Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
DADU YOGENDRENATH SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
THE COLLECTOR, SEONI
DATE OF JUDGMENT25/01/1977
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
BENCH:
SARKARIA, RANJIT SINGH
KHANNA, HANS RAJ
SINGH, JASWANT
CITATION:
1977 AIR 1128 1977 SCR (2) 757
1977 SCC (2) 1
ACT:
The Land Acquisition Act, 1894, S. 23(1)--Considerations
for determination of compensation, scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Responding to a notice under s. 9 of the Land Acquisi-
tion Act, 1894, the appellants flied a claim for Rs.1500/-
per acre at which rate the adjoining lands were sold. The
Collector awarded compensation at the rate of Rs.450/- per
acre. At the instance of the appellants under s. 18 of the
Act, the matter was referred to the District Judge who
enhanced the compensation to Rs.11,000/per acre. An appeal
by the Collector was allowed by the High Court on the ground
that the District Judge had acted contrary to the mandate
contained in s. 25(1) of the Act, by awarding compensation
in excess of the amount claimed. The appellants contended
that their land had building potentiality and its value was
substantially more than Rs.500/- per acre, which had been
paid by them to the Government as diversion charges for
permission t.o use the adjoining land for building houses.
Allowing the appeal by certificate, the Court,
HELD: The circumstance that the appellants had volun-
tarily paid Rs.500/per acre as diversion charges, for laying
out the adjoining land into plots as building sites, taken
in conjunction with the other facts, namely, that the land
in question is within the municipal limits and is located
just on the edge of an inhabited locality of the town,
having. other buildings in the immediate vicinity, show that
its potential value as building sites is much more than the
rate of Rs.450/- per acre, awarded by the Collector and the
High Court. [760 C-D, 761 A-B]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 2128 of 1969.
From the Judgment and Order dated 4th May, 1968 of
the Madhya Pradesh High Court in First Appeal No. 88/67.
M.S. Gupta for the Appellants..
Ram Panjwani and H.S. Parihar for Respondent.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
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SARKARIA, J. This appeal on certificate is directed
against a judgment, dated May 4, 1968, of the High Court of
Madhya Pradesh. It arises out of these facts:
The appellants were owners of 7.35 acres of land being a
part of Khasra No. 47/1 in the area of village Manglipeth
District Seoni, Madhya Pradesh. On November 4, 1963, a
notification under s. 4 read with Sub-s. (1) of s. 17 of the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (to be hereinafter referred to as
the Act) was published in the Government Gazette stating
that this land was needed by the State Government for imple-
mentation of Seoni Water Supply Scheme. The declaration
under s. 6 of the Act was published on December 18, 1963,
and notices under s. 9 of the Act were issued by the Collec-
tor on December 28, 1963. In response to that notice, the
appellants filed a claim
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that they were willing to accept compensation in respect of
this land at the rate of Rs.1500/- per acre, "as the lands
adjoining this land and situated in a lesser advantageous
position are sold at this rate". The Collector made his
award on August 17, 1964, whereby he awarded compensation
for this land at the rate of Rs.450/- per acre. The total
amount awarded for this piece of land after adding solatium
at the rate of 15%, was Rs.2,904/-. He also awarded inter-
est at the rate of 4% from September 19, 1964, on which
date, the Collector had taken over possession of the land.
Dissatisfied with the Collector’s award, the appellants
made an application under s. 18 of the Act for reference to
the District Court for enhancement of the compensation. The
Collector accordingly made a reference. The Additional
District Judge, Seoni, who heard the reference, enhanced the
compensation to Rs.11,000/- per acre. In this way, after
adding solatium, he awarded to the appellants, herein, a
total amount of Rs.80,850/- together with interest at the
rate of 6%.
Against that judgment, dated May 2, 1967, of the
Additional District Judge, an appeal was preferred by the
Collector, to the High Court. The High Court accepted the
appeal, set aside the award of the Additional District Judge
and restored that of the Collector. The High Court however,
granted a certificate under Art; 133 of the Constitution.
The first contention of Shri M.S. Gupta, appearing for
the appellants, is that the appeal flied in the High Court
against the award of the Additional District Judge was not
an appeal in the eye of law inasmuch as the Collector, who
flied it, was not competent to do so. It is stressed that
no appeal was filed by the State as such, and consequently,
the incompetent appeal fired by the Collector should have
been dismissed summarily on this preliminary ground without
entering upon the merits.
This objection was raised before the High Court, also.
The High Court fully considered it against the background of
this case, and found no substance in it. In the interests
of justice we are not disposed to interfere with that find-
ing.
On merits, we find, in agreement with the High Court,
that the District Judge was palpably wrong inasmuch as he
awarded compensation at a rate far higher than what had been
claimed by the appellants themselves, pursuant to the notice
under s. 9 of the Act. The learned Additional District
Judge acted contrary to the legislative mandate contained in
s. 25 (1) of the Act, according to which, the Court "shall
not award" compensation to an applicant in excess of the
amount claimed by him pursuant to any notice under s. 9.
The only question that remains for our decision is,
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whether the High Court was right in scaling down the compen-
sation to Rs.450/- per acre ?
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Mr. Gupta contends that the High Court was not right in
holding that there was no evidence to show that the land in
question had potential value as building sites. It is
submitted that the High Court has simply ignored that evi-
dence. In this connection Counsel has referred to the
evidence on record showing that the appellants had before
the acquisition, paid diversion charges to the Government,
at the rate of Rs.500/- per acre in respect of the adjoining
land, for bringing it into use as building sites. Counsel
has further referred to the evidence showing that the land
in question is close to a built up quarter of the town, and
is within the Municipal limits.
