Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT. MEERA GUPTA
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF WEST BENGAL AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT22/10/1991
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
BENCH:
PUNCHHI, M.M.
MISRA, RANGNATH (CJ)
RAMASWAMY, K.
CITATION:
1992 AIR 1567 1991 SCR Supl. (1) 501
1992 SCC (2) 494 JT 1991 (4) 162
1991 SCALE (2)836
ACT:
Urban Land Ceiling and Regulation Act, 1976: Sections
2(g)(q)(ii) & (iii), 2A, 4(9), 4(11)--Schedule 1--Item
15--Category ’A:
Land Ceiling--Mode of computation of ’Vacant land’--What
is---Distinction between---’Vacant land’ and ’any other
land’--What is---’Urban Agglomeration’--Propeny built up
before the commencement of Act--Held outside tire purview of
’Vacant Land’---Object of the Act explained.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant’s predecessor-in-interest, respondent
herein, was the owner of two properties consisting of a
’built up property’ and a ’vacant property’ in the city of
Calcutta. The built up property comprised of 414.56 sq.
mtrs. of land of which 321 sq. mtrs. was covered by a build-
ing with a dwelling unit therein and the said property was
constructed long before the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regula-
tion) Act, 1976 came into force. The second property com-
prised of 339.65 sq. mtrs. of vacant land. The Act came into
force on February 17, 1976 but under Section 2A of the Act
the appointed day in relation to State of West Bengal was
28th January, 1976. Thus between the appointed day and the
date of enforcement of the Act there was a 20 days’ gap.
On 8th July, 1978 the respondent entered into an agree-
ment with the appellant to sell the vacant property. Since
both the properties were covered by the Urban agglomeration
as specified in category ’A’ in Scheduled 1 to the 1976 Act,
under which the ceiling limit prescribed was 500 sq. mtrs.,
the appellant and the respondent gave a notice of the pro-
posed sale under Section 26 of the Act to the competent
authority.
The competent authority held that the respondent was
holding 25421 sq. mtrs. of land in excess of the ceiling
limit. The excess land was determined by totalling 414.56
sq. mtrs. of the built-up property and 339.65 sq. mtrs. of
vacant property to 754.21 sq. mtrs., and substracting
502
therefrom 500 sq.mtrs. resulting in 254.21 sq. mtrs. in
excess of the ceiling limit. Accordingly the competent
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authority issued order vesting the excess land in the State.
Against the decision of the competent authority the respond-
ent preferred an appeal before the Appellate Authority which
was dismissed in default.
In the meantime the appellant filed a suit against the
respondent for specific performance of the agreement dated
8th July, 1978 which was decreed and consequently a deed of
conveyance was executed in favour of the appellant and the
possession of the property was also given to her.
Subsequently the appellant came to know of the dis-
missal of the respondent’s appeal. Thereupon she filed a
Review Petition before the Appellate Authority stating that
she had become the owner of the vacant property and prayed
for retrieval of the same from being treated as excess land
in the hands of respondent which was dismissed. The appel-
lant filed a writ petition in the High Court and a Single
Judge allowed the same. On appeal by State a Division Bench
of the High Court reversed the judgment of the Single Judge.
Against the decision of the Division Bench, appeal was filed
in this Court.
