Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
N.D.M.C.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATESMAN LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT24/10/1989
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATACHALLIAH, M.N. (J)
MISRA RANGNATH
CITATION:
1990 AIR 383 1989 SCR Supl. (1) 591
1989 SCC Supl. (2) 547 JT 1989 (4) 207
1989 SCALE (2)877
ACT:
Punjab Municipal Act, 1911: Sections 193(3), Building Bye-
Laws for Union Territory of Delhi, 1983: Bye-Laws 2.27,
16.4.8 and 16.4.8.1--Fire Safety Measures--"Refuge
Areas"--Requirement of Bye-Laws--Not inflexible--The words
"in any other manner"--Do not envisage a totally different
idea of the location of "Refuge Areas"-Suggest some feasible
alternative to the technical design of the construction of
the "Refuge Area"--Purpose of Refuge Area explained.
Reduction in the extent of "Refuge-Area"--Permissibility
of-Building plan--Fire Safety Measures--Clearance given by
Chief Fire Officer--Whether conclusive and binding on the
Corporation-Whether Corporation can examine the question
independently.
"External-wall"--Provision intended to promote public
safety, health and well-being--Refuge Area to be provided on
the "external-wall"--Building plan providing refuge area
abutting into an inner vacant space--Whether satisfies
requirement.
National Building Code of India, 1983: Part IV- Pre-
scriptions for "Fire Precaution"--Envisage certain broad
minimal assurances for fire-safety--Better and more reliable
measures ought not to be excluded.
Delhi Development Act, 1957: Section 9(2) Zonal Develop-
ment Plan--Zone D-1 (Connaught Place Area) Building
Plan--Provision for "Podium/Pedestrian Walk-way’ ’--Feasi-
bility and necessity of.
Delhi Urban Art Commission Act, 1973: Section 12: ’Buil-
ding operations’/’Development proposals’--Approval by
local body-Reference to Urban Arts Commission for scrutiny.
Constitution of India, 1950: Article 136--Appeal--Rais-
ing new issues--Supreme Court can consider if matters are of
general public importance.
592
HEADNOTE:
The respondent company obtained sanction of a building
plan from the-New Delhi Municipal Committee for the con-
struction of a building on a plot held by it on lease. After
incorporating certain changes, the respondent company sub-
mitted a revised plan for sanction of the New Delhi Munici-
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pal Committee, but the same was rejected by an order Dated
18.12.1987.
A rectified plan was thereafter submitted by the re-
spondent to the New Delhi Municipal Committee, for necessary
sanction, but as no orders were received, the respondent
filed a writ petition in High Court seeking a direction to
the New Delhi Municipal Committee to deal with the same for
grant of necessary sanction.
During the pendency of the aforesaid writ proceedings
the Delhi Urban Art Commission approved the plans as re-
quired under Section 12 of the Delhi Urban Art Commission
Act, 1973. The Chief Fire Officer also gave clearance to the
building plans in relation to the Fire Safety Precautions.
The High Court allowed the Writ Petition by an Order
dated 28.4.1989 holding that inspite of the clearance grant-
ed by the Urban Art Commission and the Chief Fire Officer,
New Delhi Municipal Committee’s disinclination to accord the
sanction was unjustified, and directed the New Delhi Munici-
pal Committee to convey the formal sanction in respect of
the building plans.
In appeal to this Court, it was contended on behalf of
the New Delhi Municipal Committee, that (i) in the matter of
fire safety requirements, the building plans were not in
accordance with Building Bye-Laws for the Union Territory of
Delhi, 1983; (ii) The clearance given by the Chief Fire
Officer is not binding on the New Delhi Municipal Committee
which can examine the question independently of such clear-
ance and (iii) the proposed building plan does not provide
for a ’Podium"/"Pedestrian Walk-way" as required under the
approved Zonal Development Plan under Sec. 9(2) of the Delhi
Development Act, 1957.
Setting aside the High Court Order dated April 28, 1989,
this Court,
HELD: 1. The requirements of Bye-Laws 16.4.8 arc not
inflexible and in appropriate cases where the plans and
designs incorporate fire safety measures which, in judgment
of the Corporation are
593
considered to provide for the safety in a measure better
than those envisaged by the bye-laws 16.4.8 the Corporation
would not be precluded from accepting them i.e. if a build-
ing-design incorporate fire safety measures in a measure
promoting fire safety precautions far better than those
suggested by the Bye-laws they should not fetter the hands
of the licencing authority to accept them. [609H; 610A,
609C]
1.1 Whether the plans submitted by Respondent distribut-
ing Refuge-Area in each floor provide such a better and more
reliable fire safety measures is a matter for the decision
of the Corporation. [610A]
1.2 It is, of course, wise in the interests of uniformi-
ty of administration of these Bye-laws and of elimination of
possible complaints of’ partisanship, that the Corporation
should insist upon adherence to the requirements of the
Bye-law 16.4.8 on its own strict terms. That should not,
however, denude the power of the Corporation to accept
designs which, in its judgment offer and incorporate fire
safety precautions of higher measure. [608H: 609A]
1.3 When fast and sweeping changes are overtaking the
fundamental ideas of building design and construction and
new concepts of building material emerging, it would be
unrealistic to impute rigidity to provisions essentially
intended to promote safety in building designs. [609A]
2. The clearance from the Chief Fire Officer envisaged
by Bye-law 17.1 is an additional condition and not a limita-
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tion on the power of the Corporation to satisfy itself that
the building plans provide for adequate fire safety precau-
tion in accordance with its bye-laws or in a better measure.
The clearance by the Chief Fire Officer, which is expected
to involve and follow a technical assessment and evaluation,
obliges the Corporation to give due weight to it but, having
regard to the scheme and language of the bye-laws the deci-
sion of the Chief Fire Officer is not binding on the Corpo-
ration. [609E]
2.1 The clearance of the plans by the Chief Fire Offi-
cer would not render it obligatory on the part of the Corpo-
ration ipso facto to treat the plans as necessarily comply-
ing with the requirements of relevant bye-laws. While the
clearance by the Chief Fire Officer is an indispensable
condition for eligibility for sanction, however, such clear-
ance, by itself, is not conclusive of the matter nor binding
on the Corporation which is entitled to examine the question
independently of such clearance from the Chief Fire Officer.
