Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
GIRDHARILAL AMRATLAL SHODAN AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
28/01/1966
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
BENCH:
BACHAWAT, R.S.
SARKAR, A.K.
MUDHOLKAR, J.R.
CITATION:
1966 AIR 1408 1966 SCR (3) 437
CITATOR INFO :
F 1977 SC 594 (4)
F 1980 SC 367 (8,9,11,12)
R 1988 SC1615 (7)
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (1 of 1894)-Notification under s.
6 invalid and ineffective-Power of Government to issue fresh
notification.
HEADNOTE:
Where a notification under s. 6 of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894 is invalid, the Government may treat it as ineffective
and issue in its place a fresh notification under s. 6.
Nothing in s. 48 of the Act precludes the Government from
doing so. The cancellation of the earlier notification is
only a recognition of the invalidity of that notification.
[439 B-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 1070 of
1965.
Appeal from the judgment and order dated April 2, 1965 of
the Gujarat High Court in Special Civil Application No. 584
of 1961.
Niren De, Additional Solicitor-General and J. B. Dadachanji
for the appellants.
R. Ganapathy Iyer and B. R. G. K. Achar, for respondent
Nos. 1 and 2.
Arun H. Mehta, M. N. Shroff and I. N. Shroff, for respondent
No. 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Bachawat, J. : On August, 3, 1960, the Government of Gujarat
issued a notification under s. 4 of the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894 (hereinafter referred to as the Act) stating that
the land measuring about 7151 sq. yards in Final Plot No.
460 of the Town Planning Scheme No. III of Elisbridge in
Ahmedabad taluka city, village Changispur, was likely to be
needed for a public purpose, viz., for construction of
houses for Shri Krishnakunj Government Servants Co-operative
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Housing Society, Ltd., Ahmedabad. The land is the subject-
matter of a trust of Which appellant No. 1 is the trustee
and appellants Nos. 2 to 6 are the beneficiaries. An
enquiry under s. 5-A of the Act was duly held, and a report
under s., 5A(2) was made to the Government. On July 18, 196
1, the State Government issued a notification’ under s. 6 of
the Act stating that the land was needed to be acquired for
the aforesaid public purpose at the expense of Shri
Krishnakunj Government Servants co-operative Housing Society
Ltd. On September, 22, 1961, the appellants filed a writ
application in the High Court of Gujarat 437
438
praying for an order quashing the notification under s. 6
dated July 18, 1961. During the pendency of this
application, the Government issued a notification dated
April 28, 1964 cancelling the aforesaid notification dated
July 18, 1961. On August 14, 1964, the Government issued a
fresh notification under s. 6 stating that the land was
needed to be acquired at the public expense for a public
purpose, viz., for the housing scheme undertaken by Shri
Krishnakunj Government Servants Co-operative Housing
Society, Ltd., Ahmedabad with the sanction of the
Government. The appellants were thereupon allowed to amend
the writ petition, and by the amended writ petition, they
prayed for an order quashing the notification under s. 6
dated August 14, 1964 as also the notification under s. 4
dated August 3, 1960. On April 2, 1965, the High Court
dismissed the application. The appellants now appeal to
this Court on a certificate granted by the High Court.
Counsel for the appellants submitted that the power of the
State Government to cancel a notification under s. 6 of the
Act implied by s. 21 of the General Clauses Act, 1897 is
subject to the condition that the Government should withdraw
from the acquisition as provided for in s. 48 of the Act, by
cancelling the notification under s. 6 dated July 18, 1961,
the Government must be taken to have withdrawn from the
acquisition and cancelled the notification under s. 4 dated
August 3, 1960 also and consequently the Government could
not issue the notification under s. 6 dated August 14 1964
without issuing a fresh notification under s. 4 and making a
fresh enquiry under s. 5A. Counsel for the respondents
disputed the correctness of this submission.
It is to be noticed that the notification under s. 6 dated
July 18, 1961 stated that the land was required for a public
purpose at the expense of Shri Krishiakunj Government
Servants Co,operative Housing Society , The Government had
no power to issue this notification. Having regard to the
proviso to s. 6 of the Act, a declaration for acquisition of
the land for a public purpose could only be made if the
compensation to be awarded for it was to be paid wholly or
partly out of public revenues or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority. The Government had no power
to issue a notification for acquisition for a public purpose
where the compensation was to be paid entirely by a. com-
pany. The notification dated July 18, 1961 was, therefore,
invalid and of no effect, see Shyam Behari v. State of
Madhya Pradesh( ). The appellants filed the writ petition
challenging the aforesaid notification on this ground. The
challenge was Justified and the notification was liable to
be quashed by the Court. The State Government realised that
the notification was invalid, and without waiting for an
order of Court, cancelled the notification on April
(1) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 636; A.I.R. 1965 S.C. 427.
439
28, 1964 The cancellation was in recognition of the
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invalidity of the notification. The Government had no
intention of withdrawing from the acquisition. Soon after
the cancellation, the Government issued a fresh notification
under s. 6 where, as in this case, the notification under s.
6 is incompetent and invalid, the Government may treat it as
ineffective and issue a fresh notification under s. 6. This
is what, in substances the Government did in this case. The
cancellation on April 28, 1964 was no more than a
recognition of the invalidity of the earlier notification.
There is nothing in s. 48, which precluded the Government
from treating the earlier invalid notification as
ineffective and issuing in its place an effective
notification under s. 6. Where the notification under s. 6
is lawful and valid, a question may well arise whether the
Government can cancel it without withdrawing from the
acquisition, as provided for under s. 48. But no such ques-
tion arises in this case and we express no opinion on it.
Counsel for the appellants next submitted that on issuing
the notification dated July 18, 1961 the power of the State
Government to issue a notification under s. 6 was exhausted
and the Government could not issue a fresh notification
under s. 6. There is no substance in this contention. The
notification dated July 18, 1961 was invalid. By the issue
of this notification, the Government had not effectively
exercised its power under s. 6. In the circumstances, the
Government could well issue the fresh notification under s.
6 dated August 14, 1964.
Counsel for the appellants next submitted that the
notification under s. 6 must be issued without unreasonable
delay after the issue of the notification under s. 4 and
consequently, the notification dated August 14, 1964 is
invalid, as it was issued after unreasonable delay. This
contention was not raised in the High Court. On September
25, 1961, soon after the filing of the writ petition, the
appellants obtained an injunction restraining the Government
from proceeding with the acquisition. We are informed that
this injunction continued for some time and was modified at
a later date. Until the modification of the injunction, the
Government could not take further steps in the acquisition.
The question whether there was unreasonable delay in the
issuing of the notification dated August 14, 1964 was not
put in issue and was not investigated in the Court below.
We, therefore, indicated in the course of the argument that
the appellants cannot be allowed to urge this point for the
first time in this Court. We express no opinion one way or
the other whether the Government is bound to issue the
notification under s. 6 without reasonable delay after B the
issue of the notification under s. 4.
In the High Court, the appellants contended that the
public purpose set out in the notification dated August 14,
1964 was
M10 Sup.C.L/66-15
440
different from the public purpose set out in the
notification dated July 18, 1961 and the Government could
not issue the notification dated August 14, 1964 without
issuing a fresh notification under s. 4. The High Court
repelled this contention. It found that the public purpose
set out in the notification dated August 14, 1964 was
identical with the public purpose set out in the notifica-
tion dated July 18, 1961. This finding is no longer
challenged before us.
The appeal fails and is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed..
441
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