Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
B.K. SRINIVASAN & ANOTHER ETC. ETC.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT19/01/1987
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
BENCH:
REDDY, O. CHINNAPPA (J)
OZA, G.L. (J)
CITATION:
1987 AIR 1059 1987 SCR (1)1054
1987 SCC (1) 658 JT 1987 (1) 180
1987 SCALE (1)142
ACT:
Mysore Town and Country Planning Act,
1961--ss.9.12,13,76J and 81A(a)--Planning Authority Rules,
1965--Rules 32 and 33 and Form II--Publication of a notice
in Official Gazette--Inviting attention of the Public to the
display and availability for inspection of the Plan and the
Regulations--Whether sufficient compliance with s. 13(4) and
Rule 33--Plan and Regulations--Whether to be bodily incorpo-
rated in the Gazette--Defect in Publication, if any,--Wheth-
er curable by s. 76J--Mention of Plan and non-mention of the
Regulations in the notice--Whether amounts to non-publica-
tion of Regulations--s. 13-Outline Development Plan and
Regulations--Whether distinct.
Administrative Law--Subordinate legislation--Notifica-
tion-Necessity of--How ’and when becomes effective--Publica-
tion of Notification--Mode of--Notification--Defect in
publication--If notification otherwise served its
purpose--Whether mere procedural irregularity in publication
would render the notification illegal--Subordinate legisla-
tion--To be published or promulgated in suitable manner.
Statutory Law--Effect of non-compliance with statutory
requirement-Whether depends upon the mandatory or directory
nature of the pro vision.
Interpretation of Statutes--Interpretation which departs
from common understanding of statute should be avoided.
HEADNOTE:
In 1961 the Bangalore Metropolitan Board was formed. The
Board prepared an Outline Development Plan (O.D.P.). In
February, 1963, the Mysore Town and Country Planning Act,
1961 came into force with effect from January 15, 1965.
Section 81-A(a) of the Act provides that the Outline Devel-
opment Plan for the Bangalore Metropolitan Area prepared by
the Bangalore Metropolitan Planning Board shall be deemed to
be the Outline Development Plan of the Planning Area com-
prising the City of Bangalore, prepared under the Act, by
the Planning Authority of the Area. Section 81-A(a) further
provides ’that the said plan alongwith the particulars
specified in clauses (ii), (iii), (iv)
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and (v) of s. 12(2) shall be published and submitted to the
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State Government for provisional approval. Section 81-A(b)
provides that on receipt of the plan and the particulars,
the State Government shall after making such modifications
as it deems fit, return the plan and the particulars to the
Planning Authority for taking further action in accordance
with the provisions of s. 13. Section 13 deals with approval
of the Outline Development Plan. Section 76J provides for
"validation of acts and proceedings". Rule 32 of the Mysore
Planning Authority Rules, 1965 provides for "publication of
Outline Development Plan under sub.s.(1) and sub--s.(2) of
s.9." It prescribes that the publication shall be made by
making a copy of the Plan available for inspection and
displaying a notice in Form II, (a) at the office of the
Planning Authority and (b) at such other places as may be
specified by the Planning Authority. The Planning Authority
is also required to publish a notice in Form II in the
Official Gazette and in one or more newspapers. The Publica-
tion under s.9(2) is also required to be made in the same
manner. Rule 33 provides for ’Publication of Outline Devel-
opment Plan and Regulations under s.13(4), and stipulates
that the Outline Development Plan and the Regulations as
approved by the State Government under sub-s.(3) ors.13
shall be published in the Official Gazette.
A ’Notice of publication of Outline Development Plan’
was published in the Mysore Gazette dated 21.12.1967 in Form
II. After the State Government provisionally approved the
Plan, ’Notice of publication of Outline Development Plan’
was published in the Mysore Gazette dated 10.10.1968 again
in Form II. In response to the invitation to file objec-
tions, as many as 600 representations and objections were
received from individuals, institutions, associations,
Chambers of Commerce etc. The Outline Development Plan was
finally approved by the Government and a notification to
that effect was published in the Mysore Gazette dated
13.7.72.
The Bangalore Improvement Trust Board desired to develop
Raj Mahal Vilas Extension under the provisions of the City
of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945. Land was acquired and
plots were alloted to several people. A lay out plan was
prepared and conditions were imposed for construction of
houses on the sites. One of the conditions of allotment was
that the sites were not to be sub-divided and not more than
one dwelling house was to be constructed on each of the
sites. Apparently multistoreyed, high-rise buildings were
not within the contemplation of either the Improvement Trust
Board or the allotees at the time of allotment. However,
High buildings came up. A number of residents of the locali-
ty submitted a memorandum to the Governor and
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the Chief Minister to take an appropriate action to prevent
construction of high-rise buildings in residential area of
Raj Mahal Vilas Extention. Since there was no response some
persons resorted to ’Public Interest Litigation, by filing
writ petitions alleging that the Outline Development Plan
for Bangalore which had been published in the prescribed
manner had been ignored by the authorities in granting
permission to the appellants to construct the high-rise
buildings and that permits had been granted to construct
eight-floor residential buildings going to a height of 80
feet whereas under the regulations the maximum permissible
height of a building was only 55 feet. Writs were sought to
quash the permits granted for construction, to restrain the
appellants from constructing the eight-floor buildings, to
direct them to demolish the structures already put up and to
require the Bangalore Urban Area Commission to recommend to
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the State Government against the construction of highrise
buildings in any of the existing extensions of Banglore.
The High Court allowed the petitions and declared the
licences granted for constructions illegal and directed the
Commissioner, Corporation of the City of Bangalore to modify
the licences os as to bring them in confirmity with the
Outline Development Plan and the Zonal Regulations appended
thereto promulgated under s.13(4) of the Karnataka Town and
Country Planning Act and take all consequential actions in
accordance with law.
In the appeal to this Court, on behalf of the appellants
it was contended: (1) that publication of the Outline Devel-
opment Plan and the Regulations in the prescribed manner,
that is, in the Official Gazette was mandatory under s.
i3(4) and that failure to so publish the Outline Development
Plan and the Regulations rendered them ineffective. The
licences already granted to the appellants could not be
cancelled or directed to be modified so as to be in accord
with the Outline Development Plan and the Regulations; (2)
that the Regulations were distinct from the Outline Develop-
ment Plan and that in the case of the Regulations, there was
no attempt whatever at publication; (3) that the High Court
was in error in holding that s.76 J cured whatever defect
there was in regard to the publication of the Plan and the
Regulations and that the Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations became effective as soon as they were approved
by the Government under s. 13(3) of the Act irrespective of
the date of publication under s.13(4); (4) that offer of
inspection cannot be a substitute for publication; (5) that
s. 13(1) used the words "the Plan and the particulars", s.
