Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT.WINKY DILAWARI & ANR.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
AMRITSAR IMPROVEMENT TRUST,AMRITSAR
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/09/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
FAIZAN UDDIN (J)
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
THE 3RD DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 1996
Present:
Hon’ble Mr.Justice K.Ramaswamy
Hon’ble Mr.Justice Faizan Uddin
D.V.Sehgal, Sr.Adv.A.T.M.Sampath, Ms.Monica Gosain, Advs.,
with him for the appellants.
E.C.Agrawala, Adv. for the Respondent
O R D E R
The following order of the Court was delivered:
Smt.Winky Dilawari & Anr.
V.
Amritsar Improvement Trust, Amritsar
O R D E R
This appeal by special leave arises from the judgement
and order of the learned single Judge of the Punjab &
Haryana High Court made in RSA No. 2071/92 on August 2,
1993. The admitted facts are that the respondent-Trust had
framed a Scheme for providing passage to Guru Nanak Stadium
from the main road, namely, Madan Mohan Malviya Road under
Section 36 of the Punjab Town Improvement Act, 1922 (for
short, the "Act"]. The Scheme in that behalf was framed and
notices were issued of the factum of framing of the Scheme;
objections were invited and the Scheme was published under
Section 78 in the weekly newspapers for three consecutive
weeks and also in the State Official Gazette. It was also
published in the newspapers in the locality within the
specified period. The notice of the Scheme was sent to the
President of the Municipal Committee and to the Medical
Officer under sub-section 2(b) of Section 36 of the Act. No
objections in that behalf came to be made. Thereafter, the
Government had approved the Scheme under Section 40 of the
Act. By operation of Section 42(2) of the Act, the approval
of the Scheme having been published under Section 42(1), it
became conclusive evidence that the Scheme had been duly
framed and sanctioned. Thereafter, the proceedings under
Schedule to the Act read with Section 59 were taken up for
acquisition of the land proposed to be acquired under the
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Scheme. Section 38 of the Act envisages compliance of the
notice of the publication in that behalf. It reads as under:
"38. Notice of proposed acquisition
of land :- (1) During the thirty
days next following the first day
on which any notice is published
under section 36 in respect of any
Scheme under this Act the trust
shall serve a notice on:-
(i) every person whom the trust has
reason to believe after due enquiry
to be the owner of any immovable
property which it is proposed to
acquire in executing the Scheme.
(ii) The occupier (who need not be
named) of such premises as the
trust proposes to acquire in
executing the Scheme.
2) Such notice shall :-
a) state that the trust proposes to
acquire such property for the
purposes of carrying out a Scheme
under this Act, and
b) require such person, if he
objects to such acquisition, to
state his reasons in writing within
a period of sixty days from the
service of the notice.
3) Every such notice shall be
signed by, or by the order of the
Chairman."
There is no dispute and it cannot be disputed that
service of the notice on every person whom the Trust had
reason to believe, after due enquiry, to be the owner of the
immovable property which the Trust proposes to acquire in
execution of the Scheme, or the occupier of such premises,
is necessary. It would therefore, be necessary that the
Trust must have reason to believe, after due enquiry, that
the person to be affected is the owner of the immovable
property proposed to be acquired. In this case, the admitted
position is that the disputed property is a vacant site. The
appellant had purchased the property on January 24, 1985.
The Scheme was approved by the Government on March 19, 1985.
It would be obvious that the proposal under Section 36 was
widely published in the Gazette, weekly and daily newspapers
and notice thereof was also given to the Municipality before
the appellants purchased the property. It is not in dispute
that after the purchase made by the appellant, his name was
not mutated in the records of the Municipality before the
approval was granted by the State Government. The question
therefore, is: whether the failure to serve the notice on
the appellant vitiates the approved Scheme? In our view, it
does not.
