Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
LALJI KHIMJI AND ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT
DATE OF JUDGMENT29/01/1993
BENCH:
ANAND, A.S. (J)
BENCH:
ANAND, A.S. (J)
SHARMA, L.M. (CJ)
CITATION:
1993 SCR (1) 366 1993 SCC Supl. (3) 567
JT 1993 (2) 89 1993 SCALE (1)239
ACT:
Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879 :
Sections 3(6), 17,18 and 77 and Notification dated 27th
September, 1963-Executive Engineer appointed as Canal
Officer-Whether competent to enter into agreement/compromise
with landlords on behalf of Government-Whether such
agreement binding on Government.
Constitution of India, 1950 :
Article 299-Agreement entered into by Executive Engineer,
appointed as Canal Officer, with landlords in exercise of
powers vested under the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879-Whether
a contract within the meaning of the Article-Whether invalid
for non-satisfaction of essential requirements of the
Article.
HEADNOTE:
Under an Irrigation Scheme, the respondent-State proposed to
construct a dam on a river in the State and prepared a
sketch, indicating the passage of the canal from the Dam and
for that purpose, proceeded to acquire land through which
the canal was proposed to run. Apprehending that serious
damage will be caused to their lands by the passing of the
canal through their lands, the appellants-farmers filed a
suit against the respondent-State, seeking to restrain it
from implementing the Irrigation Scheme, as proposed.
During the pendency of the suit an agreement was arrived at
between the parties to the effect that the canal from the
Dam would be run as per the line demarcated in red in the
map appended to the deed of agreement. As a result, the
suit was unconditionally withdrawn by the appellants, but
subsequently, on discovering that the State Government was
going back from the agreement and the alignment of the canal
was being undertaken contrary to the alignment reflected in
red in the map appended to the agreement, they filed a fresh
suit for declaration to the effect that the agreement
entered into between them and the respondents through its
Executive Engineer, Irrigation Department, was binding on
the
367
parties and that the parties were bound to act according to
the terms of the said agreement and for an injunction,
restraining the respondent-State from going back on the
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agreement.
The trial court decreed the suit and permanently restrained
the State from going back from the agreement and acting
otherwise than as per the terms of the same. The appeal
preferred by the State was also dismissed by the District
Judge.
The State riled a second appeal before the High Court
contending that the alleged compromise/agreement was not
binding upon the State, inasmuch as the Executive Engineer
had no authority to agree on behalf of the State Government
as he was not the representative of the Government. The
High Court held that the agreement was a null and void
document for non-compliance with the mandatory provisions of
Article 299(1) of the Constitution. It also rejected the
appellants’ plea that under the statutory powers conferred
by section 18 of the Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879 the
Executive Engineer was competent to enter into a compromise
and that the said compromise arrived at during the pendency
of the earlier suit was binding on the Government.
In the appeal filed before this Court on behalf of the
appellants farmers, it was submitted that reliance placed on
Article 299 of the Constitution of India was wholly
erroneous, that by a Notification, dated 27th of September
1963, published in Part IV-B of the Government Gazette, the
State Government had appointed all Executive Engineers and
Superintending Engineers in charge of canals in the State to
be Canal Officers in respect of such canals and assigned to
them all the powers and duties of the Canal Officers under
the Act and, therefore, the agreement/compromise entered
into by the Executive Engineer during the pendency of the
suit of which he was doing ’pervi’ was a validly executed
compromise which was binding on the parties and respondent
could not go back on it, and that after having made the
appellants to withdraw their earlier suit on the basis of
the agreement, it was not permissible for the respondent to
dispute the act done by its officers or agents within their
powers under the statute.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD : 1.1. The agreement/compromise arrived at in the
previous
368
suit, could not have been equated with a contract between
the State and the citizen.
1.2. Article 299(1) of the Constitution concerns itself with
contracts and assurances of property and lays down how
Government contracts, including assurances of property are
to be made and executed. The provisions of Article 2" are
mandatory in character and their non-compliance would render
a contract void, but where the agreement is not referable to
Article 299 and is not a contract, as contemplated by that
Article, the agreement cannot be invalidated for not
satisfying the essential requirements of Articles 299 of the
Constitution. [375B, D-E]
1.3. There is a marked distinction between contracts
which are executed in exercise of the executive powers and
agreements or orders made, which are statutory in nature.
