Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Writ Petition (civil) 42 of 1985
PETITIONER:
SOCIETY OF ST.JOSEPHS COLLEGE
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA & OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/11/2001
BENCH:
S.P.BHARUCHA CJI & S.S.M.QUADRI & SANTOSH N.HEGDE & S.N.VARIAVA & S.V.PATIL
JUDGMENT:
JUDGMENT
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO.7751 OF 2001
DELIVERED BY:
S.P.BHARUCHA ,CJI
Bharucha, CJI. :
In this writ petition, the Court is called upon to interpret for the
first time the provisions of clause (1A) of Article 30 of the Constitution
of India. Clause (1A) was introduced in the Constitution by the
Constitution (Forty-fourth Amendment) Act, 1978.
Article 30, subsequent to the forty-fourth amendment, reads thus:
30. Right of minorities to establish and administer
educational institutions.
(1) All minorities, whether based on religion or
language, shall have the right to establish and
administer educational institutions of their
choice.
(1A) In making any law providing for the
compulsory acquisition of any property of an
educational institution established and
administered by a minority, referred to in clause
(1), the State shall ensure that the amount fixed by
or determined under such law for the acquisition of
such property is such as would not restrict or
abrogate the right guaranteed under that clause.
(2) The state shall not, in granting aid to
educational institutions, discriminate against any
educational institution on the ground that it is
under the management of a minority, whether
based on religion or language.
The writ petitioner is a religious minority institution founded by
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the members of the Society of Jesus, which is a religious congregation in
the Catholic Church. The petitioner has established and is
administering an educational institution called the St. Josephs College
in Tiruchirappally, Tamil Nadu. The college was established more than
150 years ago. It has been accorded autonomous status by the
University of Madras in April, 1978. Within the campus of the college is
a building owned by the petitioner. The said building was let out in
1910 to the Post & Telegraph Department of the Government of India
and has since then been used as a Post Office. On 26th October, 1974 the
petitioner wrote to the Senior Superintendent of Posts, Tiruchirappally
Division, seeking an enhancement of the rent of Rs. 830/- per month of
the said building. There was no response. On 30th October, 1974 the
fourth respondent, the Revenue Divisional Officer, Tiruchirappally,
issued to the petitioner a notice under Section 3(1) of the Madras
Requisition and Acquisition of Immovable Property Act, 1956 to
commence the acquisition of the said building. On 11th December, 1974
the petitioner objected to such action. Nothing happened over five
years. Then, on 3rd May, 1979 a notification was issued under Section
4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 in respect of the said building.
On 24th February, 1980, the petitioner filed objections to the proposed
acquisition. On 17th February, 1982 the Section 6 notification was
gazetted. On 4th June, 1982 the fourth respondent issued to the
petitioner notices under Section 9(3) and Section 10 directing the
petitioners to appear before him in regard to their claim to
compensation. On 9th September, 1982 the petitioner filed a writ
petition in the High Court at Madras challenging the said acquisition.
The writ petition was dismissed, and a writ appeal was filed by the
petitioner. The writ appeal was dismissed on 18th April, 1984. In the
meantime, on 6th April, 1984 an award of Rs. 1,56,377/- was made in
favour of the petitioner, being the amount payable to it upon the
acquisition of the said building. A Special Leave Petition was filed
against the order of the writ appeal and also this writ petition under
Article 32. The writ petition seeks a declaration that the provisions of
the Land Acquisition Act do not apply to and empower the acquisition
of the properties of minority educational institutions and the quashing
of the notifications under Sections (4) and (6) of the Land Acquisition
Act in respect of the said building.
On behalf of the petitioner, Mr. Bobde submitted that a provision
identical to clause (1A) of Article 30 was inserted by the same
Constitution Amendment Act which deleted Article 31 and Article
19(1)(f) from the Constitution and added Article 300A. In his
submission, the provision was inserted because Parliament, acting as a
constituent body, was aware to the fact that while removing the right to
property from the chapter on Fundamental Rights in the Constitution,
it was of the utmost importance in secular India to preserve that right in
a suitable form in relation to the property of minority educational
institutions. It was realised that the right of the minorities to establish
and administer educational institutions could be seriously undermined
and even abrogated by the expedient of acquiring the property of such
educational institutions under the Land Acquisition Act or any other
law made by Parliament or by a State legislature under Entry 42 of List
III. It should be assumed that the following was borne in mind by
Parliament : The Land Acquisition Act did not itself acquire any
property but was an enabling law enabling the State to acquire property
in accordance with the procedure provided therein. Section 4 thereof
froze the date of computing compensation and the award came years
later. By the time compensation was received, perhaps after appeals up
to the stage of this Court, it represented only a fraction of the value of
the property. A law made for a particular property or for a class of
properties was required to provide only for an amount which might be
fixed by such law or which might be determined in accordance with
such principles and given in such manner as might be specified in such
law and no such law could be called in question on the ground that the
amount was not adequate or the whole or part of such amount was to be
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given otherwise then in cash. Article 300A, which had been added by
the forty-fourth Amendment, only provided the safeguard that the
deprivation of property be done by the authority of law. Clause (1A) of
Article 30 required Parliament or a State legislature to make a law for
the specific purpose of acquiring a specified property of a minority
educational institution. After the introduction of clause (1A), the State
could not act under the general law as, for example, the Land
Acquisition Act. In making the special law, Parliament and the State
legislatures had to apply their mind to the situation of the particular
educational institution whose property was being acquired; as for
example, to its financial condition, the number and nature of its
property, its location, the impact of the acquisition of the property on
the institution, the feasibility of replacing that property by a similarly
situated property and the like. All relevant factors had to be taken into
account for fixing or providing for such amount as would ensure that
the right under Article 30 was not restricted or abrogated. The special
law would itself have to acquire the property or specially authorise its
acquisition by the State and fix the compensation amount or provide for
the determination thereof. Such amount should be such that the
educational institution could replace the acquired property with similar
property or an asset of an equivalent real value. In the absence of such
a special law in the instant case, the acquisition of the said building was
bad in law.
