
said scope and object of insertion of Section 51A in the LA Act
when it held thus :
"It was in the wake of the aforesaid practical
difficulties that the new Section 51A was
introduced in the LA Act. When the section
says that certified copy of a registered
document "may be accepted as evidence of
the transaction recorded in such document"
it enables the court to treat what is recorded
in the document, in respect of the
transactions referred to therein, as
evidence."
While coming to the above conclusion in Narasaiah’s case,
this Court found support from similar provisions in the other
statutes like Section 293 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which
enables the court to use report of a Government Scientific Expert
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as evidence in any enquiry, trial or proceeding under the said
Code, even without examining any person as a witness in a court
for that purpose. Notice was also taken of Section 13(5) of the
Prevention of Food Adulteration Act pertaining to the report of a
Public Analyst which says that any document purporting
to be a report signed by a Public Analyst may be
used as evidence of the fact stated therein in
any proceeding under the said Act. In Narasaiah’s case, this Court
also relied on a judgment of the Constitution Bench of this Court
in Mangaldas Raghavji Ruparel & Anr. vs. State of Maharashtra
& Anr. (AIR 1966 SC 128) which held thus:
"that sub-section clearly makes the contents
of the report of Public Analyst admissible in
evidence and the prosecution cannot fail solely on
the ground that the Public Analyst had not been
examined in the case, but what value is to be
attached to such report must necessarily be for the
court to consider and decide."
Thus, the reasoning of this Court in Narasaiah’s case that
Section 51A enables the party producing the certified copy of a
sale transaction to rely on the contents of the document without
having to examine the vendee or the vendor of that document is the
correct position in law. This finding in Narasaiah’s case is also
supported by the decision of this Court in the case of Mangaldas
Raghavji Ruparel (supra).
Therefore, we have no hesitation in accepting this view of
the court in the Narasaiah’s case as the correct view.
The submission of Mr. G. Chandrasekhar to the effect that
the contents of a sale deed should be a conclusive proof as regard
the transaction contained therein or the court must raise a
mandatory presumption in relation thereto in terms of Section 51A
of the Act cannot be accepted as the Court may or may not receive
a certified copy of sale deed in evidence. It is discretionary in
nature. Only because a document is admissible in evidence, as
would appear from the discussions made hereinbefore, the same by
itself would not mean that the contents thereof stand proved.
Secondly, having regard to the other materials brought on record,
the court may not accept the evidence contained in a deed of sale.
When materials are brought on record by the parties to the lis, the
court is entitled to appreciate the evidence brought on records for
determining the issues raised before it and in the said process, may
accept one piece of evidence and reject the other.
In M.S. Madhusoodhanan and Anr. vs. Kerala
Kaumudi (P) Ltd. and Ors. [(2004) 9 SCC 204], it is stated :
"119\005 They are rules of evidence which
attempt to assist the judicial mind in the matter
of weighing the probative or persuasive force of
certain facts proved in relation to other facts
presumed or inferred (ibid). Sometimes a
discretion is left with the court either to raise a
presumption or not as in Section 114 of the
Evidence Act. On other occasions, no such
discretion is given to the court so that when a
certain set of facts is proved, the court is bound
to raise the prescribed presumption. But that is
all. The presumption may be rebutted."
A registered document in terms of Section 51A of the Act
may carry therewith a presumption of genuineness. Such a
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presumption, therefore, is rebuttable. Raising a presumption,
therefore, does not amount to proof; it only shifts the burden of
proof against whom the presumption operates for disproving it.
Only if the presumption is not rebutted by discharging the burden,
the court may act on the basis of such presumption. Even when in
terms of the Evidence Act, a provision has been made that the
court shall presume a fact, the same by itself would not be
irrebuttable or conclusive. The genuineness of a transaction can
always fall for adjudication, if any question is raised in this behalf.
