Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2735 of 2004
PETITIONER:
Union of India & Ors.
RESPONDENT:
Krishan Lal Arneja & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/04/2004
BENCH:
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL & D.M.DHARMDHIKARI.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NOS.2736, 2738 AND 2739 OF 2004
(Arising out of S. L. P. (C) Nos. 9264/2003, 9263/2003
and 9265/2003)
(Arising out of S. L. P. (C) NO. 5451/ 2003)
SHIVARAJ V. PATIL J.
Leave granted.
In these appeals, common order dated 22.3.2002
passed in Letters Patent Appeals by the Division Bench
of High Court of Delhi, is under challenge. The facts
leading to the filing of these appeals, in brief, are
that:
In all, 14 properties including the properties in
question in these appeals, were notified for
acquisition on 6th March, 1987 under the provisions
of Section 4 and Section 17(1)&(4) of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (for short ‘the Act’). Earlier
these properties were requisitioned by the appellants
under the Defence of India Rules. The provisions of the
Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable Property
Act, 1952 (for short ‘1952 Act’) were going to lapse on
10th March, 1987. These properties were occupied
either for offices or for providing residential
quarters to the officers. Out of these 14 properties,
Banwari Lal and Sons and Shakuntala Gupta had
questioned the validity of acquisition proceedings
pertaining to property no. 6, Ansari Road, Dariyaganj,
New Delhi and property no. 2, Underhill Road, Delhi,
respectively by filing separate writ petitions. The
writ petitions were allowed and acquisition proceedings
were quashed including the above-mentioned notification
of 6th March, 1987. These matters attained finality
having reached this Court. The respondents in these
appeals filed writ petitions challenging the
acquisition of their properties under the very
notification. Learned Single Judge of the High Court
allowed the writ petitions. The appellants questioned
the correctness and validity of the orders made by
learned Single Judge in the Letters Patent Appeals,
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which were dismissed by the impugned order mainly
following earlier judgments in the cases of Banwari Lal
and Sons and Shakuntala Gupta.
The learned senior counsel for the respondents
raised a preliminary objection as to the very
maintainability of these appeals on the ground that the
controversy raised and the contentions sought to be
urged in these appeals are fully covered against the
appellants by the judgment of this Court in Union of
India & Ors. vs. Shakuntala Gupta (Dead) by Lrs.
[(2002) 7 SCC 98]. The learned senior counsel for the
appellants, however, did not agree and sought to argue
these appeals on merits raising various contentions
stating that the decisions in Shakuntala Gupta (supra)
and Banwari Lal & Sons Pvt. Ltd. vs. Union of India &
Ors [DRJ 1991 (Suppl) 317] are distinguishable on facts
and that certain questions of law, which go to the root
of the matter, were neither urged nor decided in the
aforementioned two cases. Hence, we heard the learned
counsel for the parties on either side at length.
The contentions advanced on behalf of the
appellants were: (1) that Banwari Lal’s case was
wrongly decided and further it was on its own facts
being property specific; Banwari Lal’s case was not a
precedent as no reasoned order was made by this Court
inasmuch as the petition was dismissed at the SLP stage
itself; (2) Non-mentioning of the nature and existence
of urgency in the notification issued under Sections 4
and 17 of the Act does not vitiate the notification;
subjective satisfaction as regards urgency could not be
determined solely on the basis of the expressions used
in the notification and such urgency could be gathered
looking to the surrounding circumstances and the
records which would show the urgency for the
acquisition; (3) pre and post notification delay would
not affect the notification on account of lethargy of
the officers and such delay would not render the
exercise of power to invoke urgency clause invalid
where there was a grave urgency on account of shortage
of Government housing; (4) the High Court committed a
serious error in appointing the arbitrator to determine
the damages in the absence of any arbitration agreement
and there being no prayer in that regard in the writ
petition; (5) correctness of the order in Banwari Lal’s
case was not considered in Shakuntala Gupta’s case;
paras 11, 12 and 15 in Shakuntala Gupta’s case in
review must be read together to understand the correct
legal position; (6) alternatively, notification as
regards Section 17(1), could be quashed sustaining it
only to the extent of Section 4(1) of the Act.
The learned senior counsel for the respondents
made submissions supporting the impugned judgment.
They contended that Banwari Lal’s case was correctly
decided. The orders of this Court in Shakuntala Gupta
affirm the legal position stated in Banwari Lal. Hence
the same result rightly followed in the writ petitions
filed by the respondents in these appeals. The High
Court was right and justified in passing the impugned
common judgment affirming the order of the learned
Single Judge having regard to the decision already
rendered in Banwari Lal’s case in regard to the same
common notification; if a different view is taken at
this stage, particularly after the decision in
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Shakuntala Gupta’s case in the main appeal as well as
in review, it will lead to anomalous result leading to
conflict of decisions, i.e., the very same notification
stands quashed in respect of some writ petitioners
which has attained finality by virtue of affirmation of
the said order by this court in Banwari Lal and
Shakuntala Gupta and in regard to other writ petitions
filed by the present respondents, it will have to be
sustained. If that be so, it will result in treating
similarly placed persons differently on same set of
facts. The learned senior counsel further urged that
non-compliance of Section 17(3A) is yet another ground
for quashing notification; strict compliance of sub-
section (3A) of Section 17 is mandatory. According to
them, in these cases even on the facts and
circumstances found, there was neither material nor
justification to invoke urgency clause; they made
submissions distinguishing decisions relied on behalf
of the appellants having regard to the facts of those
cases and the points that arose for consideration. It
was also their contention that the appellants having
been in possession of the properties, there was no
reason to invoke urgency clause to take immediate
possession; at best, after the expiry of the 1952 Act
as amended by Act No. 20 of 1985, the appellants
continuing in unauthorized possession, could be made to
pay damages or compensation for the period during which
they unauthorisedly continued to be in possession. They
also submitted that this Court sustained the
appointment of arbitrator to determine the damages made
in earlier decisions and having taken note of the same,
as can be seen from the impugned common judgment in
these appeals; almost after 17 years, it may not be
just and equitable to direct the parties to approach
civil court for claiming damages. The learned counsel
submitted that Shakuntala Gupta’s case is concluded on
facts and in law in relation to the very same
notification against the appellants. In SLP No.
9264/2003, the ground of delay in filing writ petition
is not raised; the learned Single Judge did not find
delay as a good ground for rejecting the writ petition
on the facts and circumstances. The Division Bench in
the LPA agreed with the learned Single Judge.
In reply, the learned counsel for the appellants
submitted that non-compliance of sub-section (3A) of
Section 17 may affect the possession and not the
acquisition; on account of such non-compliance, party
may be entitled for interest under Section 23A of the
Act; it would also not lead to returning possession of
the property.
We have carefully considered the respective
submissions made by the learned counsel for the
parties. The notification issued on 6.3.1987 which was
the subject matter of challenge in the writ petitions
reads:
"NOTIFICATION
Dated 5.3.1987
No. F.7(9)/86-L&B: (1) Whereas it
appears to the Governor Delhi that the
lands/properties are likely to be required to
be taken by the government at the public
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expense for the following public purposes.
It is hereby notified that the land in the
locality described below is likely to be
required for the above purpose.
This notification is made under the
provisions of Section 4 of the Land
Acquisition Act, to all whom it may concern.
