Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 61
PETITIONER:
MAHARAO SAHIB SRI BHIM SINGHJI ETC. ETC
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
UNION OF INDIA AND ORS. ETC. ETC.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/07/1985
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
BENCH:
CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. ((CJ)
KRISHNAIYER, V.R.
BHAGWATI, P.N.
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 1650 1985 SCR Supl. (1) 862
1986 SCC (4) 615 1985 SCALE (2)289
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1986 SC2030 (17)
R 1989 SC1796 (3)
ACT:
A. Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (Act
XXXIII of 1976) -Whether constitutionally valid vis-a-vis
Articles 39(b) and (c) of the Constitution.
B. Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (Act
XXXIII of 1976), section 2(g),-Artificial definition of
family in section 2(f), whether offends against Article 14
of the Constitution.
C. Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (Act
XXXIII of 1976), section 11(6) validity of-Whether the
maximum limit of the amount of compensation payable fixed at
Rupees two lakhs is illusory and confiscatory and therefore,
violative of Article 14 and 31(2) of the Constitution, as
amended by the Twenty-fifth Amendment Act, 1971-Effect of
the Amendment.
D. Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation), Act, 1976 (Act
XXXIII of 1976), section 23 validity of-The provision
subserves the objectives of Articles 39(b) and (c) and hence
protecte by Articles 31 and C, but the governing test of
disposal of excess lands being "social good", any disposal
in any particular case or cases which does not subserve that
purpose will be invalid.
E. Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976
section 27(1), validity of-Whether offends Articles 14 and
19(1) (f).
F. Interpretation of statutes-Rule of reading down the
provision, Permissibility as a part of the judicial process.
G. Constitution of India, 1950 Articles 31 and 300 -A-
Basic structure of the Constitution, thereby applicability
of-Whether right to property is a part of the basic
structure of the Constitution-State’s power of "eminent
domain", and conditions precedent to exercise of that power,
explained.
H. Constitution of India, 1950-Part IV-Directive
Principles of State Policy, character and cognisability by
the Courts.
863
1. Interpretation of Constitution and the approach to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 61
be adopted, explained.
J. Interpretation of statute-External and Internal
Aids, use of
LK. Words and Phrase-Concept and meaning of "Public
Purpose."
HEADNOTE:
The Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (Act
XXXIII of 1976) is in force in 17 States and all the Union
Territories in the country. It seeks to impose a ceiling on
vacant lands in urban agglomerations having a population of
two lakhs or more and for that purpose classifies such urban
agglomerations in various cities and towns in all the States
and Union Territories into four categories and fixes the
ceiling limit for each such category.
The primary object and purpose of the Act, as its long
title and the Preamble show, is to provide for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land for matters connected there with,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein and with a view to bring about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, presumably in furtherance of the Directive
Principles of State Policy contained in Article 39(c) and
(b) respectively. The enactment has also been put in the
Ninth Schedule as Item 132 by the Constitution (Fortieth
Amendment) Act, 1976; in other words, the enactment enjoys
the benefit of protective umbrella of both the articles,
Article 31-B and 31-C as it stood prior to its amendment by
the Constitution (Forty-second Amendment) Act, 1976.
By these writ petitions the petitioners, who are
holders of vacant land in the urban agglomerations in
various States, are seeking to challenge the vires of some
of the salient provisions of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 (XXXIII of 1976) and since, according
to them, some of the impugned provisions are pivotal and
non-severable, having an impact on its entire scheme, the
whole Act is liable to be struck down as being invalid and
unconstitutional. The petitioners have, therefore, prayed
for an order quashing notices issued to them by the
concerned competent authorities under the Act and a mandamus
directing the respondents not to implement the provisions
thereof against them.
Dismissing the petitions and upholding the
constitutional validity save and except section 27(1) by a
majority of 4:1 (A-P. Sen, J- partially dissenting on the
validity of sub-sections (1),(2), (3) and the opening words
of sub-section (4) of section 23), the Court.
^
HELD: Permajarity: (Y.V. Chandrachud, C.J., P.N.
Bhagwati, V.R, Krishna Iyer and an.Sen. jj; V.D,
Tulzapurkar, J. dissenting).
