Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF MYSORE & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
D. ACHIAH CHETTY ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/12/1968
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
BENCH:
HIDAYATULLAH, M. (CJ)
SHAH, J.C.
RAMASWAMI, V.
MITTER, G.K.
GROVER, A.N.
CITATION:
1969 AIR 477 1969 SCR (3) 55
1969 SCC (1) 248
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1970 SC 564 (143,146)
R 1972 SC2205 (19,20)
ACT:
The Bangalore Acquisition of Lands (Validation) Act (Mys. 19
of 1962), s. 2-Scope of-Legislative competence to remove
discrimination retrospectively-Validating Acts-
Classification produced thereby-If reasonable
classification.
HEADNOTE:
In Mysore there were two Acts bearing on acquisition of
private land for public purposes, namely, the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, 1894, and City of Bangalore Improvement
Act, 1945. A notification under s. 4 of the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, 1894, was issued for acquisition of the
respondents’ plots in Bangalore. The procedure in the
Acquisition Act is a shortened procedure which is
prejudicial to the owner of property acquired. The
respondents challenged the acquisition in the High Court on
various grounds and the High Court allowed the petitions.
The State appealed to this Court and while the appeal was
pending the Bangalore Acquisition of Lands (Validation) Act,
1962, was passed and received the assent of the President,
as required by the Constitution on May 4, 1963. It
validates all acquisitions made, proceedings held, noti-
fications issued or orders made in connection therewith, by
the State Government purporting to act under the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, before the Validating Act came into force,
for the purpose of improvement, expansion or development of
the City of Bangalore. It also provides that pending
proceedings may be continued under the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act. The provisions are to be effective
notwithstanding the City of Bangalore Improvement Act, or
any other law, judgment, decree or order of any court.
Section 2(1) of the Validation Act, provides, that no order
made under the Mysore Land Acquisition Act is to be called
in question on the ground that the State Government was not
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competent to make acquisition for the Purpose of improvement
or on any ground whatsoever, and s. 2(2) provides that a
notification or order may be questioned in accordance with
the provisions of the Mysore Land Acquisition Act -and the
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, and the rules made thereunder.
In this Court in spite of the Validating Act the respondents
sought to support the judgment of the High Court on the
grounds that : (1) there were still two Acts which covered
the same field but prescribed two different procedures, and
that the notifications issued following the more prejudicial
procedure in the Mysore Land Acquisition Act were
unconstitutional as that Act was discriminatory; (2) an
acquisition or anything done, previously hit by Art. 14
cannot be validated unless the vice of unreasonable
classification is removed, and so, the Validating Act was
ineffective; (3) the Mysore Land Acquisition Act and the
Land Acquisition Act. 1894, are general laws which must give
way to the special law in the Improvement Act; and (4) There
is still discrimination, because. there are two classes of
cases one, in whose case the Validating Act dispenses with
the procedure of the Improvement Act and’ those, in whose
case that procedure will be followed
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HELD : (1) The supremacy of the Legislatures in India,
within the constitutional limits of their jurisdiction is
complete. By the non-obstante clause ’ in the Validating
Act, the Improvement Act is put out of the way as if it were
repealed or as if it had not been passed. The Legislature,
has made retrospectively a single law for the acquisition of
property and rendered all acquisitions, made before the
Validating Act was passed, to be governed by the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act alone. Objections based on breach of
Constitution or fundamental rights could be raised in spite
of the words ’or on any ground whatsoever’ in the Validating
Act, but, objections on the ground that there has been
nonobservance of the provisions of the Improvement Act must
fail. [62 A-C; 63 A-B]
(2) It is wrong to assume that a discrimination arising
from selection of one law for action rather than another,
where two procedures are available, can never be righted by
removing retrospectively one of the competing laws from the
field. If there is legislative competence, the Legislature
can always put out of action retrospectively one of the pro-
cedures leaving one procedure only available, namely, the
one that was followed and thus get over the discrimination.
In the present case, the only curb on the Legislature’s
powers was the requirement of the President’s assent and
that was obtained. [63 B]
Piara Dusadh v. King Emperor, [1944] F.C.R. 61, applied.
