Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 1084 of 2006
PETITIONER:
PUNE MUNICIPAL CORPORATION
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/02/2007
BENCH:
C.K. THAKKER & LOKESHWAR SINGH PANTA
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
Hon. C.K. THAKKER, J.
This appeal is filed by the Pune Municipal
Corporation (’Corporation’ for short) against the
judgment and order dated July 8, 2004 passed by the
Division Bench of High Court of Judicature at Bombay in
Writ Petition No. 643 of 1996. By the said order, the
High Court confirmed the order passed by the State of
Maharashtra on June 21, 1995 in purported exercise of
revisional jurisdiction under Section 34 of the Urban
Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act, 1976 (hereinafter
referred to as ’the Act’) holding that no sufficient
opportunity had been given to the land-owners before
declaring their land to be excess and vacant land under
the Act.
The case has a checkered history and to appreciate
rival contentions raised by the parties in their proper
perspective, it would be appropriate to bear in mind the
facts.
Pranlal Zaverchand Doshi (since deceased) who has
been represented through his heirs and legal
representatives and Chandravadan Pranlal Doshi were
owners of certain lands situate at village Mouje Parvati,
Taluka Haveli, District Pune in the State of Maharashtra.
On February 17, 1976, the Act came into force in the
State of Maharashtra. The owners of the land filed a
statement under sub-section (1) of Section 6 of the Act in
the prescribed form on August 14, 1976. The Competent
Authority, Pune Urban Agglomeration prepared draft
statement under sub-section (1) of Section 8 of the Act.
The draft statement was sought to be served in
accordance with the provisions of sub-section (3) of
Section 8 of the Act. An order was passed by the
Competent Authority on April 20, 1977 under sub-
section (4) of Section 8 of the Act observing therein that
a notice under Section 8(3) of the Act was issued and
sent to the declarant by Registered A.D. but it was
received back ’undelivered’. It was also observed that the
notice was properly sent at the address given by the
declarant and hence the owner was treated as ’served’.
Since the declarant had not raised any objection nor he
remained present on the date fixed for enquiry, the
notice was finalized without any change. A direction was
issued to pass final order as required by Section 9 of the
Act.
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Pursuant to the above direction, final order came to
be passed on April 25, 1977. After the final statement, a
notification under sub-section (1) of Section 10 of the Act
was issued on April 28, 1977 intimating the persons
having interest in the land to prefer their claims to the
Competent Authority either personally or through an
agent within a period of 30 days from the date of
publication of notification in the Official Gazette. The
said notification was published in the Maharashtra
Gazette on May 12, 1977. The case was fixed for hearing
on June 23, 1977. On June 16, 1978, the Competent
Authority issued notification under sub-section (3) of
Section 10 of the Act declaring excess land to be
acquired by the State. It was notified for the information
of general public that the land specified in the Schedule
appended thereto would be deemed to have been
acquired by the Government of Maharashtra with effect
from July 31, 1978 and would be deemed to have been
vested in the Government of Maharashtra free from all
encumbrances from that date. The said notification was
published in the Official Gazette on August 24, 1978.
Since the land stood vested in the State of
Maharashtra free from all encumbrances, the appellant-
Corporation made an application in August, 1978 for
purchase of land declared to be excess land under the
Act and stood vested in the State. The Competent
Authority vide its letter dated January 8, 1979 offered
the land to the appellant-Corporation for occupancy
price of Rs.1,45,000/- for Development Plan Reservation,
Pune Municipal Corporation. In the said communication,
it was stated that the terms and conditions subject to
which the land was offered, were enclosed in the form of
Agreement. If those terms and conditions were
acceptable to the Corporation, the latter was required to
execute the Agreement with the Collector of Pune and to
pay occupancy price by challan.
On January 9, 1979, the Competent Authority also
issued notice under sub-section (5) of Section 10 of the
Act directing the land-owners to handover possession of
land within 30 days. It was stated in the said notice that
the notification under sub-section (3) of Section 10 of the
Act was published in the Maharashtra Government
Gazette on August 24, 1978 and the land specified in the
Schedule had absolutely vested in the Government of
Maharashtra. It was further stated that since the owners
were in possession of the land, they were required to
surrender and deliver possession thereof within 30 days
to the Tehsildar, Pune City who was duly authorized by
the State Government to take it. It was also stated that
in the event of their failure or refusal to surrender the
possession by the owners, appropriate steps would be
taken to take possession of the land by use of force.