Articles 299(1) applies to a contract made in exercise of
the executive power of the Union or the State and it has no
application to a case where a particular statutory authority
as distinguished from the Union or the State, enters into an
agreement within his authorised capacity. [375F]
State of Haryana and Ors. v. Lal Chand and Ors., [1984] 3
S.C.C. 634, relied on.
1.4. A compromise of the nature contained in the
agreement arrived at during the pendency of a suit, in the
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instant case is not a contract executed between the parties
as envisaged by Article 299. [375E]
2.1 It is clear from the record that it was the
Executive Engineer who was doing ’pervi’ of the case in the
suit filed earlier. The agreement in question was entered
into during the pendency of the said case. The State
Government had appointed all Executive Engineers and
Superintending Engineers in-charge of canals in the State to
be Canal Officers in respect of such canals and assigned to
them all the powers and duties of the Canal Officers under
the Act by virtue of the Notification dated 27th September,
1963. Thus, it is manifest that the Executive Engineer, by
virtue of the said Notification, had been lawfully appointed
as Canal Officer within the meaning of Section 3(6) of the
Bombay Irrigation Act, 1879.
[377F-H, 378A]
2.2. Section 18 of the Act vests the Canal Officers with the
power to
369
hold Inquiry and direct the construction of suitable
alignments for a water course and by Section 77 of the Act a
Canal Officer Is vested with the authority to survey,
demarcate and make a map of the land which, in his opinion,
Is suitable for constructing an alignment for the water
course.
[378A]
23. Thus, under the statute, read with the
notification dated 27th September, 1963, the Canal Officer
(Executive Engineer) was fully competent to decide about the
particular alignment of the water course and it fell within
the jurisdiction of the Canal Officer to decide and settle
about the suitable demarcation of the alignment of the water
course of the canal from the Dam, in question and he
exercised that jurisdiction under the statute when he
demarcated the water course in red, in the map attached to
the agreement. It is the content of the agreement and not
its form which is relevant to trace the source of power
behind it and in the light of the statutory provisions, it
Is manifest that the document has been executed by the
Executive Engineer by virtue of the statutory powers vested
In him. The circumstance that the agreement came into
existence during the pendency of the suit and was executed
by way of an agreement does not militate against the order
of alignment as reflected therein being any less statutory
in character. [378B-D]
2.4. The Act itself envisages that the Canal Officer may
after and settle the alignment in consultation with the
landholders through which the water course is to run. In
the agreement in question, the Executive Engineer had agreed
to alter the alignment of the water course in consultation
with the appellants who thereupon ’unconditionally’ withdrew
the suit since no grievance remained to be settled. The
altered alignment was, therefore, validly made by following
the procedure envisaged by the Act. The High Court fell in
error in ignoring the statutory powers of the Executive
Engineer, vested in him under Sections 18 and 77 of the Act
read with the notification or 27th September, 1963 on the
true import of agreement. [378E-F]
2.5. Under these circumstances, the agreement was
lawfully executed by the Executive Engineer in exercise of
his statutory powers under the Act and the State was obliged
to act according to the terms of the said agreements and
could not give it a go bye without following the procedure
under the Act to again alter the alignment [378G]
370
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JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 47 of 1979.
From the Judgment Order dated 20.1.77 of the Gujarat High
Court in Second Appeal No. 90 of 1976.
Krishan Kumar for Vimal Chandra S. Dave for the Appellants.
Ms. Meenaksh Arora for Anip Sachthey for the Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
ANAND, J. This appeal by special leave, is directed against
the judgment of the Gujarat High Court dated 20th of
January, 1977 in Second Appeal No. 90 of 1976.