864
1. The Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 is
constitutionally valid save and except section 27(1) in so
far a it imposes a restriction on transfer of any urban of
urbanisable land with a building or of a portion of such
building. which is within the ceiling area. [877 E-F]
Per Chandrachud. C.J. and P.N. Bhagwati, J.
1. The Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act. 1976 is
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 61
valid. The vice from which a provision here or a provision
there of the impugned Act may be shown to suffer will not
justify the conclusion that the Act is not intended to or
does not, by its scheme; in fact implement or achieve the
purposes of clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the
Constitution.[878 C-D]
2. The definition of "family" in section, 2(f) of the
Act, which in relation to a person means the individual, the
wife or husband, as the case may be, of such individual and
their unmarried minor children, will not necessarily lead to
concentration of wealth in the hands of a few persons or
families. Such is not the intendment, nor the drive, nor the
direct and inevitable consequences of the definition of
"family", [873 D-E]
3. Section 11(6) of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 which provides that the amount payable
under sub-section (I) or sub-section (5) of section 11
shall, in no case, exceed two lakhs of rupees is valid. The
amount thus payable, is not illusory and the provision is
not confiscatory Rupees two lakhs is not like a farthing
even if the excess land may be a fortune.
[879 F]
4. Section 23 of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act is valid and does not suffer from any
constitutional infirmity. Sub-section (4) of section 23 is
the prepondering provisio governing the disposal of excess
vacant land acquired under the Act. Though it is "subject to
the provisions of sub-section (1) (2), and (3)", the
provisions of sub-section (1) are enabling and not
compulsive and those of sub-sections (2) and (3) are
incidental to the provisions of sub-section (1). The
disposal of excess vacant lands must therefore be made
strictly in accordance with the mandate of sub-section (4)
of section 23, subject to this, that in a given case such
land may be allotted to any person, for any purpose relating
to, or in connection with any "industry" or the other
purposes mentioned in sub-section (1), provided that by such
allotment, a common good will be subserved. The governing
test of disposal of excess land being "social good", any
disposal in any particular case or cases which does not
subserve that purpose will be liable, to be struck down as
being contrary to the scheme and intendment of the Act. The
preamble to the Act ought to resolve interpretational doubts
arising out of the defective drafting of section 23. "Common
Good", being the writing on the wall, any disposal which
does not serve that purpose will be outside the scope of the
Act and, therefore, lacking in competence in diverse senses.
Private property cannot under the Constitution be acquired
or allotted for private purposes though an enabling power
like that contained in sub-section (I) of section 23
865
may be exercised in cases where the common good dictates the
distribution of excess vacant land to an industry, as
defined in clause (b) of the Explanation to Section 23.
[878’ G-H; 879 A-E]
5. Sub-section (I) of section 27 of the Act is invalid
insofar as it imposes a restriction on transfer of any
urbanisable land with a building or a portion only of such
building, which is within the ceiling area. Such property
will therefore be transferable without the constraints
mentioned in sub-section (I) of Section 27 of the Act.
Nothing usefully can be added to the Judgment delivered by
Krishna Iyer, J and the reasons given therein are fully
agreed to. [879 G-H]
Per Krishna Iyer, J. (Concurring)
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 61
1. The legislation on the Ceiling and Regulation of
urban lands is constitutionally valid, though section 27(1)
is partially invalid. The legislation is obviously a measure
for inhibiting concentration of urban lands in the hands of
a few persons and for equitable distribution of such land to
subserve the common good. Article 39(b) and (c) of the
Constitution are directly attracted and the fullest
exploitation of the material resources of the community
undoubtedly requires distribution of urban land geared to
the common good.