It appears that original owners of the land preferred
an appeal under Section 33 of the Act in the Court of
Collector and Appellate Authority under the Act at Pune
on February 20, 1979. The said appeal was against an
order passed under sub-section (3) of Section 10 of the
Act. It may be stated that so far as the order declaring
the land as excess land under the Act as also issuance of
final statement are concerned, no challenge was made to
them. In the Memorandum of Appeal, it was stated that
the enquiry under sub-section (2) of Section 10 was
pending. It was also stated that the property was not
being utilized by the Pune Municipal Corporation for
public purpose because of shortage of funds. The
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appellants\027owners intended to make use of the land for
public purpose such as hostel, cinema house, petrol
pump, mangal karyalaya, lodge, hospital, godown etc.
They had submitted layout plans to the Government of
Maharashtra for construction and the matter was under
active consideration of the Government. It was further
stated that even though the order under sub-section (5)
of Section 10 of the Act was passed on January 9, 1979,
it was received by the appellants somewhere on 21st
January, 1979. The appeal was, therefore, within time,
but even if there was some delay, it might be condoned.
A prayer was, therefore, made to set aside the order
dated January 9, 1979 passed under sub-section (5) of
Section 10 of the Act.
It has come on record that the appellant-
Corporation had paid the occupancy price of
Rs.1,45,000/- for the land admeasuring 37,517 sq.
meters from Survey No. 33A/1, 32/A and 34/A/2+1
(part). It is also on record that on February 22, 1979,
possession of the land was handed over by the State
Government through Tilathi Parvati to the appellant-
Corporation. The possession receipt has been duly
signed in token of ’possession given’ and ’possession
taken’ by the parties.
An order was passed on August 23, 1979 by the
Appellate Authority on the appeal filed by the land-
owners under Section 33 of the Act. It was stated that
the appeal was against the notification under Section
10(5) of the Act, but such appeal was not maintainable.
The Appellate Authority, therefore, summarily dismissed
the appeal by inter alia observing as under:
"On perusal of the notification u/s. 10(5) of the
Act produced by the appellants it is observed
that final notification u/s. 10(3) of the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 has
been published on 24.8.1978 and 26.10.1978
respectively from when the surplus land is
deemed to have been acquired and vested in
State Government free from any
encumbrances. Besides there is no remedy of
appeal after final notification u/s. 10(3) of the
Act has been published. Considering all these
facts the present appeal is not tenable".
It is pertinent to note that nothing was done by the
owners of the land for more than a decade after the
above order in appeal was passed in August, 1979. On
May 21, 1990, one Shaikh Issaqua Saikh Gafoor, Power
of Attorney of P.Z. Doshi, one of the owners of the land,
preferred an appeal to the Government under Section 34
of the Act. It was stated therein that the land was jointly
owned by P.Z. Doshi and G.P. Doshi and it consisted of
’a built-up bungalow of about 500 sq. meters’. The
bungalow was existing on the land since long i.e. when
the land was purchased. It was further stated that since
the land attracted the provisions of the Act, the owners
had filed return (statement) under Section 6(1) of the
Act. The Competent Authority, Pune Urban
Agglomeration, while deciding the case, should have
accorded two units i.e. 1,000 sq. meters each to P.Z.
Doshi and C.P. Doshi to make total of 2,000 sq. meters.
The authority, however, had granted only one unit of
1,000 sq. meters. A copy of the order under sub-section
(4) of Section 8 was also enclosed by the appellants for
ready reference. A grievance was also made that the
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Competent Authority had not considered the build-up
property of bungalow required to be excluded from the
total holding together with the land appurtenant and
additional land appurtenant. Thus, gross injustice had
been done to the owners. A prayer was, therefore, made
to the Government to redress the grievance and to award
2 units and to exclude built-up property of bungalow.
The Revisional Authority disposed of the Revision on
August 7, 1991 observing that there was no provision
under Section 34 of the Act to consider the application of
the applicants and the application could not be
considered.