13(2) used the words "the Plan and the the Regulations".
s.13(3) used the words "the Plan and the Regulations" and
s.13(4) used the words "the Out-
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line Development Plan and the Regulations" as well as the
words "the Plan and the Regulations" and this signified that
the particulars and the Regulations are not to be treated as
part of the plan but as creations distinct from the Plan. In
the notice published on 27.6.1972, the Planning Authority
mentioned that the Plan was available for inspection at the
office of the planning authority but made no reference to
the Regulations and, therefore, it must be considered that
the Regulations were not made available for inspection and
so never published; and (6) that neither the Municipal
Corporation nor any other Civic Authority appeared to be
aware of the Outline Development Plan and the Regulations as
was evident from the circumstances that in the years that
passed since the approval of the Plan by the Government and
before the writ petitions were filed, as many as 57 build-
ings licences had admittedly been issued in contravention of
the Regulations.
On behalf of the respondents it was contended: (1) that
there was sufficient publication of the Plan and the Regula-
tions, that the Plan and Regulations were always kept avail-
able for inspection at the office of the concerned authori-
ties and that it was not the case of the appellants origi-
nally that there was no publication and that they had no
knowledge of the Plan and the Regulations: (2) that the
defect in the publication of the Plan and the Regulations
was effectively cured by s.76J and the passage of time; and
(3) that the Regulations were integral part of the Outline
Development Plan.
Dismissing the Appeal,
HELD 1. There was compliance with the requirements of s.
13(4) of the Mysore Town and Country Planning Act, 1961 and
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Rule 33 of the Mysore Planning Authority Rules, 1965.
[1075G]
2. At every stage the public were informed by notices
published in the Official Gazette that the Outline Develop-
ment Plan was available for inspection at the office of the
Planning Authority. [1078H]
3. The Authorities justifiably always treated the Plan
as including the Regulations and what was kept for inspec-
tion was the Plan alongwith the Regulations. [1079A-B]
4.(i) Where a law, whether Parliamentary or subordinate,
demands compliance, those that are governed must be notified
directly and reliably of the law and all changes and addi-
tions made to it by various processes. Whether law is viewed
from the standpoint of the
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’conscientious good man’ seeking to abide by law or from the
standpoint of Justice Holmes’s ’unconscentious bad man’
seeking to avoid the law, law must be known, that is to say,
it must be so made that it can be known. [1074C-E]
4.(ii) Delegated or subordinate Legislation is all
pervasive and there is hardly any field of activity where
governance by delegated or subordinate legislative powers is
not as important if not more important, than governance by
Parliamentary legislation. But unlike Parliamentary Legisla-
tion which is publicly made, delegated or subordinate Legis-
lation, is often made unobtrusively in the chambers of a
Minister, a Secretary to the Government or other official
dignitary. It is, therefore, necessary that subordinate
Legislation, in order to take effect, must be published or
promulgated in some suitable manner, whether such publica-
tion or promulgation is prescribed by the parent statute or
not. [1074E-F]
4.(iii) Where the parent statute prescribes the mode of
publication or promulgation that mode must be followed.
Where the parent statute is silent, but the subordinate
Legislation itself prescribes the manner of publication such
a mode of publication may be sufficient, if reasonable. If
the subordinate Legislation, does not prescribe the mode of
publication or if the subordinate Legislation prescribes a
plainly unreasonable mode of publication it will take effect
only when it is published from the customarily recognised
official channel, namely, the Official Gazette or some other
reasonable mode of publication. There may be subordinate
Legislation which is concerned with a few individuals or is
confined to small local areas. In such cases publication or
promulgation by other means may be sufficient. [1074F-H;
1075A]
4.(iv) In the present case, s.13(4) has prescribed the
mode of publication of Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations. It requires the Outline Development Plan and
the Regulations to be published in the prescribed manner and
the Plan and particulars to be permanently displayed in the
office of the Director and the Planning Authority and a copy
to be kept available for the inspection of the public at the
office of the Planning Authority. The particulars referred
to presumably are the particulars mentioned in s. 12(2) of
the Act consisting of various reports, including the Regula-
tions. ’The prescribed manner’ is what is prescribed by Rule
33, that is, publication in the Official Gazette. [1075A-C]
4.(v) Under s.9(1) and 9(2) also the Outline Development
Plan is
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required to be published in ’the prescribed manner’. The
prescribed manner for the purposes of sub---s.(1) and (2) of
s.9 is that prescribed by Rule 32. Rule 32 prescribes making
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a copy of the Plan available for inspection, publishing a
notice in Form No. II in the Official Gazette and in one or
more newspapers and displaying a notice in Form No.11 at the
office of the Planning Authority and at other specified
places. [1075C-E]
4.(vi) Rule 33 speaks of publication of approved Outline
Development Plan and Regulations in the Official Gazette
suggestive of a requirement that the Outline Development
Plan and Regulations should bodily be incorporated in the
Official Gazette. But if the entire scheme of the Act and
the rule is considered as an integral whole it becomes
obvious that what s. 13(4) contemplates besides permanently
displaying the Plan and the particulars in the offices of
Director and Planning Authority and keeping available a copy
for the inspection of the public at the office of Planning
Authority, is a.public notice to the general public that the
Plan and Regulations are permanently displayed and are
available for inspection by the public. Such public notice
is required to be given by a publication in the Official
Gazette. This is how it was understood by the authority and
everyone else concerned and this is how it was done in the
present case. This appears to be a reasonable and a rational
interpretation of s.13(4) and Rule 33 in the setting and the
scheme. [1075D-H]
4.(vii) Section 13(1) requires the provisional Outline
Development Plan and particulars to be published by notifi-
cation in the Official Gazette with a view to invite com-
ments from the public. What was published in the present
case under s.13(1) was also a notice in Form No. II and not
the whole of the Plan and particulars. Such publication
evoked considerable public response. As many as 600 repre-
sentations from individuals and Institutions were received.
Therefore everyone concerned, i.e., the Government, the
Director, the Planning Authority and the public, individual
and institution alike, thought that publication of a notice
in the Gazette inviting the attention of the public to the
display and availability for inspection of the Plan and
particulars was all that was contemplated by the provisions
providing for publication. There is no reason or justifica-
tion to adopt an interpretation which departs from common
understanding of the Act and the Rules. [1075H; 1076A-C]
Shalagram Jhajharia v. National Co. Ltd. & Ors., [1965]
35 Company Cases 706, Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co. v. Syn-
thetics & Chemicals Ltd. & Ors., [1971] 41 Company Cases
377,Municipal Board, Pushkar v. State Transport Authority,
Rajasthan & Ors., [1963] Suppl. 2
1060
S.C.R. 373 and Joint Chief Controller of Imports & Exports,
Madras v. M/s. Aminchand Mutha etc., [1966] 1 S.C.R. 262,
distinguished.