Setting aside the judgment of the Division Bench of
the High Court and allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1. The primary objective of the Urban Land
Ceiling and Regulation Act, 1976 is to fix a ceiling limit
on the holding of vacant lands, conditioned as they are on
the appointed day, and as held on the date of commencement
of the Act. [512-F]
2. Under Section 3 of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1973 no person is entitled to bold any
vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit. Ceiling limit of
vacant land in case of every person like the
predecessor-in-interest of the appellant is 500 sq. mtrs. as
set up under Section 4. [508 E-F]
2.1 However, as per Section 2(g), ’Vacant land’ does
not include land of three categories. The first category is
land on which construction of a building is not permissible
under building regulation in force in the area in which
such land is situated. The second category is of land occu-
pied by any building in an area, where there are building
regulations, which has
503
been constructed upon, or is under construction on the
appointed day, with the approval of the appropriate authori-
ty, and the land appurtenant tO such building. Thus if the
building stood constructed on the land prior to January 28,
1976, the land occupied under the building is not vacant
land. It also covers the land on which any building was in
the process of construction on January 28, 1976 with the
approval of the appropriate authority. Additionally, the
land appurtenant to these two kinds of buildings is also not
"vacant land". The third category likewise conditioned is of
land occupied by any building in an area where there are no
building regulations, which has been constructed before
January 28, 1976 or is in the process of construction on
such date, and the land appurtenant to these two kinds of
buildings. [510A-D]
2.2 The expression "land appurtenant" as defined in
Section 2(g) when related to any building in an area where
there are building regulations as well as in an area where
there are no building regulations reveals that the addition-
al extent as permitted is based on the principle of conti-
guity. The expression applies to buildings constructed
before the "appointed day" as well as to buildings, con-
struction of which commenced before the "appointed day", and
was in progress on that day. Therefore, if the construction
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of a building with a dwelling unit therein had begun after
the appointed day, then it is all the same "any other land"
to be reckoned for calculating the extent of vacant land
held by a person. And if the construction of a building with
a dwelling unit therein on land had been completed or was in
progress by and on the appointed day, then it is not "any
other land" to be reckoned for calculating the extent of
vacant land held by a person. [512G-H, 513A-B]
The built-up property in question had been constructed
prior to the commencement of the Act. Therefore, it is
outside the purview of "vacant land". If that is excluded
from being reckoned towards calculating the extent of vacant
land held by the predecessor-in-interest of the appellant,
the vacant land in the vacant property cannot be declared
excess for that is within the permissible limits. Even if no
land is left as land appurtenant to the built-up area, then
93.56 sq. mtrs. the remainder plus 339.65 sq. mtrs. of the
unbuilt property would total up to the figure less than 500
sq. mtrs.; which is again within the permissible limit.
Accordingly the entire proceedings towards declaring excess
land in the hands of the appellant and her predecessor-in-
title are quashed. [513C-E]
504
State of U.P. & Or3. v.L.J. Johnson & Ors. [1983] 4 SCC
110, held inapplicable.
Union of India etc. v.V.B. Chaudhary etc. etc. [1979] 3
SCR 802; Maharao Sahib Shri Bhim Singhji etc. etc. v. Union
of India & Ors., [1981] 1 SCC 166, referred to.
Eastern Oxygen v. State AIR 1981 M.P. 17; Prabhakar
Narhar Pawar v. State, AIR 1984 Bom. 122; State v. Radha
Raman Aggarwal, AIR 1987 All. 272, cited.
3. In the scheme of sub-section (9) of Section 4 of the
Act the visible contrast between "vacant land" and "any
other land" held by a person on which there is a building
with a dwelling unit therein is prominent. The said "any
other land" is reckoned and brought at par with the "vacant
land" for the purpose of calculating the final extent of
vacant land. The expression "vacant land" in the first
portion of the provision connotes land minus land under
buildings constructed or in the process of construction
before and on the appointed day, and the expression "vacant
land" in the latter portion of the provision connotes the
sum total of "vacant land" of the first order and distinctly
the "other land" on which is a building with a dwelling unit
therein of which construction commenced after the appointed
day, and the land appurtenant thereto. Such an interpreta-
tion is required by the context as otherwise the concept of
the appointed day and the gap period would be rendered
otiose. The legislature cannot be accused to have indulged
in trickery in giving something with one hand and taking it
away with the other. "Any other land" in the sequence would
thus mean any other built-upon land except the one excluded
from the expression "vacant land" on account of it being
occupied by a building which stood constructed. or was in
the process of construction, on the appointed day. [510F-H,
511A-B]
4. Section 5 is reflective of the scheme of the Act in
as much as transfers of vacant land within the gap period
are ignorable, and likewise, vacant land brought under
construction of building by a person within the
j gap period is also ignorable for the purposes of calculat-
ing the extent of vacant land, so that the provision of law
are not defeated by human ingenuity. [512-BC]
5. Though Sub-section (11) of Section 4 is not happily
worded, yet when meaningfully construed in the context, it
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means that a building which
505
gets excluded by virtue of the definition of "vacant land"
gets clothed with the protective cloak for not being reck-
oned again as any other land, over which there is a building
with a dwelling unit therein. This provision means to convey
that what is not vacant land under sub-clauses (ii) and
(iii) of clause (q) of Section 2 cannot go to add up as
"vacant land" under sub-section (9) of Section 4 by descrip-
tive overlapping. To wipe out the distinction of "vacant
land" and "any other land" as demonstrated in sub-section
(9) of section 4 is to strangulate and destroy the spirit
and life-blood of the "appointed day" and the gap period.