[880 E-F]
2, Family as defined in section 2(f) of the Act accords
with the current life style in urban conditions and is
neither artificial nor arbitrary nor violative of Article
14. And the courts, in these days of family planning and
self-reliance of the adult cannot condemn as arbitrary, by a
process of judicial ratiocination, the legislative provision
that a family shall be defined as the parents plus their
minor children. [886 B-C]
3.1 The payment, fixed under section 11(6) of the Act
of a sum of Rs. two lakhs whatever be the total value of the
property in the market is not so fictitious and flimsy as to
be a farthing. There are no absolutes in law as in life and
the compulsions of social realities must unquestionably
enter the judicial verdict. [881 G-H]
3.2 The various amendments to Article 31 culminating in
the present provision which provides for the payment of the
"amount" disclose a determined approach by Parliament in
exercise of its constituent power to ensure that full
compensation or even fair compensation cannot be claimed as
fundamental right by the private owner and that short of
paying a "farthing for a fortune" the question of
compensation is out of bounds for the court to investigate.
[881 D-F]
3.3 Having regard to the human condition of a large
percentage of pavement dwellers and slum dwellers in our
urban areas and proletarian miserables in our rural
vastnesses, any one who gets Rs. 2 lakhs can well be
regarded as having got something substantial to go by. In a
society where half of humanity lives below the breadline, to
regard Rs. 2 lakhs as a farthing is farewell to poignant
facts and difficult to accept. Therefore, section 11(6) is
invulnerable and does not contravene Article 31(2) the
payment stipulated is reasonable, neither a mere mockery or
discriminatory. [884 E-F]
866
4. The whole story of the legislation, the long
gestation of pre-legislative consideration, the brooding
presence of Article 39(b) and (c) and the emphasis in
Section 23(4) on common good as the guiding factor for
distribution point to public purpose, national development
and social justice as the cornerstone of the policy of
distribution. Any transgression of Article 39(b) and (c) is
beyond the scope of Section 23(1) and disposal of land
thereunder must subserve the common good and not the
reverse. This limitation on the wide words of section 23(1)
is a matter of semantics and reading down the judicial
process. To sustain a law by interpretation is the rule. To
be trigger-happy in shooting at sight every suspect law is
judicial legicide. Courts can and must interpret words and
read their meanings so that public good is promoted and
power misuse is interdicted. The wide definition of
"industry" or the use of general words like "any person" and
"any purpose" cannot free the whole clause from the
inarticulate major premise that only a public purpose to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 61
subserve the commom on good and filing the bill of Article
39(b) and (c) will be permissible. The touchstone is public
purpose, community good and like criteria. If the power is
used for favouring a private industrialist or for nepotistic
reasons the oblique act will meet with its judicial
Waterloo. To presume as probable graft, nepotism. patronage,
political clout. friendly pressure or corrupt purpose is
imper missible. The law will be good, he power will be
impeccable but if the particular act of allotment is mala
fide or beyond the statutory and constitutional parameters
such exercise will be a casualty in court and will be struck
down. The power of judicial review to strike at excess or
mala fides is always there for vigilant exercise. Hence,
even the crude drafting of section 23(4) by the unwanted
"subject to" will not whittle down the power, why the
obligation, to distribute vacant land, not according to
personal, political or official fancy but strictly geared to
the good set down in Article 39(b) and (c).
[887 D-H; 888A; 889D]
5. Section 27(1) of the Act, is invalid, partially.
[880 A]
6.1 The question of basic structure being breached
cannot arise when examining the vires of an ordinary
legislation as distinguished from a Constitutional
amendment. Nor, indeed, can every breach of equality spell
disaster as a lethal violation of the basic structure.
Peripheral inequality is invitable when large-scale
equalization processes are put into action. What is a
betrayal of the basic feature is not a mere violation of
Article 14 but a shocking, unconscionable or unscrupulous
travesty of the quintessence of equal justice. If a
legislation does go that far it shakes the democratic
foundation and must suffer the death penalty. But to permit
the Bharti ghost to haunt the corridors of the court
brandishing fatal writs for every feature of inequality is
judicial paralysation of parliamentary function. Nor can the
constitutional fascination for the basic structure doctrine
be made a Trojan horse to penetrate the entire legislative
camp fighting for a new social order and to overpower the
battle for abolition of basic poverty by the basic structure
’misslle.
[889 E-H; 890A]
6.2 Right to property is not part of the basic
structure even his right to develop is not the basic
structure of India for ever. The whole adventure of the
Constitution is to remove poverty and in that process remove
concentration of
867
property, not for a return, but for almost free, if the
justice of the situation commended itself to the legislation
to take it that way.
