Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 518 of 1998
PETITIONER:
UNION OF INDIA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SHAKUNTALA GUPTA (DEAD) BY LRS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 27/08/2002
BENCH:
RUMA PAL & ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
RUMA PAL, J
The respondent claims to be the owner of premises
known as Grand Hotel which is situated at 2, Under Hill Road,
Delhi. On 3rd April, 1980, a portion of the premises had been
requisitioned by the petitioners under the Requisition &
Acquisition of Immovable Property Act, 1952. The 1952 Act
lapsed on 10th March, 1987. On 6th March, 1987 a notification
was issued under Section 4 of the Land Acquisi1tion Act, 1894
(hereinafter referred to as the Act’.) which reads as follows:
" No.F.7 (9)/86- L&B (1) Whereas it
appears to the Lt. Governor Delhi that the
lands/properties are likely to be required to be
taken by the Government at the public
expense for the following public purposes. It
is hereby notified that the land in the locality
described below is liked to be required for the
above purpose.
This notification is made under the
provisions of Section 4 of the Land
Acquisition Act to all whom it may concern.
In exercise of the powers conferred by
the aforesaid section the Lt. Governor is
pleased to authorise the officers for the time
being engaged in the undertaking with their
servants and workmen to enter upon and
survey any land in the locality and do all
other acts required or permitted by that
section.
The Lt. Governor, being of the opinion
that the provisions of sub-section (1) of
section 17 of the Act are applicable to this
land is further pleased under sub-section 4 of
the said section, to direct that the provisions
of Section 5-A shall not apply".
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The notification goes on to list 14 properties under the
heading ’Specification’ to which the notification would apply.
Apart from the description, the purpose of acquisition in respect
of each of the properties specified has been set out in a separate
column. Against item 7 of the Specification, 11.740 sq. meters of
2, Under Hill Road Delhi (referred to hereafter as the ’premises’)
has been mentioned, and the purpose of acquisition stated is
"Housing the Government Office". A notification under Section 6
of the Act was issued in respect of all fourteen properties on 10th
March, 1987.
The respondent challenged the notification issued under
Section 4 as well as the declaration under Section 6 of the Act
under Article 226 of the Constitution before the High Court at
Delhi. The owner of one of the premises similarly specified in
the impugned notifications, namely Banwari Lal and Sons Pvt.
Ltd., (Banwari Lal ) also filed a writ application in the High
Court impugning the notifications inter alia on the ground that
there was no urgency which justified the Governor to dispense
with the right of the owner to object under Section 5A of the Act.
Banwari Lal’s writ application was allowed on 4th February, 1991
and the impugned notifications were quashed. The High Court
upheld the several contentions of Banwari Lal including the
issue of urgency . The Division Bench of the High Court set
aside the acquisition proceedings on three bases:
(i) ".. There is not a whisper of what was
the urgency to take immediate possession
and to deny the right of raising objection
to the owner under Section 5-A of the Act.
The Notification under Sections 4 and
17(1) in the present case, therefore, stand
vitiated for non-compliance of the
requirement of mentioning urgency in the
Notification itself".
(ii) "What is more objectionable is the fact
that the building was already in
occupation of the officers of the Delhi
Administration and the Administration
knew that the Requisitioning and
Acquisition of Immovable Properties Act
was to lapse on 10.3.1987. Thus they had
sufficient time to make alternate
arrangement for the residence of the
officers and there was no urgency
whatsoever for invoking the provisions of
the laxity or lethargy of the
Administration to take appropriate steps in
time for making available alternate
accommodation for its officers".
iii) "The Notification under Section 17(1) is
also bad in law for non compliance of the
requirement of Sub-section 3-A of Section
17 of the Land Acquisition Act. The said
Sub-Section mandates the Collector to
tender payment of 80 per cent of the
compensation for the land, as estimated by
him before taking possession of the land."
The High Court also appointed an Ex-Chief Justice of the
Delhi High Court as an Arbitrator to determine the damages
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payable by the Delhi Administration to Banwari Lal.
The decision in Banwari Lal’s case was impugned before
this Court by the petitioners by way of an application for special
leave to appeal. The application was dismissed by this Court on
21st March, 1991 by the following order:
" In the facts and circumstances of the case
we do not find any good ground to interfere
with the impugned order of the High Court.
The Special Leave Petition is accordingly
dismissed.
Although we have dismissed the petition
but having regard to the facts that public
servants are residing in the premises in dispute
and their immediate dispossession may cause
injury to public interest, we allow the
petitioners to continue in possession till
31.3.93 provided the petitioners file an
undertaking in this Court within three weeks
with usual conditions to hand over vacant
possession on or before 31.3.93. We further
make it clear the Arbitrator appointed by the
High Court may give award and the same may
be filed before the High Court for appropriate
orders".
It is not in dispute that the petitioners have since
vacated Banwari Lal’s premises pursuant to the order of this
Court.
In the respondent’s writ application the decision in Banwari
Lal’s case was followed by the High Court. While disposing of the
respondent’s writ application, the Division Bench also appointed
a retired Judge of the Delhi High Court to determine the damages,
if any, payable to respondent by the petitioners.
The petitioners impugned the decision of the High Court
before this Court. On 19th January 1998, leave was granted.