(3) There is no question of general Acts giving way to a
special Act because, after the Validating Act was passed
there was no Improvement Act to consider. [63 E-F]
(4) All Validating Acts lead to two distinct classes those
in which validation is necessary and those in which it is
not. Such class legislation is permissible and the
Legislature is competent to validate procedural defects. [63
H]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal Nos. 111 to 113,
115 to 117 of 1966.
Appeals by special leave from the judgment and order dated
March 3, 1961 of the Mysore High Court in Writ Petitions
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Nos. 1076, 1083 and 1087 of 1959 and 270, 359 and 360 of
1960.
C. K. Daphtary, B. R. L. Iyengar, R. H. Dhebar and S. P.
Nayar, for the appellants (in all the appeals).
S. T. Desai, J. Mahajan, J. B. Dadachanji and P. R.
Srinivasan, for the respondent (in C.A. No. 111 of 1966).
Sarjoo Prasad, B. Datta, J. B. Dadachanji and P. R. Srini-
vasan, for respondent No. 1(in C.A. No. 113 of 1966).
R. Thiagarajan, for respondent No. 2 (in C.A. No. 113 of
1966).
A. N. Singh and D. N. Gupta, for the respondent (in C.A.
No. 115 of 1966).
J. B. Dadachanji and P. R. Srinivasan, for the respondent
(in C.A. No. 116 of 1966).
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Shyamala Pappu, M.R. Ramamurthy and Vineet Kumar, for the
respondent (in C.A.-No. 117 of 1966).
The Judgment of the Court was
Hidayatullah, C.J, These appeals by special leave are
against a common judgment of the High Court of 1961,
allowing a batch of writ petitions. By the order now
impugned the High Court had quashed two notifications issued
under ss. 4 and 6 of the Mysore Land Acquisition Act 1894
and published in the Mysore Gazette dated May 7,1959 and
October 15, 1959, respectively, and restrained the State
Government from acquiring the land affected by the said
notifications The State now appeal .
The petitions were directed against the State of Mysore and
the Special Land Acquisition Officer, City Improvement Trust
Board, Bangalore. In some of the Petitions there were other
respondents either with or without the Special, Land
Acquisition Officer. Nothing, however, turns upon the array
of the respondents.
In Mysore there are two Acts bearing on acquisition of pri-
vate land for public purposes. The first is the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act which following the same scheme as the Land
Acquisition Act in force in India. The other is the City of
Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945. The latter Act constitutes
a Board of Trustees charged with the execution of the Act
and in its Third Chapter lays down the duties and powers of
the Board and the manner in which improvement schemes are to
be effectuated. Sections 14 to 18 and s. 27 outline the
procedure by which acquisition of land is to be made.
Section 52 of the Act lays down that any provision of law
contained in any other enactment in force in Mysore
repugnant to any provision contained in the Improvement Act
is to stand down to the extent of- the repugnancy. The
Mysore, Land Acquisition Act has also sections 4, 5A and 6
analogous to the corresponding sections in the Central Land
Acquisition Act in force in the whole of India.
The land in respect of which the present dispute has. arisen
is Survey No. 2 of Raja Mahal village, Kasba Hobli,
Bangalore North Taluk. This land belonged originally to the
Maharaja who divided it into plots. The petitioners who
came before the High Court, are owners of some of the plots
which were transferred to them by different modes such as
sale, gift, etc. These, petitioners acquired plots for
purposes of their own. Some, had made lay-outs already with
the prior sanction of the Board and spent money in laying
out the plots including amount paid out to the Board in this
connection. The notification under s. 4 issued for
acquisition of these plots stated that they were being
7Sup.C.I.169-5
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acquired for public purpose to wit Raja Mahal Vilas Layout.
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Many petitions were, filed in the High Court to question the
validity of the action. It was said that the Notification
under s. 4 of the Mysore Land Acquisition Act gave no
particulars and was followed by tile Notification under s. 6
with the result that the opportunity under s. 5A of
objecting to the acquisition was lost to the petitioners.
It was also contended that the scheme of layout was feasible
only under the Improvement Act through the Board of Trustees
for the Improvement of the City of Bangalore and the
procedure in Chapter III of that Act had to be followed.
The acquisition, however, was being made entirely under the
Land Acquisition Act without any advertence to the
provisions of the Improvement Act. It was, therefore,
contended that the action of the Government was ultra-vires,
section 52 of the Improvement Act and the provisions of the
Third Chapter of that Act. It was also submitted that the
action in using the provisions of the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act was discriminatory because in -other cases
the provisions of the Improvement Act were applied.