Kesavanda Bharati v. State of Kerala [1972] Supp. SCR
p. I referred to.
6.3 Part IV which seeks to build a Social Justice
Society, is basic to our constitutional order. The Directive
Principles of State Policy being paramount in character and
fundamental in the country’s governance, distributive
justice, envisaged in Article 39(b) and (c) has a key role
in the developmental process of the Socialist Republic that
India has adopted. [888 C; 880 G]
Per Tulzapurkar, J. (dissenting)
1. The urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976,
though purporting to do so, does not, in fact, further the
directive principles in Article 39(b) and (c). The measure
was, undoubtedly, taken in hand with a view to achieve the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 61
unexceptional objectives underlying Article 39(b) and (c)
and supported by several State Legislatures as per their
resolutions passed under Article 252(1) with a laudable
object namely, to clothe the Parliament with legislative
competence to enact a law for the imposition of ceiling on
urban immovable property for the country as a whole, but the
enacted provisions misfire and produce the opposite results
and also damage or destroy the essential features or basic
structure of the Constitution. Section 2(f) in relation to
prescription of ceiling area permits unwarranted and
unjustified concentration of wealth instead of preventing
the same and is in teeth of the objective under Article
39(c): Similarly section 23 produces results contrary to the
objectives under Article 39(b) Therefore, the impugned Act
is outside the protective umbrella of Article 31-C. Further,
sections 2(f) 23 and 11(6) which puts a maximum limit on the
quantum of the amount payable in respect of excess vacant
land acquired from a holder irrespective of the extent of
area held by him-these three provisions flagrantly violate
those aspects of Articles 14 and 31 which constitute the
essential and basic features of the Constitution and hence
the protective umbrella of Article 31-B is not available to
the impugned Act inasmuch as the Fortieth Constitution
Amendment Act, 1976 to the extent to which it inserts the
Act in the Ninth Schedule is beyond the constituent power of
the Parliament. Section 23 which authorises compulsory
acquisition of property for private purposes is in breach of
the doctrine of eminent domain and since it flagrantly
violates Article 31(1) is ultra vires and unconstitutional.
Similarly section 27 being severable is partially ultra
vires and unconstitutional, being beyond the ambit of the
Act and also violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution.[916 H, 917A-D]
The legislative competence of the Parliament bring
still there, a well drafted enactment within the
constitutional limitations of the subject would be the
proper remedy.[198 G-H]
Union of India v. Valluri Basaviah Chowdhry, [1979] 3
SCR 802 referred to.
2.1 The artificial definition of " Family" given in
section 2(f) of(t) of Act, when considered in relation to
the prescriptions of the ceiling area under
868
section 4(1) is clearly violative of and strikes at the root
of the equality clause contained in Article 14 of the
Constitution. This artificial definition together with the
double standard adopted for fixing the ceiling area runs
through and forms the basis of chapter III of the Act and
the discriminatory result or inequalities produced thereby
are bound to have an impact on the scheme of that chapter
and, therefore, along with it the whole chapter III must
fall being violative of Article 14. [898 C-F]
2.2 The classification made between minor children and
major children belonging to a family is not based on any
intelligible differentia having no nexus to the object
sought to be achieved by the Act, which is to acquire excess
vacant land after leaving the ceiling area to the family. It
has not been shown that so called nuclear families alleged
by in vogue have replaced normal families which include
major sons or joint Hindu families in urban areas. [898 B-C]
Karimbil Kunhikoman v. State of Kerala [1962] Supp. 1
SCR 829; A.P. Krishnasami Naidu v. State of Madras [1964] 7
S.R 82 followed.