[609G; 610B]
594
3. Bye-law 16.4.8.1 requires that Refuge-Areas shall be
provided on the "external Walls" by means of cantilever
projections or "in any other manner". The words "in any
other manner" in Bye-law 16.4.8.1 are not intended to envis-
age a totally different idea of the location of Refuge
Areas, but, prima facie, intended to suggest some feasible
alternative to the technical design of the construction of
the Refuge Area--whether it should be a cantilever projec-
tion or designed in some other way. The purpose of Refuge
Areas include that in the event of an out-break of fire in
the building, persons exposed to the hazard should be able
to have immediate access to a place of safety which by its
access to fresh air insulates them from heat and smoke and
further that those persons could conveniently be extricated
and rescued to safety by rescue operations. Therefore,
"Refuge Areas" must be located on walls which open into
vacant space from which rescue operations are possible.
[610C, 611B, 610D-G]
3.1 The word "external wall" in bye-law 16.4.8.1 which
is a provision intended to promote public safety, health and
well being must receive a purposive construction which
promotes those objects and purposes. Having regard to the
very purpose of providing for Refuge Areas the expression
"external wall" must be held to be one which abuts a vacant
space to which fighting and rescue equipment can have access
and from which rescue operations are feasible. [610D; 610F]
3.2 In the instant case, the Refuge Areas are provided
on the wails that open into an inner vacant space. Refuge-
Area located on a wail though abutting an inner vacant space
would not, by itself, promote the object if the vacant space
is such that no rescue operations are possible to be con-
ducted therefrom. If the fire fighting and rescue equipment
cannot have access to such inner vacant space, then, in the
context of the specific objectives of bye-law 16.4.8.1 the
wail abutting such inner vacant space would not be an
"external wall" for the purpose of the said bye-law. The
Corporation should decide this question and examine whether
such rescue operations are feasible from the inner circular
vacant space. This is an exercise individual to each case
and to be judged on case to case basis. [610C; E, H; 611A]
4. Though the Zonal Development Plans envisaged a raised
pedestrian walk-way on either side of Barakhamba Road and
the provision for podia connecting the building with the
walk-way were accepted and an appropriate notification
issued way back in 1966, no steps appear to have been taken
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to give effect to them in a uniform manner. In fact several
authorities including a Committee constituted by the Lt.
Gover-
595
nor of Delhi in 1983, and the Chief Fire Officer, have
advised against the implementation of the proposal. In such
circumstances insistence to have such a pedestrian walk-way
for the building, if such walk-ways do not already obtain in
other buildings on the Road, requires reconsideration.
Moreover, the insistence for provision of such a walk-way in
an individual case without the integration and continuation
of the walk-way along the whole of the road, would indeed,
be purposeless. [611G-H; 612A-B]
[Respondent to effect such rectifications to ’the plans
in regard to the Refuge Area as may be necessary, the New
Delhi Municipal Committee to consider and decide the ques-
tion of according sanction to the plans without insisting
upon any fresh clearance from Delhi Urban Arts Commission or
the Chief Fire Officer. Appeal to be kept pending and be
taken for final disposal after the submission of the report
from New Delhi Municipal Committee]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 4447 of
1989.
From the Judgment and Order dated 28.4. 1989 of the
Delhi High Court in C.W.P. No. 3090 of 1987.
Kapil Sibal, Manoj Prasad and Dalveer Bhandari for the
Appellant.
F.S. Nariman, Soli J. Sorabjee, H.N. Salve and K.J. John
for the Respondents.
The following Order of the Court was delivered by
VENKATACHALIAH, J. The New Delhi Municipal Committee
(NDMC) seeks special leave to appeal to this court from the
order dated 28.4. 1989, of the High Court of Delhi in Civil
Writ Petition 3090 of 1987. In the writ petition, Statsman
Ltd., and its Managing Director, Respondents 1 and 2 respec-
tively herein, sought to impugn the decision of the NDMC
dated 18.2. 1987, declining to sanction the Revised-Plans
for the construction of "Statesman-House"--a high-rise
building on plot No. 148, Barakhamba Road New Delhi, of
which the first respondent is the lessee. The High Court
allowed the writ-petition and directed the NDMC to convey
its formal sanction of the building plans on or before the
5th day of May, 1989.
The NDMC assails the decision of the High Court on grounds,
596
principally, that the plans for the multi-storeyed high-rise
building, as proposed by Statesman Ltd., did not, in the
matter of the fire-safety requirements, accord with the
mandatory requirements of the Statutory Building Bye-laws
promulgated under the Punjab Municipal Act 1911, in relation
to the Union territory of Delhi and that the proposed build-
ing did not also provide for a "podium/pedestrian walk-way"
made mandatory by the Zonal Development Plan for Zone D-1
(viz. Connaught Place Area) approved by the Central Govern-
ment on 30th April 1966 in No. 21023(7)66 UD under Section
9(2) of the Delhi Development Act 1957.
We have heard Sri Kapil Sibal learned Senior Advocate
for the NDMC and Sri Nariman and Sri Soli J. Sorabjee
learned Senior Advocate for the Statesman Ltd and its Manag-
ing Director. Special Leave is granted.
2. Respondent No. 1, a publisher of Newspapers, holds a
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lease in perpetuity from Government of the plot No. 148,
Barakhamba Road, New Delhi. In the year 1980 Respondent No.
1 sought for, and obtained, permission from the Land Devel-
opment Officer, to erect a high-rise building of an area of
1,62,000 square feet and paid Rs.63,40,918 as betterment
levy. On 4.5.1982 it applied for, and on 29.8. 1980 ob-
tained, sanction from the NDMC of its building-plans, valid
for 2 years. The sanction was revalidated for a further
period of two years.
In June 1985, however, there was, it would appear,
prohibition on high-rise structures. But this prohibition,
in relation to Connaught Place area, was lifted on 18.7.