[512 D-F]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION:CiviIAppeaINo. 4235 of
1991.
From the Judgment and Order dated 5.6.1987 of the Cal-
cutta High Court in original order no. 129 of 1985 and/915
of 1983.
A.K. Ganguly, A.K. Chakraborty, A.D. Sikri and Ms.
Mridula Ray for the Appellants.
D.N. Mukherjee and Rathin Das for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
PUNCHHI, J. We are required in this matter to interplay
some of the provisions of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regu-
lation) Act, 1976 to determine whether the appellant herein
had any excess vacant land.
Smt. Probhavati Poddar (Proforma respondent herein) was
the owner of two properties in the city of Calcutta being
(i) premises No. P-290, C.I.T. Road, comprising 414.56 sq.
mtrs. of land of which 321 sq. mtrs. was covered by a build-
ing, constructed thereon long before the coming into force
of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976
(hereafter referred to as ’the Act’), with a dwelling unit
therein, and (ii) property No. P-210, C.I.T. Scheme VII(M),
Calcutta comprising 339.65 sq. mtrs. of vacant land. Hereaf-
ter these would be referred to as the ’built-up property’
and ’vacant property’ respectively. The exact date/period of
the construction of the built-up property is not available
on the present record but the litigation has proceeded on
the footing that it was constructed long before February 17,
1976, the day when the Act came into force in the State of
West Bengal.
The State 1egislatures of 11 States, including the State
of West Bengal, considered it desirable to have a uniform
legislation enacted by Parlia-
506
ment for the imposition of ceiling on urban property for the
country as a whole, and in compliance with clause (1) of
Article 252 of the Constitution, passed a Resolution to that
effect. Accordingly, the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation)
Bill, 1976 was introduced in the Lock Sabha on January 28,
1976 covering all the Union Territories and the 11 resolving
States. After the passing of the Bill by the Parliament, the
Act came into force on February 17, 1976 at once..Later from
time to time, the Act was adopted by some other States after
passing Resolutions under Article 252(1) of the Constitu-
tion. The Act now apparently is in force in 17 States and
all the Union Territories in the country.
The primary object and purpose of the Act was to provide for
the imposition of the ceiling on vacant land in urban ag-
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glomerations, for the ’acquisition of such land in excess of
the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of buildings
on such land and for matters connected therewith, with a
view to preventing the concentration of urban land in the
hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein, and with a view to bringing about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to sub-serve
the common good, and in furtherance of the directive princi-
ples of Articles 39(B) & (C) of the Constitution. These
features were .spelled out by this Court in Union of India
etc. v.V.B. Chaudhary etc. etc. [1979]3 SCR 802. That it is
valid piece of legislation, save and except Section 27(1),
and had received the protective umbrella of Article 31-C as
it stood prior to its amendment by 42nd Amendment Act was
held by this Court in Maharao Sahib Shri Bhim Singhji etc.
etc. v. Union of India & Others. [1981]1 SCC 166.
"Appointed day" has been defined in Section 2-A of the
Act. It means (i) in relation to any State to which the Act
applies in the first instance, the date of introduction of
the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Bill, 1976 in Par-
liament, and (ii) in relation to any State which adopts the
Act under Clause (1) of Article 252 of the Constitution, the
date of such adoption. In relation to the State of West
Bengal, in which the town of Calcutta is situated, the
"appointed day" is January 28, 1976. It is thus evident that
between the appointed day and the date of enforcement of the
Act, there is a 20 day’s gap.