The petitions were filed between the last week- of December,
1959 and the last week of March, 1960. Before the petitions
came up for hearing the Governor of Mysore promulgated on
June 9, 1960 an Ordinance called the City of Bangalore Im-
provement (Amendment) Ordinance (No. 1 of 1960) introducing
retrospectively s. 27-A. This was followed by an Act which
reenacted the provisions of the Ordinance. The Act was,
however, not reserved for the assent of the President, nor
was his assent taken to its introduction. By this; section
compliance with the Third Chapter of the Improvement Act was
dispensed with. The petitioners then challenged the
Amending Ordinance and the Amending Act as not complying
with Arts. 213(1) and 254(1) of the Constitution. The State
of Mysore relied upon the Mysore Land Acquisition Act for
the validity of the proceedings. The petitioners submitted
that the public purpose was linked up with the improvement
of the city of Bangalore and thus fell to be governed by the
Improvement Act., They contended that the discrimination
still continued if the attempted inclusion of s. 27-A in the
City Improvement Act was held to be unconstitutional. It
may be mentioned that in one petition a ground of estoppel
had been raised, as expenditure had been incurred in laying
out the plot and the Board had received payment for its
sanction.
The petitions in the High Court, therefore, proceeded on the
following three broad points : (1) validity of Ordinance 1
of 1960 and the Mysore Act XIll of 1960; (2) non-compliance
with the City of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945; and (3)
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discrimination between two classes of cases, i.e. those in
which the provisions of Chapter III of the Improvement Act
were followed and those like the case of the petitioners in
which they were not followed. An additional point of
estoppel was special to one petition only.
The High Court rightly declared unconstitutional Ordinance 1
of 1960 and the Amending Act XIII of 1960 on the’ short
ground that the former offended cl. (1) of Art. 213 being
promulgated without the instructions of the President and
the latter offended cl. (2) of Art. 254, and it was not
reserved for the consideration of the President and was not
assented to by him. These grounds are so patent that no
attempt was made before us to urge anything to the contrary.
The High Court next considered the validity of the notifi-
cations on the ground of discrimination and found that the
provisions of the Third Chapter of the Improvement Act had
to be, followed in law. Since they were by-passed, the High
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Court found discrimination between these cases and the cases
of others in which the provisions were followed. The High
Court held that this shortened procedure offended against
the equality clause in the Constitution. The State was
aggrieved by the decision and this appeal is the result.
Before this appeal came up for hearing a Validating Act was
passed by the Legislature of the State. This Validating Act
was reserved for the assent of the President. The State in
arguing these appeals seeks support from the provisions of
the Validating Act and contends that the judgment under
appeal cannot now be supported because of the validation of
the acquisition not, withstanding the provisions of the
Improvement Act. The case before us, therefore, was
considered under the new Validating Act. Before we discuss
the arguments, which are advanced in support of the
decisions of the High Court and those against it we may set
out here the provisions of the Validating Act since they are
the main subject of controversy in the appeal before us.
The Act in question is the Bangalore Acquisition of Lands
(Validation) Act, 1962 (Act 19 of 1963). It received the
assent of the President on the Fourth day of May, 1963. As
its long title shows it is an Act to validate the
acquisition under the Mysore Land Acquisition Act, 1894 of
lands by the State Government for the purpose of
improvement, expansion or development of the City of
Bangalore, and the orders passed and the proceedings held in
connection therewith. The Act is intended to apply to any
area to which the City of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945
extends and validates orders passed and proceedings held in
connection therewith. The Act consists of only two
sections. The first section gives the short title and the
second section deals with validation of certain acquisition
of lands and
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proceedings and orders connected therewith. The second
section reads as follows :
"2. Validation of certain acquisition of lands
and proceedings and orders connected
therewith.-
(1) Notwithstanding anything contained in
the City of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945
(Mysore Act V of 1945), or in any other law,
or in any judgment, decree or order of any
Court,-
(a) every acquisition of land for the
purpose of improvement; expansion or
development of the City of Bangalore or any
area to which the City of Bangalore
Improvement Act, 1945, extends, made by the
State Government acting or purporting to act
under the Mysore Land Acquisition Act, 1894
(Mysore, Act VII of 1894), at any time before
the commencement of this Act, and every
proceeding held, notification issued and order
made in connection with the acquisition of
land for the said purpose shall be deemed for
all purposes to have been validly made, hold
or issued, as the case may be, and any
acquisition proceeding commenced under the
Mysore Land Acquisition Act, 1894, for the
said purpose before the commencement of this
Act but not concluded before such
commencement, may be continued under the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (Central Act 1 of 1894),
as extended to the State of Mysore by the Land
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Acquisition (Mysore Extension and Amendment)
Act 1961 and accordingly no acquisition so
made, no proceeding held, no notification is-
sued and no order made by the State Government
or by any authority under the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, 1894, or the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894, in connection with any such
acquisition shall be called in question on the
ground that the State Government was not
competent to make acquisition of land for the
said purpose under the said Act or on any
other ground whatsoever;
(b) any land to the acquisition of which the
provisions of clause (a) are applicable shall,
after it has vested in the State Government,
be deemed to have been transferred, or stand
transferred, as the case may be, to the Board
of Trustees for the improvement of the City of
Bangalore.