1986. On 29.12. 1986 Respondent No. 1 submitted Revised-
plans incorporating therein substantial changes in the plans
necessitated, as it was claimed, by the changing require-
ments of printing-technology and the plans as earlier sanc-
tioned did not meet these altered requirements. The new-
building, as envisaged by the revised-plans, would accommo-
date the printery of the Respondent 1, its offices and other
offices and business accommodation. On 7.1. 1987 the appel-
lant forwarded the Revised-plans to the Delhi Urban Art
Commission (DUAC) in compliance with the requirements of
Section 12 of the Delhi Urban Art Commission Act 1973 which
envisages that, notwithstanding anything contained in any
other law for the time being in force, every local body
shall, before according approval in respect of any "building
operations" or "development proposals" refer the same to the
DUAC for its scrutiny. Section 12 further provides that the
decision of the DUAC in that behalf shall be binding on such
local
597
body. The DUAC did not promptly scrutinise the plans but
engaged itself in some correspondence with the NDMC as also
with the Ministry of Urban Development, Government of India,
seeking what it referred to as the "requisite clarifica-
tions", "clear cut finalised policy" and "guidelines" for it
to be able to process the plans.
3. However, by communication dated 18.2. 1987, the NDMC
in exercise of power under Section 193(3) of the Punjab
Municipal Act, 1911, rejected the plans, assigning 28 rea-
sons for the rejection. On 14.5. 1987, the Architect of
First-Respondent claiming to have subsequently complied with
or clarified the points on which the rejection was based,
resubmitted the plans. On 26.5. 1987, the Architects wrote
to NDMC to reconsider its decision dated 18.2. 1987, in the
light of the rectifications effected. However, no positive
response having emanated from the NDMC Respondents 1 & 2, on
27.10.1987, filed the Writ-petition in the High Court for an
appropriate order directing the DUAC and the NDMC to "forth-
with deal with the application for grant of sanction".
Sometime in March 1988, the Chief Fire Officer, Delhi
Fire Services, and the Deputy Commissioner of Police (Traf-
fic), New Delhi, were impleaded to the proceedings. During
the pendency of the proceedings in the High Court, the DUAC
which had earlier considered the plans to be ’conceptually
unsatisfactory’ took a decision to approve the plans. So did
the Chief Fire Officer who, by his communication dated
9.3.1988, gave clearance to the building-plans in relation
to the Fire-safety precautions. The High Court considered
the objection raised by the Deputy Commissioner of Police
(Traffic) as unrelated to the bye-laws as applicable to the
situation and held that the objection from that source
should not interdict the sanction of plans by the NDMC.
During the pendency of the proceedings, the High Court
required the parties to sort out their differences. On 9.12.
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1988, the High Court had occasion to say:
" ..... We have no doubt that the NDMC will
grant the final approval without wasting any
further time. In case the meeting of the
Building Plans Committee of NDMC is not sched-
uled to be held within two weeks, the NDMC
will so arrange that a special meeting is held
so that the matter is not delayed any further.
Case to be listed before Court for final
orders and disposal on February 3, 1989."
4. In the course of the order dated 28.4.1989 finally dis-
posing of
598
the writ-petition, the High Court after referring to what is
considered to be a co-operative attitude of the DUAC and
other authorities, however, had this to say of the NDMC:
"However, to our surprise on the
final date of arguments, that is, on 31.3.
1989 the NDMC changed its counsel and the
Standing Counsel for NDMC appeared instead of
Mr. H.P. Sharma, advocate who had been appear-
ing throughout ..... "
"But surprisingly NDMC was not willing to
take a decision and continued to raise frivo-
lous objections for reasons best known to it.
Inspite of the fact the clearance had been
granted by Urban Art Commission as also by all
other Authorities the sanction was not con-
veyed and was withheld for no reasons. This
attitude of NDMC is beyond our understanding.
Since I have come to the conclusion that no
objection remains from any Authority I am of
the opinion that non-sanction of the plans on
the part of the NDMC is absolutely unjustified
and cannot be supported by any reason whatso-
ever."
The High Court was persuaded to the view that NDMC’s
disinclination to accord sanction to the plan was unjusti-
fied; that whatever reservations it had had as to the ade-
quacy of the fire-safety measures, as envisaged in the
Building designs, were allayed by the Chief Fire Officer’s
clearance and held that, thereafter, there was no impediment
to the sanction. The High Curt, accordingly, directed the
NDMC:
" ..... to convey its formal sanction of the
building plans and release the same to the
petitioner Company on or before the 5th day of
May, 1989 ..... "
5. Before us, Appellant-NDMC has aired a serious griev-
ance both against the validity of the reasoning of and
conclusion reached by the High Court as also the manner of
the conduct of proceedings which were, according to the
appellant, initially more in the nature of efforts directed
towards the resolution of the dispute by mutual negotiation
than by adjudication, but acquired an adjudicative complex-
ion with such suddenness that appellant was denied a reason-
able opportunity of elaborating on the substantial issues,
of serious public importance pertaining, as they did, to a
vital area of fire-safety precautions in highrise buildings
as conceived in the Building Bye-laws. It is submitted
599
that the High Court failed to consider submissions of the
appellant on certain vital issues. In his affidavit dated
6.6. 1989, filed in this Court, Sri H.P. Sharma, learned
Advocate who appeared for the NDMC before the High Court
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stated:
" ..... Again, it is clear from the order
that the entire matter was being conducted in
a spirit of compromise which shows that in-
stead of adjudicating upon the issues in the
Writ Petition, parties to the petition were
required to resolve the matter amicably. On
March 31, 1989, Mr. S.D. Satpate, Chief Archi-
tect, NDMC and Mr. Karam Chand, Dy Architect,
NDMC were present in Court.