In exercise of the powers conferred by
the aforesaid section, the Lt. Governor is
pleased to authorize the officers for the
time being engaged in the undertaking with
their servants and workmen to enter upon and
survey any land in the locality and do all
other acts required or permitted by that
section.
The Lt. Governor, being of the opinion
that the provisions of sub-section (1) of
section 17 of the said Act are applicable to
this land is further pleased under sub-
section 4 of the said section, to direct that
the provisions of section 5A shall not apply.
SPECIFICATION
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
---------------
Sl. Property Total Area Field or Purpose of
No. boundaries No. acquisition
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
1 2 3 4 5
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
1. 95, Lal Kothi 321 sq. mts. East Kutab Road, Residential use
Jatwara Mohalla West Hosue of of Govt.
Sh. Tej Ram, servants
North Gali, South
Shops.
2. 8 A.Kamla Nagar 285 sq. mtrs. East Road, West Housing the
Delhi G.T. Road, North govt. offices
Property No. 7A
South Property
No.9-A
3. 301, Okhla New 106 sq. mtrs. East Gali West Setting up of
Delhi Hosue No. 76/1, dispensary
Dispensary, North
Road, South
House NO. 301-A
4. 15, Alipur Road Big - Bis Khasra No. 537 Housing the
& Civil Station, 7 - 12 Min. 7 bigha 610 govt
. offices
Min. 12 Biswas
5. 1 Rajpur Road 10 - 13 981/500 big-bis Housing the
Civil Station 0 - 05 govt. office
&
10-08 govt. servants
6. 15 Rajpur road 475 11 - 10 Housing the
Civi Station govt. offices
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7. 2, Under Hill 11-740 sq. mts. East Kothi No. 16, Housing the
Road, Delhi Alipur Road, West govt. office
K. No. 4 Road,
South K. No. 4 & 6
Under Hill Road
8. 60/21, Ramjas 475 sq. mts. East Ramjas Raod Residential use
Road, Delhi West 60/2, North of govt. servant
Street, South Road
9. 30, Rohtak Road 1087 sq. mts. East Plot No. 29 Residential use
1087 Delhi West Plot No. 31 of govt.
North Road South servants.
Gali
10. 11, Lencer Road 1125 sq. mts. East K. No. 1 Housing the
Delhi West K. No. 10-A govt. offices
North service
Land . South Road
11. 3, Tilak Marg East Old Qila East Old Qila Road Housing the
Road, West West Tilak Marg Road govt. offices
North Police Station,
South Rajdootawas
Kothi No. 1
12. 6 Ansari Road, 5592 sq. yds. East Land, West Residential use
Daryaganj, Delhi Electric Transformers of govt.
Station and Ansari servants
Road, North Masjid
Ghat Road, South
K. No. 5
13. 97, Daryaganj 320 sq. yds. Eat Road, West for residential
Delhi. Sham Lal Road use of govt.
North-Kothi No. 96 servants.
South - Kothi No. 98
14. M.C. No. 500 to 1595 sq. yds East-House, West Housing the
507, Ward No. IX/6062, Gali, North-Gali govt. offices
Gandhi Nagar (4 set of South - Gali
Old Police Station, Gandhi
Nagar, Seelampur)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----------------
By order
Sd/-
(Mrs. Neeru Singh)
Joint Secretary (L&B)
Delhi Administration,
Delhi".
Under this notification, 14 properties were sought to
be acquired.
Banwari Lal and Sons filed writ petition No.
2385/88 seeking quashing of the aforesaid notification
in respect of property 6, Ansari Road, Darya Ganj,
Delhi. The purpose of acquisition of this property was
mentioned as for "residential use of government
servants". This property No. 6 Ansari Road, Dariya
Ganj measures 5592 sq. yds., with built up area of
about 6,000 sq. ft. It is situated in the main
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commercial centre of Delhi and was being used all along
for commercial purpose by Bharat Bank and then by the
American Embassy for running the United States
Information Centre. On 27.9.1950, four flats out of
the said building were acquisitioned by the Delhi
Administration under the provisions of Requisitioning
and Acquisition of Immovable Property Act, 1952.
Further on 13.3.1959, remaining building along with the
garages, warehouses and other structures was
requisitioned by the Administration under the same Act.
The building continued under the requisition till the
said Act lapsed on 10.3.1987. It may be recalled that
notification under Section 4 read with Section
17(1)&(4) of the Act was issued on 6.3.1987 for
acquiring 14 properties including this building, 6
Ansari Road, Darya Ganj, Delhi. On 10.3.1987, Delhi
Administration issued notification under Section 6 of
the Act and issued a letter to the Collector to take
possession of the property within 15 days. Thereafter
the Administration proposed to the writ petitioners
that the building be given on lease and the
negotiations for lease were continued for long. The
officers of the Administration continued to stay in the
building for over 20 months. Suddenly, the
Administration decided to proceed with land acquisition
after a period of 20 months. At that stage, the above-
mentioned writ petition was filed. On 25.11.1988, the
High Court directed that the possession of the building
was not to be taken by the Administration under Section
17 of the Land Acquisition Act but the acquisition
proceedings could go on. Thereafter, award was passed
fixing compensation at Rs. 77,11,230.60. Petitioners
were ready to receive the compensation under protest
but the Administration did not make the payment. It
also did not offer the payment of 80% of the proposed
compensation under Section 17(3A) of the Act. Mainly
three grounds were urged in the writ petition : (1) the
notification issued under Section 4 and Section 17 did
not indicate the urgency for taking possession and,
therefore, the same was vitiated in law; petitioners
were illegally deprived of their right to raise
objections and inquiry under Section 5A of the Act; (2)
the Administration could not acquire commercial
building for residential purpose; (3) that the whole
exercise of acquisition of the building was a fraud on
the powers under the Act. On behalf of the
Administration, it was contended that the building was
urgently needed for the residence of the officers, the
building was being used for residential purpose for a
long time and for payment of amount under sub-section
(3A) of Section 17, steps had been taken for securing
the sanction. The High Court dealing with the
contentions raised in the said writ petition held that
there was no whisper in the notification as to what was
the urgency to take immediate possession and to deny
the right of raising objections under Section 5A of the
Act; the building was already in occupation of the
officers of the Delhi Administration and the
Administration knew that the Requisitioning and
Acquisition of Immovable Property Act, 1952 was to
lapse on 10.3.1987; they had sufficient time to make
alternate arrangements for the residence of the
officers and that there was no urgency whatsoever for
invoking the provisions of Section 17(1)&(4) of the
Act. The court also held that Section 17(1) could not
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be utilized to cover up the laxity and lethargy of the
Administration in taking appropriate steps for securing
alternate accommodation for its officers. The
notification was also held bad in law for non-
compliance of the requirement of Section 17(3A) of the
Act, in that the Collector did not tender 80% of the
compensation of the land as estimated by him before
taking possession of the land and that the Delhi
Administration had no explanation for the non-
compliance of Section 17(3A) except saying that process
of sanction had been initiated by them. The High court
also held that issuing of notification under Section
17(1) was a fraud on the powers. In that view, the
notification was quashed and direction was given to
hand over the peaceful physical possession of the
building to the petitioner. An arbitrator also was
appointed to determine the damages payable by
Administration having taken note of the facts and to
avoid further delay. The Union of India and Ors. filed
SLP No. 4458/91, aggrieved by this order of the High
Court dated 4.2.1991 made in the writ petition. The
SLP was dismissed on 21.3.1991 by passing the following
order:-
"In the facts and circumstances of the
case, we do not find any good ground to
interfere with the impugned order of the
High Court. The Special Leave Petition
is accordingly dismissed.