(2) For the removal of doubts it is hereby
declared that nothing in sub-section (1) shall
be construed as preventing any person from
questioning in accordance
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with the provisions of the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, 1894, of the Land Acquisition
Act, 1894, and the rules made under the said
Acts, any notification or order made
thereunder."
Now the effect of this section is in many directions. It
applies first to every acquisition of land for the purpose
of improvement, expansion or development of the city of
Bangalore by the State Government, purporting to act under
the Mysore Land Acquisition Act but only to acquisitions
made before that Act came into force. Next it applies to
every proceeding held, notification issued or order made in
connection therewith. Then it provides that all these shall
be deemed to be validly made, held or issued. Then it
provides that pending proceedings may be continued under the
Mysore Land Acquisition Act and no order made is to be
called in question on the ground that the State Government
was not competent to make acquisition for the said purpose
under that Act or on any ground whatsoever. All these
provisions are to be effective notwithstanding the City of
Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945 or any other law, judgment,
decree or order of any Court. The land to which these
provisions apply is further to be deemed to have been
transferred or stand transferred to the Board of Trustees
for the improvement of the city of Bangalore. The only room
left for questioning any order or notification is in
accordance with the provisions of the Mysore Land
Acquisition Act, 1894. the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 and
the rules made under those Acts.
The State Government claims that this Validating Act cuts
short all controversy. It has validated all past actions
notwithstanding any breach of the, Improvement Act or -any
other law or the decree and order of the High Court. It
further submits that the action cannot be called in question
on the ground that State Government Was not competent to
make the acquisition of land or on any other ground
whatsoever. It further submits that proceedings already
afoot can continue.
This contention is met by the respondents on three main
grounds. The first is that there are still two Acts which
cover the same field but prescribe two different
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procedures . In one procedure there is an inquiry assessment
of the public purpose preparation of scheme, and in the
other, there is none. The,, more prejudicial procedure
which is that of the Acquisition Act. must be disallowed as
it is discriminatory and therefore the two notifications
still continue to’ be unconstitutional.
The above argument denies to the legislatures the supremacy
which it possesses to make laws on the subject of
acquisition. What the Legislature has done is to make
retrospectively a single law for the acquisition of these
properties. The Legislature
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could always have repealed - retrospectively the Improvement
Act rendering all acquisitions to be governed by the Mysore
Land Acquisition Act alone. This power of the Legislature
is not denied. The resulting position after the validating
Act is not different. By non-obstante clause the
Improvement Act is put out of the way and by the operative
part the proceedings for acquisition are wholly brought
under the Mysore Land Acquisition Act to be continued only-
under that Act. The Validating Act removes altogether from
consideration any implication arising from Chapter III or
Section 52 of the Improvement Act in much the same way as if
that Act had not been passed.
The Validating Act goes further and says that all the acqui-
sitions shall not be called in question on the ground that
the State Government was not competent to make the
acquisition. No claim based upon the failure to observe the
Improvement Act can, therefore, be heard. The State relies
upon the last six words of the first clause of s. 2(1) of
the Validation Act to contend further, that the acquisition
cannot be called in question on any ground whatsoever except
in so far as door for objections is kept open by the second
sub-section. This is perhaps a larger claim than these
words warrant. What those words mean is no more than that
in addition to the ground that the State Government was not
competent, no other ground based upon breach of the
Improvement Act or any other law is to be entertained.
