Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
AHMEDABAD MUNICIPAL CORPORATION
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NAWAB KHAN GULAB KHAN & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/10/1996
BENCH:
K. RAMASWAMY, G.B. PATTANAIK
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
K. Ramaswamy J.
Leave granted.
This appeal by special leave arises from the judgment
and order made on February 20, 1991 by the Gujarat High
Court in Special Civil Application No. 5351 of 1982.
The admitted facts are that 29 persons had filed the
writ petition in the High Court. They are pavement-dwellers
in unauthorised occupation of footpaths of the Rakhial Road
in Ahmedabad which is a main road. They have constructed
huts thereon. When the Corporation sought to remove their
encroachments on December 10, 1982, they approached the High
Court under Article 226 of the Constitution. The High Court
granted interim stay of removal of the encroachment. By the
impugned judgment, the High Court directed the Municipal
Corporation not to remove their huts until suitable
accommodation was provided to them. The High Court also
further held that before removing the unauthorised
encroachments the procedure of hearing, consistent with the
principles of natural justice should be followed.
We requested Shri Dushyant Dave, the learned senior
counsel of the Bar to assist the Court as amicus curiae and
Smt. K. Sharda Devi has been assigned as Legal Aid counsel
to argue on the behalf of the respondents since they are not
appearing either in person or through counsel. By order
dated September 11, 1995, this Court directed the appellant
thus :
"We think that the Municipal
Corporation should frame a Scheme
to accommodate them at the
alternative places so that the
hutmen can shift their residence to
the places of accommodation
provided by the Corporation to have
permanent residence. Corporation is
accordingly directed to frame a
scheme and place before this Court
within two months from today"
Pursuant thereto, a Scheme has been framed and placed
before this Court. It would appear that only 10 persons out
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of original petitioners in the High Court whose names have
been mentioned in the supplementary affidavit are residing
there; of them Nurmahommad Samsuddin and Hakimuddin
Karimuddin have converted their huts into commercial units
run on the pavement. This road is 80 feet wide with 10 and 8
feet wide foot-paths on tow sides of the road. At present 56
persons, obviously including 10 original encroachers are in
occupation of hutments erected on the footpaths and
whereabouts of 19 original petitioners who have left the
area in consideration of money they have accepted, are
known. In their place, others have occupied the huts by
making payments.
Shri Dushyant Dave has also further submitted proposals
as alternative to the Scheme. Having heard the counsel on
both sides, we reserved the case for consideration. At the
outset, we express our deep appreciation for the valuable
assistance rendered by Shri Dushyant Dave and also for the
fair arguments advanced by Shri Arun Jaitely, learned senior
counsel appearing for the Corporation.
The questions for consideration are : (1) whether the
respondents are liable to ejectment from the encroachments
of pavements of the roads and whether the principle of
natural justice, viz., audi alteram partem requires to be
followed and, if so, what is its scope and content? (2)
whether the appellant is under an obligation to provide
permanent residence to the hutment dwellers and, if so,
what would be the parameters in that behalf? The questions
are dealt with later. On the first question, Sections
63(i)(19) of the Bombay Municipal Corporation Act, 1955 [as
applicable to Gujrat or Section 231 of the Bombay Provincial
Municipal Corporation Act [BPMC Act] empowers the
Commissioner to remove any wall, fence, rail, post step,
booth or other structure or fixture, permanent or moveable,
which shall be erected or set up in or upon any street or
upon or over any open channel, drain, well or tank, contrary
to the provisions of sub-section (1) of Section 312 after
the same came into force in the city of Ahmedabad or in the
Super-bazars after the Bombay Municipal (Extensions of
Limits) Act, 1950 came into force or in the tended suburbs
after the date of the coming into force of the Bombay
Municipal Act, 1955 [for short, the "Act"]. The power to
remove encroachments on street, pavement or footpath was
conferred upon the Commissioner, the highest officer of the
Municipal Corporation, who acts with high degree of
responsibility and duty to implement the provisions of the
Act. every citizen has a right to pass or repass on the
pavement, street, footpath as general amenity for convenient
traffic. A Constitution Bench of this Court in Sadan Singh
etc. etc. v. New Delhi Municipal Committee & Anr. etc.
[(1989)] 2 SCR 1038] was confronted with and had considered
the question "can there be at all a fundamental right of a
citizen to occupy a particular place on the pavement where
he can squat and engage in trading business? We have no
hesitation in answering the issue against the petitioners.
The petitioners do have the fundamental right to carry on a
trade or business of their choice, but not to do so on a
particular place. Hawkers cannot be allowed to, or be
permitted to, carry on trade or business on every road in
the city. If the road is not wide enough to conveniently
accommodate the traffic on it, no hawking may be permitted
at all, or may be sanctioned only once a week, say on
Sundays when the rush considerably thins out,". Thereby,
this Court has minimised the hardship to pedestrians and
the hawkers in doing their business by hawking on the public
street and at the same time has protected the public from
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free passes or re-passes of the traffic on road, pavement or
footpath. In Olga Tellis v. Municipal Corporation of Greater
Bombay [(1965)] 3 SCC 545], another Constitution Bench had
held that "we are, therefore of the opinion that the
procedure prescribed by Section 314 of the Bombay Municipal
Corporations Act for removal of the encroachment on the
footpath over which the public has right of passage cannot
be regarded as unreasonable, unfair or unjust. There is no
static measure of reasonableness which can be applied to all
situations alike. Indeed, the question "Is this procedure
reasonable?" implies and postulates the inquiry as to
whether the procedure prescribed is reasonable in the
circumstances of the case."