Even after the disposal of the above application in
1991, nothing was done by the land-owners for quite
some time. After more than three years on September
21, 1994, through another Power of Attorney (Mr. Ashok
Milapchand Jain), C.P. Doshi and his wife Mrs. Rajnana
P. Doshi requested the Minister for Housing & Special
Assistance Department to revise the orders passed
earlier. In the said application, it was said that the
Additional Collector and Competent Authority, Pune
Urban Agglomeration was pleased to decide the case of
applicants on February 20, 1979 declaring the
applicants to be surplus holders of land. (It may be
stated that the order declaring surplus land was passed
by the Competent Authority in April, 1977) It was stated
that the Competent Authority had decided the case
’without considering all the necessary facts’. Then, a
grievance was made with regard to units as also
exclusion of the land of built up area. It was stated that
an appeal was filed but it was rejected on the ground
that remedy of appeal was not available after the final
notification under Section 10(3) of the Act. It was also
stated that the land was proposed to be allotted to Pune
Municipal Corporation but applicants had filed Regular
Civil Suit No. 1913 of 1979 against the State
Government and Pune Municipal Corporation and the
learned Civil Judge, Senior Division, Pune had granted
status quo thereby restraining Pune Municipal
Corporation from taking possession of land or developing
it. It was asserted that the applicants had submitted a
scheme under Section 20 of the Act to the Competent
Authority which was pending. The applicants were ready
to construct a maternity home and hospital and for that
purpose plans were submitted. A prayer was, therefore,
made to decide the matter on merits and to issue
direction to Additional Collector and Competent
Authority to scrutinize and sanction the scheme under
Section 20 of the Act.
The Revisional Authority observed that it was
proved that the applicant had not been given sufficient
opportunity for showing the ownership documents to the
Competent Authority and prima facie, the order of the
Competent Authority dated April 28, 1977 was ’wrong’.
In exercise of power under Section 34 of the Act,
therefore, the said order was set aside and the case was
remitted for reconsideration to Additional Collector and
Competent Authority, Pune. It was directed that the
applicant should be given sufficient opportunity by
Additional Collector and Competent Authority, Pune
before deciding the matter.
It may be stated that neither the owners joined the
appellant\027Pune Municipal Corporation as party
respondent, nor notice was issued, nor opportunity of
hearing was afforded to the Corporation by the
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Revisional Authority though it was stated in the Revision
itself that the land was allotted to the Corporation and
the Corporation was proceeding with construction
thereon.
In view of the fact that the revision was allowed and
the order passed by the Competent Authority was set
aside without making the Corporation a party and
without affording opportunity of being heard, the
Corporation filed a writ petition in the High Court of
Bombay. The petition came up for hearing before the
Division Bench and the Division Bench passed the
impugned order holding that since no notice was served
upon the owners, the order passed by the Competent
Authority was bad in law and was rightly set aside in
revision. Regarding right of the Corporation, the Division
Bench was of the view that hearing could be afforded
only to the ’affected’ parties. According to the High
Court, the Corporation could not be treated as an
’affected’ party as it was ’mere beneficiary of allotment by
the State of Maharashtra’ which could only be done had
there been a valid vesting in the State of Maharashtra.
Since the order was passed by the Competent Authority
without hearing the owners, it was violative of natural
justice. In the circumstances, the Corporation had no
right over the land and it was not necessary to hear the
Corporation. The High Court also held that since the
proceedings were initiated without serving notice to the
land-owners, there was no valid vesting of property in
the State. Allowing the petition filed by the Corporation
would, therefore, result in revival of an illegal order. No
Court of law would make an order which would restore
illegal or ultra vires order. Accordingly, the High Court
dismissed the petition and directed the Appellate
Authority to decide the matter pending under Sections 8
and 9 of the Act within a period of three months from the
date of judgment of the High Court. It is this order which
is challenged in the present appeal.
Notice was issued by this Court on November 5,
2004 and stay against further proceedings was granted.
The matter was thereafter heard from time to time.
Finally, on February 6, 2006, leave was granted and stay
continued. The matter has now been placed for final
hearing.
We have heard learned counsel for the parties.