The Act ordains a ceiling limit of 500 sq. mtrs. for the
urban agglomeration of Calcutta, as per item 15 of Category
A in .Schedule I of the Act. Both the properties of Smt.
Poddar,. the proforma respondent herein, thus became liable
to be screened by the Authorities under the Act. Before-hand
on July 8, 1978, Smt. Poddar entered into an agreement with
Smt. Meera Gupta, the appellant herein, to sell the vacant
property on
507
terms entered. On November 23, 1978, the proposed vendor and
the proposed vendee gave notice under Section 26 of the Act
to the Competent Authority, appointed for the purpose of the
proposed sale. On August 7, 1980, the competent authority in
exercise of powers under Section 6(2) of the said Act,
issued a notice under Section 6(1) thereof to Smt. Poddar
directing her to file a statement in Form No. 1 on the basis
that she held vacant land in the Calcutta Urban Area in
excess of the ceiling limit of 500 sq. mtrs. Having got no
response, a reminder was sent to her, but in vain. The
Competent Authority thereafter initiated suomo to proceed-
ings against Smt. Poddar and sent her a draft statement on
September 18, 1979, exercising powers under Section 8(1) of
the Act intimating that she could submit her objection, if
any, to the draft statement. It was specified in the said
statement that she was tentatively required to surrender
254.21 sq. mtrs. of land (figure arrived by
totalling .414.56 sq. mtrs. of the built-up property and
339.65 sq. mtrs. of the vacant property to 754.21 sq. mtrs,
are substracting therefrom 500 sq. mtrs. resulting in 254.21
sq. mtrs.). The objections of Smt. Poddar filed to the draft
statement were rejected by the Competent Authority, who
published the final statement under section 9 of the Act
vesting the said 254.21 sq. mtrs. of excess land in the
State, and the same was communicated to Smt. Poddar on June
22, 1981. She preferred an appeal under Section 33 of the
Act before the Special Secretary, Land and Land Reforms
Department, Government of West Bengal, the Appellate Author-
ity under the Act, but the same was dismissed in default on
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January 18, 1983.
Before-hand the appellant herein filed suit No. 121 of
1981 against Smt. Poddar in the Calcutta High Court claiming
specific performance of the agreement dated July 8, 1978. On
August 21, 1981, a decree for specific performance was
passed in favour of the appellant in the usual terms. Pursu-
ant to the said decree, the deed of conveyance in respect of
the vacant property was executed in favour of the appellant
on November 19, 1981 for a consideration of Rs.1,26,000/-
paid over to Smt. Poddar. Possession of the vacant property
was delivered to the appellant and necessary entries were
made in the municipal and revenue registers.
The appellant then got scent of the dismissal of the
appeal of Smt. Poddar in default on July 2, 1983. The appel-
lant then filed a Review Petition before the Appellate
Authority stating, inter alia, that she had become the owner
of the vacant property and prayed for retrieval of the same
from being treated as excess land in the hands of Smt.
Podar. The Review Petition was rejected on August 10, 1983,
which occasioned a petition under Article 226 of the Consti-
tution being filed by the appellant in the Calcutta
508
High Court on a variety of grounds. The Writ Petition was
opposed on each and every ground. The learned Single Judge,
before whom the writ petition was placed, taking aid from
some observations in two decisions of this Court in Maharao
Sahib Shri Bhim Singhji’s case (supra), and State of U.P. &
Others v. L J. Johnson & Others, [1983] 4 SCC 110 allowed
the writ petition on November 27, 1984. On appeal by the
State of West Bengal and its responding officers, a Division
Bench of the High Court reversed the judgment and order of
the Single Judge on June 5, 1987 in Appeal No. 129 of 1985,
leading to this appeal by special leave at the instance of
the appellant. The matter having come before a two-Judge
Bench of this Court, of which one of us was a member, on
28.7.1988, it was felt that lohnson’s case (supra) may have
to be tested, and thus the matter was ordered to be heard by
a larger Bench at least of three Judges. This is how the
matter stands placed before us.