5. The effect of the non-performance of a duty imposed
by a statute in the manner prescribed by the statute is not
discovered by a simple answer to the question whether the
statute is mandatory or directory. These are not simple
chemical reactions. The question whether a statutory re-
quirement is mandatory or directory cannot itself be an-
swered easily. Many considerations must prevail and the
object and the context are the most important. [1077A-B]
Liverpool Borough v. Turner, [1861] 30 L J Ch 379, referred
to.
6.(i) The High Court was of the view that such defect as
there was in regard to publication of the Plan was cured by
s.76J, the Omnibus Curative clause, called by this Court as
the "Ganga" clause. Provisions similar to s.76J are found in
several modern Acts and their object is to put beyond chal-
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lenge defects of constitution of statutory bodies and de-
fects of procedure which have not led to any substantial
prejudice. A defective publication which has otherwise
served its purpose is not sufficient to render i1legal what
is published and that such defect is cured by Section 76 J.
[1077B-D]
Bangalore Woollen, Cotton & Silk Mills Co. Ltd. Banga-
lore v. Corporation of the City of Bangalore, [1961] 3
S.C.R. 707 and Municipal Board, ’Sitapur v. Prayag Narain
Saigal & Firms Moosaram Bhagwandas, [1969] 3 S.C.R. 387,
followed.
6.(ii) In the present case, there certainly was an
effort to bring the Plan and Regulations to the notice of
the public by giving notice of the Plan in the Official
Gazette. Non-publication of the Plan in the Official Gazette
was, therefore, a curable defect capable of being cured by
s.76J. [1077H; 1078A-B]
7. Failure of the appellants to plead want of publica-
tion or want of knowledge assumes importance. In the answer
to the Writ Petitions, the appellants took up the substan-
tial plea that they had complied with the requirements of
the Outline Development Plan and the Regulations but not
that they had no knowledge of any such requirement. It can
safely be said that the defect or irregularity did not
effect the merits of the case. [1078B]
8. The Outline Development Plan and the Regulations are not
1061
distinct from each other. The Regulations are born out of
the Plan and the Plan thrives on the Regulations. The Plan
is the basis for the Regulations and the Regulations are
what make the plan effective. Without the Regulations, the
Plan virtually becomes a dead letter. The reference in the
four clauses of s.13, where the word ’Plan’ or the ’Outline
Development Plan’ is used, is to the core plan, without the
particulars and the Regulations and not the whole of the
Outline Development Plan which must include the Regulations.
What the different phraseology is meant to convey is to
emphasise tile different parts of the Plan which have to be
forwarded to the Government, considered by the Government,
made available for inspection by the public, as the case may
be and to the extent necessary. Merely because the words
"and Regulations" are added to the word ’Plan’, the Regula-
tions are not to be treated as not constituting part of the
Plan even as when a building is sold along with the fix-
tures, it does not mean that the fixtures are not treated as
part of the building. [1078D-G]
9. Notwithstanding the Regulations some building li-
cences were granted in contravention of the Regulations but
that only exposes the deplorable laxity of the concerned
authorities and emphasises the need for greater public
vigilance. The present Writ Petitions are forerunners of
such vigilance. [1079C-D]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos. 2780-81
of 1982
From the Judgment and Order dated 11.6. 1982 of the
Karnataka High Court in Writ Petition No.3386 and 3387 of
1981
K.S. Cooper, Dr. Y.S. Chitale, Mrs. P.S. Shroff, S.S.
Shroff and Mrs. Kiran Chaudhary for the Appellants.
M. Veerappa, A.K. Sharma, K.N. Singh, S.S. JavaIi, G.P.
Shivaprakash and B.P. Singh for the Respondents.
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The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
CHINNAPPA REDDY, J. Bangalore was a beautiful
city--once. It was a city with magic and charm, with elegant
avenues, gorgeous flowers, lovely gardens and plentiful
spaces. Not now. That was before the invasion of concrete
and steel, of soot and smoke, of high-rise and the fast
buck. Gone are the flowers, gone are the trees, gone are the
avenues. gone are the spaces. We are now greeted with tail
puffing
1062
chimneys and monstrous high-rise buildings, both designed to
hurt the eye, the environment and the man. But they are
thought by many as symbols of progress and modernity. They
have come to stay. Perhaps they are necessary. Nostalgic
sentiments, we suppose, must yield to modern societal re-
quirements. Smoking Chimneys produce much needed goods.
High-rise buildings save much-scarce space. They have a
place in the scheme of things. But where, how, to what
extent, at what cost, are the questions raised by some
aggrieved citizens of Bangalore. They want congestion to be
prevented, population density to be controlled, lung spaces
to be provided where people can breath, existing recreation-
al facilities to be preserved and improved, pollution and
health hazards to be removed, civic and social amenities to
be provided etc. All these require a balanced use of avail-
able land. It is with that object that the Mysore Town and
Country Planning Act was enacted in 1961 and it is with the
interpretation of some of the provisions of that Act that we
are concerned in these appeals.
The problem and the pain have been well brought out by
the Chairman of the Bangalore Urban Arts Commission (4th
respondent before the High Court) in the Chairman’s response
to an editorial in a local newspaper. It is extracted in the
Additional Statement filed in the High Court by the Writ
Petitioners. He says, "when we speak of saving Bangalore’s
skyline and its cherished character, we are apt to be misun-
derstood even by some well-meaning citizens. Vested inter-
ests and busybodies with an easy conscience would in any
case rubber wall any consideration of argument because the
present time, with the skyrocketing property value, is a
great opportunity for them to "make hay". They would rather
sell the city than dwell on its future.
We are not speaking only of the central areas of the
city--even when we regard them, understandably enough as
more precious than the rest of the city. Nor are we trying
to guard the City’s supposed "colonial solitude" which, we
know, vanished many decades ago. We are not afflicted with
irrational nostalgia and have no fetish about bungalows and
court yards. We are aware of the dynamics of a modern city.
All that we want--and it was ably summed up in your editori-
al is that we must prevent any more ugliness and haphazard-
ness, of which we have had more than what Bangalore can take
if it is to stay as the City Beautiful, with its planned
spaciousness and (still) largely unclustered skyline. We
also want, without any further delay, a vigilant, clearly
speltout and scrupulously honest system to ensure an orderly
growth of the city, in "Keeping with the capacity of its
services, like water supply, drainage and roads".