2.3 Apart from the discriminatory result which the
artificial definition of family in section 2(f) produces,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 61
the adoption of the artificial definition of "family" and
double standard for fixing ceiling area one for a family
with minor children and another for a family with major
children and completely ignoring the concept of Joint Hindu
Family in relation to prescription of ceiling area clearly
lead to results which run counter to the directive
principles contained in Article 39 (c) of the
Constitution.[899 E-F]
3.1 Section 11(6) of the Act, which puts the maximum
limit of Rupees Two lakhs on the amount payable to a holder
of excess vacant land acquired under the Act irrespective of
the extent of such excess vacant land held by him is not
merely violative of Articles 14 and 32(2) of the
Constitution, but would be a piece of confiscatory
legislation, because vacant land in excess of that portion
which at the prescribed rates is worth Rupees Two lakhs
stands confiscated to the State without any payment
whatsover. [911 C-D]
3.2 The enactments involving large schemes of social
engineering like abolition of Zamindars, agrarian reforms
nationalisation of undertakings and businesses and the like,
where avowedly the benefit of the community or public at
large is the sole consideration are distinguishable from the
instant case, where "industry" has been expressly defined to
include business, trade or profession in private sector and
where power has been coffered upon the State Government to
allot properties acquired under the enactment to individual
businessman, trader or professional to enable him to carry
on his private business, trade or profession, that is to
say, where the legislation is a fraud on State’s power of
eminent domain, such a provision of putting a maximum limit
on compensation payable in respect of the acquired property
irrespective of its extent will have to be regarded as
confiscatory in nature. [911E 912 A-C]
869
However, section 11 (6) is clearly a severable
provision, and, therefore, ultra vires and unconstitutional.
[913A]
State of Kerala v. The Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg.Co. Ltd.
[1974] I SCR 671 distinguished.
4.1 Section 23 of the Act which authorises compulsory
acquisition of property for private purposes flagrantly
violates those aspects of Article 31 which constitute the
essential or basic features of the Constitution and is,
therefore, ultra vires and unconstitutional. Further,
indispensably, it is the most vital, integral and non-
severable part of the entire scheme of urban ceiling as
without it the scheme will merely remain a scheme for unjust
and illegal enrichment of the State, and therefore, the
whole of chapter III in which it occurs, must fall with it.
[906 A-B]
4.2 Article 31 of the Constitution has more than one
facet: it undoubtedly confers upon individuals (including
non citizens) and corporate bodies a fundamental right to
property and incorporates in our Constitution the concept of
State’s power of eminent domain i.e. power of compulsory
acquisition of private property and prescribes two
conditions precedent to the exercise of that power, namely,
(i) such acquisition cannot be except for a public purpose
and (ii) it must be on payment of compensation (now termed
amount") to the claimant having interest in the property.
But these two conditions precedent are sine qua non for the
exercise of the State’s power of eminent domain and,
represent those aspects of the right to property under
Article 31 which constitute the essential or basic features
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 61
of our Constitution and for that matter these would be so of
any democratic constitution and, therefore, any law
authorising expropriation of private property in breach of
anyone of those conditions would damage or destroy the basic
structure of our Constitution. [903 H, 904A, B-E]
H.H. Kesavananda Bharati v. Union of India & Ors.
[1973] Supp. SCR 1 referred to.
State of Bihar v. Kameshwar Singh, [1952]SCR 889 relied
on.
4.3 It is extremely doubtful whether compulsory
acquisition of all the excess vacant land in all urban
agglomerations throughout the country for a bald, indefinite
and unspecified objective like "industry" simpliciter
without any attempt at dovetailing it by having a proper
scheme for industrial development will constitute a valid
public purpose for the exercise of the power of eminent
domain" [905 C-D]
4.4 The adoption of a wide definition of a wide
definition of industry so as to include any business, trade
or profession in private sector not only makes a mockery of
"public purpose", but also, in the context of eminent domain
is clearly suicidal. What is worse is that under the
priorities laid down such private
870
purposes are to be catered to first and then comes the
disposal or distribution thereof to subserve common good,
which clearly smacks of depriving Peter of his property to
give it to Paul and, therefore, clearly amounts to an