Although we have dismissed the
petition but having regard to the fact
that public servants are residing in the
premises in dispute and their immediate
dispossession may cause injury to public
interest, we allow the petitioners to
continue in possession till 31.3.1993
provided the petitioners file an
undertaking in this Court within three
weeks with usual conditions to hand over
the vacant possession of the premises
including the servant quarters on or
before 31.3.1993, we further make it
clear that the Arbitrator appointed by
the High Court may give award and the
same may be filed before the High Court
for appropriate orders."
(emphasis supplied)
Shakuntala Gupta filed writ petition No. 894 of
1987 inter alia raising similar contentions as were
raised in Banwari Lal case (supra). The High Court
allowed the said writ petition and quashed the
notification following the order made in the case of
Banwari Lal and Sons aforementioned. The Union of
India and Ors. filed Civil Appeal No. 518 of 1998
before this Court by special leave. This Court disposed
of the said appeal on 14.11.2000 observing thus:-
"The High Court quashed the impugned
notification by following its earlier
decision in Banwari Lal & Sons vs. Union
of India decided on 4th February, 1991
in which this very notification was
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quashed. It is not in dispute that
subject matter including the
notification under Land Acquisition were
the same except that in Banwari Lal it
was the government housing for the
officers while in the present case it is
housing for the offices. The said
decision of the High Court stood
confirmed when this Court dismissed the
SLP filed by the Union of India. We do
not find any sustainable ground raised
in the present appeal to make any
distinct or difference from the one in
the case of Banwari Lal and Sons.
Accordingly, there is no error committed
by the High Court in making the decision
and dismissing the same. Accordingly
the present appeal has no merits and it
is dismissed."
Further Union of India and Ors. filed a review petition
(c) No. 74 of 2001 in aforementioned appeal No. 518/98.
The review petition was disposed of on 27.8.2002 by a
considered order in the light of contentions urged and
arguments advanced extensively. The said order is
reported as Union of India and Ors vs. Shakuntala Gupta
(Dead) by Lrs. [(2002) 7 SCC 98].
The learned counsel for the respondents heavily
relied on this decision and contended that it fully
covers the case against the appellants; in view of the
same, it is not open to the appellants particularly
being the parties to the said decision, to re-agitate
on the same issue again when the notification being
composite one in respect of all 14 properties sought to
be acquired under it and when the ground of urgency was
also common in respect of all the 14 properties. But
according to the learned counsel for the appellants,
the correctness of decision in Banwari Lal is not
decided in this case and it is clearly distinguishable
in applying to the facts of the cases in these appeals.
In other words, the decision in Shakuntala Gupta is
confined to its own facts. In the light of these
submissions and that this decision will have great
bearing on the question in deciding these appeals
whether urgency clause could be invoked under Section
17(1)&(4) of the Act, the notification being composite
one in respect of all 14 properties including the
properties which are the subject matter of these
appeals, we will refer to the decision in greater
details. In the case of shakuntala Gupta, part of the
premises known as Grand Hotel situated at No. 2,
Underhill Road, Delhi, had been requisitioned on
3.4.1980 under the Requisition and Acquisition of
Immovable Property Act, 1952, which lapsed on
10.3.1987. On 6.3.1987, the very same notification,
which is also the subject matter of these appeals, was
issued under Section 4 read with Section 17(1) and (4)
of the Act. In this notification, 14 properties were
specified to which it applied. This notification also
indicated purpose for which each property was sought to
be acquired, the purpose being either "housing the
Govt. office" or "for residential use of Govt.
servants".
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Shakuntala Gupta challenged the notification
issued under Section 4 read with Section 17(1)&(4) as
well as the declaration made under Section 6 of the Act
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India before
the High Court. As already stated above, Banwari Lal
and Sons Pvt. Ltd., the owner of one of the 14
properties specified in the notification, also filed
writ petition in the High Court impugning the same
notification inter alia urging that there was no
urgency to dispense with the right of the owner to file
objections and inquiry under Section 5A of the Act.
Banwari Lal’s writ application was allowed on 4.2.1991
quashing the impugned notification upholding the
contentions urged on behalf of Banwari Lal including
the issue of urgency. The SLP filed against the
decision of the High Court in Banwari Lal case was
dismissed by this Court on 21.3.1991. The appellants
vacated the Banwari Lal’s premises pursuant to the
order of this Court made on 21.3.1991. The Division
Bench of the High Court disposed of Shakuntala Gupta’s
writ petition following Banwari Lal’s case quashing the
impugned notification. In the SLP filed against the
said order by the appellants, leave was granted on
19.1.1998 and hearing of the appeal was expedited. The
appeal was duly listed for hearing from time to time
and ultimately on 14.11.2000, the appeal was disposed
of by a reasoned order, relevant portion of which is
already extracted in the earlier paragraph. Later the
appellants made an application for recalling the order
dismissing the appeal on the ground that it was
disposed of without hearing them. On 10.1.2001,
accepting the request of the appellants, the
application made for recalling the order dated
14.11.2000 was treated as a review petition and the
review petition was accordingly heard. In support of
the review petition, relying on the decisions of this
Court in Aflatoon & Ors. vs. Lt. Governor of Delhi &
Ors. [(1975) 4 SCC 285], Deepak Pahwa & Ors. vs. Lt.
Governor of Delhi & Ors. [(1984) 4 SCC 308], Satendra
Prasad Jain & Ors. vs. State of U.P. & Ors. [(1993) 4
SCC 369] and Chameli Singh & Ors. vs. State of U.P. &
Anr. [(1996) 2 SCC 549], it was urged that the
principles of law enunciated in Banwari Lal’s case no
longer held the field. On that basis, it was contended
that the decision of the High Court quashing the
impugned notification by following Banwari Lal’s
decision was erroneous. Opposing the review petition,
it was urged that the review petition itself was not
maintainable as there was no error apparent on the face
of the record; the same notification stood quashed in
Banwari Lal’s case; since the impugned notification had
been quashed on a general ground which did not
specifically relate to a particular petitioner, the
quashing of the notification must enure to the benefit
of all persons affected by that notification. In
support of this, reliance was placed on Abhey Ram
(Dead) by LR. & Ors. vs. Union of India & Ors. [(1997)
5 SCC 421] and Delhi Administration vs. Gurdip Singh
Uban & Ors. [(2000) 7 SCC 296]. The review petition was
disposed of on 27.8.2002 since reported in [(2002) 7
SCC 98]. To appreciate the rival submissions as to the
implication and understanding of this judgment, it is
necessary to reproduce paras 12, 13 and 15 of the
judgment which read:-
"12. The matter has been argued extensively. We
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therefore do not propose to reject the application
on the ground that the review application should not
at all be entertained. It is also not necessary to
consider whether the decision in Banwari Lal
(Banwari Lal & Sons (P) Ltd. v. Union of India, DLJ
1991 Supp 317) correctly enunciates the principles
of law as to acquisitions under Section 17 of the
Act as we are of the view that the order of this
Court dated 14-11-2000 was, in the circumstances of
the case, correct.