It is for the Court to decide in exercise of its
constitutional power of judicial review whether the
deprivation of life or personal liberty in a give case is by
procedure which is reasonable, fair and just or it is
otherwise. Footpath, street or pavement are public property
which are intended to serve the convenience of general
public. They are not laid for private use indeed, their use
for a private purpose frustrates the very object for which
they carved out from portions of public roads. The main
reason for laying out pavements is to ensure that the
pedestrians are able to go about their daily affairs with a
reasonable measure of safety and security. That facility,
which has matured into a right of the pedestrians, cannot be
set at naught by allowing encroachments to be made on the
pavements. The claim of the pavement dwellers to construct
huts on the pavement or road is a permanent obstruction to
free passage of traffic and pedestrians’ safety and
security. Therefore, it would be impermissible to permit or
to make use of the pavement for private purpose. They should
allow passing and re-passing by the pedestrians. On one has
a right to make use of a public property for the private
purpose without the requisite authorisation from the
competent authority. It would, therefore, be but the duty of
the competent authority to remove encroachments on the
pavement or footpath of the public street obstructing free
flow of traffic or passing or re-passing by the pedestrians.
This view was firmly laid down by this Court in Olga Tellis
case thus :
"No person has a right to encroach
by erecting a structure or
otherwise on footpaths and
pavements or other place reserved
or earmarked for a public purpose
like (for e.g. garden or
playground) and that the provision
contained in Section 314 of the
Bombay Municipal Corporation Act is
not unreasonable in the
circumstances of the case".
The Constitution does not put an absolute embargo on
the deprivation of life or personal liberty but such a
deprivation must be according to the procedure, in the given
circumstances, fair and reasonable. To become fair, just and
reasonable, it would not be enough that the procedure
prescribed in law is a formality. It must be pragmatic and
realistic one to meet the given fact-situation. No
inflexible rule of hearing and due application of mind can
be insisted upon in every or all cases. Each case depends
upon its own backdrop. The removal of encroachment needs
urgent action. But in this behalf what requires to be done
by the competent authority is to ensure constant vigil on
encroachment of the public places. Sooner the encroachment
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is removed when sighted, better would be the facilities or
convenience for passing or re-passing of the pedestrians on
the pavements or foot-paths facilitating free flow of
regulated traffic on the road or use of public places. On
the contrary, the longer the delay, the greater will be the
danger of permitting the encroachers claiming semblance of
right to obstruct removal of the encroachment. If the
encroachment is of a recent origin the need to follow the
procedure of principle of natural justice could be obviated
in that no not has a right to encroach upon the public
property and claim the procedure of opportunity of hearing
which would be a tardious and time-consuming process leading
to putting a premium for high-handed and unauthorised acts
of encroachment and unlawful squatting. On the other hand,
if the Corporation allows settlement of encroachers for a
long time fore reasons best known to them, and reasons are
not far to see, then necessarily a modicum of reasonable
notice for removal, say two weeks or 10 days, and personal
service on the encroachers or substituted service by fixing
notice on the property is necessary. If the encroachment is
not removed within the specified time, the competent
authority would be at liberty to have it removed. That would
meet the fairness of procedure and principle of giving
opportunity to remove the encroachment voluntarily by the
encroachers. On their resistance, necessarily appropriate
and reasonable force can be used to have the encroachment
removed. Thus considered, we hold that the action taken by
the appellant-Corporation is not violative of the principal
of natural justice.
It is not in dispute that Rakhial Road is one of the
important main road in the city of appellant-Corporation and
it needs removal of encroachment for free passing and re-
passing of the pedestrians on the pavements/footpaths. But
the question is ; whether the respondents are entitled to
alternative settlement before ejectment of them ?
Article 19(1) (e) accords right to residence and
settlement in any part of India as a fundamental right.
Right to life has been assured as a basic human right under
Article 21 of the Constitution of India. Article 25(1) of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights declares that
everyone has the right to standard of living adequate for
the health and well-being of himself and his family; it
includes food, clothing, housing, medical care and necessary
social services. Article 11(1) of the International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights lays down that State
parties to the Convenat recognise that everyone has the
right to standard of living for himself and his family
including food, clothing, housing and to the continuous
improvement of living conditions. In Chameli Singh & Ors. v.
State of U.P. & Anr. [(1996) 2 SCC 549], a Bench of three
Judges of this Court had considered and held that the right
to shelter is a fundamental right available to every
citizen and it was read into Article 21 of the Constitution
of India as encompassing within its ambit, the right to
shelter to make the right to life more meaningful. In
paragraph 8 it has been held thus :
"In any organised society, right to
live as a human being is not
ensured by meeting only the animal
needs of man. It is secured only
when he assured of all facilities
to develop himself and is freed
from restrictions which inhibit his
growth. All human rights are
designed to achieve this object.