invalid exercise of State’s power of "eminent domain". [905
F,G-H,906 A]
4.5 Besides, the wide definition of "industry" and the
priorities for disposal or distribution of excess vacant
land laid down in sub-sections (1) to (5) have adverse
impact on the directive principle contained in Article 39(b)
in as much as private purposes receive precedence over
common good. The enactment which contains such provisions
that produce contra results cannot be said to be in
furtherance of the directive principle of Article 39(b) and
cannot receive the benefit of the protective umbrella of
Article 31-C. [906 C-D,G-H]
4.6 It is well settled that it is only when there is
ambiguity in the text of any provision in the enactment that
the preamble could be looked into. Here, there is no
ambiguity whatsoever in section 23(1) and (4). Far from
there being any ambiguity there is express provision in
section 23(1) and (4) indicating the priorities in the
matter of disposal or distribution of excess vacant land, in
face of which, the Preamble cannot control, guide, or direct
the disposal or distribution in any other manner. [907 A-C]
4.7 No rules framed under section 46(1), which empowers
the Central Government to make rules for carrying out the
provisions of the Act, and the disposal or distribution of
excess vacant land can override the express provisions of
section 23. Here, no rules have so far been framed. 907 C-D]
4.8 No reliance can be made on the "Compendium of
Guidelines" issued by the Central Government in the Ministry
of Works and Housing under the Act either. No doubt, the
recommendations made by the 9th Conference of State
Ministers of Housing and Urban Development seek to furnish
improved guidelines but in the process reverse the
priorities given in section 23 in the matter of disposal or
distribution of excess vacant land. Hence, the priorities
given in section 23 and as have been summarised in para 3 of
the Note must prevail over the priorities indicated in the
guidelines contained in para 4 of the Note and the latter
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 61
are of no avail. [907 F-G-H, 908 A-B]
4.9 Section 23 by no stretch deals with the objective
of Article 39(c) at all but only deals with the objective
underlying the directive principle of Article 39(b) and its
provisions clearly run counter to that objective and as such
the enactment which contains such provisions must forfeit
the benefit of the protective umbrella of Article 31-C. [908
C-D]
4.10 The definition of "industry" in section 23 cannot
be read down by the Court so as to confine the same to
industries is public sector or co-operative sector or the
like where benefit to community or public at large would be
the sole consideration, so that allotment of excess vacant
land acquired under the Act to private entrepreneurs for
private purposes which runs counter to the
871
doctrine of eminent domain would be completely eschewed,
because Parliament has for the purpose of section (i.e. for
purposes of disposal or distribution of such excess vacant
land) deliberately and in express terms adopted a very wide
definition which includes within its scope not merely
trading or manufacturing activity but also any business or
profession in private sector and reading down the definition
would be doing violence to the Parliament’s intention stated
in express terms. [908 G-H, 909A]
4.11 Nor can sub-section (1) of section 23 of the Act
be read as containing merely an enabling provision; the
scheme of sub-sections (1) to (4) read together clearly
shows that the disposal of excess vacant land is first to be
done under sub-section (1) and disposal under sub-section
(4) comes thereafter. The opening words of sub-section (4),
"subject to sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" cannot be read as
constituting a non obstante clause giving an overriding
effect to sub-section (4) nor can sub-section (4) be read as
if the opening words were absent. By indulging in such
interpretative acrobatics, the Court cannot reach the
opposite result than is warranted by the plain text of the
provision. Further, to say that every disposal of excess
vacant land under sub-section (1) must be for ’common good
is to read into that sub-section something which is not
there; it amounts to rewriting that sub-section, which
cannot be done, the preamble notwithstanding. Such
interpretations require the restructuring of the entire
section-a function legitimately falling within the domain of
legislature. Moreover, sub-sections (1), (2), (3) and (4) of
section 23 are integral parts of the whole scheme dealing
with the disposal of excess vacant land acquired under the
Act and as such cannot be severed from one another. The
attempt to salvage section 23, either wholly or in part, by
seeking to free it from the two vices, namely (i) the
adoption of the wide definition of "industry" and (ii) the
priorities mentioned therein governing the disposal of
excess vacant land acquired under the Act, must, therefore.