4. Counsel for NDMC informed to the
Court of the presence of the said persons who
were ready to assist the Court as certain
objections were still outstanding. However,
the Court did not ascertain from any of the
Officers if they had any objections. Conse-
quently, the Hon’ble Court was not informed of
the details of the said objections of the
NDMC. Instead, the Court issued Rule on the
same date and proceeded with the matter. I, as
counsel appearing on behalf of NDMC along with
Mr. Bikramjit Nayyar, Advocate requested the
Court that the NDMC wished. to file an Affida-
vit giving details of the outstanding objec-
tions. Time was sought to file the said affi-
davit. Counsel for NDMC also indicated that
the normal practice of the Court is to issue
Rule and thereafter fix the case for final
disposal giving an opportunity to the parties
to file additional affidavits, if any for the
disposal of the petition. However, the Court
declined the request and directed counsel for
NDMC to proceed with the hearing on that very
date. The matter was proceeded with and Judg-
ment was reserved on that date. During the
course of the hearing the standing counsel for
the NDMC raised the issue of the applicability
of Bye-law 16.4.8 of the applicable Building
Bye-laws of the NDMC and submitted that the
clearance of the Chief Fire Officer did not
prevent the NDMC from enforcing the applicable
bye-laws. Standing counsel for the NDMC also
submitted to the Court that the approval of
the DUAC was conditional. However, the Court
in the light of the statement of counsel for
the DUAC did not deal with the issue of the
applicability of Bye-law 16.4.8."
(Emphasis Supplied)
600
To similar purport and effect is the affidavit of Sri Sat-
pate the NDMC’s Chief Architect.
6. Before we examine the specific contentions raised in
the appeal, it is necessary to refer to certain basic fea-
tures of the proposed building in relation of its fire-
safety aspects. The eligibility of the proposed construction
for sanction except on the point of adequacy of "Refuge-
areas" in the requirement of a "pedestrian walk-way" and
"Podium" is not otherwise disputed.
The proposed "Statesman-House" envisaged by the plans is
a fifteen storey, 55.2 meter-high structure its High-rise
portion being a cylindrical structure with a hollow-core
open to sky. On each of the floors above the 4th floor,
commencing above the height of 15 meters, there is a 5 foot
wide circular passage on the inner-side of the circle over-
looking the central vacant area. These passages which are
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connected to the lift-areas, provide access to the accommo-
dation on the respective floors. Only an arc of the circular
passage in each of the floors is visible from and overlooks
the front of the building. Respondent No. 1 claimed that
these inner-circular passages answer the description and
serve the purpose, of "Refuge-areas" required to be provided
as fire-safety measures. In so designing, the Architects
seek to combine general-utility and "Refuge-areas". The
question is whether this architectural and design resource-
fulness, which enables Respondent 1 to claim these, other-
wise essentially functional and utility-areas, also as
’refuge-areas’ for fire-safety, really satisfies the re-
quirements of the Bye-laws.
7. We may now turn to the requirements of the Bye-laws
in this behalf. Fire-protection requirements, generally are
dealt with by bye-law 17.1 and 17.2 which provide:
"17.1 Buildings, shall be planned designed and
constructed to ensure fire safety and this
shall be done in accordance with part IV Fire
Protection of National Building Code of India,
unless otherwise specified in these bye-laws.
In the case of buildings (identified in Bye-
law No. 6.2.4.1), the building schemes shall
also be cleared by the Chief Fire Officer,
Delhi Fire Service"
"17.2 The additional provisions related to
fire protection of buildings more than 15m in
height and buildings identified in 6.2.4.1,
shall be as given in Appendix K."
601
The proposed building is over 15 meters in
height and attracts Bye-law 16.4.8 which,
inter alia, provides:
"Refuge Area--For all buildings exceeding 15 m
in height, refuge area shall be provided as
follows:
(a) For floors above 15m and upto 24m--one
refuge area on the floor immediately above
13m.
(b) For floor above 24m and upto 36m--one
refuge area on the floor immediately above
24m.
(c) For floor above 36m--one refuge area per
every five floors above 36m.
This Bye-law specifies the location, at various heights,, of
the "refuge-areas". The structural nature and basis of its
calculation of the extent of these "Refuge-areas" are dealt
with by Bye-law 16.4.8.1. which provides:
"Refuge area shall be provided on the external
walls as cantilever projections or in any
other manner (which will not be covered in
FAR) with a minimum area of 15 sq. mrs. and to
be calculated based on the population on each
floor at the rate of 1 sq. m. per person."
(Emphasis Supplied)
The expression "External Wall" is a defined
expression. Bye-law 2.27 says:
"An outer wall of a building not being a
partition wall even though adjoining to a wall
of another building and also means a wall
abutting on an interior open space of any
building."
In the plans, the disposition of the ’refuge-area’ is,
admittedly, not in strict accord with the prescription of
Bye-law 16.4.8 which requires the location of ’refuge-areas’
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for a group of floors as specified therein. The Bye-law does
not contemplate one for each floor as now provided in the
plans. The ’refuge-areas’ are not provided on the outer
"external" wall; but are on the wall abutting the inner
circular vacant space forming the floor of the hollow-care
of cylindrical structure. As the entrance is now designed
and conceived fire-fighting and rescue-
602
equipment cannot, it would appear, be carried into this
inner-area. But Respondent 1 claims that the walls on which
these refuge-areas are provided about the inner vacant space
and are eligible to be called ’External’ walls within the
meaning of Bye-law 2.27.
The NDMC by its communication dated 14.3.1989 to the
Chief Fire Officer expressed its reservations as to the
correctness and propriety of the clearance to the plans
accorded by him on 9.3. 1989. By his reply dated 30.3. 1989,
the Chief Fire Officer, in justification of the approval
which he gave stated:
"the consultants have proposed refuge area at
each floor above 15m level, which is consid-
ered to be more convenient and reliable be-
cause there is hardly any scope of smoke
logging due to centre core open to sky."
(Emphasis Supplied)
8. The contentions urged by Sri Sibal in
support of the appeal are:
(i) Bye-Law 16.4.8 prescribes that in respect
of all buildings exceeding 15 metres in height
there shall be provision for refuge areas at
specific locations for a specific group of
floors. The requirement is mandatory as it is
guided by the considerations of the need to
direct and concentrate rescue-operations at
particular, pre-fixed locations. The Bye-law
is binding on the Chief Fire Officer who is
not competent to relax the rigor of its pre-
scriptions.
(ii) The ’external’ walls spoken of by
Bye-law 16.4.8.1, though so defined in Bye-law
2.27 as to include a wall "abutting on an
interior open space of any building", however,
having regard to the purpose of the Bye-law
can only refer to an outer wall accessible to
the rescue-team. The definition is. as always,
subject to the context requiring a different
meaning. For purposes of Bye-law 16.4.87 an
"external" wall should be understood with
reference to an open area from which
rescue operations are possible.