Shri Ram Panjwani, appearing for the Respondent, submits
that this evidence was much too insufficient to establish
the potential value of the land as building sites, because
the existing buildings in the vicinity of this land are old
buildings, and the deposit of Rs.500/as diversion charges
for the adjacent land made by the appellants, was only a
speculative investment with an eye on the distant future In
support of his contention, Shri Panjwani has referred to the
decision of this Court in R.N. Singh v.U.P. Government(1).
In our opinion, there is evidence on the record which
unmistakably shows that from the view-point of a willing
purchaser, at the relevant time, this land had potential
value as building sites. Firstly, it was admitted even by
Gokul Prasad who was examined by the Respondents as their
Witness No. 1, that in front of the land in question there
are buildings which are being used as the office of the
Range Officer and as residential quarters for the employees
of that Department. Adjoining the Range Office is the house
of Dewan Najaf Ali in which the Additional District Judge
was residing. The witness further admitted that the land
in dispute abutts on Seoni-Chhindwara Road.
Dadu Yogendra Nath Singh, appellant, testified in the
witnessstand that apart from the office and the quarters of
the Forest Department, there were other buildings also, near
this land. At a short distance was the bungalow of Shri
Bhargava, Barrister. The Municipal Octroi Post was adjacent
to this land. The land in question is within the Municipal
limits of Seoni. The appellant further stated that he
intended to parcel out this land into plots and sell the
same as building sites and that was why for the adjacent
land, he had obtained for that purpose, the permission of
the Government by depositing diversion charges at the rate
of Rs.500/- per acre. He added that negotiations for the
sale of two plots had already been completed at the rate of
12 annas per foot. He also cited other instances of sales
of land in the vicinity at rates ranging from 4 annas per
foot to 6 annas per foot.
The oral evidence of Dadu Yogendra Nath Singh with
regard to the fact that the adjoining land had been laid
out into plots for building purposes, receives full corrobo-
ration from unimpeachable documentary evidence on record,
which shows that the appellants had
(1)[1967] 1 S.C.R 489.
760
before this acquisition, in 1963, made an application to the
Sub-Divisional Officer, Seoni, for permission to bring 6.16
acres of agricultural land out of Kh. No. 47/1, "in non-
agricultural use viz., for construction of houses". The
order of the officer concerned was that such permission. was
granted to him on depositing diversion charges in respect of
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that area at the rate of Rs.500/- per acre. It is signifi-
cant to note that this piece of 6.16 acres was also a part
of Khasra No. 47/1, out of which Khasra, the land, admeasur-
ing 7.35 acres, is in question. This circumstance unerring-
ly indicates that the land in question was suitable for
being used as building sites, and had for that purpose, a
potential value substantially in excess of Rs.500/- per
acre. The High Court has not at all discussed this evi-
dence.
It is difficult to accept the argument advanced on
behalf of the respondent that the appellant had paid
Rs.500/- per acre as diversion charges for the adjacent
land, merely as speculative business in the hope of making
money in the remote future. No prudent person would make
such an investment if there was no reasonable chance of a
good return over that investment in the present, or immedi-
ate future. In our opinion this circumstance coupled with
the other facts, namely, that the land-in question is within
the Municipal limits and is located just on the edge of an
inhabited locality of the town, having other buildings in
the immediate vicinity, was sufficient to establish its
potential value as building sites.
The observations made by this Court in R.N. Singh v.
U.P. Government (supra) do not advance the case of the
respondent. In that case, Shelat J. quoted these observa-
tions from an earlier decision, in N.B. Jeejabhoy v. The
District Collector, Thana (C.A. Nos. 313 to 315 of 1965
decided on August 30, 1965):
"A vendor willing to sell his land at
the market value will take into consideration
a particular potentiality or special adapt-
ability of the land in fixing the price. It
is not the fancy or the obsession of the
vendor that enters the market value, but the
objective factor namely, whether the said
potentiality can be turned to account within a
reasonably near future. The question there-
fore turns upon the facts of each case. In
the context of building potentiality many
questions will have to be asked and answered,
whether there is pressure on the land for
building activity, whether the acquired land
is suitable for building purposes, whether the
extension of the said activity is towards the
land acquired, what is the pace of the
progress and how far the said activity has
extended and within what time, whether build-
ings have been put up on lands purchased for
building purposes, what is the distance be-
tween the built-in-land and the land acquired
and similar other questions will have to be
answered. It is the over-all picture drawn
on the said relevant circumstances that
affords the solution."
What has been extracted above are broad guidelines and
not immutable absolutes. The essence of the whole thing is
in the sentence which has been underlined. It shows that
in the ultimate
761
analysis, the question, whether or not a land has potential
value as building site, is primarily one of fact. in the
present case, the circumstance that the appellants had
voluntarily paid Rs.500/- per acre as diversion charges, for
laying out the adjoining land into plots as building sites,
was of a clinching character, and taken in conjunction with
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the other facts, noticed above, conclusively showed that its
potential value as building sites was much more than the
rate of Rs.450/- per acre awarded by the Collector and the
High Court.
In their application dated 17-10-1964, under s. 18 of
the Act, the appellants stated that similar land in the
immediate vicinity had been sold at the rate of Rs.1,250/-
per acre and another plot at the rate of Rs.1,350/- per
acre. These lands are close to the area for which they had
paid the diversion charges at the rate of Rs.500/- per acre.
They filed a map also, showing the location of those lands.
On an over-all view, after taking into account the potential
value of the land, we think it will be reasonable to award
compensation to the appellants at the rate of Rs.1,250/- per
acre with interest at 6% per annum till payment, from the
date on which the possession was taken over by the Collec-
tor. The appellants shall also be entitled to solatium at
15% on the compensation amount awarded for the land.
Accordingly, we allow the appeal with proportionate
costs and modify the decree of the High Court to the extent
indicated above.
M.R. Appeal allowed.
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