1063
I entirely agree that for new areas we must provide for
more density of population if we are to get adequate mileage
from per capital expenditure, and if we are to release
sufficient lung-spaces for recreational and community activ-
ities. In fact, we have long back suggested to City Planners
to plan for self-contained and self-sufficient clusters of
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multiple-storey blocks, with their own plazas, shopping and
recreational centers, in carefully selected locations and in
keeping with the available services.
Again, there is no doubt that coverage per plot must be
systematically reduced through imaginatively formulated
bye-laws, if we are to continue the garden-city character of
the City’s new areas. It is utterly mystifying however, that
such obviously valid thoughts and suggestions should end
with the plea for "concentrated growth"-presumely in the
central area of the city and preferably with high-rise
buildings. Such growth which is bound to obliterate what we
have still left of this beautiful city and put further
strains on its traffic, water supply and drainage, is cer-
tainly not going to help the proletarian office-goer or
house-seeker. It will serve only the big-time builder, the
high-spending rich and--last but not least--the fast-buck
chasing wheeler-dealers and busybodies mentioned above.
"Now that the State Government has announced a clear
policy in this behalf, there is no reason why we should not
expect the best. This Commission has made its own contribu-
tion to the formulation of a new set of building bye-laws
which aim at the much needed regulation--on fully modern
lines--of this City’s future growth, and which leave minimum
scope for corruption. We hope that these will be adopted
soon. We look forward to a new approach and a new era-free
from the stench of corruption. We hope that these will be
adopted soon. We look forward to a new approach and a new
era-free from the strench of corruption, innuendoes and
loose talk of "motives", and characterised by future-think-
ing. After all, we have the City Beautiful because of the
future thinking and hard work of the planners and adminis-
trators."
Raj Mahal Vilas Extension is a sparsely developed area
of the city of Bangalore which the Bangalore Improvement
Trust Board desired to develop under the provisions of the
city of Bangalore Improvement Act, 1945. Land was acquired
and plots were allotted to several people. A lay-out was
prepared and conditions were imposed for construction of
houses on the sites. The present appellants as well as the
petitioners before the High Court were all of them allottees
1064
from the Improvement Trust Board. One of the conditions of
allotment was that the sites were not to be sub-divided and
not more than one dwelling house was to be constructed on
each of the sites. Apparently multistoreyed, high-rise
buildings were not within the contemplation of either the
Improvement Trust Borad or the allottees at the time of
allotment. However, the petitioners before the High Court
were dismayed to find such high-rise buildings coming up in
the Raj Mahal Vilas Extension. Apprehending that there was
going to be an invasion of the privacy of the residents of
the locality, a disturbance of the peace and tranquility of
the residential area, an interference with basic civic
amenities consequent on haphazard rise of high-rise build-
ings, and exposing of the residents to all manners of health
hazards and interference with their way of living, a number
of residents of the locality submitted a memorandum to the
Governor and the Chief Minister of the State to take appro-
priate action to prevent the construction of high-rise
buildings in a residential area such as the Raj Mahal Vilas
Extension. There was no response from the authorities. In
desperation, some of the persons who submitted the memoran-
dum resorted to ’Public Interest Litigation’ and filed the
writ petitions out of which the present appeals arise. Their
principal complaint was that the Outline Development Plan
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for Bangalore which had been published in the prescribed
manner had been ignored by the authorities in granting
permission to the appellants to construct the high-rise
buildings. The first of the grounds mentioned in the writ
petitions was that permits had been granted to construct
eight-floor residential buildings going to a height of 80
feet whereas under the regulations the maximum permissible
height of a building was only 55 feet. The inconveniences,
discomforts and the hazards to which such a high-rise build-
ing in a residential locality would expose the other resi-
dents of the locality were explained in the writ petition
and writs were sought to quash the permits granted for
construction and to restrain the present appellants from
constructing the eight-floor buildings and to direct them to
demolish the structures already put up. There was also a
prayer to require the Bangalore Urban Arts Commission to
recommend to the State of Karnataka against the construction
of high-rise buildings in any of the existing extensions of
Bangalore. Writ Petition No. 3386 of 1981 out of which
arises Civil Appeal No. 2780 of 1982 and Writ Petition No.
3387 of 1981 out of which arises Civil Appeal No. 2781 of
1982 were filed on 25.2.81. In Writ Petition No. 3386 of
1981 an interim order was initially refused by a learned
Single Judge but on appeal a Division Bench of the High
Court granted an interim order restraining the appellants in
Civil Appeal No. 2780 of 1982 from raising further construc-
tion. However, in the special leave petition filed by
1065
the appellants the order of the learned Single Judge was
restored subject to an undertaking given by the appellants
that in the event of the original writ petition being al-
lowed and the construction being required to be pulled down,
the appellants will not raise any objection and will not
plead the construction during the pendency of the writ
petition as a defence to the pulling down of the construc-
tion. The order of the Supreme Court was made on 2.6.81. In
W.P. No. 3387 of 1981 the High Court made an interim order
on 24.7.81 permitting the appellants in Civil Appeal No.
2781 of 1982 to proceed with the construction subject to the
appellants giving an undertaking similar to the undertaking
given by the appellants in the other connected appeal. We
find from the judgment of the High Court that in W.P. No.
3386 of 1981 only excavation work had been done by the time
of the filing of the petition and that the work was complet-
ed only after the undertaking was given to the Supreme
Court. In the other case the ground floor had been con-
structed and pillars had been put up for the next floor when
the writ petition was filed. The work was completed after
the undertaking was given to the Division Bench of the High
Court. We may add that again in this Court when the appel-
lants sought interim orders to enable them to complete the
construction during the pendency of the present appeals they
gave an undertaking that they would complete the construc-
tion work of the 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, and 8th floors at their
own risk and cost and that they will raise no objection
whatever to this Court passing an order for demolition of
the said floors if the Court was ultimately inclined to pass
such an order and that they would claim no compensation for
demolition, if ordered.
The present appellants contested the writ petitions. The
writ petitions appeared to have been argued in the first
instance before a learned single Judge who after hearing the
petitions for some considerable time referred them for
hearing by a Division Bench. The Division Bench commenced
hearing the writ petitions on 16.3.82 and on 22.3.82 a
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further contention was raised by the appellants that the
Outline Development Plan and the Regulations were never
published, consequently they have never become effective
and, therefore, there was no need for any compliance with
the requirements of the plan and the regulations. As it
turns out this is the only contention which was finally
argued before the High Court and before us. The High Court
overruled the contention and declared the licences granted
for construction illegal and directed the Commissioner,
Corporation of the City of Bangalore to modify the licences
so as to bring them in conformity with the Outline Develop-
ment Plan and the Zonal Regulations appended thereto promul-
gated under Section 13(4) of the Karnataka
1066
Town and Country Planning Act and take all consequential
action in accordance with law.