In the present case the construction
of the Bye-law suggested by the respondent-
company would be justified only if fire fight-
ing and rescue operations could be conducted
from the inner open-space. In the present
case,
603
having regard to the lack of access to the
inner vacant space for fire-engines etc., the
proposition of Respondent- 1 is not even a
statable possibility.
(iii) The clearance from the Chief Fire Offi-
cer, Delhi Fire Service, envisaged in Bye-laws
17.1 is in addition to the requirements of
bye-laws 16.4.8. and 16.4.8.1. The said clear-
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ance is one of the conditions for eligibility
of the plan to be considered for accord of
sanction by the NDMC is not in substitution of
the requirement of compliance with the objec-
tive prescriptions of those bye-laws. The
primacy to the Chief Fire Officer’s implicit
in the approach of the High Court is erroneous
and virtually renders the clearance of the
Chief Fire Officer binding on the NDMC. It is
the NDMC and NDMC alone that can decide wheth-
er the plans satisfy the Bye-laws in any
particular case.
A reasonable construction bye-laws
6.2.4.1, 16.4.8., 16.4.8.1, 17.1 and
17.2 would detract from the validity of the
first respondent’s claim and establishes that
the clearance from the Chief Fire Officer is
one of the conditions and not the sole or
conclusive test of the adequacy of fire safety
measures in terms of the relevant Bye-laws.
(iv) The view of the Chief Fire Officer that
the design of the Refuge-areas in the plans is
"more convenient and reliable" is factually
and technically unsound as the very nature of
the cylindrical structure with a hollow-core
would promote a "stock" or chimney effect. The
Chief Fire Officer’s view is not final or
conclusive on the point and, at all events,
not binding on the NDMC.
(v) The construction of a Pedestrian walk-way
and Podium are mandatory not under the bye-
laws but from the requirements of a zonal plan
of zone D- 1 in which plot No. 148, Barakhamba
Road is located and that no relaxation of the
requirement would be permissible except on a
modification of the relevant Zonal Development
Control Plans.
The provision for "pedestrian walk-
way" and "podium" is, therefore, mandatory
under the Zonal Development Plan and that no
authority including the Chief Fire Officer
could compel an abandonment of those statutory
presumptions.
604
(vi) That in the manner in which the case
before the High Court proceeded the NDMC was
denied a reasonable and effective opportunity
of presenting its case. Considerations of
public safety underlying the stand of the NDMC
was not properly appreciated and the NDMC
should have been afforded an opportunity to
substantiate its valid objections to the
plans.
(vii) The grant of relief in the writ petition
in the form of a direction to the appellant to
sanction the plan was not permissible and
that, at best, the High Court could have
directed the appellant to reconsider the
question of according sanction to the plans in
the light of the High Court’s order.
9. Sri Nanman, for the respondent-company however,
submitted that the objection to the plans raised by the
appellant on the basis that the refuge-areas were not in
accordance with the Bye-laws was a classic after-thought on
the part of the Appellant. Bye-laws 16.4.8 and 16.4.8.1
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learned counsel urged, were merely prescriptive of certain
minimal standards of fire-safety precautions, it being
always open to the owner to build-into the designs better
and more satisfactory standards of fire-safety precautions
and that in the present case the Chief Fire Officer who was
a technical authority, had himself accepted the designs in
that behalf as better and more reliable. Learned counsel
urged that out of the 28 reasons put forward by the appel-
lant on 18.2. 1987 in support of the rejection of the plans,
not even one referred to its present insistence that the
refuge-areas should be built only at the levels suggested in
the Bye-law or that the refuge-area did not abut the "exter-
nal wall"- Shri Nariman further pointed out that in the
communication dated 18.2.1987 all that was sought to be
said, with reference to the refuge-areas in each floor, was
that the same had not been taken into account in the calcu-
lation of the F.A.R.
Shri Nariman said that bye-law 16.4.8 in its language
and content had been bodily lifted from the corresponding
prescriptions in the "National Building Code of India"
(1983), from the provisions of part IV relating to "Fire
Protection". The said Code itself indicated that the norms
in regard to fire-protection referred to therein were only
broad guide-lines and were not to be construed to prohibit
better arrangements. Shri Nariman referred to the following
excerpts from part IV of the said Code at para 0.2 and 0.7:
605
" ..... An indefinite combination
of variable is involved in the phenomenon of
fire, all of which cannot be quantified. The
requirements of this Code should, therefore,
be taken as a guide and an engineering design
approach should be adopted for ensuring a fire
safe design for buildings. It would also be
necessary for this purpose to associate quali-
fied and trained fire protection engineers
with the planning of buildings, so that ade-
quate fire protection measures could be incor-
porated in the building design fight from the
beginning."
(Emphasis Supplied)
"0.7. Nothing in this part of the
Code shall be construed to prohibit better
types of building construction, more exits or
otherwise safer conditions than the minimum
requirements specified in this part."
(Emphasis Supplied)
It was, accordingly, urged that the prescriptions in bye-law
16.4.8. and 16.4.8.1 were not inflexible and wherever more
liberal and better standards of fire precautions were incor-
porated in the designs, the bye-laws did not prevent such
better measures being adopted by the licencing authority. It
was further urged that the Chief Fire Officer was the au-
thority competent to decide questions whether the provisions
incorporated in the designs were better and more liberal and
that his decision in the matter ought to be conclusive and
binding on the licencing authority. In regard to the adequa-
cy and acceptability of fire safety measures in the build-
ing-design, it was urged, the bye-law, recognised and ac-
corded a primacy of place to the decision of the Chief Fire
Officer and that, indeed, para K-1 of Appendix-K ’read with
bye-law 17.2 recognised the importance of, and finality, to
the decision of the Chief Fire Officer. The said para K- 1
Appendix-K reads:
"K- 1 In addition to the provision
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of Part IV Fire Protection of National Build-
ing Code of India, the Chief Fire Officer,
Delhi Fire Service may insist on suitable
provisions in the building from fire safety
and fire fighting point of view depending on
the occupancy and height of buildings."