As said at the outset, we have to interplay some of
the provisions occurring in Chapter 3 titled as "Ceiling on
Vacant Lands" in the Act. We shall presently set out those
provisions which have a bearing in the case. But before we
do that we do not wish to leave the impression that we have
not viewed the statute as a whole. The endeavour on our
behalf to construe the provisions has not left any part
thereof altogether.
So we proceed thenceforth to the interpretative process.
Section 3 of the Act provides that except as otherwise
provided in this Act, on and from the commencement of this
Act, no person shall be entitled to hold any vacant land in
excess of the ceiling limit in the territories to which this
Act applies under sub-section (2) of Section 1. Ceiling
limit of vacant land in case of every person like the prece-
dessor-in-interest of the appellant is 500 sq. mtrs. as set
up under Section 4. Clauses (g) and (q) defining "vacant
land" and "land appurtenant" and sub-sections (9) and (11)
of Section 4 which have precedence in engaging our attention
are set out below, but without the Explanation to sub-sec-
tion (11), for it is not relevant for our purpose:
"2(g) - "Land appurtenant", in rela-
tion to any building means - (i) in an area
where there are building regulations, the
minimum extent of land required under such
regulations to be kept as open space for the
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enjoyment of such building, which is no case
shall exceed five hundred square meters; or
(ii) in an area where there are no building
regulations, an extent of five hundred square
metres contiguous to the land oc-
509
cupied by such building,
and includes, in the case of any building
constructed before the appointed day and with
a dwelling unit therein, an additional extent
not exceeding five hundred square metres of
land, if any, contiguous to the minimum extent
referred to in subclause (i) or the extent
referred to in sub-clause (ii), as the case
may be;
2(q) -"Vacant Land", means land, not being
land mainly used for the purpose of agricul-
ture, in an urban agglomeration, but does
not include -
(i) land on which construction of a building
is not permissible under the building regula-
tions in force in the area in which such land
is situated;
(ii) in an area where there are building
regulations, the land occupied by any building
which has been constructed before, or is being
constructed on, the appointed day with the
approval of the appropriate authority and the
land appurtenant to such building; and
(iii) in an area where there are no building
regulations, the land occupied by any building
which has been constructed before, or is being
constructed on, the appointed day and the land
appurtenant to such building.
4(9) - where a person holds vacant land and
also holds any other land on which there is a
building with a dwelling unit therein, the
extent of such other land occupied by the
building and the land appurtenant thereto
shall also be taken into account in calculat-
ing the extent of vacant land held by such
person.
4(11) - For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that nothing in sub-sections (5),
(6), (7), (9) and (10) shall be construed as
empowering the competent authority to declare
any land referred to in sub-clause (ii) or
sub-clause (iii) of clause (q) of section 2 as
excess vacant land under this Chapter."
To begin with "vacant land" as per the definition given
in clause (q) of Section 2 means land as such, not being
land mainly used for the put-
510
pose of agriculture, but situated in an urban agglomeration.
"Vacant Land", however, does not include, as per the defini-
tion, land of three categories. The first category is land
on which construction of a building is not permissible under
the building regulations in force in the area in which such
land is situated. But this is a category with which we are
not concerned in the instant case. Johnson’s case (supra) is
of this category. The second category is of land occupied by
any building in an area, where there are building regula-
tions, which has been constructed upon, or is under con-
struction on the appointed day, with the approval of the
appropriate authority, and the land appurtenant to such
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building. This means that if the building stood constructed
on the land prior to January 28, 1976, the land occupied
under the building is not vacant land. It also covers the
land on which any building was in the process of construc-
tion on January 28, 1976 with the approval of the appropri-
ate authority. That too is not "vacant land". Additionally,
the land appurtenant to these two kinds of buildings is also
not "vacant land". The third category likewise conditioned
is of land occupied by any building in an area where there
are no building regulations, which has been constructed
before January 28, 1976 or is in the process of construction
on such date, and the land appurtenant to these two kinds of
buildings.