Learned counsel for the appellant-Corporation
contended that the Revisional Authority had committed
grave error of law in entertaining revision and in setting
aside the order passed by the Competent Authority
under the Act. It was submitted that the order was
passed by the Competent Authority as early as in 1977
and several consequential actions had been taken
thereafter. Notifications under Section 10 were issued
and the land stood vested ’free from all encumbrances’ in
the State Government. Pursuant to the demand made by
the appellant-Corporation, a part of land was granted to
the Corporation. An appeal filed by the owners under
Section 33 was dismissed in August, 1979. The said
order was never challenged by the owners by
approaching the High Court. Revisional jurisdiction was
invoked thereafter in 1990 i.e. after more than ten years
of disposal of the appeal. (Though it was described as an
appeal under Section 34 of the Act) Even that petition
was dismissed. Surprisingly after more than three years,
second revision petition was filed which was allowed by
the Revisional Authority and the order of the Competent
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Authority was set aside. The counsel also submitted that
though the land declared to be excess under the Act and
vested in the Government was granted to appellant-
Corporation and the owners were aware of the fact and
had also filed a suit in the Court of Civil Judge, Senior
Division, Pune in 1979 and had obtained ’status quo’
order, they did not think it proper to join Corporation as
party opponent, nor the Revisional Authority thought it
appropriate to issue notice and to afford hearing to the
Corporation. The order passed by the Revisional
Authority, therefore, was violative of principles of natural
justice and fair play. The Corporation, therefore,
approached the High Court. Unfortunately, however, the
High Court committed the same mistake and went on to
observe that Corporation was not ’affected’ party. The
order passed by the Revisional Authority and confirmed
by the High Court, therefore, deserves to be quashed and
set aside.
The learned counsel for the land-owners supported
the order passed by the Government and confirmed by
the High Court. He submitted that from the record, it
was clear that notice under Section 8 of the Act was
never served upon the owners. Declaration of surplus
land was, therefore, violative of principles of natural
justice. Such an order cannot be said to be an order in
the eye of law and it was rightly set aside by the
Government. Regarding appeal as also revision filed
earlier, it was submitted that they were dismissed on the
ground of ’maintainability’ and not on merits. In the
circumstances, second revision was rightly allowed
setting aside the order passed by the Competent
Authority. The High Court correctly observed that since
the initial order passed by the Competent Authority was
in contravention of principles of natural justice, allowing
the petition of the Corporation would result in revival of
an order which was illegal and unlawful. It, therefore,
cannot be said that the High Court committed an error.
The present appeals, hence, deserve to be dismissed.
On behalf of the State Government, the learned
counsel submitted that it was the duty of the State to do
justice to the parties and when the record revealed that
notice had never been served upon the owners of the
land, the order of the Competent Authority was rightly
set aside by the Revisional Authority and the action does
not require interference.
Having given anxious consideration to the facts and
circumstances of the case in the light of statutory
provisions, in our opinion, the appeal deserves to be
allowed.
It is not in dispute by and between the parties that
the land-owners filed a statement under sub-section (1)
of Section 6 of the Act in August, 1976. Final order was
passed declaring certain land to be excess land under
the Act in 1977. Notification under Section 10(3) was
issued and the land stood vested in the State ’free from
all encumbrances’. A notice was issued to the land
owners to handover possession of the excess land and
the possession was taken over by the authorities. Pune
Municipal Corporation applied for land and the State
Government asked the Corporation to pay occupancy
price of Rs.1,45,000/- which was paid by the
Corporation in February, 1979. So far as the order
passed under Section 8 of the Act is concerned, it was
never challenged by the land owners in the appeal. An
appeal which was filed by the land owners in 1979 was
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an appeal against an order passed under Section 10(3) of
the Act. The Appellate Authority, therefore, rightly held
such appeal to be not maintainable. If the land owners
were aggrieved by the order passed under Section 8 of
the Act, either they should have challenged the order
before the Appellate Authority or before the Revisional
Authority. The Land owners did neither. The order,
therefore, became final. More than a decade had passed
thereafter. In 1990, land owners, through one Power of
Attorney (Shaikh Issaqua Shaikh Gafoor) approached
Revisional Authority under Section 34 of the Act by filing
an appeal (revision) which was dismissed on the ground
of maintainability. Again, the said order had not been
challenged. After more than three years, through another
Power of Attorney, (Ashok Milapchand Jain) second
revision was filed without arraying appellant-Corporation
as party respondent. It is indeed surprising as to how
the Revisional Authority did not think it proper to issue
notice and to afford hearing to Corporation, though the
record clearly revealed development from 1979 and
allotment of land to Corporation and payment of price by
it. Moreover, the order of the Revisional Authority is
conspicuously silent as to filing of appeal as well as first
revision by the land-owners. In our opinion, therefore,
the learned counsel for the appellant-Corporation is right
in submitting that the order passed by the Revisional
Authority deserves to be set aside.