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Right to live guaranteed in any
civilised society implies the right
to food, water, decent environment,
education, medical care and
shelter. These are basic human
rights known to any civilised
society. All civil, political,
social and cultural rights
enshrined in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and
Convention or under the
Constitution of India cannot be
exercised without these basic human
rights. Shelter for a human being,
therefore, is not a mere protection
of his life and limb. It is home
where he has opportunities to grow
physically, mentally,
intellectually an spiritually.
Right to shelter, therefore,
includes adequate living space,
safe and decent structure, clean
and decent surroundings, sufficient
light, pure air and water,
electricity, sanitation and other
civic amenities like roads etc. so
as to have easy right to shelter,
therefore, does not mean a mere
right to a roof over one’s head but
right to all the infrastructure
necessary to enable them to live
and develop as human being. Right
to shelter when used as an
essential requisite to the right to
live should be deemed to have been
guaranteed as a fundamental right.
As is enjoined in the Directive
Principles, the State should be
deemed to be under an obligation to
secure it for its citizens, of
course subject to its economic
budgeting. In a democratic society
as a member of the organised
permanent shelter so as to
physically, mentally and
intellectually equip oneself to
improve his excellence as a
Fundamental Duties and to be a
useful citizen and equal
participant in democracy. The
ultimate object of making a man
equipped with right to dignity of
person and equality of status is
to enable him to develop himself
into residence, therefore,
frustrates the very object of the
constitutional animation of right
to equality, economic justice,
fundamental right to residence,
dignity of person and right to live
itself.
Socio-economic justice, equality of status and of
opportunity and dignity of person to foster the fraternity
among all the sections of the society in an integrated
Bharat is the arch of the Constitution set down in its
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Preamble. Articles 39 and 38 enjoins the State to provide
facilities and opportunities. Article 38 and 46 of the
Constitution enjoin the State to promote welfare of the
people by securing social an economic justice to the weaker
sections of the society to minimise inequalities in income
and endeavor to eliminate inequalities in status. In that
case, it was held that to bring the Dalits and Tribes into
the mainstream of national life, the State was to provide
facilities and opportunities as it is the duty of the State
to fulfil the basic human and constitutional rights to
residents so as to make the right to life meaningful. In
Shantistar Builders v. Narayan Khimalal Toame [(1990) 1 SSC
520], another Bench of three judges had held that basic
needs of man have traditionally been accepted to be three
food, clothing and shelter. The right to life is guaranteed
in any civilised society. That would take within it sweep
the right to food, the right to clothing, the right to
decent environment and a reasonable accommodation to live.
The difference between the need of an animal, it is the bare
protection of the body; for a human being, it has to be a
suitable accommodation which would allow him to grow in
every aspect - physical, mental and intellectual. The
surplus urban-vacant land was directed to be used to provide
shelter to the poor. In Olga Tellis case (supra), the
Constitution Bench had considered the right to dwell on
pavements or in slums by the indigent and the same was
accepted as a part of right to life enshrined under Article
21; their ejectment from the place nearer to their work
would be deprivation of their right to livelihood. They
will be deprived of their livelihood if they are evicted
from their slum and pavement dwellings. Their eviction
tantamount to deprivation of their life. The right to
livelihood is a traditional right to live, the easiest way
of depriving a person of his right to life would be to
deprive him of his means of livelihood to the point of
abrogation. Such deprivation would not only denudes the life
of its effective content and meaningfulness but it would
make life impossible to live. The deprivation of right to
life, therefore, must be consistent with the procedure
established by law. In P.G. Gupta v. state of Gujarat
[(1995)] Supp. 2 SCC 182], another Bench of three Judges had
considered the mandate of human right to shelter and read it
into Article 19(1)(e) and Article 21 of the Constitution and
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention
of Civic, Economic and Cultural Rights and had held that it
is the duty of the State to construct houses at reasonable
cost and make them easily accessible to the poor. The
aforesaid principles have been expressly embodied and in
built in our Constitution to secure socio-economic democracy
so that everyone has a right to life, liberty and security
of the person. Article 22 of the Declaration of Human Rights
envisages that everyone has a right t social security and is
entitled to its realisation as the economic, social and
cultural rights and indispensable for his dignity and free
development of his personality. It would, therefore, be
clear that though no person has a right to encroach and
erect structures or otherwise on footpath, pavement or
public streets or any other place reserved or earmarked for
a public purpose, the State has the Constitutional duty to
provide adequate facilities and opportunities by
distributing its wealth and resources for settlement of life
and erection of shelter over their heads to make the right
to life meaningful, effective and fruitful. Right to live
livelihood is meaningful because no one can live without
means of his living, that is the means of livelihood. The
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deprivation of the right to life in that context would not
only denude right of the effective content and
meaningfulness but it would make life miserable and
impossible to life. It would, therefore, be the duty of the
State to provide right to shelter to the poor and indigent
weaker sections of the society in fulfillment of the
Constitutional objectives.