The aforesaid three categories of lands would otherwise
be "vacant land" but for the definitional exclusion. The
specific non-inclusion of these three categories of land is
by itself an integral part of the definitional and function-
al sphere. The question that arises what happens to lands
over which buildings are commenced after the appointed day
and the building progresses to complete thereafter. On the
appointed day, these lands were vacant lands, but not so
thereafter because of the surface change. Here the skill of
the draftsman and the wisdom of the legislature comes to the
fore in cognizing and filling up the gap period and covering
it up in the scheme of sub-section (9) of Section 4. The
visible contrast between "vacant land" and "any other land"
held by a person on which there is a building with a dwell-
ing unit therein becomes prominent. The said "any other
land" is reckoned and brought at par with the "vacant land"
for the purpose of calculating the final extent of vacant
land. It seems to us that the expression "vacant land" in
the first portion of the provision connotes land minus land
under buildings constructed or in the process of construc-
tion before and on the appointed day, and the expression
"vacant land" in the latter portion of the provision con-
notes the sum total of "vacant land" of the first order and
distinctly the "other land" on which is a building with a
dwelling unit therein of which construction commenced after
the appointed day, and the land appurtenant thereto. Such an
interpretation is required by the conext
511
as otherwise the concept of the appointed day and the gap
period would be rendered otiose. The legislature cannot be
accused to have indulged in trickery or futility in giving
something with one hand and taking it away with the other.
"Any other land"in the sequence would thus mean any other
built-upon land except the one excluded from the expression
"vacant land" on account of it being occupied by a building
which stood constructed, or was in the process of construc-
tion, on the appointed day.
Such interpretation of ours finds support from Section 5
of the Act which pursues and does not leave alone transfer
of vacant land in the gap period. It provides as follows:
"5. TRANSFER OF VACANT LAND - (1) In any State
to which this Act applies in the first in-
stance, where any person who had held vacant
land in excess of the ceiling limit at any
time during the period commencing on the
appointed day and ending with the commencement
of this Act, has transferred such land or part
thereof by way of sale, mortgage, gift, lease
or otherwise, the extent of the land so trans-
ferred shall also be taken into account in
calculating the extent of vacant land held by
such person and the excess vacant land in
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relation to such person shall, for the pur-
poses of this Chapter, be selected out of the
vacant land held by him after such transfer
and in case the entire excess vacant land
cannot be so selected, the balance, or, where
no vacant land is held by him after the trans-
fer, the entire excess vacant land, shall be
selected out of the vacant land held by the
transferee:
Provided that where such person has trans-
ferred his vacant land to more than one per-
son, the balance, or, as the case may be, the
entire excess vacant land aforesaid, shall be
selected out of the vacant land held by each
of the transferees in the same proportion as
the area of the vacant land transferred to him
bears to the total area of the land trans-
ferred to all the transferees.
(2) Where any excess vacant land is selected
out of the vacant land transferred under sub-
section (1), the transfer of the excess vacant
land so selected shah be deemed to be null and
void.
(3) In any State to which this Act applies in
the first instance and in any State which
adopts this Act under clause (1) of Article
252 of the Constitution, no person holding
vacant land
512
in excess of the ceiling limit immediately
before the commencement of this Act shall
transfer any such land or part thereof by way
of sale, mortgage, gift, lease or otherwise
until he has furnished a statement under
Section 6 and a notification regarding the
excess vacant land held by him has been pub-
lished under sub-section (1.) of Section 10;
and any such transfer made in contravention of
this provision shall be deemed to be null and
void." [Underlining ours]. The underlining is
reflective of the scheme of the Act in as much
as transfers of vacant land within the gap
period are ignorable, and likewise, in our
view, vacant land brought under construction
of building by a person within the gap period
is also ignorable for the purposes of calcu-
lating the extent of vacant land, so that the
provisions of law are not defeated by human
ingenuity.