Section 34 of the Act confers on Government
revisional jurisdiction. It reads thus;
34. Revision by State Government.\027The
State Government may, on its own motion,
call for and examine the records of any order
passed or proceeding taken under the
provisions of this Act and against which no
appeal has been preferred under Sec. 12 or
Sec. 30 or Sec. 33 for the purpose of
satisfying itself as to the legality or propriety
of such order or as to the regularity of such
procedure and pass such order with respect
thereto as it may think fit;
Provided that no such order shall be
made except after giving the person affected a
reasonable opportunity of being heard in the
matter.
The learned counsel for the appellant-Corporation
submitted that the Act does not confer right to file
revision upon a person aggrieved. The State alone is
empowered to exercise revisional power. The counsel
submitted that such power can be exercised by the State
Government on its own motion (suo motu) calling for and
examining the records of any order passed under the Act
for the purpose of satisfying itself of the legality and
propriety of such order. It is, therefore, implicit that a
party cannot invoke revisional jurisdiction under Section
34 of the Act.
We are, however, unable to uphold the said
contention. It is true that Section 34 enables the State
Government to exercise revisional powers suo motu.
That, however, does not mean that a party cannot invoke
such jurisdiction. A revision can also be filed by party
aggrieved and it can invite the attention of the Revisional
Authority as to illegality or impropriety of any order
passed under the Act. The revision filed by the land-
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owners, therefore, could not be held to be not
maintainable.
But reading of the above provision makes it clear
that revision is not an additional remedy over and above
remedy of appeal under Section 33 of the Act. Section 34
of the Act authorizes the State Government to exercise
revisional jurisdiction in those cases in which "no appeal
has been preferred". Thus, the remedy of revision is
alternative to appeal and not additional or
supplementary.
The learned counsel for the appellant-Corporation
is also right in contending that the Revisional Authority
ought to have considered the fact that such jurisdiction
was invoked by the petitioner after several years. It may
be recalled that the first appeal filed by the land-owners
was not against an order under Section 8 of the Act but
against the notification under Section 10 of the Act,
which was dismissed on the ground of maintainability.
Likewise, the first revision filed in the year 1990 was
dismissed as not maintainable in 1991.
Now it is true that no period for revision is provided
in the Act. It was, therefore, submitted on behalf of the
land-owners that when the Legislature did not think it fit
to prescribe period of limitation, such power can be
exercised ’at any time’ and no Court by a ’judicial fiat’,
usurp legislative power and prescribe period of
limitation. It is no doubt true that the statute does not
fix period of limitation within which revisional power
should be exercised under Section 34 of the Act. The
Legislature, in its wisdom, has not fixed period of
limitation as it had empowered the State Government to
exercise revisional power suo motu. In our judgment,
however, only in such cases i.e. where the period of
limitation is not prescribed that the concept of
’reasonable time’ can be invoked and power must be
exercised within such period.
In this connection, it would be profitable to refer to
a leading decision of this Court in State of Gujarat v.
Patel Raghav Natha & Ors., (1969) 2 SCC 187. In that
case, an application was filed by the land-owner under
Section 65 of the Bombay Land Revenue Code, 1879 for
converting agricultural land to non-agricultural use. The
permission was granted. The Municipal Committee,
however, objected to such permission and the
Commissioner, in purported exercise of revisional power
under Section 211 of the Code, set aside the order
passed earlier. When the matter reached this Court, it
was contended by the owners, that though Section 211
did not prescribe period of limitation, revisional powers
ought to be exercised within a reasonable time.
Upholding the contention and considering the
scheme of Sections 65 and 211 of the Code, this Court
stated:
"The question arises whether the
Commissioner can revise an order made
under s. 65 at any time. It is true that
there is no period of limitation prescribed
under s. 211, but it seems to us plain that
this power must be exercised in
reasonable time and the length of the
reasonable time must be determined by
the facts of the case and the nature of the
order which is being revised.
It seems to us that s. 65 itself indicates
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the length of the reasonable time within
which the Commissioner must act under s.