It is seen that the Municipality was sent notice of the
proposed acquisition as required under Section 36 and also
under Section 38 of the Act. When such presumption was made,
it would be obvious that the person in possession would be
aware of the proceedings proposed for the execution of the
Scheme and also acquisition thereof. It is true, as
contended by Shri Sehgal, learned senior counsel for the
appellants, that registration of a document in the office of
the Sub-Registrar is a notice as envisaged under the
Registration Act. But the question is: whether the public
authorities are expected to go on making enquiries in the
Sub-Registrar’s office as to who would be the owner of the
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property? Reasonable belief, after due enquiry, contemplated
under Section 38(1)(i) would envisage that the persons who
are reputed to be known as owners of the immovable property
which was proposed to be acquired after the Scheme was
approved by the Government, are the actual owners of the
property. It is now settled law that public functions are to
be discharged through its officers and if there is
delectation on their part in the performance thereof and the
public inconvenience is enormous, the Court always considers
the procedure to be directory. It has always considered, by
catena of decisions of this Court, such a procedure to be
directory. It it were a case where a reputed owner whose
name has already been entered in the Municipal records and
has paid the municipal taxes over a period to the
Municipality of the Gram Panchayat, as the case may be,
necessarily there would be scope for the authorities to
reasonably believe, after due enquiry, that he would be the
owner. If they derelict in making such enquiry or serving
the notice, necessarily it may be held that its failure to
get the notice served on the owner, who was believed to be
the owner of the property, for the proposed acquisition,
vitiates the acquisition made under the Schedule read with
Section 59 of the Act. But if in a short interregnum there
were successive sales and transfer of the land, the public
authorities are not expected to go on making enquiries in
the Sub-Registrar’s office as to who would be the owner of
the immovable property proposed to be acquired. The
principle that registration is constructive notice has no
application to such a situation.
The ratio of the full Bench of the High Court of Punjab
& Haryana in Jodh Singh Vs. Jullundhur Improvement Trust
[AIR 1984 (P&H) 398] is unexceptionable, but it has to be
considered in the backdrop of the facts in each case. The
Division Bench of the High Court in Pt. Ram Parkash & Anr.
Vs. Smt. Kanta Suri [1985 PLJ 371] has not laid the law
correctly. We, therefore, hold that the failure to serve
personal notice on the appellants does not vitiate the
proceedings for acquisition initiated pursuant to the
approved Scheme.
It is then contended that the acquisition was mala fide
since the Municipality itself had, on earlier occasion,
proposed for acquisition and had dropped the same. We find
no substance in the contention. There are two statutory
authorities functioning, one under the Act and the other,
the Municipality. When the statutory authority has initiated
the action, necessarily the Municipality has to drop the
proceedings. Therefore, it cannot be said that the
acquisition was mala fide. That apart, there is no finding
recorded by the courts below in the behalf. The High Court
also has put out the case on the principle that unless in
the circumstances the respondent proves prejudice in his
case, discretionary relief for injunction cannot be granted.
All the three courts refused to grant injunction to the
appellant restraining the authorities from enforcing the
Scheme duly framed. The injunction is a matter of
discretion. When the authorities have been implementing the
Scheme for the benefit of the public of the town, the courts
below have rightly refused to exercise discretion to grant
injunction and have not committed and manifest error of law
for correction by this Court. Moreover, the maintainability
of suit under Section 9, Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 is
doubtful. It is not necessary to examine the case as it is
settled law that such suit is not maintainable.
It is next contended that the appellant had purchased
the property for his own occupation to construct houses and
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alternatively gate could be opened from the western side -
internal road, without causing hardship to the appellants.
We find no force in the contention. The Scheme proposed to
have direct access from the main road, namely, Madan Mohan
Malviya Road. The access from the road on the western side
of the stadium would create traffic hazards and, therefore,
the Scheme was rightly framed for providing entry into the
main gate. We have seen the plan. The Scheme has taken the
property of minimal dimension rather than the large area in
the locality. Under these circumstances, the Scheme was
properly framed by the Government for providing access to
the Guru Nanak Stadium.
It is then contended by Shri Sehgal that the appellant
had purchased the property for residential purpose and he is
deprived of his right for his residence in the locality. In
view of the fact that competing public interest would
outweigh the personal interest of the appellant, we think
that he could be suitable accommodated in any available
housing Schemes taken up by the respondent-Trust. The
respondent-Trust, therefore, is directed to provide any
suitable site of an extent of 250 sq.yds as per the
prevailing reserved price.
This appeal is accordingly dismissed with the above
observations. No costs.