The decision of the Chief Fire Officer to accept the
distribution of refuge areas in each of the floors, it was
said, was referable to the general power of the Chief Fire
Officer to issue such directions. In the
606
present case, it was urged, the designs providing for refuge
areas in the ratio of one sq. metre per person on each floor
was considered by the Chief Fire Officer as a better and
more reliable fire safety measures than those envisaged by
the bye-laws and the Chief Fire Officer preferred to accept
them.
Shri Nariman sought to point out that in the Annexure B.
1 to the Affidavit dated 7.7.1989 of respondent No. 2 a list
of six buildings had been set-out respecting which the
sanctions granted by the NDMC indicated that the local body
had itself understood the prescriptions in the bye-laws to
be flexible and had further limited the extent of the Ref-
uge-Areas to 0.3 sq. metre per person as against 1 Sq. metre
per person set-out in bye-law 16.4.8.1.
10. As to the requirement of bye-law 16.4.8.1 that the
refuge area shall be provided on the "external walls" is
concerned, Shri Nariman relied upon the definition in Bye-
law 2.27 to say that a wall abutting an inner vacant space
is also an "external wall" and the acceptance of the cor-
rectness of this position was implicit in the clearance
given by the Chief Fire Officer. The words "in any other
manner" in Bye-law 16.4.8.1 it is urged, makes room for the
requisite flexibility.
11. In regard to the "pedestrian walk-way and "podium"
it was pointed out that the insistence upon these was again,
a glaring instance of the inexhaustible resourcefulness of
the appellant to thwart Respondent’s project. It was pointed
out that none of the 28 objections raised in the NDMC’s
communication dated 18.2.1987; nor the further objections
raised on 6.2.1989; nor, indeed, the objections raised by
NDMC on 14.3. 1989, to the clearance given by the Chief Fire
Officer--who, incidentally, had advised the deletion of
podium in view of the obstruction it would present the fire
brigade appliances,--had the NDMC raised the question of the
alleged infirmity in the plans for want of provision for the
walk-way and Podium. It was also pointed out that in none of
the counter-affidavits filed in the High Court nor in the
memorandum of Special Leave Petition; nor in the written
submissions filed before this Court had this question been
agitated by the NDMC. It was pointed out that the committee
constituted by the order No. 10(24) RN-83/731/7714-24 dated
13.6.1983 made by the Lt. Governor, Delhi, had in its report
of 5.2.1986 suggested the doing away with the proposal to
construct a raised pedestrian walk-way on either side of
Barakhamba Road as, in the view of the committee, the "head
clearance under this proposed walk-way will be such that
cars
607
will be able to pass under it, but fire/rescue appliances
will not be able to approach any where near the buildings
beyond the raised walkway." It was pointed out that the
committee was also of the opinion that these walk-ways, if
and when constructed, would nullify all fire safety measures
in the buildings on either side of the Barakhamba Road. Shri
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Nariman referred to the advice of the Chief Fire Officer
with regard to the present plans themselves that the walk-
way and the podium be dispensed with.
It was, therefore, urged that the insistence on the
construction of the pedestrian walk-way while being wholly
undesirable, was also a glaring instance of how by these
after-thoughts appellant made manifest its determination to
delay and defeat respondent’s project.
12. On the contentions urged, the points
that fall for consideration are:
(a) Whether Bye-law 16.4.8 as to the
disposition and location of the "Refuge Areas"
prescribes an inflexible, rigid standard and
whether the location and distribution of the
refuge areas in each floor is violative of the
Bye-law?
(b) If point (a) is held in the nega-
tive, whether the clearance given to the plan
by the Chief Fire Officer, on the view that
distribution of the refuge-areas in each floor
is a better and more reliable fire safety
measure is conclusive and binding on the NDMC.
In other words, is it open to the NDMC to
examine and decide the question independently
of the Chief Fire Officer’s clearance?
(c) Whether the Refuge Areas located on
the walls abutting the inner vacant area be
held to satisfy the requirements of Bye-law
16.4.8.1?
(d) Whether the extent of ’Refuge Area’
requires to be reduced from 1.0 sq. metre per
person to 0.3 sq. metre per person?
(e) Whether the NDMC is justified in
insisting upon the erection of "Pedestrian
Walk-way" and a "Podium" in front of the
proposed building?
13. Re: points (a) and (b): A number of affidavits and
counter-
608
affidavits are placed before us on the scope of the Bye-
laws. It is not necessary to examine all of them as the
matter is essentially one of construction of the provision
itself. The contents of Bye-laws 16.4.8 and 16.4.8.1 are
borrowed from Part IV dealing with "Fire Precaution" in the
National Building Code of India, 1983. The Code conceives of
these prescriptions as only broad guide lines. But the
Building Bye-laws in the present case which have drawn on
these provisions from the Code have, however, assimilated
them as part of the statutory prescriptions under the Bye-
laws. The NDMC says that once this is done the norms are no
longer directory but assume statutory import and become
mandatory.
In the infinite variety of ways in which the problem of
adequate fire safety measures to be incorporated in build-
ings present themselves, and having regard to the wide and
complex range of situational variations in the location,
character and design of buildings and their disposition in
relation to the other factors influencing the evaluation of
such safety-measures, a view favoring flexibility of ap-
proach ought to commend itself. The National Building Code
of India, from which the substance of the Bye-laws are
drawn, indicates that these are concerned with indicating
certain broad minimal assurances for fire-safety and that
better and more reliable measures ought not to be excluded.
We are not, however, impressed by the submission that
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the six instances cited in Annexure B- 1 to Affidavit dated
7.7.1989 of respondent No. 2 are really instances demon-
strating departure, from the present stand of the appellant.
indeed, appellant points out that out of the six buildings
referred to in Annexure B-1, only two i.e. No. 23, Barakham-
ba Road and DLF Plaza, 21-22, Narendra Place, were dealt
with by the NDMC and that the rest were dealt with by the
D.D.A. The affidavit of Shri Karamchand, Architect, NDMC
overs that no sanction was given in respect of No. 23,
Barakhamba Road and that no departure from Bye-laws 16.4.8,
as understood by the NDMC, was involved in the case of the
DLF Plaza building. The explanation offered is, in our
opinion, acceptable and, nothing much turns upon the cases
referred to in Annexure B- 1.