That apart, Section 284 (I) of the Act also imposes a
statutory duty on the Corporation to make provision for
accommodation enjoining upon the Commissioner, if it is
satisfied that within any area or any part of the City it is
expedient to provide housing accommodation for the poor
classes and that such accommodation can be conveniently
provided without making an improvement scheme, it shall
cause such areas to be defined on a plan. The Corporation is
required to pass a resolution authorising the Commissioner
who shall thereupon have power to provide such an
accommodation either by erecting buildings or in any other
manner on any land belonging to the Corporation or any land
acquired by the Corporation for the purpose or by conversion
of any building belonging to the Corporation into dwelling
for poor classes or by enlarging, altering or repairing or
improving any buildings, altering or repairing or improving
any buildings, which have, or an estate or interest which
has been acquired by the Corporation. This duty is apart of
the Constitutional mandate. Under the Urban Ceiling Act, the
excess urban vacant land is earmarked to elongate the above
objective.
The appellant-Corporation has stated that in its
Resolution No. 544 dated August 17, 1976 it was resolved
that no pavement dwellers/hut dwellers existing as on May 1,
1976 would be removed by the Corporation without providing
alternative accommodation. This cut off date was introduced
for the reason that they had conducted a detailed survey of
slum-dwellers. They were photographed and identity cards
were given to them so that they could get the protection
from removal until alternative accommodations were provided
to them. Out of 81,255 hutments, 1864 are pavement dwelling
units. In furtherance thereof, they evolved several schemes.
Of them, three schemes are in operation. The first scheme
relates to the open plots at Narol. As per that scheme plots
of land each admeasuring 25 square metres had under Urban
Land Ceiling and Regulation Act, 1976 comprised in the total
land of an extent of 38,749 square metres in Survey No. 41,
were directed to be allotted to the urban poor. The
Government by its resolution has decided that an urban poor
family whose annual income is below Rs. 18,000/- is entitled
to the allotment of said plots. They have suggested in their
affidavit filed by Rasikbhai, Deputy Commissioner of the
appellant-Corporation that they had addressed the Collector
of allotment regarding 35 plots reserved for hutments. It is
further stated that if the 10 persons who were original
petitioners in the writ petition are willing to vacate the
present encroachments they are prepared to have the Rs. 25
sq. mtr. plots in Narol Scheme allotted to them. The second
alternative scheme suggested was the Vinzol Site and
Services Scheme evolved by the Gujarat Slum Clearance Board.
Under the scheme, plots were available at Vinzol and
Vivekananda Nagar respectively. At Vinzol, cost of a plot
admeasuring 32 sq. mtrs, of land is Rs. 9,468/-. The
initial payment to be made is Rs. 3,941/- and thereafter
monthly instalment of Rs. 107/- for 11 years in required to
be paid. The accommodation provided in that scheme includes
plinth area plus W.C. In the Slum Clearance Scheme of
Vivekananda Nagar, plots admeasuring 19,52 sq. mtr. of land
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would be available at a cost of Rs. 8,910/-. The initial
payment is Rs. 5,282/- and the monthly instalment payable
thereafter is of Rs. 145/- for a period of 11 years. It
includes plinth area plus W.C. and Chokadi. There are around
700 to 1000 unallotted units available and if the
respondents are willing they would be provided with the
accommodation in the said Scheme. Thirdly, it was stated
that there are hutment dwelling units at Vinzol/Lambha Part
I and Lambha Part II of Economically Weaker Sections Scheme
operated by Gujarat Slum Clearance Board. Therein, at Vinzol
plots admeasuring 15.50 sq. mtrs. or 14.76 sq. mtrs. of land
at Lambha with facility of one room, W.C. and Chokadi are
available. 142 tenements are available at Vinzol, 140
tenements are available at Lambha Part II. This was the
information furnished by the Gujarat Slum Clearance Board.
The schemes are floated for economically weaker sections of
the society and the cost of each tenement at Vinzol is Rs.
16,187/- and of tenement at Lambha Part I and Part II is Rs.
17,094/- and Rs. 18,030/- respectively. The initial payment
to be made for the accommodation at Vinzol is Rs. 6604/- and
in respect of tenement at Lambha Part I is Rs. 7,476/- and
for Part II it is Rs. 72,00/-. The monthly instalment for
Vinzol tenement is Rs. 131/- to be paid for 9 years 7 months
and for Lambha Part I, the instalment is of Rs.141/- per
month to be paid for 10 years and for Part II it is Rs.
142/- per month to be paid for 14 years. The annual family
income limit for these tenements is also Rs. 18,000/-. Those
family units of Vinzol who qualify the income criteria are
eligible for allotment.