Shri Cooper, learned counsel for the appellants urged
that publication of the Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations in the prescribed manner, that is, in the Offi-
cial Gazette was mandatory under Section 13(4) and that
failure to so publish the Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations rendered them ineffective. The licences already
granted to the appellants could not be cancelled or directed
to be modified so as to be in accord with the Outline Devel-
opment Plan and the Regulations. It was further urged that
the Regulations were distinct from the Outline Development
Plan and that in the case of the Regulations, there was no
attempt whatever at publication. It was submitted that the
High Court was in error in holding that Section 76J cured
whatever defect there was in regard to the publication of
the Plan and the Regulations. It was said that the High
Court was also in error in holding that the Outline Develop-
ment Plan and the Regulations became effective as soon as
they were approved by the Government under Section 13(3) of
the Act irrespective of the date of publication under Sec-
tion 13(4). On the other hand, it was submitted by Shri
Javali, learned counsel for the writ petitioners in the High
Court that there was sufficient publication of the Plan and
the Regulations, that the Plan and the Regulations were
always kept available for inspection at the office of the
concerned authorities and that it was not the case of the
appellants originally that there was no publication and that
they had no knowledge of the Plan and the Regulations. It
was only after-thought, put forward in the course of the
arguments at the final stage of the hearing of the writ
petitions. It was submitted that such defect as there was in
the publication of the Plan and the Regulations was effec-
tively cured by Section 76J and the passage of time. It was
also pointed out that the Regulations were an integral part
of the Outline Development Plan.
In order to appreciate the rival contentions of the
parties, it is necessary to refer to the relevant statutory
provisions.
In 1961 the Bangalore Metropolitan Planning Board was
formed. The Board prepared an Outline Development Plan (For
short, O.D.P.). In February 1963 the Mysore Town and Country
Planning Act, 1961 came into force with effect from January
15, 1965. Section 81-A(a) of the Act provides that the
Outline Development Plan for the Bangalore Metropolitan Area
prepared by the Bangalore Metropolitan Planning Board shall
be deemed to be the Outline Develop-
1067
ment Plan of the Planning Area comprising the City of Banga-
lore, prepared under the Act, by the Planning Authority of
the Area. Section 81-(a) further provides that the said plan
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along with the particulars specified in clauses (ii), (iii),
(iv) and (v) of Section 12(2) shall be published and submit-
ted to the State Government for provisional approval. Sec-
tion 81--A(b) provides that on receipt of the plan and
particulars, the State Government shall after making such
modifications as it deems fit, return the plan and the
particulars to the Planning Authority, which shall thereupon
take further action in accordance with the provisions of
Section 13.
Section 2(3) defines ’land use’ to mean the major use to
which a plot of land is being used on any specified date.
Section 2(4) defines ’notification’ to mean a notification
published in the Official Gazette. ’Planning Area’ is de-
fined by Section 2(6) to mean the area declared to be a
local planning area under the Act in the case of the local
planning area comprising the city of Bangalore. ’Planning
Authority’ is defined to mean the Planning Authority consti-
tuted under the Act. Section 2(9) defines ’prescribed’ to
mean prescribed by rules made under the Act. Section 2(11)
defines ’regulations’ to mean the Zonal Regulations govern-
ing land-use made under the Act.
Chapter III of the Act deals with Outline Development
Plan (O.D.P.). Section 9(1) empowers the Planning Authority
to prepare and publish in the prescribed manner an Outline
Development Plan for the area within its jurisdiction and
submit it to the State Government for provisional approval.
Section 9(4) prescribes that a copy of the O.D.P. sent to
the State Government under sub-section(1) shall be kept open
for inspection by the public at the head office of the
Planning Authority before carrying out a survey for the
purpose of preparing an O.D.P. for such an area. A Planning
Authority is required by Section 10 to make a declaration of
its intention to prepare such plan and to despatch a copy of
the same to the State Government for publication in the
Official Gazette and is also required to publish in the
prescribed manner an invitation to the public to make sug-
gestions. All suggestions made in response to the invitation
within the prescribed period are required to be considered
by the Planning Authority before submitting the plan to the
State Government. Section 12 deals with the contents of
Outline Development Plan and we think it necessary to ex-
tract here the whole of the section. Section 13 deals with
approval of the Outline Development Plan and we think that
it is necessary to extract Section 13 also. Sections 12 and
13 are as follows:
1068
"S. 12. Contents of Outline Development
Plan--(1) An Outline Development Plan shall
generally indicate the manner in which the
development and improvement of the entire
planning area within the jurisdiction of the
Planning Authority are to be carried out and
regulated. In particular it shall include,--
(a) a general land-use plan and zoning of
land-use for residential, commercial, indus-
trial, agricultural, recreational, educational
and other public purposes;
(b) proposals for roads and highways;
(c) proposals for the reservation of land for
the purposes of the Union, any State, any
local authority or any other authority estab-
lished by law in India;
(d) proposals for declaring certain areas as
areas of special control, development in such
areas being subject to such regulations as may
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be made in regard to building line, height of
buildings, floor area ratio, architectural
features and such other particulars as may be
prescribed;
(e) such other proposals for public or other
purposes as may from time to time be approved
by the Planning Authority or directed by the
State Government in this behalf.
Explanation--’building line’ means
the line up to which the plinth of a building
adjoining a street may lawfully extend and
includes the lines prescribed, if any, in any
scheme.
(2) The following particulars shall
be published and sent to the State Government
through the Director along with the Outline
Development Plan, namely:-
(i) a report of the surveys carried out by the
Planning Authority before the preparation of
such plan;
(ii) a report explaining the provisions of
such Plan;
(iii) regulations in respect of each land use
zone to enforce
1069
the provisions of such plan and explaining the
manner in which necessary permission for
developing any land can be obtained from the
Planning Authority;
(iv) a report of the stages by which it is
proposed to meet the obligations imposed on
the Planning Authority by such a plan;
(v) an approximate estimate of the cost in-
volved in the acquisition of lands reserved
for public purposes."
"S.13. Approval of the Outline Development
Plan--(1) On receipt of the Outline Develop-
ment Plan with the particulars referred to in
Section 12 from the Planning Authority under
sub-section (1) of Section 9, or after such
plan and particulars are prepared and pub-
lished under subsection (2) of Section 9 the
State Government after making such modifica-
tions as it deems fit or as may be advised by
the Director, shall return through the Direc-
tor, the plan and the particulars to the
Planning Authority, which shall thereupon pub-
lish, by notification, the plan and the par-
ticulars inviting public comments within one
month of such publication.