The plaintiffs-appellants are the farmers of the Village
Morzar under Bhanwad Taluka of Jamnagar District. Their
lands are situated on the outskirts of the village. Under
the Vartu Dam Irrigation Scheme, the defendant-State
proposed to construct a Dam on river Vartu and prepared a
sketch, indicating the passage of the canal from Vartu Dam
and for that purpose, it proceeded to acquire land through
which the canal was proposed to run. The plaintiffs-
appellants apprehended serious damage to their lands by the
passing of the canal through their lands and they filed a
Regular Civil Suit in 1966 against the defendant-State,
seeking to restrain it from implementing the Irrigation
Scheme, as proposed. Suit was registered and defendants
were summoned. During the pendency of the suit, it appears
that an agreement was arrived at between the parties and it
was agreed that the canal from Vartu Dam would be run as per
the line demarcated in red in the map appended to the deed
of agreement Ex.45. As a result of the said agreement the
suit was unconditionally withdrawn by the plaintiffs on
24.11.1966. Somewhere in 1972, the plaintiffs-appellants
discovered that the State Government was going back from the
agreement and alignment of the canal was being undertaken
contrary to the alignment reflected in the map appended to
the agreement Ex.45. They, therefore, filed a fresh suit for
declaration to the effect that the agreement, dated
7.11.1966, entered into between them and the respondents
through its Executive Engineer, Irrigation Department
Jamnagar, was binding on the parties and that the parties
were bound to act according to the terms of the said
agreement and for an injunction, restraining the defendant-
State from going back on the agreement. This suit of the
plaintiffs-appellants was contested and the following issues
were framed
371
(1) Whether the suit agreement dated
7.11.1966 is not binding to the defendant ?
(2) If it is binding whether the plaintiff
prove that they have complied with the terms
and conditions of this agreement?
(3) Whether the suit as framed is not
maintainable?
(4) Whether the suit is bad for the mis-
joinder of the plaintiffs and the cause of
action?
(5) Whether the suit is not maintainable as
the agreement dated 7.11.1966 has not been
registered of because no compromise decree had
been passed in terms of this agreement?
(6) Whether the suit is not in time?
(7) Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to
the declaration sought?
(8) Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to
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get the permanent injunction as prayed for by
them?
(9) What order?
Issues 1 to 8 were decided in favour of the plaintiffs-
appellants and against the defendant-State. The Trial Court
decreed the suit and declared that the suit agreement dated
7.11.1966 entered between the plaintiffs and the defendants
through its executive engineer, was binding on the parties
and that the parties were bound to act in accordance with
the terms of the said compromise the defendant state was
permanently restrained from going back from the agreement
and act otherwise than as per the terms of the same.
The State of Gujarat preferred an appeal in the Court of
District Judge Jamnagar against the judgment and decree of
the Trial Court. During the hearing, the parties confined
their arguments to the following two points
(1) Whether the agreement dated 7.11.66 is binding to the
372
State of Gujarat?
(2) Whether the plaintiffs are entitled to the reliefs,
granted to them by the trial court?
The appellate court answered both the questions in the
affirmative and by its order dated October 20, 1975
confirmed the judgment and decree of the trial court. The
appeal of the State of Gujarat was dismissed. The State
filed a Second Appeal in the High Court. The High Court
examined the agreement dated 7.11.1966, Ex. 45 which is in
Gujarati and is described as Rojkam on the subject of the
alignment of Vartu Canal. The High Court noticed that the
Rojkam refers to the filing of the suit in the Civil Court
and the meeting between the Executive Engineer and the
occupants of land and proceeded to recite that on the
aforesaid subject there was discussion of the Executive
Engineer with the occupants and thereafter both the sides
have amicably settled(compromised) the dispute with regard
to the alignment of the canal. The Rojkam further records
that both the sides have agreed to the alignment shown in
rose colour in the map. The Rojkam then records:
"The Executive Engineer Mr. B.V. Nanavati
having assured of getting necessary
alterations as aforesaid made, they (i.e., the
plaintiffs or the occupants) have shown
willingness to withdraw unconditionally the
suit filed in Civil Court."
The Rojkam is signed by the Executive Engineer as also by
the occupants.