In the statement made on behalf of the hutment
dwellers, Shri Dushyanant Dave has stated that the aforesaid
units as situated at a far away place and direction to
vacate the pavements and occupation of the premises thereat
would deprive the respondents of their livelihood. A further
affidavit was filed on behalf of the Corporation wherein it
is stated that all infrastructural facilities are available
at the respective places. They are fully developed areas
with all basic amenities. They are at a distance of about 8
kms. from the city. Near about those places are many
factories and other commercial organisations where the
respondent-encroachers can find out their livelihood by
working in the factories. Public transport is also available
there. It was also stated that Vinzol, Vivekanand Nagar and
Lambha are developed areas and, therefore, it is easy to
find out work in the vicinity of those areas. About 15,000
persons are at present living in each of the three Schemes
with all basic amenities. Shri Dave has given suggestions
and submitted that the Corporation should be directed to
evolve the scheme under Section 284 [i] of the Act to
discharge the constitutional obligations and to provide near
about the place in Rakhial Road so that the respondents
would work in the neighborhood and would eke out their
livelihood. To this it was stated by the appellants that the
open lands available near Rakhial Road were earmarked for
the school, park/public amenities and there is no vacant
land in the nearby place.
Shri Dave further suggested that the Corporation would
relax their census of 1976 and adopt 1991 census and all
those who are residing in the city for at least 10 years
prior to January 1, 1995 should be provided with built up
accommodation so that it would provide an alternative viable
right to residence. If the land belonging to the Corporation
is available, the same could be implemented by constructing
the houses. If it is not available, lands could be acquired
and houses could be constructed and accommodation provided
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in terms of the directions given by this Court so that
pavement dwellers would have right to residence and the
planned construction could not affected. It was stated in
the additional affidavit of the respondents in this regard
that in 1991 they had identified 5 lakhs slum dwellers or
pavement dwellers out of population of 29 lakhs and for
acquisition and construction of the houses, the budget
estimates would be Rs. 220 crores. The Government has
stopped giving assistance to the Corporation for
construction of houses. This Court in SLP Nos. 47-51/96
titled Maha Gujarat Hawkers Vyapar Mahajans etc. v.
Ahmedabad Municipal Corporation had given directions to
regulate hawking. The Corporation has regulated, in terms of
the said order, the hawking business on the pavements by
dwellers in the city of Ahemdabad within the specified areas
and identified some as non-hawking zones in the Scheme which
is operated in the city of Ahemdabad. No direction in
derogation thereof would be given permitting the pavement
dwellers to convert the hutments for commercial purpose. It
is also suggested that with the co-operation of the Non
Governmental Organisations and financial participation of
the slum dwellers and industrialists the Corporation has
introduced Slum Networking Project. Under the scheme, they
have provided 35,000 built up individual toilets in the slum
areas. Subsidy component to the hutment dwellers has been
raised to 90 percent w.e.f. April 1, 1996.
As per the scheme, the following are the benefits
provided in the slum areas for the hutment dwellers :
"i) House-to-house water supply;
ii) House-to-house drainage
connection;
iii) Full pavement of internal
street;
iv) Individual toilet;
v) Provision of storm water drain;
vi) Solid waste management
services;
vii) Street light, etc.
Besides the physical services, a
package of community development
services, a package of community
development services of also
offered which includes :
i) Primary education;
ii) Primary health care;
iii) Income generating activities
etc.
This project is estimated to cost
Rs. 326 crores. A photocopy of the
said Project Report dated July 1995
and prepared by H Parikh Consulting
Engineers ....
The aforesaid benefits of the
Project are proposed to be extended
to all the slums except those
situated on land s which are
required for public purpose by the
Corporation. With a view to provide
these services in the slums and
chawls situated on private lands,
an amendment has also been proposed
to the State Government in the BPMC
Act to enable the Corporations to
provide all essential services in
the slums situated on the private
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lands without prejudice to the
right, title and interest of the
owner of the land and without
affecting their rights to remove
such hutments by following due
process of law. This amendment is
considered necessary to maintain
health and sanitation in the slums
situated on private lands and for
improving the quality of life of
the slum dwellers till they exist
on the private lands. This project
having partnership concept of slum
dwellers is now in the process of
implementation. Efforts are being
made to give priority to the
unserved/undeserved areas under the
Project. It is believed that
through this project, a large
number of slum dwellers will be in
a position to avail of the
essential services at the place
they are situated and improve
beyond the present means of the
Corporation to provide
rehabilitation to every slum
dweller by providing alternate
accommodation.
However, this is not to say that
the Corporation has permitted
section 261[I] to remain on the
statute book only. 9754 houses have
been duly constructed by the
Corporation under the Slum
Clearance Scheme for accommodation
slum dwellers and allotted to them
and another 2220 houses have been
constructed under the HUDCO Scheme
for economically weaker sections
and low income group people and
allotted. Besides this, the
Corporations has also
infrastructure to 315 hutment
dwellers under the site and service
scheme and the flood affected
hutment dwellers under the
Integrated Urban Development
Programme.
So far 733 hutments which existed
prior to May 1976 [cut of date]
have been shifted from their
earlier location in the interest of
public and all of them have been
given alternate sit by the
Municipal Corporation which
includes 709 pavement dwelling
families also. This protection is
not available to those who have
come up after 1-5-1976 [cut off
date]."
The Corporation has been further subsidising 80% cost
of construction of individual latrines by slum dwellers and
under this scheme over 35,000 individual toilets have been
built up in the slums and chawls in past few years and this
subsidy component has been further raised to 90% with
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effect from Ist April, 1996. As per the Government’s
resolution dated May 30,1987 State Level and District/City
level officers are nominated to monitor the working of the
scheme.