Similar is the view taken by this Court in V. Narasaiah’s
case wherein this Court held thus :-
"the words "may be accepted as evidence"
in the Section indicate that there is no
compulsion on the court to accept such
transaction as evidence, but it is open to the
court to treat them as evidence. Merely
accepting them as evidence does not mean
that the court is bound to treat them as
reliable evidence. What is sought to be
achieved is that the transactions recorded
in the documents may be treated as
evidence, just like any other evidence, and it
is for the court to weigh all the pros and
cons to decide whether such transaction
can be relied on for understanding the real
price of the land concerned".
Having noticed the scope of Section 51A of the LA Act as
understood by this Court in V. Narasaiah’s case to be the correct
interpretation, we will now consider whether such evidence is
mandatorly binding on the authority or the court concerned or it is
only an enabling provision.
In relation to the argument pertaining to Section 13 (5) of
the Food Adulteration Act a Constitution Bench of this Court in
Mangaldas Raghavji Ruparel & Anr. vs. State of
Maharashtra & Anr. AIR 1966 SC 128 stated as follows :-
"that sub-Section clearly makes the contents of
the report of Public Analyst admissible in
evidence and the prosecution cannot fail solely
on the ground that the Public Analyst had not
been examined in the case, but what value is to
be attached to such report must necessarily be
for the court to consider and decide."
(Emphasis supplied)
While it is clear that under Section 51A of the LA Act a
presumption as to the genuineness of the contents of the document is
permitted to be raised, the same can be relied upon only if the said
presumption is not rebutted by other evidence. In the said view of the
matter we are of the opinion the decision of this Court in the case of
Land Acuisition Officer & Mandal Revenue Officer vs. V.
Narasaiah (supra) lays down the correct law.
Having settled the scope of Section 51A of the LA Act as
stated herein above, we will consider the facts in Civil Appeal
No.6986 of 1999. In this appeal originally the Land Acquisition
Officer awarded Rs. 3707/- per acre for the acquired land. On
reference being made by the claimant, the Reference Court
enhanced the said compensation to Rs. 8,000/- per acre which was
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challenged by the beneficiary of the acquisition before the High
Court in a writ petition which was allowed and the matter was
remanded back for fresh disposal to the Reference Court. Before
the Reference Court, the respondent herein produced two certified
copies of two sale transactions which were marked as Ex. P1 and
P2. The Reference Court, however, refused to place reliance on the
said documents on the ground that the contents of the said
document were not proved. Hence, it rejected the reference. Being
aggrieved by the said order, the claimants-respondents preferred an
appeal before the High Court, the High Court disagreeing with the
reference court relied on the contents of Ex. P1 and P2 and
enhanced the compensation to Rs.15,000/- per acre. While doing
so, the High Court proceeded merely on the contents of Ex.P1 and
P2 and did not take into consideration the other evidence available
on record in regard to the comparative nature of the land, location
of the land, the market potentiality of the land etc. and fixed the
compensation on an arithmetic calculation based on the value
found in Ex. P1 and P2. We do not think this is the correct
approach. While it is true the contents of Ex.P1 and P2 should be
looked into as evidence produced by a party the evaluation of such
evidence should be made taking into consideration other evidence
if available on record like other sale transactions that may be
produced, the comparative nature of the location, suitability,
marketability etc. to fix the market value of the land acquired.
Since such a comparative examination of the evidence has not been
made by the High Court in the above appeal, even though there
was material available on record, we think it proper that the
impugned judgment in the above appeal be set aside and the
matter be remanded to the High Court for consideration in
accordance with law laid down and the directions given in this
case. Accordingly, this appeal succeeds to the extent stated herein
above.
The facts of the other cases being different, we think it
appropriate that it is not necessary for a 5-Judge Bench to decide
the issues involved in these cases, because the question of law has
been decided in C.A. 6986/1999. Therefore, these appeals should
be placed before an appropriate Bench of this Court for final
disposal. It is ordered accordingly.