(2) If within one month of the publication
under subsection (1) any member of the public
communicates in writing to the Planning Au-
thority any comments on the plan and the
regulations, the Planning Authority shall
consider such comments and resubmit the plan
and the regulations to the State Government,
through the Director with recommendations for
such modifications in the plan and regulations
as it considers necessary in the light of the
public comments made on the plan and regula-
tions.
(3) The State Government, after receiving
the plan and the regulations and the recommen-
dation for modifications from the Planning
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Authority, shall in consultation with the
Director, give its final approval to the plan
and the regulations with such modifications as
the Director may advice in the light of the
comments and the recommendations of the Plan-
ning Authority or otherwise.
(4) The Planning Authority, shall then publish
in the
1070
prescribed manner the Outline Development Plan
and the Regulations as approved by the Govern-
ment. The plan and the particulars shall be
permanently displayed in the offices of the
Director and the Planning Authority and a copy
shall be kept available for inspection of the
public at the office of the Planning Authori-
ty."
Section 14 speaks of ’Enforcement of the Outline Devel-
opment Plan and the Regulations’. Section 14(1) prescribes
that on and from the date on which a declaration of inten-
tion to prepare an outline is published under sub-section
(1) of Section 10, every land use, every change in land use
and every development in the area shall conform to the
provisions of the Act, the Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations as finally approved by the State Government
under subsection (3) of Section 13.
The only other provision of the Act to which reference
is necessary is, what we may call the, "Ganga" clause*,
Section 76J which provides for ’Validation of acts and
proceedings’. It is as follows:
"76 J. Validation of acts and proceedings--No
act done or proceeding taken under this Act
shall be questioned on the ground merely of,
(a) the existence of any vacancy in, or any
defect in the constitution of the Board or any
Planning Authority;
(b) any person having ceased to be a member;
(c) any person associated with the Board or
any planning authority under section 4F having
voted in contravention of the said section; or
(d) the failure to serve a notice on any
person, where no substantial injustice has
resulted from such failure; or
(e) any omission, defect or irregularity not
affecting the merits of the case."
We may also refer here to the rules relating to publica-
tion. Rule 32 provides for "publication of Outline Develop-
ment Plan under sub-
1’ According to Hindu tradition the waters of the Ganga
purify, cleans the sins and remedy all insufficiencies.
1071
section (1) and sub-section (2) of Section 9". It prescribes
that the publication shall be made by making a copy of the
Plan available for inspection and displaying a notice in
Form II, (a) at the office of the Planning Authority and (b)
at such other places as may be specified by the Planning
Authority. The Planning Authority is also required to pub-
lish a notice in Form II in the Official Gazette and in one
or more newspapers. The publication under Section 9(2) is
also required to be made in the same manner except that
reference to Planning Authority is to be construed as a
reference to the Director. Rule 33 provides for ’Publication
of Outline Development Plan and Regulations under Section
13(4)’ and stipulates that the Outline Development Plan and
the Regulations as approved by the State Government under
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subsection (3) of Section 13 shall be published in the
Official Gazette.
Form 11 referred to in Rule 32 is as follows:
FORM NO. II
(Rule 32)
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION OF OUTLINE DEVELOPMENT
PLAN
Notice is hereby given that an
Outline Development Plan of .............
area has been prepared under the Mysore Town
and Country Planning Act, 1961 (Mysore Act 11
of 1963) and a copy thereof is available for
inspection at the office of the Planning
Authority during office hours.
If there be any objection or suggestion in
respect of the Outline Development Plan, it
should be lodged on or before the ..........
Every such objection or suggestion should
either be presented in the office of the
Planning Authority or sent by registered post
to the Planning Authority."
We said earlier that the Outline Development Plan for
the Bangalore Metropolitan Area was prepared by the Banga-
lore Metropolitan Planning Board and that under Section 81J
of the Mysore Town and Country Planning Act, it was deemed
to be the Outline Development Plan of the planning area
comprising the city of Bangalore, prepared under the Act, by
the Planning Authority of such
1072
area. A ’Notice of publication of Outline Development Plan’
was published in the Mysore Gazette on 21.12.1967 in Form
II. It was as follows:
"OFFICE OF THE PLANNING AUTHORITY
BANGALORE CITY, PLANNING AREA,
BAN-
GALORE-9
Notice of Publication of Outline Development
Plan
Notice is hereby given that an
Outline Development Plan of Bagalore City
Planning Area has been prepared under
the Mysore Town and Country Planning Act, 1961
(Mysore Act 11 of 1963) and a copy thereof is
available for inspection at the office of the
Planning Authority in Seshadri Road, Bangalore
City during office hours.
If there be any objection or sugges-
tion in respect of the Outline Development
Plan, it should be lodged on or before the
15th day of February, 1968.
Every such objection or suggestion
should either be presented in the office of
the Planning Authority or sent by registered
post to the Planning Authority.
K. Balasubramanyam
CHAIRMAN"
After the State Government provisionally approved the Plan
’Notice of publication of Outline Development Plan’ was
published in the Mysore Gazette dated 10.10.68 again in Form
II. The Notification was in the following terms:
"OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN, PLANNING
AUTHORITY BANGALORE CITY PLANNING
AREA, BANGALORE-9
Notice of Publication of Outline Development
Plan.
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Notice is hereby given that an Out-
line Development Plan of Bangalore City Plan-
ning Area has been prepared under the Mysore
Town and Country Planning Act, 1961 (Mysore
Act 11 of 1963). The said Plan has been provi-
sion-
1073
ally approved by the Government of Mysore as
per Section 13(1) of the above Act. A copy of
the above approved plan and the report are
available for inspection at the office of the
Planning Authority in Seshadri Road, Bangalore
City during office hours.
If there be any objection or sugges-
tion in respect of the Outline Development
Plan it should be lodged within 30 days from
the date of publication of this notice in the
Gazette.
Every such objection or suggestion
should either be presented in the office of
the Planning Authority or sent by registered
post to the Planning Authority.
CHAIRMAN PLAN-
NING AUTHORITY"
It appears that in response to the invitation to file objec-
tions, as many as 600 representations and objections were
received from individuals, institutions, associations,
Chambers of Commerce etc. The Outline Development Plan was
finally approved by the Government and a notification to
that effect was published in the Mysore Gazette dated 13.7.
1972 in the following terms:
"OFFICE OF THE CHAIRMAN, PLANNING
AUTHORITY BANGALORE CITY PLANNING
AREA, BANGALORE-9.
Dated, 27th June 1972.
Notice of Publication of Outline Development
Plan.