13. It appears that the petitioners have proceeded
on the basis that the acquisition sought to be
effected by the impugned notification under Section
4 had been invalidated in respect of other specified
properties by the decision of this Court in Banwari
Lal case. The statement in the respondent’s
affidavit that several of the properties covered by
the same notification have since been returned by
the petitioners to the original owners has not been
disputed by the petitioners. Furthermore, the High
Court in the decision impugned before us has also
noted:
"It is also not disputed that under the
impugned notifications neither an award has
been made nor any compensation is
determined and paid. The reason being that
the impugned notifications were quashed and
set aside in Banwari Lal case.
14 .......................................
15. In any event the order dated 14-11-2000 was
not legally erroneous. The notification under
Section 4 was a composite one. The "opinion" of the
Lt. Governor that the provisions of Section 17(1) of
the Act were applicable, as expressed in the last
paragraph of the impugned notification, was
relatable in general to the 14 properties specified
in the notification. The impugned notification was
quashed in Banwari Lal case (Banwari Lal & Sons (P)
Ltd. v. Union of India, DLJ 1991 Supp 317) inter
alia on the ground that the "opinion" of the Lt.
Governor as expressed in the notification was
insufficient for the purpose of invoking the
provisions of Section 17(1) of the Act. This ground
was not peculiar to the premises in Banwari Lal case
(Banwari Lal & Sons (P) Ltd. v. Union of India, DLJ
1991 Supp 317) but common to all fourteen
properties. The urgency sought to be expressed in
the impugned notification cannot be held to be
sufficient for the purposes of Section 17(1) in this
case when it has already been held to be bad in
Banwari Lal case. (Abhey Ram v. Union of India,
(1997) 5 SCC 421; Delhi Admn. v. Gurdip Singh Uban,
(2000) 7 SCC 296). The expression of urgency being
one cannot be partly good and partly bad like the
curate’s egg. It must follow that the acquisition in
respect of the respondent’s premises as mentioned in
the notification which were sought to be acquired on
the basis of such invalid expression of "urgency"
cannot be sustained."
(emphasis supplied)
It is needless to repeat that a judgment need not
be read and interpreted as a statute and that a
judgment should be read and understood in the context
of the facts of case and looking to the ratio. The
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sentence in paragraph 12, extracted above, that "It is
also not necessary to consider whether the decision in
Banwari Lal correctly enunciates the principles of law
as to acquisitions under Section 17 of the Act as we
are of the view that the order of this Court dated
14.11.2000 was, in the circumstances of the case,
correct", has reference to enunciation of principles
of law in relation to Section 17 as to the expression
of urgency as stated in Banwari Lal, i.e., to whether
the existence of urgency and expression of urgency must
be specifically stated in the notification issued under
Section 4(1) read with Section 17(1) of the Act and if
not whether the notification is vitiated. In view of
the later decisions of this Court, even in the absence
of stating as to the existence of urgency or express
statement as to urgency, the issue of urgency could be
justified on the basis of the surrounding circumstances
and the records available at the time of subjective
satisfaction of authorities to invoke the aid of
Section 17(1)&(4). It is in that context that the
statement is made in para 12 not with regard to the
validity of the impugned common notification in respect
of all the 14 properties which fact is abundantly clear
from what is stated specifically in para 15 of the
judgment extracted above in relation to sustainability
of the impugned notification or otherwise in respect of
one or other property. On this basis, the court had
held that the expression of urgency in the common
notification being general to all 14 properties could
not be sustained in respect of any particular property,
on the ground that the expression of urgency being one
and the same cannot be partly good and partly bad. In
the same para, the decision in Banwari Lal that the
impugned common notification was bad, is accepted. As
is evident from paragraph 13 that pursuant to the
impugned notification, neither any award was passed nor
any compensation was determined and paid on the ground
that the impugned notification was quashed and set
aside in Banwari Lal case. This only indicates that
even the appellants understood the impugned
notification as a common and composite notification in
respect of all the 14 properties. The ground of
urgency also being common, it is not possible to accept
that the decision rendered in the cases of Banwarl Lal
or Shakuntala Gupta on the question of urgency was
properties specific. The decision in Banwari Lal and
Shakuntala Gupta of this Court in relation to the same
notification may not be binding on principle of res
judicata. The argument, however, cannot be accepted
that those decisions are not binding being ’properties
specific’ in those cases. In our considered opinion,
the decisions are binding as precedents on question of
validity of the notification, which invokes urgency
clause under Section 17 of the Act. We find ourselves
in full agreement with the ratio of the decisions in
those cases that urgency clause, on the facts and
circumstances, which are similar to the present cases,
could not have been invoked. The two decisions are,
therefore, binding as precedents of this Court. We are
not able to find any distinction or difference as to
the ground of urgency in regard to the properties
covered by these appeals.
In the order disposing of the appeal on
14.11.2000, it is clearly stated that the High Court
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quashed the impugned notification following its earlier
decision in Banwari Lal’s case; the subject matter
including the notification under the Act was the same
except that in Banwari Lal’s case, it was the Govt.
housing for the officers while in the Shakuntala
Gupta’s case, it is housing for the offices. No
sustainable ground was found in the appeal to make any
distinction or difference between the case of Banwari
Lal and Shakuntala Gupta. In review, this order was
not disturbed. In Banwari Lal’s case on the facts
found and looking to the circumstances in the
background of lapsing of the Requisitioning Act and
taking note of laxity and lethargy on the part of the
officers, the Court concluded that there existed no
urgency to invoke Section 17(1) of the Act. This
notification was struck down not merely on the ground
that the existence of urgency is not stated in the
impugned notification. The ground of urgency was common
to all 14 properties. It is not the case that the
ground of urgency was different in respect of different
properties which fact is clear from the composite
notification. Further it was also not shown either in
Banwari Lal’s case or in Shakuntala Gupta’s case if the
ground of urgency was different in respect of different
properties. In this view and looking to what is stated
in paragraph 15, extracted above, we find substantial
force in the preliminary objection raised on behalf of
the respondents. However, in the light of arguments
advanced at length, we wish to deal with them.
The provisions of the Act, to the extent they are
relevant, are reproduced hereunder:-
"Section 4 - Publication of preliminary
notification and powers of officers thereupon
- (1) Whenever it appears to the
(appropriate Government) that land in any
locality (is needed or) is likely to be
needed for any public purpose (or for a
company) a notification to that effect shall
be published in the Official Gazette ( and in
two daily newspapers circulating in that
locality of which at least one shall be in
the regional language) and the Collector
shall cause public notice of the substance of
such notification to be given at convenient
places in the said locality (the last of the
dates of such publication and the giving of
such public notice, being hereinafter
referred to as the date of the publication of
the notification).
(2) Thereupon it shall be lawful for any
officer, either generally or specially
authorized by such Government in this behalf,
and for his servants and workmen, -
to enter upon and survey and take levels
of any land in such locality;
to dig or bore in the subsoil;
to do all other acts necessary to
ascertain whether the land is adapted for
such purpose;
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to set out the boundaries of the land
proposed to be taken and the intended line of
the work (if any proposed to be made
thereon);
to make such levels, boundaries and line
by placing marks and cutting trenches; and
where otherwise the survey cannot be
completed and the levels taken and the
boundaries and lines marked, to cut down and
clear away any part of the standing crop,
fence of jungle;
provided that no person shall enter into
any building or upon any other enclosed court
or garden attached to a dwelling house
(unless with the consent of the occupier
thereof) without previously giving such
occupier at least seven days’ notice in
writing of his intention to do so."