14. But that is not to say that the rigid interpretation
sought to be placed by the appellant on the bye-law 16.4.8
and 16.4.8.1 is justified. It is, of course, wise in the
interest of uniformity of administration of these Bye-laws
and of elimination of possible complaints of partisanship,
that the NDMC should insist upon adherence to the require-
ments of the Bye-law 16.4.8 on its own strict terms. That
609
should not, however, denude the power of the appellant to
accept designs which, in the judgment of the appellant,
offer and incorporate fire safety precautions of higher
measure. When fast and sweeping changes are overtaking the
fundamental ideas of building design and construction and
new concepts of building-material are emerging, it would be
unrealistic to impute regidity to provisions essentially’
intended to promote safety in building designs. As suggested
in the National Building Code Bye-law, provisions such as
Bye-law 16.4.8 envisage certain minimal safety standards
compliance with which should, generally, be insisted in
order that there be uniformity and equal treatment and an
elimination of imputations of favoritism and arbitrariness.
If a building-design incorporates fire safety measures in a
measure promoting fire safety precautions far better than
those suggested by the Bye-laws, they should not fetter the
hands of the licensing authority to accept them. Under the
relevant statute and the Bylaws, the authority to grant or
refuse the licence is the NDMC. It has the power to decide
whether any proposals are an improvement on the prescrip-
tions contained in the Bye-laws--which, indeed, is a matter
of some complexity and, in conceivable cases, one calling
for expertise-is the NDMC itself. From the way the National
Building Code, from which the provision is borrowed, has
treated such provisions, it is not unreasonable to presume
that the requirements were incorporated in the Bye-laws with
a similar approach as to their import. The clearance from
the Chief Fire Officer envisaged by Bye-law 17.1 is an
additional condition and not a limitation on the power of
the NDMC to satisfy itself that the building plans provide
for adequate fire safety precaution in accordance with its
bye-laws or in a better measure. The clearance by the Chief
Fire Officer, which is expected to involve and follow a
technical assessment and evaluation, obliges the NDMC to
give due weight to it but, having regard to the scheme and
language of the Bye-laws the decision of the Chief Fire
Officer is not binding on the NDMC. We accept the submis-
sions of Shri Sibal that clearance of the plans by the Chief
Fire Officer would not render it obligatory on the part of
the NDMC ipso facto to treat the plans as necessarily com-
plying with the requirements of relevant Bye-laws. While the
clearance by the Chief Fire Officer is an indispensable
condition for eligibility for sanction, however, such clear-
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ance, by itself, is not conclusive of the matter nor binding
on the NDMC.
15. On the material placed before us we are inclined to
hold on points (a) and (b) that the requirements of Bye-laws
16.4.8 are not inflexible and that in appropriate cases,
where the plans and designs incorporate fire safety measures
which, in judgment of the NDMC, are considered to provide
for the safety in a measure better than those
610
envisaged by the Bye-laws 16.4.8, the NDMC would not be
precluded from accepting them. Whether the plans submitted
by Respondent 1 distributing ’Refuge-Areas’ in each floor
provide such a better and more reliable fire safety measure
is a matter for the decision of the NDMC. We also hold that
the clearance from the Chief Fire Officer in this behalf
though entitled to weight, would not be binding on the NDMC
which can and is entitled to examine the question independ-
ently of such clearance from the Chief Fire Officer.
16. Re: point (c): Bye-law 16.4.8.1 requires that Ref-
uge-Areas shall be provided on the "external walls" by means
of cantilever projections or "in any other manner". In the
present-case the Refuge Areas are provided on the walls that
open into an inner vacant space. They are provided on walls
which respondents say are "external walls" having regard to
the definition of that expression in Bye-law 2.27. The
definition is not conclusive; but is subject to the context
indicating a contrary import. The purposes of refuge areas
include that in the event of an out-break of fire in the
building, persons exposed to the hazard should be able to
have immediate access to a place of safety which by its
access to fresh air insulates them from heat and smoke and
further that those persons could conveniently be extricated
and rescued to safety by rescue-operations. The word "exter-
nal wall" in Bye-law 16.4.8.1 which is a provision intended
to promote public safety, health and well-being must receive
a purposive construction which promotes those objects and
purposes. Refuge-area located on a wall though abutting an
inner vacant space would not, by itself, promote the object
if the vacant space is such that no rescue operations are
possible to be conducted therefrom. If the fire fighting and
rescue equipment cannot have access to such inner vacant
space, then, in the context of the specific objectives of
bye-laws 16.4.8.1, the wall abutting such inner vacant space
would not be an "external" wall for purposes of the said
bye-law. Having regard to the very purpose of providing for
"Refuge-Areas" intended, as it is, to secure protection to
persons in the event of an out-break of fire in a high-rise
building, the expression "external wall" must be held to be
one which abuts a vacant space to which fighting and rescue
equipment can have access and from which rescue-operations
are feasible. We find it difficult to accept the submissions
of Sri Nariman based purely on the definition in Bye-law
2.27. The definition is subject to the context suggesting or
requiring a different meaning. The context here does suggest
such a different import. Having regard to purpose Bye-law
16.4.8.1 is intended to serve "Refuge-Areas" must be located
on walls which open into vacant space from which rescue
operations are possible. NDMC should decide this question
and examine whether such rescue
611
operations are feasible from the inner circular vacant
space. This is an exercise individual to each case and to be
judged on case to case basis. The words ’in any other man-
ner’ in Bye-law 16.4.8.1 are not intended to envisage a
totally different idea of the location of ’Refuge Areas’
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but, prima facie, intended to suggest some feasible alterna-
tive to the technical design of the construction of the
Refuge-Area--Whether it should be a cantilever projection or
designed in some other way. Point (c) is held and answered
accordingly.
17. Re: point (d): One of the contentions raised by Sri
Nariman was that the insistence of 1 sq. m. per person for
calculating the extent of the Refuge Areas is discriminatory
as the NDMC had reduced the requirement only to 0.3 sq. m.
per person in many other similar highrise buildings.