In view of the above factual background, the question
that arises is; whether there is compliance with the
directions issued by this Court referred to hereinbefore and
whether any further modulation is need in that behalf?
Empirical study of urban and rural population in India
discloses that due to lack of civic facilities and means
of livelihood people from rural areas constantly keep
migrating to the urban areas resulting in mushroom growth
of slums and encroachment of the pavements/footpaths etc.
Every Municipal Corporation has statutory obligation to
provide free flow of traffic and pedestrians right to pass
and re-pass freely and safely; as its concomitance, the
Corporation/Municipality have statutory duty to have the
encroachments removed. It would, therefore, be inexpedient
to give any direction not to remove, or to allow the
encroachment on the pavements or footpaths which is a
constant source of unhygienic ecology, traffic hazards and
risk prone to lives of the pedestrians. It would,
therefore, be necessary to permit the Corporation to
exercise the statutory powers to prevent encroachment of the
pavements/footpaths and to prevent construction thereon. As
held earlier, the Corporation should always be vigilant and
should not allow encroachments of the pavements and foot
paths. As soon as they notice any encroachments they should
forthwith take steps to have them removed and would not
allowed them to settle down for a long time. It is stated in
their affidavit that they are giving 21 days notice before
taking action for ejectment of the encroachers. That
procedure, in our view, is a fair procedure and, therefore,
the right to hearing before taking action for ejectment is
not necessary in the fact-situation. But the Commissioner
should ensure that everyone is served and if it is not
possible for reasons to be recorded in the file, through
fixture of the notice on the hutment, duly attested by two
independent panchas. This procedure would avoid the dispute
that they were not give opportunity; further prolongation of
the encroachment and hazard to the traffic and safety of the
pedestrians.
In the additional affidavit of the appellant -
Corporation, it raised and addressed four important
questions of constitutional dimensions. The first question
raised was to prevent the constant influx of the rural
people to the urban areas and consequential growth of slums
and encroachments; the second one relates to the need for
preservation of the public property like road margin,
street, place of public resorts like parks etc. to maintain
ecological balance, sanitation and safety of pedestrians;
the third question relates to lack of resources in the
budgetary provisions to construct and allot houses for the
poor and migrants of urban area; and the fourth one relates
to interference by the courts protecting the encroachers.
These questions bear vital dimensions which need careful
examination and answers.
As regards the first question, it is axiomatic that
India lives in villages. The traditional source of
employment or avocation to the rural people generally is
the agriculture. It is rather unfortunate that even after
half the century from date of independence, no constructive
planning has been implemented to ameliorate the conditions
of the rural people by providing regular source of
livelihood or infrastructural facilities like health,
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education, sanitation etc. It would be for the Union of
India, all the State Governments and the Planning
Commission, which are Constitutional functionaries, to
evolve such policies and schemes as are necessary to provide
continuous means of employment in the rural area so that in
the lean period, after agricultural operations, the
agricultural labour or the rural poor would fall back upon
those services to eke out their livelihood. The middle class
and upper middle class people in the rural areas, due
tolack of educational and medical facilities, migrate to
the nearby urban areas resulting in constant increase in
urban population. Once infrastructural facilities are
provided by proper planning and execution, necessarily the
urge to migrate to the urban areas would no longer compel
the rural people for their transplantation in the urban
areas. It would, therefore, be for the executive to evolve
the schemes and have them implemented in letter and spirit.
Article 19(e) of the Constitution provides to all
citizens fundamental rights to travel, settle down and
reside in any part of the Bharat and none have right to
prevent their settlement. Any attempt in that behalf would
be unconstitutional. The Preamble of the Constitution
assures integrity of the nation, fraternity among the people
and dignity of the person to make India an integrated and
united Bharat in a socialist secular democratic republic.
The policy or principle should be such that everyone should
have the opportunity to migrate and settle down in any part
of Bharat where opportunity for employment or better living
conditions are available and, therefore, it would be
unconstitutional and impermissible to prevent the persons
from migrating and settling at places where they find their
livelihood and means of avocation. It is to remember that
the Preamble is the arch of the Constitution which accords
to every citizen of India socio-economic and political
justice, liberties, equality of opportunity and of status,
fraternity, dignity of person in an integrated Bharat. The
fundamental right sand the directive principles and the
Preamble being trinity of the Constitution, the right to
residence and to settle in any part of the country is
assured to every citizen. In a secular socialist democratic
republic of Bharat hierarchical caste structure, antagonism
towards diverse religious belief and faith and dialectical
difference would be smoothened and the people would be
integrated with dignity of person only when social and
economic democracy is established under rule of law. The
difference due to cast, sect or religion pose grave threat
to affinity, equality and fraternity. Social democracy means
a way of life with dignity of person as a normal social
intercourse with liberty, equality and fraternity. The
economic democracy implicit in itself that the inequalities
in income and inequalities in opportunities and status
should be minimised and as far as possible marginalised. The
right to life enshrined under Article 21 has been
interpreted by this Court to include meaningful right to
life and not merely animal existence as elaborated in
several judgments of this Court including Hawkers case, Olga
Tellies case and the latest Chameli Singh’s case and host of
other decisions which need no reiteration. Suffice it to
state that right to life would include right to live with
human dignity. As held earlier, right to residence is one of
the minimal human rights as fundamental right. Due to want
of facilities and opportunities, the right to residence and
settlement is an illusion to the rural and urban poor.