Those words must be read down. They do not mean what they
appear to say Objections for example of breach of the Con-
stitution or of fundamental rights will of course remain.
It is for this reason that the Legislature enacts sub-
section (2) to remove doubts and expressly allows objections
under the Mysore Land Acquisition Act, 1894 or the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 to be raised, notwithstanding the wide
language of the last six words of the previous section.
Therefore all objections on the ground that in the
acquisition there has been non-observance of the provisions
of the Improvement Act must fail.
Mr. S. T. Desai, however, contends that an acquisition hit
by Article 14 or anything done previously cannot ever be
validated, unless the vice of unreasonable classification is
removed and the validating Act is ineffective for that
reason. This argument leads to the logical conclusion that
a discrimination arising from selection of one law for
action rather than the other, when two procedures are
available, can never be righted by removing retrospectively
one of the competing laws from the field. This is a wrong
assumption. In Piara Dusadh and others v. K.E.(1) trials
before special judges (not sessions Judges under the Code of
Criminal Procedure) were deemed to be trial before Sessions.
(1) [1944] F.C.R. 61.
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Judges in accordance with the Code and the Federal Court up-
held the constitutionality of the ordinance by which this
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fiction was created. The supremacy of the Legislatures in
India, within the constitutional limits of their
jurisdiction is as complete as that of the British
Parliament. If two procedures exist and one is followed and
the other ’discarded, there may in a given case be found
discrimination. But the Legislature has still the com-
petence to put out of action retrospectively one of the
procedures leaving one procedure only available, namely, the
one followed and thus to make disappear the discrimination.
In this way a Validating Act can get over discrimination.
Where, however, the legislative competence is not available,
the discrimination must remain for ever, since that
discrimination can only be removed by a legislature having
power to create a single procedure out of two and not by a
legislature which has not that power.
Here the Legislature was supreme in the, field of
acquisition. The only curb on its powers was the
requirement of President’s assent and that admittedly was
obtained unlike the previous occasion when the Amending Act
failed for want of such assent. Therefore the Validating
Act enacted in 1963 does not suffer from the defect from
which the Amending Act of 1960 suffered.
The same argument is next put in another way. It is said
that the Mysore Land Acquisition Act, 1894 and the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 are general laws and they must give
way to the special law in the Improvement Act, more so in
view of section 52 of the Act last mentioned. But this
again ignores, the position that after the Validating Act
there is no Improvement Act to consider.
It is contended that acquisition by the Improvement Trust is
not a public purpose. We declined to hear this argument
which does not arise in the appeal before us since it was
not raised in the High Court.
Mr. Sarjoo Prasad also argues that there will be now two
classes of cases, one in which the Validating Act dispenses
with the procedure of the Improvement Act and those in which
the procedure will be followed. This is the same argument
in another form and is equally futile. Class legislation is
always permissible. There is a special class in whose case
the acquisition was under ’the Acquisition Act without
following the procedure of the Improvement Act. There are
two distinct classes of cases and the differential is the
striking down of action in the second class and the need for
validation. All Validating Acts lead to two distinct
classes-those in which validation is necessary and
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those in which it is not The legislature is always
competent to Validate procedural defects without in any way
losing its jurisdiction, by reason of the existence of the
other class.
The arguments that no opportunity was given to oppose the
acquisition on the ground that no public purpose was
subserved, must fail because a notification has already been
issued under section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act. It is
too late for this Court, to enter into the question of
public purpose.
It remains to consider the argument based on estoppel which
is, claimed in C.A. No. III of 1966. There is no doubt that
the, High Court, has not decided that issue. The writ
petition must therefore be remanded to the High Court for
the consideration of that ground.
The result therefore is that all appeals are allowed. All
writ petitions: (except 114 which is to be compromised and
C.A. No. 111,of 1966 ’in which there is a remand) will be
dismissed. There shall, however, be no order as to costs.
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Writ petition No. 1076 of 1959 (C.A. No. 111 of 1966) shall
stand remanded to the High Court but there shall be no order
about costs.
Y.P. Appeals allowed.
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