At this juncture, sub-section (11) of Section 4 may be
noticed. It provides removal of doubts declaring. inter
alia, that nothing in sub-section (9) shall be construed as
empowering the competent authority to declare any land
referred to in sub-clause (ii) or sub-clause (iii) of clause
(q) of Section 2 as excess vacant land under this Chapter.
Though this provision is not happily worded, yet when mean-
ingfully construed in the context, it means that a building
which gets excluded by virtue of the definition of "vacant
land" gets clothed with the protective cloak for not being
reckoned again as any other land, over which there is a
building with a dwelling unit therein. Sub-section (11) of
Section 4 means to convey that what is not vacant land under
sub-clauses (ii) and (iii) of clause (q) of Section 2 cannot
go to add up as "vacant land" under sub-section (9) of
Section 4 by descriptive overlapping. If we wipe out the
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distinction of "vacant land" and "any other land" as demon-
strated in sub-section (9) of section 4, we strangulate and
destroy the spirit and life-blood of the "appointed day" and
the gap period. We would loathe giving such a construction
and would rather opt for a construction which carries out
the objectives of the Act, primary of which is to fix a
ceiling limit on the holding of vacant lands, conditioned as
they are on the appointed day, and as held on the date of
the commencement of the Act.
It would be worthwhile at this stage to take note of the
expression "land appurtenant" as defined in Section 2(g).
When related to any building in an area where there are
building regulations, as well as in an area where there are
no building regulations, the additional extent as permitted
is based on the principle of contiguity. The expression
applies to buildings constructed before the "appointed day"
as well as to buildings, construction of which commenced
before the "appointed day", and was in progress on that day.
It, no doubt, applies to buildings, constructed thereafter
too.
513
When we import this understanding to sub-section (9) of
Section 4, two different results discernably follow, based
on the commencement of the construction. If the construction
of a building with a dwelling unit therein had begun after
the appointed day, then it is all the same "any other land"
to be reckoned for calculating the extent of vacant land
held by a person. And if the construction of a building with
a dwelling unit therein on land had been completed or was in
progress by and on the appointee day, then is not "any’
other land" to be reckoned for calculating the extent of
vacant land held by a person. This is the interpretation
which commends to us of sub-section (9) of Section 4 as also
of sub-section (11) of Section 4 and the definitive expres-
sions used therein as explained and highlighted earlier.
Applying that interpretation on the facts found by the High
Court we hold that the built-up property, which in any event
had been built-up prior to the commencement of the Act, and
it is nobody’s case that construction thereof had begun
after the "appointed day", is outside the purview of "vacant
land". If that is excluded from being reckoned towards
calculating the extent of vacant land held by the predeces-
sor-in- interest of the appellant, the vacant land in the
vacant property cannot be declared excess for that is within
the permissible limits. Even if no land is left as land
appurtenant to the built-up area, then 93.56 sq. mtrs, the
remainder plus 339.65 sq. mtrs, of the unbuilt-property
would total up to the figure less than 500 sq. mtrs.; again
within the permissible limit. Therefore, interpretation to
the contrary of the dealt with provisions by the Division
Bench of the High Court, bereft as it is of the concept of
the appointed day and the gap period, would have to give
way, meriting the acceptance of this appeal and setting
aside of the judgment of the Division Bench of the High
Court by issuing the necessary writ, direction and order so
as to quash the entire proceedings towards declaring excess
land in the hands of the appellant and her predecessor-in-
title. We order accordingly. The interpretation we have put
to the provisions pertinently relate to sub-clause (ii) and
(iii) of clause (q) of Section 2. This interpretation in
express terms cannot apply to sub-clause (i) of clause (q)
of Section 2. Johnson’s case (supra) as said before, is a
case under sub-clause (i) of clause (q) of Section 2. In the
instant case, there appears to be no occasion to test its
correctness or even to dilate upon the judgments of the High
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Courts reported in AIR 1981 Madhya Pradesh 17, AIR 1984
Bombay 122 and AIR 1987 Allahabad 272, cited at the bar.
As a result, this appeal is allowed. The appellant shall
have her costs throughout.
T.N.A. Appeal
allowed.
514