In pursuance of Rule 33 of the Mysore
Planning Authority Rules 1965 Notice is hereby
given that an Outline Development Plan of
Bangalore City Planning Area has been prepared
under the Mysore Town and Country Planning
Act, 1961 (Mysore Act 11 of 1963). The said
plan has been finally approved by the Govern-
ment of Mysore as per Section 13(3) of the
above Act. A copy of the above approved plan
and the report are available for inspection at
the office of the Planning Authority in Sesha-
dri Road, Bangalore City, during office hours.
1074
M.S. Ramachandra
Chairman
Planning
Authority."
It is seen that ’at every stage the public were informed by
notices published in the Official Gazette that the Outline
Development Plan was available for inspection at the office
of the Planning Authority, though it is not disputed that
the Plan and the Regulations themselves were never published
as such in the Gazette. The question for consideration is
whether the intimation to the public through the Official
Gazette that the Outline Development Plan was available for
inspection at the office of the Planning Authority is a
sufficient compliance with the requirement of Section 13(4)
regulating the publication of the approved Plan and Regula-
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tions?
There can be no doubt about the proposition that where a
law, whether Parliamentary or subordinate, demands compli-
ance, those that are governed must be notified directly and
reliably of the law and all changes and additions made to it
by various processes. Whether law is viewed from the stand-
point of the ’conscientious good man’ seeking to abide by
the law or from the standpoint of Justice Holmes’s ’Uncon-
scientious bad man’ seeking to avoid the law, law must be
known, that is to say, it must be so made that it can be
known. We know that delegated or subordinate legislation is
all pervasive and that there is hardly any field of activity
where governance by delegated or subordinate legislative
powers is not as important if not more important, than
governance by Parliamentary legislation. But unlike Parlia-
mentary Legislation which is publicly made, delegated or
subordinate legislation is often made, unobtrusively in the
chambers of a Minister, a Secretary to the Government or
other official dignitary. It is, therefore, necessary that
subordinate legislation, in order to take effect, must be
published or promulgated in some suitable manner, whether
such publication or promulgation is prescribed by the parent
statute or not. It will then take effect from the date of
such publication or promulgation. Where the parent statute
prescribes the mode of publication or promulgation that mode
must be followed. Where the parent statute is silent, but
the subordinate legislation itself prescribes the manner of
publication, such a mode of publication may be sufficient,
if reasonable. If the subordinate legislation does not
prescribe the mode of publication or if the subordinate
legislation prescribes a plainly unreasonable mode of publi-
cation, it will take effect only when it is published
through the customarily recognised official channel, namely,
the Official Gazette or some other reasonable mode of publi-
cation. There may be subordinate legislation which is con-
cerned with a
1075
few individuals or is confined to small local areas. In such
cases publication or promulgation by other means may be
sufficient. *
In the present case Section 13(4) has prescribed the
mode of publication of the Outline Development Plan and the
Regulations. It requires the Outline Development Plan and
the Regulations to be published in the prescribed manner and
the Plan and particulars to be permanently displayed in the
offices of the Director and the Planning Authority and a
copy to be kept available for the inspection of the public
at the office of the Planning Authority. The particulars
referred to, we presume, are the particulars mentioned in
Section 12(2) of the Act consisting of various reports,
including the Regulations. ’The prescribed manner’ is what
is prescribed by Rule 33, that is, publication in the Offi-
cial Gazette. If we now turn to Section 9(1) and 9(2), we
find that there too the the Outline Development Plan is
required to be published in ’the prescribed manner’. The
prescribed manner for the purposes of sub-sections (1) and
(2) of Section 9 is that prescribed by Rule 32. Rule 32 we
have seen prescribes making a copy of the Plan available for
inspection, publishing a notice in Form No. II in the Offi-
cial Gazette and in one or more newspapers and displaying a
notice in Form No. II at the office of Planning Authority
and at other specified places. It is true that Rule 33
speaks of publication of approved Outline Development Plan
and Regulations in the Official Gazette, suggestive of a
requirement that the Outline Development Plan and Regula-
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tions should bodily be incorporated in the Official Gazette.
But if the entire scheme of the Act and the rules is consid-
ered as an integral whole it becomes obvious that what
Section 13(4) contemplates besides permanently displaying
the plan and the particulars in the offices of Director and
Planning Authority and keeping available a copy for the
inspection of the public at the office of Planning Authority
is a public notice to the general public that the Plan and
Regulations are permanently displayed and are available for
inspection by the public. Such public notice is required to
be given by a publication in the Official Gazette, This is
how it was understood by the authorities and everyone else
concerned and this is how it was done in the present case.
This appears to be a reasonable and a rational interpreta-
tion on Section 13(4) and Rule 33 in the setting and the
scheme. We are of the view that there was compliance with
the requirements of Section 13(4) and Rule 33. We have
earlier mentioned that Section 13(1) requires the provision-
al Outline Development Plan
* See Narayana Reddy, v. State of Andhra Pradesh = 1969 (1)
Andhra Weekly Reporter 77.
1076
and particulars to be published by notification in the
Official Gazette, with a view to invite comments from the
public. What was published in the present case under Section
13(1) was also a notice in Form No. II and not the whole of
the Plan and particulars. Such publication evoked considera-
ble public response. As many as 600 representations from
individuals and institutions were received. That is why we
said that everyone concerned, that is, the Government, the
Director, the Planning Authority and the public, individual
and institution alike, thought that publication of a notice
in the Gazette inviting the attention of the public to the
display and the availability for inspection of the Plan and
particulars was all that was contemplated by the provisions
providing for publication. We do not think that there is any
reason or justification for us to adopt an interpretation
which departs from common understanding of the Act and the
Rules.
Shri Cooper invited our attention to Shalagram Jhajharia
v. National Co. Ltd. & Ors., [1965] 35 Company Cases 706 and
Firestone Tyre & Rubber Co. v. Synthetics & Chemicals Ltd. &
Ors., [1971] 41 Company cases 377 to urge that offer of
inspection cannot be a substitute for publication. We do not
think that these two cases are of assistance to Shri Cooper.
What was laid down in those cases was the mandatory require-
ment of a full and frank disclosure of the relevant facts,
in the explanatory note attached to the notice convening a
general meeting of the company cannot be circumvented by an
offer of inspection. Another case to which Shri Cooper drew
our attention was Municipal Board, Pushkar v. State Trans-
port Authority, Rajasthan & Ors., [1963] Suppl. 2 S.C.R.