"Section 5A - Hearing of objections -
(1) Any person interested in any land which
has been notified under Section 4, sub-
section (1), as being needed or likely to be
needed for a public purpose or for a company
may, within thirty days from the date of the
publication of the notification, object to
the acquisition of the land or of any land in
the locality, as the case may be.
(2) Every objection under sub-section (1)
shall be made to the Collector in writing,
and the Collector shall give the objector an
opportunity of being heard in person or by
any person authorized by him in this behalf
or by pleader and shall, after hearing all
such objections and after making such further
inquiry, if any, as he thinks necessary,
either make a report in respect of the land
which has been notified under Section 4, sub-
Section (1), or make different reports in
respect of different parcels of such land, to
the appropriate Government, containing his
recommendations on the objections, together
with the record of the proceedings held by
him, for the decision of that Government.
The decision of the Appropriate Government on
the objections shall be final.
(3) For the purpose of this section, a
person shall be deemed to be interested in
land who would be entitled to claim an
interest in compensation if the land were
acquired under this Act."
"Section 17 - Special powers in cases of
urgency -(1) In cases of urgency, whenever
the Appropriate Government so directs, the
collector, though no such award has been made
may, on the expiration of fifteen days from
the publication of the notice mentioned in
section 9, sub-section (1), [take possession
of any land needed for a public purpose].
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Such land shall thereupon vest absolutely in
the Government, free from all encumbrances.
(2) Whenever owing to any sudden change in
the channel of any navigable river or other
unforeseen emergency, it becomes necessary
for any Railway Administration to acquire the
immediate possession of any land for the
maintenance of their traffic or for the
purpose of making thereon a river-side or
ghat station, or of providing convenient
connection with or access to any such
station, [or the appropriate Government
considers it necessary to acquire the
immediate possession of any land for the
purpose of maintaining any structure or
system pertaining to irrigation, water
supply, drainage, road communication or
electricity,] the Collector may, immediately
after the publication of the notice mentioned
in sub-section (1) and with the previous
sanction of the appropriate Government, enter
upon and take possession of such land, which
shall thereupon vest absolutely in the
Government free from all encumbrances;
Provided that the Collector shall not
take possession of any building or part of a
building under this sub-section without
giving to the occupier thereof at least
forty-eighty hours’ notice of his intention
so to do, or such longer notice as may be
reasonably sufficient to enable such occupier
to remove his movable property from such
building without unnecessary inconvenience.
(3) ................................
(3A) Before taking possession of any land
under sub-section (1) or sub-section (2), the
Collector shall, without prejudice to the
provisions of sub-section (3),-
(a) tender payment of eighty per centum of
the compensation for such land as
estimated by him to the persons
interested entitled thereto, and
(b) pay it to them, unless prevented by some
one or more of the contingencies
mentioned in section 31, sub-section
(2), and where the Collector is so
prevented, the provisions of section 31,
sub-section (2), (except the second
proviso thereto), shall apply as they
apply to the payment of compensation
under that section.
(3B) ..............................
(4) In the case of any land to which, in the
opinion of the appropriate Government,
the provisions of sub-section (1), or
sub-section (2) are applicable, the
appropriate Government may direct that
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the provisions of section 5A shall not
apply, and, if it does so direct, a
declaration may be made under section 6
in respect of the land at any time
[after the date of the publication of
the notification under section 4, sub-
section (1)."
These provisions clearly provide protection to a
person whose land is to be acquired by providing right
to object to the proposed acquisition of any land
notified under Section 4; opportunity of hearing is
also provided to show that the proposal to acquire the
land was unwarranted; such opportunity available under
Section 5A cannot be denied except in case of urgency.
Section 17 confers extraordinary powers on the
authorities under which it can dispense with the normal
procedure laid down under Section 5A of the Act in
exceptional case of urgency. Such powers cannot be
lightly resorted to except in case of real urgency
enabling the Government to take immediate possession of
the land proposed to be acquired for public purpose. A
public purpose, however, laudable it may be, by itself
is not sufficient to take aid of Section 17 to use this
extraordinary power as use of such power deprives a
land owner of his right in relation to immoveable
property to file objections for the proposed
acquisition and it also dispenses with the inquiry
under Section 5A of the Act. The Authority must have
subjective satisfaction of the need for invoking
urgency clause under Section 17 keeping in mind the
nature of the public purpose, real urgency that the
situation demands and the time factor i.e. whether
taking possession of the property can wait for a
minimum period within which the objections could be
received from the land owners and the inquiry under
Section 5A of the Act could be completed. In other
words, if power under Section 17 is not exercised, the
very purpose for which the land is being acquired
urgently would be frustrated or defeated. Normally
urgency to acquire a land for public purpose does not
arise suddenly or overnight but sometimes such urgency
may arise unexpectedly, exceptionally or
extraordinarily depending on situations such as due to
earthquake, flood or some specific time-bound project
where the delay is likely to render the purpose
nugatory or infructuous. A citizen’s property can be
acquired in accordance with law but in the absence of
real and genuine urgency, it may not be appropriate to
deprive an aggrieved party of a fair and just
opportunity of putting forth its objections for due
consideration of the acquiring authority. While
applying the urgency clause, the State should indeed
act with due care and responsibility. Invoking urgency
clause cannot be a substitute or support for the
laxity, lethargy or lack of care on the part of the
State Administration.
Life of Requisitioning and Acquisition of
Immovable Property Act, 1952 was extended from time to
time by various amending Acts. Finally by Act No. 20
of 1985, the period was extended to retain the
properties under the said Act for a maximum period of
two years which expired on 10.3.1987. The Statement of
Objects and Reasons of this Act - No. 20 of 1985 are as
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follows:-
"According to the provisions of the
Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable
Property Act, 1952 as these existed
immediately before the amendment of the Act
by ordinance No. 2 of 1985, all the
properties, which were requisitioned prior to
the amendment of the aforesaid Act in 1970,
were required to be released from requisition
or acquired by the 10th March, 1985.
However, it was found that some of the
properties requisitioned under the above Act
are required to be retained by the Ministry
of Defence, Ministry of Works and Housing and
also some other Ministry/Department and Delhi
Administration for public purposes. Although
Government is expeditiously implementing the
policy of acquiring or releasing from
requisition the requisitioned properties, a
number of them are expected to be needed by
the Government even after the 10th March,
1985, for public purposes. The Ministry of
Defence is taking action for either releasing
or acquiring the requisitioned properties
(including land). Similarly, in the case of
Ministry of Works and Housing, the need to
continue the properties under requisition
beyond the aforesaid date is due to shortage
of office accommodation for various
Ministry/Departments and also due to a few
cases being under adjudication by courts of
law. The Ministry of Works and Housing has
constructed a new office building in Calcutta
for the Govt. offices located in
requisitioned properties and, therefore, most
of the requisitioned properties in Calcutta
are expected to be released from requisition
shortly. An office building is nearing
completion in New Bombay also and the same is
likely to be allotted as alternative
accommodation to the eligible offices located
in requisitioned properties. It was,
therefore, decided to extent the maximum
period for which properties could be retained
under requisition by a period of two years.
2. ................................
3. In the circumstances stated above, the
Act was amended through the Requisitioning
and Acquisition of Immovable Property
(Amendment) Ordinance, 1985 (2 of 1985) so as
to extend the period for which the properties
could be retained under requisition by two
years and to provide for revision of the
recurring part of the compensation."