Before the High Court, the main plea raised by the State was
that the alleged compromise/agreement was not binding upon
the State. It was stated that the State does not admit any
agreement made by the Executive Engineer either on behalf of
the State or as a representative of the State and,
therefore, the so called agreement did not bind the State
Government. It was asserted by the State that the Executive
Engineer had no authority to agree on behalf of the State
Government as he was not the representative of the
Government. Similar plea had been raised before the trial
court and the lower appellate court but was rejected. The
High Court, however, accepted the plea of the State and
found that the courts below had erred in ignoring the
mandatory provisions of Article 299 of the Constitution of
India which mandates that all contracts made in the exer-
373
cise of the executive power of the Union or of a State shall
be expressed to be made by the President or by the Governor
of a State, as the case may be, and all such contracts and
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all assurances of property made in the exercise of that
power shall executed on behalf of the President or the
Governor by such persons and in such a manner as he may
direct or authorise. The High Court found that for non-
compliance with the provisions of Article 299(1) of the
Constitution of India which are mandatory in character, the
agreement Ex. 45, was a null and void document. The High
Court then observed :
"Apart from the question whether the Executive
Engineer in the present case was directed or
authorised to execute this agreement on behalf
of the State Government, it is clear on the
face of the document Ex.45 itself that the
alleged agreement contained therein is not
expressed to be made by the Governor. This
position is incontrovertible and even Mr. Shah
for plaintiffs-respondents was not able to
show that the document Exh.45 contains an
agreement expressed to be made by the
Governor. Really speaking, on a correct
interpretation of this document Exh.45, it
only contains basis of the compromise terms
between the Executive Engineer and the
occupants (who probably were plaintiffs of the
earlier suit) as regards the change of
alignment; and pursuant to which compromise
the plaintiffs agreed to withdraw the suit.
The Governor or the State Government is
nowhere in the picture if we go through this
agreement. Therefore, assuming that the
document contains an agreement in reality it
is an agreement not by the Governor or the
state Government but by the Executive Engineer
with the occupants who signed the same. Such
an agreement which is not in compliance with
the provisions of Article 299 of the
Constitution is void and unenforceable against
the State. If this is so, the suit filed by
the respondents-plaintiffs must fail."
The High court negatived the contention raised on behalf of
the plaintiffs-appellants to the effect that under the
statutory powers conferred by Section 18 of the Bombay
Irrigation Act, 1879 (hereinafter called the Act), the
Executive Engineer was competent to enter into compromise
and
374
that the said compromise arrived at during the pendency of
the earlier suit was binding on the Government. The High
Court said :
"Then it was contended that in exercise of his
powers under section 18 of the aforesaid Act,
the Executive Engineer acts for the
Government; and, therefore, the agreement in
question is binding on the Government. There
is an inherent misconception underlying this
contention. While exercising statutory powers
i.e. powers conferred by a statute an officer
of the Government does not act for the
Government. He acts not because of any
authority derived from the Government to
exercise power conferred on him by the
Statute. This contention must also fail."
As a consequence, the appeal filed by the State was allowed
and the judgment and decree passed by the courts below were
reversed and the suit filed by the plaintiffs-appellants was
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dismissed with costs throughout.
Learned counsel for the appellants has assailed the judgment
of the High Court and submitted that the
agreement/compromise, Ex.45, had been validly entered into
by the Executive Engineer with the appellants in view of the
statutory powers vested in the Executive Engineer under
Section 18 of the Act and reliance placed on Article 299 of
the Constitution of India, in the facts and circumstances of
this case, was wholly erroneous. It was urged that by a
Notification, dated 27th of September 1963, published in
Part IV-B of the Gujarat Government Gazette dated 31st of
October, 1963, the Government of Gujarat had appointed all
Executive Engineers and superintending Engineers in-charge
of canals in the State of Gujarat to be Canal Officers in
respect of such canals and assigned to them all the powers
and duties of the Canal Officers under the Act, and,
therefore, the agreement/compromise entered into by the
Executive Engineer on 7.11.1966 during the pendency of the
suit of which he was doing "pervi" was a validly executed
compromise which was binding on the parties and the
respondent could not go back on it. Having been made to
withdraw their earlier suit on the basis of the agreement,
dated 7.11.1966, it was not permissible for the respondent
to now dispute the act done by its officers or agents within
their powers under the statute.