211. Under s. 65 of the Code if the Collector
does not inform the applicant of his decision
on the application within a period of three
months the permission applied for shall be
deemed to have been granted. This section
shows that a period of three months is
considered ample for the Collector to make up
his mind and beyond that the legislature
thinks that the matter is so urgent that
permission shall be deemed to have been
granted. Reading Sections 211 and 65
together it seems to us that the Commissioner
must exercise his revisional powers within a
few months of the order of the Collector. This
is reasonable time because after the grant of
the permission for building purposes the
occupant is likely to spend money on starting
building operations at least within a few
months from the date of the permission. In
this case the Commissioner set aside the
order of the ’Collector on October 12, 1961,
i.e. more than a year after the order, and it
seems to us that this order was passed too
late". (emphasis supplied)
The law laid down in Patel Raghav Natha has been
reiterated by this Court in several cases. We do not
intend to burden our judgment with all those cases. We
may only state that broad contention of the land owners
that when no period of limitation is prescribed, revisional
jurisdiction can be exercised at any time cannot but be
rejected. If the law prescribes period of limitation, the
action must be taken within such period. But where the
law does not prescribe limitation, the Court would
import the concept of ’reasonable time’. We may,
however, hasten to add that what is the length of the
reasonable time would depend upon the facts and
circumstances of each case and no rule of universal
application can be laid down. [See also Shailesh Jadavji
Varia v. Sub-Registrar, Vadodara & Ors. (1996) 3 Guj LR
783 (FB)].
In the facts and circumstances of the case, in our
opinion, the Revisional Authority was duty bound to take
into account the length of delay, intervening
circumstances and subsequent events from 1977 to
1995 and to consider whether the powers should have
been exercised or not. Since no such exercise has been
undertaken, the order suffers from legal infirmity and
must be quashed.
We have also gone through the grievance of the
land-owners when they had filed an appeal in 1979
against an order under Section 10(3) of the Act as also
appeal (Revision) in 1990 (first revision). There was no
whisper about non-service of notice and non-observance
of principles of natural justice. Reading of Memorandum
of Appeal, grounds and prayers makes it clear that
contentions were raised as to legality of decision on
merits. It was urged, inter alia, that certain land was
sold prior to the commencement of the Act which could
not have been taken into account for the purpose of
declaring the land to be surplus; that constructed
portion and built up area (bungalow) ought to have been
excluded and that two units ought to have been granted.
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Even in the second revision filed in 1994, there is
nothing about non service of notice or absence of hearing
by the Competent Authority. The Revisional Authority,
in our view, ought to have considered that aspect as
well.
Again, the Revisional Authority was bound to apply
its mind to the effect of vesting of land ’free from all
encumbrances’ in the State and grant of land by the
State in favour of appellant-Corporation. It was only after
the land vested in the State that it was disposed of in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. After the
notification under Section 10(3) was issued, a prayer was
made by the Corporation to allot the land. The prayer
was granted and payment of Rs.1,45,000/- was made by
the Corporation and it started construction. They were
indeed relevant and material facts and circumstances.
The Revisional Authority, however, has not even referred
to those facts and circumstances. The impugned order
thus suffers from serious infirmity.
To us, the High Court was wholly wrong in holding
that Corporation was not ’affected’ party. When the land
was assigned to Corporation and Corporation made the
payment of price, by no stretch of imagination, it can be
said that the Corporation was not ’affected’ party. From
the record, it was clear that possession was handed over
by the State and was taken over by the Corporation. The
Corporation was proceeding to put up construction on
the land which compelled the land-owners to institute a
suit and to obtain order of status quo. The High Court in
the circumstances, ought to have allowed the petition
by setting aside the order of the Revisional Authority,
by directing it to issue notice to the Corporation, to
afford hearing and to pass appropriate order on merits.
By not doing so, the High Court has committed the
same error which had been committed by the
Government and the order of the High Court also cannot
be sustained.