(emphasis supplied)
This Court in the case of H.D. Vora vs. State of
Maharashtra & Ors. [1984 (2) SCR 693] dealing with the
scope of Requisitioning and Acquisition of Immovable
Property Act, 1952 in relation to length of the period
for which the properties requisitioned could be
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continued, has observed thus:-
"The two concepts, one of requisition and the other
of acquisition are totally distinct and independent.
Acquisition means the acquiring of the entire title
of the expropriated owner whatever the nature and
extent of that title may be. The entire bundle of
rights which was vested in the original holder passes
on acquisition to the acquirer leaving nothing to the
former. Vide : Observations of Mukherjee, J. in
Chiranjit Lal case (Chiranjit Lal v. Union of India,
1950 SCR 869 : AIR 1951 SC 41). The concept of
acquisition has an air of permanence, and finality in
that there is transference of the title of the
original holder to the acquiring authority. But the
concept of requisition involves merely taking of
"domain or control over property without acquiring
rights of ownership" and must by its very nature be
of temporary duration. If requisitioning of property
could legitimately continue for an indefinite period
of time, the distinction between requisition and
acquisition would tend to become blurred, because in
that event for all practical purposes the right to
possession and enjoyment of the property which
constitutes a major constituent element of the right
of ownership would be vested indefinitely without any
limitation of time in the requisitioning authority
and it would be possible for the authority to
substantially take over the property without
acquiring it and paying full market value as
compensation under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894. We
do not think that the Government can under the guise
of requisition continued for an indefinite period of
time, in substance acquire the property, because that
would be a fraud on the power conferred on the
government. If the Government wants to take over the
property for an indefinite period of time, the
Government must acquire the property but it cannot
use the power of requisition for achieving that
object. The power of requisition is exercisable by
the Government only for a public purpose which is of
a transitory character. If the public purpose for
which the premises are required is of a perennial or
permanent character from the very inception, no order
can be passed requisitioning the premises and in such
a case the order of requisition, if passed, would be
a fraud upon the statute, for the Government would be
requisitioning the premises when really speaking they
want the premises for acquisition, the object of
taking the premises being not transitory but
permanent in character. Where the purpose for which
the premises are required is of such a character that
from the very inception it can never be served by
requisitioning the premises but can be achieved only
by acquiring the property which would be the case
where the purpose is of a permanent character or
likely to subsist for an indefinite period of time,
the Government may acquire the premises but it
certainly cannot requisition the premises and
continue the requisitioning indefinitely. Here in the
present case the order of requisition was made as far
back as April 9, 1951 and even if it was made for
housing a homeless person and the appellant at that
time fell within the category of homeless person, it
cannot be allowed to continue for such an
inordinately long period as third years. We must
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therefore hold that the order of requisition even if
it was valid when made, ceased to be valid and
effective after the expiration of a reasonable period
of time. It is not necessary for us to decide what
period of time may be regarded as reasonable for the
continuance of an order of requisition in a given
case, because ultimately the answer to this question
must depend on the facts and circumstances of each
case but there can be no doubt that whatever be the
public purpose for which an order of requisition is
made, the period of time for which the order of
requisition may be continued cannot be an
unreasonably long period such as thirty years. The
High Court was, therefore, in any view of the matter,
right in holding that in the circumstances the order
of requisition could not survive any longer and the
State Government was bound to revoke the order of
requisition and derequisition the flat and to take
steps to evict the appellant from the flat and to
hand over vacant possession of it to the third
respondent."
(emphasis supplied)
In these appeals also, the properties in question
had been under requisition for a very long time. It
appears, the Union Works and Housing Minister on
28.3.1985 assured the Lok Sabha that the Government
would return all requisitioned properties within two
years or acquire it permanently after paying
compensation. This announcement came at the end of the
debate on the Requisitioning and Acquisition of
Immovable Property (Amendment) Bill, 1985 which later
became Act. From the debate, it is also clear that the
National Conference Member mentioned about the
difficulties faced by many people whose properties were
requisitioned for one purpose or the other. The
Minister informed that he had written letter to the
concerned for making arrangements for vacating or
permanently acquiring the properties within next two
years.
The Office Memorandum dated 9.7.1979 reads:-
"Delhi Administration, Delhi
(Public Works Department)
Vikas Bhawan, New Delhi.
No. F.13/22/79-PWD/Allot/8397 Dated
9.7.1979
OFFICE MEMORANDUM
Due to amendment in the
Requisitioning and Acquisition of
Immovable Property Act, 1952 and as per
Decision of the Executive Council all the
requisitioned/leased houses which are with
the Administration for more than 10 years
are to be released to their owners
immediately. As such it has since been
decided by the Administration to compile a
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priority list of the occupants of
requisitioned/leased houses with a view to
allot them alternative accommodation on
priority basis. All the occupants of
requisitioned/leased houses are requested
to furnish the relevant information in the
enclosed performa by 16.7.1979 failing
which, the officer concerned will be
liable for eviction from requisitioned
house without provision for alternative
accommodation. This may please be noted.
( L.d. Gupta)
Under Secretary (PWD)
Shri K.K. Kamra,
Exchange Stores
13, Alipur Road, Delhi
Despatcher,
P.W.D./L.S.G Deptt.
Delhi Administration
I.P. Estate, N.Delhi-110001"
(emphasis supplied)
One more aspect to be noticed is, as observed by
the High Court, that the properties in question
continued to be in possession of the appellants; in
other words, there was no urgency of taking immediate
possession nor there was any immediate threat of
dispossessing them from the properties. At the most,
after the lapsing of the Requisition Act on 10.3.1987,
their possession over the properties would have been
unauthorized, may be so long they continued in
unauthorized possession of the properties, they were
liable to pay damages for their occupation for few
months during which period they could have completed
acquisition proceedings in the normal course without
resorting to provisions of Section 17 (1) & (4) of the
Act. During the course of the hearing, we specifically
asked the learned counsel for the appellants in this
regard, the only answer was that the appellants being
Union of India & others did not want to remain in the
unauthorized possession of the properties. We are not
convinced by this reply so as to justify invoking
urgency clause to acquire the properties. Having regard
to the facts and circumstances of the case in these
appeals, the authorities could have completed
acquisition proceedings in couple of months even after
providing opportunity for filing objections and holding
inquiry under Section 5A of the Act if they were really
serious.