373. In that case the question arose as to what was to be
treated as the date of the order of the Regional Transport
Authority. Was it the date of the resolution of the Regional
Transport Authority or was it the date on which the resolu-
tion was brought into effect by publication of the notifica-
tion? The answer was that it was the date of the publication
of the notification. In Joint Chief Controller of Imports &
Exports, Madras v. M/s. Aminchand Mutha etc., [1966] 1
S.C.R. 262 another case on which Shri Cooper relied, the
Court held that there was no order prohibiting the import of
fountain pens, since in fact no such order had been pub-
lished and no such order was brought to the notice of the
Court. All that was available was an entry ’nil’ against
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fountain pens in the declaration of policy as to import. We
are unable to see how these two cases can be of any help to
Shri Cooper. Shri Cooper also invited our attention to cases
drawing a distinction between mandatory and directory statu-
tory requirements but those cases again are of no avail to
him in the view that we have taken. We also desire to state
that the effect of the non-perfor-
1077
mance of a duty imposed by a statute in the manner pre-
scribed by the statute is not discovered by a simple answer
to the question whether the statute is mandatory or directo-
ry. These are not simple chemical reactions. The question
whether a statutory requirement is mandatory or directory
cannot itself be answered easily as was pointed out more
than a century ago in Liverpool Borough v. Turner, [1861] 30
L J Ch 379. Many considerations must prevail and the object
and the context are the most important.
The High Court was of the view that such defect as there
was in regard to publication of the Plan was cured by Sec-
tion 76J,’ the Omnibus Curative clause to which we earlier
made a reference as the ’Ganga’ clause. Provisions similar
to s.76J are found in several modern Acts and their object
is to put beyond challenge defects of constitution of statu-
tory bodies and defects of procedure which have not led to
any substantial prejudice. We are inclined to agree with the
High Court that a defective publication which has otherwise
served its purpose is not sufficient to render illegal what
is published and that such defect is cured by Section 76J.
The High Court relied on the two decisions of this Court
Bangalore Woollon, Cotton & Silk Mills Co. Ltd. Bangalore v.
Corporation of the City of Bangalore [1961] 3 S.C.R. 707 and
Municipal Board, Sitapur v. Prayag Narain Saigal & Firm
Moosaram Bhagwandas, [1969] 3 S.C.R. 387. In the first case
objection was raised to the imposition of octroi duty on the
ground that there was failure to notify the final resolution
of the imposition of the tax in the Government Gazette as
required by Section 98(2) of the City of Bangalore Municipal
Corporation Act. A Constitution Bench of the Court held that
the failure to publish the final resolution in the Official
Gazette was cured by S.38(1)(b) of the Act which provided
that no act done or proceeding taken under the Act shall be
questioned merely on the ground of any defect or irregulari-
ty in such act or proceeding, not affecting the merits of
the case. The Court said that the resolution had been pub-
lished in the newspapers and was communicated to those
affected and failure to publish the resolution did not
affect the merits of its imposition and failure to notify
the resolution in the Gazette was not fatal to the legality
of the imposition. In the second case it was held that the
non-publication of a special resolution imposing a tax was a
mere irregularity, since the inhabitants had no fight to
object to special resolutions and had otherwise clear notice
of the imposition of the tax. It is true that both these
cases relate to non-publication of a resolution regarding
imposition of a tax where the imposition of a tax was other-
wise well known to the public. In the present case the
situation may not be the same but there certainly was an
effort to bring the Plan
1078
and regulations to the notice of the public by giving notice
of the Plan in the Official Gazette. Non-publication of the
Plan in the Official Gazette was therefore a curable defect
capable of being cured by Section 76J. It is here that the
failure of the appellants to plead want of publication or
want to knowledge in the first instance assumes importance.
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In the answer to the Writ Petitions, the appellants took up
the substantial plea that they had complied with the re-
quirements of the Outline Development Plan and the Regula-
tions but not that they had no knowledge of any such re-
quirement. It can safely be said that the defect or irregu-
larity did not affect the merits of the case.
Finally, one last submission of Shri Cooper requires to
be examined. Shri Cooper submitted that Section 13(1) used
the words "the Plan and the particulars", Section 13(2) used
the Words "the Plan and the Regulations," Section 13(3) used
the words "the Plan and the Regulations" and Section 13(4)
used the words, "the Outline Development Plan and the Regu-
lations" as well as the words, "the Plan and the Regula-
tions". This, according to Shri Cooper, signified that the
particulars and the Regulations are not to be treated as
part of the Plan but as creations distinct from the Plan. We
do not think that we are entitled to split the unity and
identity of the plan as suggested by the learned counsel.
The Outline Development Plan and the Regulations are not
distinct from each other. The regulations are born out of
the Plan and the Plan thrives on the Regulations. The Plan
is the basis for the Regulations and the Regulations are
what make the plan effective. Without the Regulations, the
plan virtually becomes a dead letter. The reference in the
four clauses of Section 13, whenever the word ’Plan’ or the
’Outline Development Plan’ is used, is to the core plan,
without the particulars and the Regulations and not the
whole of the Outline Development Plan which must include the
Regulations. What the different phraseology is meant to
convey is to emphasise the different parts of the Plan which
have to be forwarded to the Government, considered by the
Government made available for inspection by the public, as
the case may be and to the extent necessary. Merely because
the words "and Regulations" are added to the word ’Plan’,
the Regulations are not to be treated as not constituting
part of the Plan even as when a building is sold along with
the fixtures, it does not mean that the fixtures are not
treated as part of the building. Shri Cooper drew the dis-
tinction between the Plan and the Regulations to suggest
that in the notice published on 27.6.72, the Planning Au-
thority mentioned that the Plan was available for inspection
at the office of the Planning Authority but made no refer-
ence to the Regulations and, therefore, it must be consid-
ered that the Regulations were not made
1079
available for inspection and so never published. We do not
think that it is possible to reach the conclusion suggested
by Shri Cooper from the absence of the reference to the
Regulations in the notice. The Authorities justifiably
always treated the Plan as including the Regulations and we
are satisfied that what was kept for inspection was the Plan
along with the Regulations.
Shri Cooper argued that neither the Municipal Corpora-
tion nor any other civic authority appeared to be aware of
the Outline Development Plan and the Regulations as was
evident from the circumstance that in the years that passed
since the approval of the Plan by the Government and before
the writ petitions were filed, as many as 57 building li-
cences had admittedly been issued in contravention of the
Regulations. It may be that notwithstanding the Regulations
some building licences were granted in contravention of the
Regulations but that only exposes the deplorable laxity of
the concerned authorities and emphasises the need for great-
er public vigilance. The present Writ Petitions, we hope,
are forerunners of such vigilance.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 20
In the result we find no merit in the appeals which are
accordingly dismissed with costs. The judgment of the High
Court will now be given effect by the authorities, taking
note of the several undertakings given to the High Court and
this Court at various stages.
A.P.J. Appeals
dismissed.
1081