Notice was issued on the application of the petitioners on stay
and the operation of the impugned order was stayed in the
meanwhile. On 8th May 2000, the appeal was directed to be
expedited. It appears from the records that the appeal was duly
listed for hearing at least on 9th August, 2000. However, from
time to time the matter was adjourned. Ultimately on 14th
November 2000, the appeal was disposed of by a reasoned order,
the relevant extract of which is quoted:
"The High Court quashed the impugned
notification by following its earlier decision in
Banwari Lal & Sons V. Union of India
decided on 4th February, 1991 in which this
very notification was quashed. It is not in
dispute that subject matter including the
notification under Land Acquisition were the
same except that in Banwari Lal it was the
Government housing for the officers while in
the present case it is housing for the offices.
The said decision of the High Court stood
confirmed when this Court dismissed the SLP
filed by the Union of India. We do not find
any sustainable ground raised in the present
appeal to make any distinct(ion) or difference
from the one in the case of Banwari Lal &
Sons. Accordingly, there is no error
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committed by the High Court in making the
decision and dismissing the same.
Accordingly, the present appeal has no merits
and it is dismissed."
The petitioners then made an application for recalling the
order dismissing the appeal on the ground that they were not
heard before the appeal was disposed of. On 10th January 2001,
the petitioners’ prayer that the application for recalling the order
dated 14th November 2000 may be treated as a review petition
was allowed and notice was issued on the review application on
17th January 2001.
It is this Review application which is now being disposed
of. It was submitted by the Learned Solicitor General appearing
o+n behalf of the petitioners that the principles of law enunciated
in Banwari Lal’s case no longer hold the field. Reliance was
placed on the decisions of this Court in Aflatoon vs. Lt. Governor
of Delhi (1975 (4) SCC 285) ; Deepak Pahwa Etc. vs. Lt.
Governor of Delhi and Ors. (1985 (1) SCR 588) ; Satendra
Prasad Jain and Others vs. State of U.P. and Others (1993 (4)
SCC 369); Chameli Singh and Others vs. State of U.P. and Anr.
(1996 (2) SCC 449) to contend that the decision in Banwari Lal’s
case was wrong. It was therefore submitted that the decision of
the High Court to quash the impugned notifications by following
Banwari Lal’s decision was erroneous.
Mr. Arun Jaitley, learned senior counsel appearing for the
respondent, has on the other hand submitted that the review
petition itself was not maintainable at all as there was no error
apparent on the face of the record. It was further submitted that
the same notification stood quashed in Banwari Lal’s case and
that since the impugned notification had been quashed on a
general ground which did not specifically relate to a particular
petitioner, the quashing of the notification must enure to the
benefit of all persons affected by that notification. Reliance has
been placed on Abhey Ram vs. Union of India (1997(5) SCC
421) and Delhi Administration vs. Gurdip Singh Uban and Others
(2000(7) SCC 296) in this connection. Several other decisions
were also cited to contend that the provisions of Section 17(4) of
the Act had been improperly invoked in the circumstances of this
case. It was also submitted that since 1996 the petitioners had
made no payment whatsoever in respect of the premises and in
fact were not utilising the premises which were in a state of utter
disrepair and occupied by encroachers.
The matter has been argued extensively. We therefore do
not propose to reject the application on the ground that the review
application should not at all be entertained. It is also not necessary
to consider whether the decision in Banwari Lal correctly
enunciates the principles of law as to acquisitions under Section
17 of the Act as we are of the view that the order of this Court
dated 14th November, 2000 was, in the circumstances of the case,
correct.
It appears that the petitioners have proceeded on the basis
that the acquisition sought to be affected by the impugned
notification under Section 4 had been invalidated in respect of
other specified properties by the decision of this Court in
Banwari Lal’s case. The statement in the respondent’s affidavit
that several of the properties covered by the same notification
have since been returned by the petitioners to the original owners
has not been disputed by the petitioners. Furthermore, the High
Court in the decision impugned before us has also noted:
"It is also not disputed that under the
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impugned notifications neither an award
has been made nor any compensation is
determined and paid. The reason being
that the impugned notifications were
quashed and set aside in Banwari Lal’s
case (supra)."
Indeed no compensation as envisaged under Section 17
(3A) of the Act has been offered to the respondent by the
petitioners till now.
In any event the order dated 14th November, 2000 was not
legally erroneous. The notification under Section 4 was a
composite one. The "opinion" of the Lt. Governor that the
provisions of Section 17(1) of the Act were applicable, as
expressed in the last paragraph of the impugned notification, was
relatable in general to the 14 properties specified in the
notification. The impugned notification was quashed in Banwari
Lal’s case inter alia on the ground that the "opinion" of the Lt.
Governor as expressed in the notification was insufficient for the
purpose of invoking the provisions of Section 17(1) of the Act.
This ground was not peculiar to the premises in Banwarilal’s case,
but common to all fourteen properties. The urgency sought to be
expressed in the impugned notification cannot be held to be
sufficient for the purposes of section 17 (1) in this case when it
has already been held to be bad in Banwari Lal’s case . The
expression of urgency being one cannot be partly good and partly
bad like the curate’s egg. It must follow that the acquisition in
respect of the respondent’s premises as mentioned in the
notification which were sought to be acquired on the basis of such
invalid expression of "urgency" cannot be sustained.
We therefore dismiss the review application without any
order as to costs.