The learned Attorney General pointed out that a provision
identical to clause (1A) of Article 30 had been first introduced in Article
31 by the Constitution (Twenty-fifth) Amendment Act, which had also
altered the position as to the payment of compensation for compulsory
acquisition by requiring the payment of an amount. The learned
Attorney General submitted that it was settled law that the Constitution
did not prohibit the acquisition of property belonging to a minority
educational institution but, by reason of the introduction of the
aforementioned safeguard provision, the question might have to be
examined in a different light if such acquisition could be proved to be
such as to destroy property for even the survival of the educational
institution. The twenty-fifth amendment empowered the State inter alia
to acquire property by a law for a public purpose on payment of an
amount instead of the payment of compensation and no such law could
be called in question in any court on the ground that the amount so
fixed or determined was not adequate or that the whole or any part
thereof was to be given otherwise than in cash at the same time. The
twenty-fifth amendment carved out an exception in favour of minority
educational institutions by inserting the safeguard provision. The
rationale for the safeguard provision was to preclude Parliament and
the State legislatures from taking a cue from the twenty-fifth
amendment and making a law which awarded only an amount and not
compensation for the acquisition. In the learned Attorney Generals
submission, it was only in respect of legislation enacted after the twenty-
fifth amendment that the State was required to ensure that the amount
fixed or determined under such law for the acquisition of the property
of a minority educational institution was such as would not restrict or
abrogate the right guaranteed by Article 30. Property could be
acquired prior to the twenty-fifth amendment on payment of
compensation on the principles laid down in the acquisition statutes, for
example, the Land Acquisition Act. There was, therefore, no need to
make any safeguard provision therein in respect of minority education
institutions. In the alternative, the learned Attorney General submitted
that the requirement of the safeguard provision should be read into the
provisions of the Land Acquisition Act so that that Act was in
conformity with the constitutional mandate. In the further alternative,
the learned Attorney General submitted that pending proceedings and
acquisitions effected under the Land Acquisition Act should not be
quashed for such time as the Court deemed reasonable to enable
Parliament to effect the necessary change in the Land Acquisition Act;
he submitted that a period of six months should be given for the
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purpose.
Article 30 is a part of the chapter on Fundamental Rights in the
Constitution. It guarantees a right to the minorities, religious and
linguistic, to establish and administer educational institutions of their
choice. Clause (1A) thereof requires that the State shall, in making a
law that provides for the compulsory acquisition of any property of a
minority educational institution, ensure that the amount, either fixed or
determined under such law, that is payable to the educational
institution for the acquisition of its property is such as would not either
restrict or abrogate the right aforementioned. Clause (1A), therefore,
requires the State, that is to say, Parliament in the case of a Central
legislation or a State legislature in the case of State legislation, to make
a specific law to provide for the compulsory acquisition of the property
of minority educational institutions, the provisions of which law should
ensure that the amount payable to the educational institution for the
acquisition of its property will not be such as will in any manner impair
the functioning of the educational institution.
It is not necessary that a statute should be enacted exclusively for
the compulsory acquisition of the property of minority educational
institutions, but it is necessary that in a law that provides, in general,
for the compulsory acquisition of property, there should be enacted, by
amendment thereof, a provision that relates specifically to the
acquisition of the property of minority educational institutions. That
provision must ensure that the amount payable for such acquisition will
not in any manner impair the right conferred upon the minorities by
Article 30.
Plainly, Parliament in its constituent capacity apprehended that
minority educational institutions could be compelled to close down or
curtail their activities by the expedient of acquiring their property and
paying them inadequate amounts in exchange. To obviate the violation
of the right conferred by Article 30 in this manner, Parliament
introduced the safeguard provision in the Constitution, first in Article
31 and then in Article 30.
We cannot accept the submission of the learned Attorney General
that the provisions of a statute that provides for the acquisition of
property in general, as for example, the Land Acquisition Act, are
adequate for the compulsory acquisition of the property of minority
educational institutions because what is payable thereunder is
compensation, or that the provisions of clause (1A) of Article 30 should
be read into such statute. Clause (1A) clearly states that after the date
of its introduction there must be a law that specifically relates to the
compulsory acquisition of the property of minority educational
institutions and that that law must make provisions that ensure that the
amounts that are fixed or determined thereunder for the acquisitions
are such as do not restrict or abrogate the right guaranteed under
Article 30. Necessarily, such law must require the taking into account
of factors that do not come into play in the determination of amounts
payable in relation to the acquisition of the properties of others and are,
therefore, not set out in the general acquisition statutes.
We think, however, that it is appropriate that Parliament and the
State legislatures should have time upto 31st May, 2002 to make such
laws, if they so choose, and that pending and uncompleted acquisitions
of the properties of minority educational institutions should lapse only if
at the end of such time the statutes under which the acquisitions have
been commenced have not been duly amended. On the other hand, if
they are duly amended, the amounts payable for such acquisitions shall
be determined thereunder.
This will apply as well to the acquisition of the said building of the
petitioner under the Land Acquisition Act.
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Order on the writ petition accordingly.
The Civil Appeal No. 7751 of 2001 shall stand disposed of in the
above terms.
No order as to costs.