The High Court was also wrong in referring to and
relying upon Gadde Venkateswara Rao v. Government of
Andhra Pradesh & Ors., AIR 1966 SC 828 and also
Maharaja Chintamani Saran Nath Shahdeo v. State of
Bihar & Ors., 1999 (8) SCC 16 for the proposition that
allowing a petition of the Corporation would result in
reviving and restoring of illegal order. In our view, the
High Court has ignored an important fact that setting
aside of order by the Revisional Authority would not have
resulted in restoring illegal order inasmuch as the
original order passed under Section 8 of the Act was not
challenged by the land-owners in an appeal filed in
1979. The order passed by the Competent Authority,
therefore, cannot be held void, still-born or purported
order. On the contrary, in the said order, it was stated
that the notice was properly sent at the address supplied
by the declarant and the owner would have to be treated
as served. In the appeal also, it was never contended by
the land-owners that they were not served and on that
ground the order was bad. Hence, unless the said order
was set aside, it could not be termed as illegal or void
order.
It is well settled that no order can be ignored
altogether unless a finding is recorded that it was illegal,
void or not in consonance with law. As Prof. Wade states:
"The principle must be equally true even where the
’brand of invalidity’ is plainly visible; for there also the
order can effectively be resisted in law only by obtaining
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the decision of the Court".
He further states:
"The truth of the matter is that the court
will invalidate an order only if the right
remedy is sought by the right person in the
right proceedings and circumstances. The
order may be hypothetically a nullity, but the
Court may refuse to quash it because of the
plaintiff’s lack of standing, because he does
not deserve a discretionary remedy, because
he has waived his rights, or for some other
legal reason. In any such case the ’void’ order
remains effective and is, in reality, valid. It
follows that an order may be void for one
purpose and valid for another, and that it
may be void against one person but valid
against another".
In Smith v. East Elloe Rural District Council, 1956
AC 736 at 769 : (1956) 1 All ER 855, Lord Redeliffe had
an occasion to consider a similar argument (that the
order was null and void). Negativing the contention, the
Law Lord made the following off-quoted observations:
"(T)his argument is in reality a play on the
meaning of the word ’nullity’. An order even
if not made in good faith, is still an act
capable of legal consequences. It bears no
brand of invalidity upon its forehead. Unless
the necessary proceedings are taken at
law to establish the cause of invalidity
and to get it quashed or otherwise upset,
it will remain as effective for its
ostensible purpose as the most
impeccable of orders". (emphasis supplied)
A similar question came up for consideration before
this Court in State of Punjab & Ors.. v. Gurdev Singh,
(1991) 4 SCC 1. In Gurdev Singh, a suit for declaration
was instituted by the plaintiff contending that the order
dismissing him from service was ultra vires,
unconstitutional, violative of principles of natural justice
and void ab initio and he continued to be in service.
Such suit, in accordance with the provisions of Article
113 of the Limitation Act, 1963, must be filed within
three years from the date of passing of order or where
departmental appeal or revision is filed from the date of
dismissal of such appeal/revision. The suit was,
however, filed beyond the period of three years. The High
Court held that since the order was void, the provisions
of Limitation Act would not apply to such order. The
aggrieved State approached this Court.
Setting aside the decree passed by all the Courts
and referring to several cases, this Court held that if the
party aggrieved by invalidity of the order intends to
approach the Court for declaration that the order against
him was inoperative, he must come before the Court
within the period prescribed by limitation. "If the
statutory time of limitation expires, the Court cannot
give the declaration sought for".
The Court then stated;
"If an Act is void or ultra vires it is
enough for the Court to declare it so and it
collapses automatically. It need not be set
aside. The aggrieved party can simply seek a
declaration that it is void and not binding
upon him. A declaration merely declares the
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existing state of affairs and does not ’quash’
so as to produce a new state of affairs".
In the present case, no period of limitation is
prescribed for preferring Revision under Section 34 of
the Act. The principle laid down in Patel Raghav Natha,
hence, applies. If, therefore, the Revisional Authority was
inclined to exercise jurisdiction, it ought to have been
satisfied that such power was invoked by the petitioner
within reasonable time. Merely on the ground that the
order passed in 1977 was unlawful was not sufficient to
ignore length of delay and other attenuating
circumstances.
It was also contended that the order passed by the
Appellate Authority dismissing appeal as ’not
maintainable’ and order passed in first revision refusing
relief on the same ground i.e. non-maintainability of
revision would not operate as res judicata. In this
connection, our attention has been invited by the
counsel for the land-owners to several decisions of this
Court. It is not necessary to refer to those decisions
since in our opinion, the respondents are right that the
doctrine of res judicata has no application. That does
not, however, mean that Revisional Authority would not
consider the extent of delay, grounds/reasons for not
approaching Revisional Authority and intervening
circumstances. It is only thereafter on satisfaction of the
Government that it could consider the merits of the
matter and pass an appropriate order in accordance with
law.