In the Objects and Reasons of Act No. 20 of 1985,
it is stated that all the properties which were
requisitioned prior to the amendment of the Act in 1970
were required to be released from requisition or
acquired by March 10, 1985; although Government is
expeditiously implementing the policy of acquiring or
releasing from requisition the requisitioned
properties, a number of them are expected to be needed
by the Government even after the 10th March, 1985 for
public purposes; the Ministry of Defence is taking
action for either releasing or acquiring the
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requisitioned properties. It was, therefore, decided
to extend the maximum period for which the properties
could be retained under requisition by a period of two
years. Thus, it is clear that the authorities were
aware that the properties were to be released or
acquired and the maximum period was extended upto two
years for the purpose. From 1985 to 1987 they had
sufficient time to acquire the properties in question
in the usual course. They had enough time to provide
opportunity for filing objections and holding inquiry
under Section 5A of the Act. There was no need to
invoke Section 17 of the Act. The Office Memorandum
dated 19.7.1979 extracted above shows that the
Executive Council took the decision in view of the
amendment in the Requisition and Acquisition of
Immovable Property Act, 1952 with all the
requisitioned/leased houses which were with the
Administration for more than 10 years were to be
released to their owners immediately and all the
occupants of requisitioned/leased houses were requested
to furnish the relevant information by 16.7.1979
failing which the officer concerned will be liable for
eviction from the requisitioned house without provision
for alternative accommodation. Here again, it is clear
that the authorities were in know of the situation in
the year 1979 itself. Further the minutes of the
meeting held on 8.4.1985 in the room of Secretary
(PWD/L&D), Delhi Administration, Delhi show that the
position regarding all the requisitioned properties in
Delhi which were requisitioned under the 1952 Act was
reviewed. The said meeting was attended by (1)
Secretary (PWD&L&D), (2) Joint Director (Training), (3)
Additional District Magistrate (Registration) and Under
Secretary (LA). In the said meeting, it was decided
that all the pre-1970 residential buildings which were
partially requisitioned and were not in full occupation
of Delhi Administration should be de-requisitioned in
stages.
It was noted that some of the requisitioned
buildings which were fully occupied for
residential/office purposes by the various departments
of the Delhi Administration and which buildings are
essentially required for the functioning of such
departments should be acquired under the Act.
Shri V.N. Khanna pointed out that in cases where
the buildings/properties were to be acquired under the
Act, 80% of the compensation was to be given at the
stage of notice itself.
In this meeting, cases of requisitioned buildings
were reviewed in details and recommendations were made
in respect of each property.
It was also noticed that the acquisition of
buildings was going to be prolonged affair; initially
those properties which have been surveyed by ADM
(Requisition) and recommended for acquisition/de-
requisitioning vide letter dated 27.3.1985 may be taken
up.
Thus, from the Statement of Objects and Reasons of
the Act 20 of 1985, Statement by the concerned Minister
to Lok Sabha on 28.3.1985, the Office Memorandum
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aforementioned and the minutes of meeting dated
8.4.1985, it is sufficiently clear that the appellants
were fully aware that they had to make arrangements
either for acquiring the properties or de-
requisitioning them by making alternate arrangement
within a period of two years i.e. upto 10.3.1987
inasmuch as no further extension of the Requisition Act
was possible. Further having regard to the
observations made by this Court in the case of Vora
(supra), there would have been no justification for the
appellants to continue properties in question under the
Requisitioning Act any more. If the appellants were
really serious in acquiring the properties in question,
they had almost 2 years time even after taking the
decision to acquire them or derequisition them within
which time, acquisition proceedings could be completed
in the usual course without depriving the respondents
of their valuable right to file objections for
acquisition and without dispensing with inquiry under
Section 5A of the Act.
The High Court was not right in holding that
without expression of urgency in the impugned
notification itself, it could not be sustained, but
then the High Court did not rest its conclusion only on
this. Having examined the facts and circumstances of
the case, it was found that there was no material and
the circumstances even to have subjective satisfaction
by the authorities to invoke urgency clause under
Section 17 of the Act. This urgency was common in
respect of all the 14 properties as already noticed
above in the cases of Banwari Lal as well as Shakuntala
Gupta aforementioned. The finding of fact that there
was no urgency for invoking Section 17 has become
final. This finding holds good even for these appeals.
Having regard to the facts and circumstances and the
material available on record, we are of the view that invocation
of urgency clause was without justification and was untenable as
held in Banwari Lal and Shakuntala Gupta. This Court in State of
Punjab & Anr. vs. Gurdayal Singh & Ors. [(1980) 2 SCC 471] as to
the use of emergency power under Section 17 of the Act has
observed that "it is fundamental that compulsory taking of a
man’s property is a serious matter and the smaller the man the
more serious the matter. Hearing him before depriving him is both
reasonable and pre-emptive of arbitrariness, and denial of this
administrative fairness is constitutional anathema except for
good reasons. Save in real urgency were public interest does not
brook even the minimum time needed to give a hearing land
acquisition authorities should not, having regard to Articles 14
(and 19), burke an enquiry under Section 17 of the Act. Here a
slumbering process, pending for years and suddenly exciting
itself into immediate forcible taking, makes a travesty of
emergency power."
In Om Prakash and Another vs. State of U.P. & Ors.
[(1998) 6 SCC 1] referring to State of Punjab vs.
Gurdiyal Singh (supra), this Court in para 21 has
observed that "according to the said decision, inquiry
under Section 5A is not merely statutory but also has a
flavour of fundamental rights under Articles 14 and 19
of the Constitution though right to property has no
longer remained a fundamental right, at least
observation regarding Article 14 vis-a-vis Section 5A
of the Land Acquisition Act would remain apposite."
In the present appeals, the appellants have not been
able to show before the High Court any genuine
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subjective satisfaction depending upon any relevant
material available to the State authorities at the time
when they issued the impugned notification under
Section 4(1) of the Act and dispensed with Section 5A
inquiry taking aid of Section 17(4) of the Act. A
bench of three learned Judges of this Court in Narian
Govind Gavate & Ors. vs. State of Maharastra & Os.
[(1977) 1 SCC 133] has expressed that Section 17(4)
cannot be read in isolation from Section 4(1) and 5A of
the Act and has expressed that having regard to the
possible objections that may be taken by the land
owners challenging the public purpose, normally there
will be little difficulty in completing inquiries under
Section 5A of the Act very expeditiously. In the same
judgment, it is also stated that "The mind of the
officer or authority concerned has to be applied to the
question whether there is an urgency of such a nature
that even the summary proceedings under Section 5A of
the Act should be eliminated. It is not just the
existence of an urgency but the need to dispense with
an inquiry under Section 5A which has to be
considered."
The various decisions cited on behalf of the
appellants in support of their submission that there
was justification in invoking urgency clause for
acquiring the properties in question were on the facts
of those cases where either urgency was made out or
where it was shown that relevant material and data was
available at the time of issuing notification invoking
urgency clause. In the case of Deepak Pahwa & Ors. vs.
Lt. Governor of Delhi & Ors. [1984) 4 SCC 308] one of
the grounds raised was that long period of 8 years was
spent in inter-departmental correspondence which showed
that there was no urgency to invoke Section 17(4) of
the Act. In that context, the Court observed that
"Very often persons interested in the land proposed to
be acquired make various representations to the
concerned authorities against the proposed acquisition.
This is bound to result in a multiplicity of enquiries,
communications and discussions leading invariably to
delay in the execution of even urgent projects. Very
often the delay makes the problem more and more acute
and increases the urgency of the necessity for
acquisition." The Court proceeded on the assumption
that the pre-notification delay could have been caused
by representations made by the aggrieved parties but
this case is not an authority to say that in the
absence of material to justify urgency clause and long
delay in issuing the notification could be ignored or
condoned to uphold the validity of such notification.
In Chameli Singh & Ors. vs. State of U.P. & Anr.
[(1996) 2 SCC 549], the observations of the Court that
larger the delay, greater be the urgency was in the
context of the facts of that case having regard to the
public purpose involved therein for invoking the
urgency clause. In that case, the Court appeared to
think that very often the officials due to apathy in
the implementation of the policies and programmes of
the Government themselves adopt dilatory tactics which
leads the aggrieved party to challenge the invocation
of urgency. The Court took note of the fact that
urgency clause was invoked in that case for providing
house sites to the dalits and the poor which is a
national problem. This is not an authority to condone
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or ignore the laxity or lethargy or carelessness on the
part of the authorities in invoking urgency clause to
exercise special powers under Section 17 of the Act to
cover up their delay and laches without there being any
justification or material justifying invoking of
urgency clause. In the case of Union of India vs.