Article 38,39 and 46 mandate the State, as its minimise
inequalities in income and in opportunities and status. It
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positively charges the State to distribute its largess to
the weaker sections of the society envisaged in Article 46
to make socio-economic justice a reality, meaningful and
fruitful so as to make the life worth living with dignity of
person and equality of status and to constantly improve
excellence.
The Gram Panchayats, the Zilla Parishads and
municipalities are local bodies. Parts IX and IXA of the
Constitution have brought, through Articles 243 to 243ZG.
the Panchayats, Zilla Parishads and municipalities as
constitutional instrumentalities to elongate the socio-
economic and political democracy under the rule of law.
Article 2436 and 243W enjoin preparation of plans for
economic development and social justice. The State, i.e.,
the Union of India and the State Government and the local
bodies constitute an integral executive to implement the
directive principle contained in Part IV through planed
development under the rule of law. The appellant-
Corporation, therefore, has Constitutional duty and
authority to implement the directives contained in Articles
38, 39 and 46 and all cognate all the citizens as
meaningful. It would, therefore, be the duty of the
appellant to enforce the schemes in a planned manner by
annual budgets to provide right to residence to the poor.
As regards the question of budgeting, it is true that
Courts cannot give direction to implement the scheme with a
particular budget as it being the executive function of the
local bodies and the State to evolve their annual budget. As
an integral passing annual budget, they should also earmark
implementation of socio-economic justice to the poor. The
State and consequently the local authorities, are charged
with the Constitutional duty to provide the weaker sections,
in particular the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes with
socio-economic and political injustice and to prevent their
exploitation and to prevent them from injustice. The Union
of India have evolved Indira Avas Yojna Scheme exclusively
to provide housing accommodation to the Scheduled Castes and
Scheduled Tribes and separate annual budgets are being
allotted in that behalf by the Parliament and the
appropriate Legislatures in allied matters, In that behalf,
in implementation of the housing scheme evolved for them,
the budgetary allocation should exclusively be spent for
them and should not be diverted to any other projects or
similar schemes meant for others. The Planning Commission
has evolved the principle of allotment of a specified
percentage for the overall developments of the Scheduled
Castes and Scheduled Tribes. As a facet of it, the annual
budget including by the Parliament. Similarly for other
schemes covered by the State budgets. Therefore, when the
State, namely, Union of India or the appropriate State
Government or the local bodies implement these schemes for
housing accommodation of the Scheduled Castes and Scheduled
Tribes or any other schemes, they should, in compliance with
mandates of Articles 46, 39 and 38, annually provide housing
accommodation to them with in the allocated budget and
effectively and sincerely implement them using the
allocations for the respective schemes so that the right to
residence to them would become a reality and meaningful and
the budget allocation should not either be diverted or used
for any other scheme meant for other weaker sections of the
society. Any acts in violation thereof or diversion of
allocated funds, misuse or misutilisation, would be in
negation of constitutional objectives defeating and
deflecting the goal envisioned in the Preamble of the
Constitution. The executive forfeits the faith and trust
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reposed in it by Article 261 of the Constitution.
Similarly separate budget would also be allocated to
other weaker sections of the society and the backward
classes to further their socio-economic advancement. As a
facet thereof, housing accommodation also would be evolved
and from that respective budget allocation the amount needed
for housing accommodation for them should also be earmarked
separately and implemented as an on-going process of
providing facilities and opportunities including housing
accommodation to the rural or urban poor and other backward
classes of people.
It is common knowledge that when Government allows
largess to the poor, by pressures or surreptitious means or
in the language of the appellant-Corporation "the slum
lords" exert pressures on the vulnerable sections of the
society to vacate their place of occupation and shift for
settlement to other vacant lands belonging to the State or
municipalities or private properties by encroachment. The
Scheduled Castes and Scheduled Tribes who are settled in the
allotted Government properties/houses/plots of lands are
compelled or driven by pressures to leave the places to
settle at some other place. This would have deleterious
effect on the integration and social cohesion and public
resources are wasted and the constitutional objectives
defeated. It would, therefore, be of necessity that the
policy of the Government in executing the policies of
providing housing accommodation either to the rural poor or
the urban poor, should be such that the lands allotted or
houses constructed/plots allotted be in such a manner that
all the sections of the society, Schedules Castes,
Scheduled Tribes, Backward Classes and other poor are
integrated as cohesive social structure. The expenditure
should be met from the respective budgetary provisions
allotted to their housing schemes in the respective
proportion be utilised. All of them would, therefore, live
in one locality in an integrated social group so that social
harmony, integrity, fraternity and amity would be fostered,
religious and caste distinction would no longer remain a
barrier for harmonised social intercourse and integration.