The learned counsel for the State of Maharashtra
strongly urged that the State authorities must act fairly
and reasonably. When it found that an order was passed
under Section 8 of the Act but the requisite notice was
not served upon the land-owners, it must fairly state
that the order was illegal and an opportunity should be
given to the land-owners as to why appropriate order
should not be passed under the Act after hearing them.
There can be no two opinions about it. The State
has to act fairly. But the State or a public authority
must be fair not to one party but to all the parties to the
litigation. In the present case, an order was passed by
the Competent Authority in 1977, and in 1979, the land
vested in the State, possession was taken over from
land-owners, application was made by the Pune
Municipal Corporation, land was allotted to it, an
amount of Rs.1,45,000/- was paid by the Corporation,
possession was handed over to the Corporation and
Corporation was undertaking construction activities. An
appeal by the land-owners was dismissed in 1979 and
revision, which was filed after more than ten years met
with the same fate. The State Government was,
therefore, expected to issue a notice and afford hearing
to the Corporation when second revision petition was
filed by the land-owners. The Government was aware of
all the above facts which were on record. It was also
alive of the fact that a Civil Suit was filed before more
than ten years in 1979 and status quo order was
obtained by the land-owners. Therefore, when it was
submitted that the State ought to have acted fairly
towards land owners, it ought to have acted fairly
towards Municipal Corporation also. But Pune Municipal
Corporation was never issued any notice, nor given
opportunity for hearing. Even when the Corporation
challenged the order passed by the Revisional Authority
in a writ petition in the High Court, it was not conceded
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by the State that the order in revision was liable to be set
aside as it was not made by the Revisional Authority in
observance of principles of natural justice and the
matter must be sent back to the Government to decide it
afresh after extending opportunity of hearing to all the
parties. The matter did not end there. Even in this
Court, the State counsel submitted that the Revisional
Authority rightly set aside the order passed against the
land-owners as they could not be served before the
impugned order was passed under Section 8 of the Act.
The State counsel also supported the order passed by
the High Court, but the counsel did not state that the
same reasoning would apply to an order passed by the
Revisional Authority and by the High Court without
hearing Pune Municipal Corporation. The State has its
own concept of ’fairness’. We, however, express our
inability to put seal of approval on the stand taken by
the State and on its concept of ’fairness’.
It may be recalled that neither in the Memorandum
of Appeal filed by the land owners in 1979, nor in the
first revision nor in the second revision, which are part
of the record, it was even alleged by the land-owners that
they were not served with the notice under Section 8 of
the Act and they had no opportunity to put forward their
case and the order was, therefore, liable to be set aside.
In fact, no appeal was filed against an order passed
under Section 8 of the Act. Be that as it may, had such
contention been taken by the land-owners and had the
appellant-Corporation been joined as party respondent
before the Revisional Authority in the second revision, it
could have pointed out that the land-owners were aware
of the proceedings and because of such knowledge, they
had not raised such contention. Ultimately, in such
matters, the Court would apply ’prejudice test’. If the
circumstances had proved that the land-owners were in
know of proceedings, it is possible that the Revisional
Authority might have refrained from exercising
discretionary jurisdiction. Moreover, the appellant-
Corporation could have contended that there was gross,
unreasonable and unexplained delay on the part of the
land-owners and it was not a fit case to exercise
revisional power after such period.
For the foregoing reasons, in our opinion, the order
passed by the Revisional Authority and confirmed by the
High Court is liable to be set aside and is hereby set
aside. The matter is now remitted to the Revisional
Authority for taking fresh decision in accordance with
law after hearing the parties, including the Corporation.
It is open to all the parties to raise all contentions
available to them. It goes without saying that all
proceedings taken in pursuance of the order passed in
revision are of no consequence and no effect can be given
to them. We may clarify that we have not entered into
correctness or otherwise of the allegations and counter-
allegations and we may not be understood to have
expressed any opinion on the merits of the matter. As
and when the Revisional Authority will take up the
matter for consideration, it will decide the same without
being influenced by the observations made by the High
Court as also by us. The appeal is accordingly allowed
with costs.