In the facts and circumstances of this case, we find force
in the submission of learned counsel for the appellants
regarding the non-ap-
375
placability of Article 299 of the Constitution of India to
invalidate the agreement/compromise dated 7.11.1966 arrived
at during the pendency of the earlier suit filed by the
appellants relying whereupon the appellants withdrew the
earlier suit. The agreement/compromise Ex.45, arrived at in
the previous suit, could not have been equated with a
contract between the State and the citizen. Article 299 (1)
which reads thus :
"All contracts made in the exercise of the
executive power of the Union or of a State
shall be expressed to be made by the
President, or by the Governor of the State, as
the case may be, and all such contracts and
all assurances of property made in the
exercise of that power shall be executed on
behalf of the President or the Governor by
such persons and in such manner as he may
direct or authorise."
concerns itself with contracts and assurances of property
and lays down how Government contracts, including assurances
of property are to be made and executed. Indeed, the
provisions of Article 299 are mandatory in character and
their non-compliance would render a contract void but where
the agreement is not referable to Article 299 and is not a
contract, as contemplated by that Article, the agreement
cannot be invalidated for not satisfying the essential
requirements of Article 299 of the Constitution. A
compromise of the nature contained in the agreement dated
7.11.1966, arrived at during the pendency of a suit, is not
a contract executed between the parties as envisaged by
Article 299. There is a marked distinction between
contracts which are executed in exercise of the executive
powers and agreements or orders made which are statutory in
nature. Article 299(1) applies to a contract made in
exercise of the executive power of the Union or the State
and it has no application to a case where a particular
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statutory authority, as distinguished from the Union or the
State, enters into an agreement within his authorised
capacity. In State of Haryana & Ors. v. Lal Chand & Ors.,
[1984] 3 SCC 634 this Court considered a contract granting
exclusive privilege of liquor vending, in exercise of the
statutory powers referable to Punjab Excise Act, 1914 and
Punjab Liquor Licence Rules, 1956, and held that the grant
of the exclusive privilege gave rise to a contract of a
statutory nature, distinguished from the one executed under
Article 299(1) and, therefore, compliance with Article
299(1) was not required in such a case.
376
The question which immediately arises for our consideration
is :
Was the Executive Engineer competent to execute the
agreement Ex.45?
In this connection, it would be relevant to refer to some of
the more relevant statutory provisions contained in the Act.
Section 3(6) provides as follows :
(6) "Canal Officer" means any officer
lawfully appointed or invested with powers
under section 4;
Section 17 reads thus;
"Any persons desiring to construct a new
water-course, but being unable or unwilling to
construct it under a private arrangement with
the holder of the land required for the same,
may apply in writing to any Canal Officer duly
empowered to receive such applications,
stating;
(1) that he is ready to defray all the
expense necessary
for acquiring the land and constructing such
water-course;
(2) that he desires the said Canal Officer
in his behalf
and his cost to do all things necessary for
constructing
such water-course."
Section 18 provides as follows
"If the Canal Officer considers the
construction of such water-course expedient,
he may call upon the applicant to deposit any
part of the expense to such officer may con-
sider necessary, and upon such deposit being
made, shall cause inquiry to be made into the
most suitable alignment for the said water-
course, and shall mark out the land which, in
his opinion, it will be necessary to occupy
for the construction thereof,
and shall forthwith publish a notification in
every village through which the water’-course
is proposed to be taken, that so much of such
land as is situated within such
377
village has been so marked out,
and shall send a copy of such notification to
the Collector of every district in which such
land is situated, for publication on such
land.
The said notification shall also call upon any
person who wishes to share in the ownership of
such water-course to make his application in
that respect to the Canal Officer within
thirty days of the publication of such
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notification.
If any such applicant appears, and his
application is admitted, he shall be liable to
pay his share in the construction of such
water-course, and in the cost of acquiring the
land for the same, and shall be an owner of
such water-course when constructed."
Powers of the canal officers are contained in
Section 77 reads thus
"(1) For the purpose of the inquiries under
section 76 such Canal Officer may enter, by
himself or any officer authorised by him for
the purpose, upon any land adjacent to any
such work, and may survey, demarcate and make
a map of the same.