The facts in this case do disclose that out of 29
encroachers who have constructed the houses on pavements, 19
of them have left the places, obviously due to such
pressures and interests of rest have come into existence by
way of purchase. When such persons part with possession in
any manner known to law, the alienation or transfer is
opposed to the Constitutional objectives and public policy.
Therefore, such transfers are void ab initio conferring no
right, title or interest therein. In some of the State law
has already been made in that behalf declaring such
transfers as void with power to resume the property and
allot the same to other needy people from these scheme.
Other States should also follow the suit and if necessary
the Parliament may make comprehensive law in this behalf. It
would take care of the third question raised by the
appellant. The Union Law Commission would examine this
question.
Encroachment of public property undoubtedly obstructs
and upsets planned development, echology and sanitation.
Public property needs to be preserved and protected. It is
but the duty of the State and local bodies to ensure the
same. This would answer the second question. As regards the
fourth question, it is to reiterate that judicial review is
the basic structure of the Constitution. Every citizen has a
fundamental right to redress the perceived legal injury
through judicial process. The encroachers are no exceptions
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to that Constitutional right to judicial redressal. The
Constitutional Court, therefore, has a Constitutional duty
as sentinel qui vive to enforce the right of a citizen when
the he approaches the Court for perceived legal injury,
provided he establishes that he has a right to remedy. When
an encroacher approaches the Court, the Court is required
to examine whether the encroacher had any right and to what
extent he would be given protection and relief. In that
behalf, it is the salutary duty of the State or the local
bodies or any instrumentality to assist the Court by placing
necessary factual position and legal setting for
adjudication and for granting/refusing relief appropriate to
the situation. Therefore, the mere fact that the encroachers
have approached the Court would be no ground to dismiss
their cases. The contention of the appellant-Corporation
that the intervention of the Court would aid impetus to the
encroachers to abuse the judicial process is untenable. As
held earlier, if the appellant-Corporation or any local body
or the State acts with vigilance and prevents encroachment
immediately, the need to follow the procedure enshrined as
a inbuilt fair procedure would be obviated. But if they
allow the encroachers to remain in settled possession
sufficiently for long time, which would be a fact to be
established in an appropriate case, necessarily suitable
procedure would be required to be adopted to meet the fact
situation and that, therefore, it would be for the
respondent concerned and also for the petitioner to
establish the respective claims and it is for the Court to
consider as to what would be the appropriate procedure
required to be adopted in the given facts and
circumstances.
It is true that in all cases it may not be necessary,
as a condition for ejectment of the encroacher, that he
should be provided with an alternative accommodation at the
expense of the State which if given due credence, is likely
to result in abuse of the judicial process. But no absolute
principle of universal application would be laid in this
behalf. Each case is required to be examined on the given
set of facts and appropriate to the facts of the case.
Normally, the Court suitable to the facts of the case.
Normally, the Court may not, as a rule, directs that the
encroacher should be provided with an alternative
accommodation before ejectment when they encroached public
properties, but, as stated earlier, each case required
examination and suitable direction appropriate to the facts
requires modulation. Considered from this perspective, the
apprehensions of the appellant is without force.
As regards the direction given by the High Court to
provide accommodation as a condition to remove the
encroachment, as held earlier, since the Municipal
Corporation has a constitutional and tatutory duty to
provide means for settlement and residence by allotting the
surplus land under the Urban Land Ceiling Act and if
necessary by acquiring the land and providing house sites or
tenements, as the case may be, according to the scheme
formulated by the Corporation, the financial condition of
the Corporation may also be kept in view but that would not
be a constraint on the Corporation to avoid its duty of
providing residence/plot to the urban weaker sections. It
would, therefore, be the duty of the Corporation to evolve
the schemes. In the light of the schemes now in operation,
we are of view that opportunity should be given to the 10
named petitioner encroachers to opt for any one of the three
schemes and the named two persons who are carrying on
commercial activities should immediately stop the same. If
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they intend to have any commercial activity or hawking, it
should be availed of as per directions already issued by
this Court in the aforesaid judgment and no further
modification or any directions contra thereto need to be
issued. Out of these 10 persons, if they are eligible within
the terms of the schemes and would satisfy the income
criterion, they would be given allotment of the sites or the
tenements, as the case may be, according to their option. In
case they do not opt for any of the schemes, 21 days notice
would be served on them and other encroachers and they may
be ejected from the present encroachments. As regards other
persons who have become encroachers by the way of purchase
either from the original encroachers or encroached pending
writ petition/appeal in this Court, they are not entitled to
the benefits given to the 10 encroachers. As regards those
who are eligible according to the guidelines in the schemes
and also fulfill the income criterion, it may be open to the
Corporation to extend the same benefits in either of the
three schemes, if they so desire. It is, however, made it
clear that we are not giving any specific direction in this
behalf lest it would amount to encouraging the people to
abuse the judicial process to avail of such remedy by
encroaching public property.
Accordingly, the appeal is allowed. The order of the
High Court is modified as indicated above. The writ
petitions stand disposed of accordingly. In the
circumstances of the case, however, there will be no order
as to costs.