Ghanshyam Das Kedia [(1996) 2 SCC 285], this Court has
taken the view that the notification need not
specifically recite the nature of urgency and it is
enough if the records disclosed the consideration by
the Government on the urgency for taking action under
Section 17(1) & (4) of the Act. This position was not
disputed before the High Court and is also not
contested before us. The view of High Court in this
regard that the notification itself must specifically
state about the nature of urgency and in its absence
the notification gets vitiated, cannot be accepted.
But as already observed above, the High Court did not
quash the notification only on the ground of non-
mentioning of urgency in the impugned notification but
it has also independently considered and concluded that
no material was placed before the Court to show that
material and circumstances were available before the
authorities at the relevant time to invoke the urgency
clause to exercise powers under Section 17 of the Act.
’Urgency’ for invoking of Section 17 of the Act should
be one arising naturally out of circumstances, which
exist when the decision to acquire the land is taken
and not such, which is the result of serious lapse or
gross delay on the part of Acquiring Authority.
However, the position may be different where the delay
is caused or occasioned by the landowner himself.
Failure to take timely action for acquisition by the
authorities of the Union of India cannot be a ground to
invoke the urgency clause to the serious detriment of
the right of the landowner to raise objections to the
acquisition under Section 5-A.
In Civil Writ Petition No. 229/92 filed by Sudhir
Choudhrie, (the respondent in SLP No. 9264/2003), a
contention was raised on behalf of the appellants
herein that the writ petitioner’s case suffered from
delay and laches. The learned Single Judge having
regard to the facts and circumstances of the case
concluded that the writ petition could not be dismissed
on the ground of delay holding that the writ petitioner
had been pursuing his remedies in the court of law
against the proposed action of the appellants. The
Division Bench of the High Court in the order under
challenge in regard to the delay in filing the writ
petition agreeing with the learned Single Judge has
stated thus:-
"Before parting, we may however notice that
the appellant had raised a question of delay
in filing the writ petition by the first
respondent in writ petition No. 229/92 which
is the subject matter of LPA No. 10/1995.
However, the learned single Judge not only
accepted the explanation for the alleged
delay but also entertained the writ petition
and decided the same on merits. We,
therefore, are of the opinion that it is not
a fit case where this court should interfere
with the said judgment on the afore-mentioned
ground."
Ground of delay is not raised by the appellants in
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the SLP. In this view, the contention urged on behalf
of the appellants that the writ petition No. 229 of
1992 ought to have been dismissed on the ground of
delay and laches cannot be accepted.
The argument advanced by the learned counsel on
behalf of the appellants that the arbitrator could not
be appointed by the High Court in the absence of any
agreement for appointment of arbitrator to determine
the damages and there being no prayer in that regard in
the writ petition, cannot be accepted. This Court
dismissed the SLP No. 4458 of 1991 filed by the
appellants against the order dated 4.2.1991 made by the
High Court in Banwari Lal’s case. While dismissing the
said SLP on 22.3.1991, may be in the light of the
argument made on behalf of the appellants that
arbitrator could not be appointed, this Court expressly
made it clear that the arbitrator appointed by the High
Court may give award and the same may be filed before
the High Court for appropriate orders. Civil Appeal
No. 518 of 1998 filed by the appellants against the
order made in the writ petition No. 894 of 1987 filed
by Shakuntala Gupta was disposed of by this Court on
14.11.2000 following Banwari Lal’s case which included
appointment of arbitrator. In the said order, this
Court did not find any sustainable ground raised in the
appeal to make any distinction or difference from the
case of Banwari Lal and others. Hence it follows that
order of appointment of arbitrator made in Shakuntala
Gupta’s case was also upheld by this Court. The
learned Single Judge passed the order in the writ
petition appointing arbitrator to determine the damages
payable by the Delhi Administration instead of making
the petitioners to run to the civil court for that
purpose after spending several years in the court. In
the impugned order, the Division Bench of the High
Court has upheld the same. Since the order appointing
arbitrator in the cases of Banwari Lal and Shakuntala
Gupta is upheld by this Court, we have no good reason
to take a different view. On the other hand, we are in
respectful agreement with the same having regard to the
facts and circumstances of the case.
The alternative argument urged on behalf of the
appellants that if the impugned notification suffers
from infirmity in relation to invoking urgency clause,
it can be quashed only to the extent of invoking the
aid of Section 17 and the said notification can be
sustained confining it to Section 4 of the Act, cannot
be accepted. Otherwise, the same common notification
stands quashed in respect of the few parties as in the
cases of Banwari Lal and Shakuntala Gupta and it stands
sustained in respect of others i.e. respondents in
these appeals leading to anomalous situation. Added to
this, if the argument, as advanced on behalf of the
Union, is accepted, the notification under Section 17
of the Act invoking urgency clause would stand quashed
but the landowner, would nonetheless be deprived of the
possession of the property as also payment of 80% of
compensation under Section 17(3A) of the Act. Such an
unjust result cannot be allowed to happen by quashing
the notification in part only to the extent of Section
17 of the Act and maintaining it for the purpose of
Section 4 of the Act. Thus, having regard to the facts
and circumstances brought on record in these appeals,
it is not possible to accept this argument particularly
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when the very foundation of invoking Section 17 was
invalid and unjustified as upheld by this Court in
Banwari Lal and Shakuntala Gupta.
Since we are of the view that the decisions in
Banwari Lal and Shakuntala Gupta cover these appeals
against the appellants, we do not consider it necessary
to deal with the contention that due to non-compliance
of sub-section (3A) of Section 17 of the Act, the
entire acquisition proceedings were vitiated. Further
when we are upholding the impugned common order on
other grounds, we do not wish to deal with this
contention.
One more contention urged on behalf of the
appellants in SLP (C) No. 5451/2003 namely that the
writ petition filed by the respondents being tenants
was not maintainable, is required to be dealt with. It
does not appear that this contention was urged before
the Division Bench of the High Court. In the light of
the decision of this Court in Municipal Corporation of
Greater Bombay vs. Industrial Development Investment
Co. Pvt. Ltd. & Ors. [(1996) 11 SCC 501], it cannot be
said that in no case, the tenant of the land which is
sought to be acquired under the provisions of the Act
can challenge the acquisition proceedings. It is clear
from Section 5A(3) of the Act that for the purpose of
the said Section, a person shall be deemed to be
interested in land who would be entitled to claim an
interest in compensation if the land were acquired. In
an appropriate case, a tenant having sufficient
subsisting interest in the land can challenge the
acquisition proceedings. In view of the facts and
circumstances of the case, the learned Single Judge did
not dismiss the writ petition as not maintainable on
the ground that the tenant could not maintain the writ
petition. The Division Bench of the High Court also did
not disturb the order of the learned Single Judge.
This apart, the very same notification being common is
quashed at the instance of other writ petitioners. In
this view, at this stage, the contention urged on
behalf of the appellants that writ petition filed by a
tenant was not maintainable cannot be accepted.
Thus, having regard to all aspects and for the
reasons stated and discussion made above, we do not
find any merit in these appeals. Hence, they are
dismissed. No costs.