In the course of the counter-affidavit filed by Sri
Karam Chand, Architect of NDMC, this claim that the extent
of refuge area could be calculated at 0.3 sq. metre per
person instead of 1.0 sq. metre per person is not disputed.
Indeed, it is stated in the said affidavit:
" ..... The NDMC does not have any objection
to the provision of 1.0 sq. metre per person
as required by by-law 16.4.8.1. In the event
the Statesman Limited wish to provide only 0.3
sq. metre per person in accordance with the
resolution of August 4, 1988, the NDMC would
have no objection to the same and the States-
man Limited in this regard be directed to
amend their building plans in accordance with
their desires ..... "
Respondents are therefore at liberty to limit the Ref-
uge-Areas to 0.3 sq. metre per person as against 1.0 sq.
metre per person.
18. Re: point (d): This relates to the insistence on
construction of a "pedestrian walk-way" and a "podium"
parallel to Barakhamba Road in front of the proposed build-
ing. Though the zonal development plans envisaging a raised
pedestrian walk-way on either side of Barakhamba Road and
the provision for podia connecting the building with the
walk-way were accepted and an appropriate notification
issued way back in 1966, no steps appear to have been taken
to give effect to them in a uniform manner. In the very
nature of the concept of a pedestrian walk-way on either
side of the road, the insistence for provision of such a
walk-way in an individual case without the integration and
continuation of the walk-way along the whole of the road,
612
would indeed, be purposeless. Several authorities, including
a committee constituted by the Lt. Governor of Delhi in 1983
and the Chief Fire Officer, have advised against the imple-
mentation of the proposal. In the instant case the Chief
Fire Officer has, it is not disputed, expressly opined
against the desirability of such a ’walk-way’. The NDMC has
to bestow serious re-consideration on its insistence to have
such a pedestrian walk-way for the building, if such walk-
ways do not already obtain in other buildings on the Road.
The only way in which, perhaps, the zonal developmental
requirements in this behalf and the difficulties and prob-
lems inherent in the insistence upon construction of such
pedestrian walk-way in an isolated particular case, could be
reconciled is to direct the NDMC, in the event of its ap-
proving the plans otherwise, to keep the requirement of the
pedestrian walk-way and the podium in abeyance for the
present, subject to a written-undertaking to be lodged with
it by the respondent 1 and 2 to the effect that whenever the
policy to implement the Zonal Developmental requirements in
this behalf is finally decided upon, the respondent 1 and 2
would undertake to put-up such a pedestrian walk-way and
Podium. The NDMC also, if it so chose, could secure the
requisite financial guarantees for the construction of such
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a pedestrian walk-way by the NDMC itself at the expense of
the respondent if Respondent 1 and 2 fail to do so whenever
so required. This course would, while ensuring the prospect
of compliance with the Zonal Development prescriptions, if
they are decided to be put into effect, also allay the
apprehension of Respondent 1 and 2 that Governmental author-
ities are dealing with the Statesman’s project with ’an evil
eye and an uneven hand. Point (d) is answered accordingly.
19. We might advert here to the grievance of Respondent
1 and 2 that the NDMC did not raise, at the appropriate
stage, any specific objections to the plans on the ground
that either they were not in conformity with Bye-law 16.4.8
or 16.4.8.1 or that the plans were .defective for want of
pedestrian walk-way. Objection based on bye-law 16.4.8.1, it
was urged, was never in mind of the NDMC. These objections,
it was urged, were developed from stage to stage leaving the
inference inescapable that the NDMC was pre-determined to
decline the sanction for the ’Statesman-House’ on one ground
or another.
We are afraid, the way NDMC has developed its stance
from time to time incurs and perhaps justifies this griev-
ance. Indeed, at no stage of the proceedings before the High
Court, or even in important
613
communications bearing on the question of the sanction, did
the NDMC refer to the specific objection based on the lacuna
that Refuge Areas were not located on the "external" walls,
as interpreted by the NDMC and the lack of a provision for
the pedestrian walk-way. Sri Nariman urged that we should
not permit the NDMC to raise these belated and laboured
objections.
We have considered these submissions. We have proceeded
to consider the contentions of the NDMC even on these points
on the merits in view of the fact that they are matters of
some general public importance, though we are not unmindful
that the NDMC has not been business-like in the way it has
dealt with the question from time to time.
20. It is for this reason that though in view of the
findings recorded on the various contentions, the order
dated 24.4. 1989 of the High Court requires to be and is
hereby set aside, however, we keep this appeal pending for
such final orders and directions as may become necessary to
be issued. In the meanwhile. We permit Respondent 1 and 2 to
effect such rectifications to the plans in regard to the
Refuge Area as may be necessary in the light of the observa-
tions in this order. The refuge-areas could be located in
each of the floors separately, provided that it could be
shown to the satisfaction of the NDMC that such a measure
would better promote fire safety in the building and, pro-
vided further, that they are located on external walls "by
cantilever projection or in any other manner" abutting a
vacant space from which rescue operations are rendered
possible. If such rectifications to the plans are made and
submitted within 3 weeks from today, the NDMC will consider
and decide the question of according sanction to the plans
in the light of the observations in this order and--without
insisting upon any fresh clearance from DUAC or the Chief
Fire Officer-within 3 weeks thereafter and report to this
Court the decision taken upon such re-construction.
This appeal shall be kept pending and be taken-up for
final disposal after the submission of the report from the
NDMC in this behalf. If respondents 1 and 2 are aggrieved by
such fresh decision of the NDMC, those grievances shall be
considered in the further proceedings in the appeal.
21. It was also submitted to us that pending final
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decision, respondents 1 and 2 should be permitted to com-
mence the construction as delays had entailed serious cost
and time over-runs. We permit
614
respondents, at their option, to commence the construction-
work according to the plans submitted by them, on the condi-
tion that they file a written undertaking before the NDMC
that the construction would be at the risk of the Respond-
ents 1 & 2 and it would not progress beyond a height of 15
metres and in the event of an ultimate rejection of the
plans, they would have no claim against the NDMC for any
loss occasioned to respondent 1 and 2.
22. The appeal is directed to be called after 6 weeks to
await the further report of the NDMC referred to in para 20
supra. Ordered accordingly.
T.N.A.
615