(2)Notwithstanding anything contained in
section 76 where no sufficient evidence is
forthcoming as to all or any of the matters
specified in that section such Canal Officer
shall, so far as may be, settle and record the
aforesaid matters in such manner as he may
deem fit."
A perusal of the record reveal that it was the Executive
Engineer who was doing "pervi" of the case in the suit
filed. in 1966. The agreement (compromise) Ex.45 was
entered into during the pendency of the said case. As
already noticed the Government of Gujarat had appointed all
Executive Engineers and Superintending Engineers in-charge
of Canals in the State of Gujarat to be Canal Officers in
respect of such canals and assigned to them all the powers
and duties of the Canal Officers under the Act by virtue of
the Notification dated 27th September, 1963. Thus, it is
manifest that the Executive Engineer, by virtue of the said
Notification, had been lawfully appointed as Canal Officer
within the meaning of Section
378
3(6) of the Act. Section 18 of the Act vests the Canal
Officer with the power to hold inquiry and direct the
construction of suitable alignments for a water-course and
by Section 77 of the Act (supra) the Canal Officer is vested
with the authority to survey, demarcate and make a map of
the land which in his opinion is suitable for constructing
an alignment for the water-course. Thus, under the
statute,, read with the Notification dated 27th September
1963, the Canal Officer (Executive Engineer) was fully com-
petent to decide about the particular alignment of the water
course and it fell within his jurisdiction to decide and
settle about the suitable demarcation of the alignment of
the water course of the canal from Vartu Dam. He exercised
that jurisdiction under the statute when he demarcated the
water course in red, in the map attached to Ex.45, the
agreement. It is the content of the agreement and not its
form which is relevant to trace the source of power behind
it and when examined in the light of the statutory
provisions noticed above, it is manifest that the document
Ex.45 has been executed by the Executive Engineer by virtue
of the statutory powers vested in him. The circumstance
that the agreement Ex.45 came into existence during the
pendency of the suit and was executed by way of an agreement
does not militate against the order of alignment as
reflected therein being any less statutory in character. As
a matter of fact the Act itself envisages that the Canal
Officer may alter and settle the alignment in consultation
with the landholders through which the water course is to
run. In the agreement Ex.45, the Executive Engineer had
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agreed to alter the alignment of the water course in
consultation with the petitioners who thereupon
,unconditionally’ withdrew the suit as it appears no
grievance remained to be settled. The altered alignment
was, therefore, validly made by following the procedure
envisaged by the Act. The High Court fell in error in
ignoring this aspect of the case. It failed to appreciate
the statutory powers of the Executive Engineer, vested in
him under Sections 18 and 77 of the Act read with the
notification of 27th September, 1.963 on the true import of
agreement Ex.45. Thus, in the facts and circumstances of the
case we are satisfied that the agreement dated 7.11.1966,
Ex. 45 was lawfully executed by the Executive Engineer in
exercise of his statutory powers under the Act and the State
was obliged to act according to the terms of the said
agreement and could not give it a go bye without following
the procedure under the Act to again alter the alignment.
It is nobody’s case that for making an alteration in the
alignment, the requisite exercise was undertaken, as
envisaged by the Act, in 1972, when the suit out of which
379
these proceedings have arisen was filed.
In view of the aforesaid discussion, the judgment and
decree of the High Court deserves to be set aside and are
hereby set aside. The judgment and decree passed by the
Trial Court as confirmed by the District Judge are restored
though for different reasons, as detailed above. The appeal
is consequently allowed. The parties, however, shall bear
their own costs throughout.
Before parting with the judgment, we would also like to
clarify certain position. The dispute is almost three
decades old. Learned counsel for the parties were unable to
state as to whether fresh alignments as envisaged by the red
line in the map attached to Ex.45, agreement, had been made
for the passing of the canal or not. We would, therefore,
like to clarify that if any fresh alignment for the water
course is required to be made, different than the one
originally proposed or the one contained in the said Map,
the same may be made but only by following the procedure
prescribed under the Act and this judgment shall not be
construed as any bar therefore.
N.P.V. Appeal allowed.
380