fail. [909 C-G]
5.1 Though the authorisation was for imposition of
ceiling on whom immovable property Parliament deliberately
kept out built up properties from the purview of the Act and
the Act seeks to impose ceiling only on vacant land in urban
agglomerations; that being so any restriction on transfer of
built up properties or part thereof (including flats
therein) standing on urban land falling within the
permissible ceiling area would be outside the purview of the
Act. [915 E-F]
5.2 Such a provision, as in Section 27 of the Act would
not be incidental or ancillary to the ceiling contemplated
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 61
by the Act and would not fall within the phrase "for matters
connected therewith" occurring in the Preamble and the long
title of the Act, for the words "matters connected
therewith" occurring in the concerned phrase must be
correlated to what precedes the phrase, namely, "an Act to
provide for ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomerations,
for the acquisition of such land in excess of the ceiling
limit, to regulate the construction of buildings on such
land", and therefore, the words "matters connected
therewith" must mean matters in relation to the ceiling
imposed by the Act. A reference to objectives under Article
39(b)(c)
872
(for the achievement of which the enactment is allegedly
taken in hand) in the Preamble or long title cannot enlarge
the ambit or scope of the Act. Any restriction imposed on
built-up properties falling within the permissible ceiling
area left with the holder would, therefore, be outside the
ambit and scope of the Act. [914 G-H, 915A]
5.3 In the absence of any guidelines for the exercise
of the power and in the absence of any standards having been
laid down by the Legislature for achieving the objectives of
prevention of concentration, speculation and profiteering in
urban land and urban property, it cannot be said that there
three broad objectives recited in the Preamble could
effectively or adequately guide the exercise of power by the
competent authority in the matter of granting or refusing to
grant the permission under section 27 and is bound to
produce arbitrary or discriminatory results. Further, the
provision for appeal under section 33 the Appellate
Authority and a revision under section 34 to the State
Government would not be of much avail to preventing
arbitrariness in the matter of granting of refusing to grant
the permission. Section 27 which does not adequately control
the arbitrary exercise of the power to grant or refuse the
permission sought, is clearly violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution and as such the requirement of permission
contained therein is ultra vires and unconstitutional,
[915 G-H,916A-B]
Per A.P. Sen, J. (concurring)
1.1 Sub-sections (2) and (3) of Section 23 and the
opening words subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1),
(2) and (3) "in section 23(4) of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976 are ultra vires of the Parliament and
these provisions are not protected under Article 31-B and
31-C of the Constitution. Sub-section (1) of section 27 of
the Act is invalid in so for as it imposes a restriction of
transfer of urban property for a period of ten years from
the commencement of the Act, in relation to vacant land or
building thereon, within the ceiling limits. The remaining
provisions of the Act, including sub-section (4) of section
23 being in conformity with Part IV of the Constitution and
Article 31(2) are valid and constitutional. The Act is in
furtherance of the directive principles under Article 39(b)
and (c) and has the protection of both Article 31-B and 31-
C. [946 B-F]
1.2 To strike down the whole Act would be against the
national interest. Unless it becomes clear beyond reasonable
doubt that the legislation in question transgresses the
limits of the organic law of the Constitution, it must be
allowed to stand as the true expression of the national
will. Here, the invalidity of the provisions of sub-sections
(1) to (3) of section 23 and the opening words "subject to
the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in section
23(4) cannot affect the validity of the Act as a whole, in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 61
as much as the said provisions are not inextricably bound up
with the remaining provisions of the Act. Further, the
legislature would have enacted what survives without
enacting the part that is ultra vires. The Act still remains
the Act as it was passed i.e. an Act for imposition of
ceiling on urban land [935 D-E, 9.6 A-B]
Attorney-General for Alberin v. Attorney General for
Canada [1947] AC-505 at 518 quoted with approval.
873
1.3 In determining the effect of law upon the
individual’s right to property, the Court must take judicial
notice of the fact of vast inequalities in the existing
distribution of property in the Country. The Court’s concern
lies not merely with applying the preexisting sets of
theories, concepts, principles and criteria with a view to
determining what the law is on a particular point. The
proper approach should be to view the principles with the
realisation that the ultimate foundation of the Constitution
finds its ultimate roots in the authority of the people.
And, constitutional questions should not be deter- mined
from a doctrinaire approach, but viewed from experience
derived from the life and experience or actual working of
the community, which takes into account emergence of new
facts of the community’s social and economic life affecting
property rights of the individual, whenever, among there,
the validity of a law prescribing preference or
discrimination is in question under the "equal protection"
guarantee. [936 B-E]
2. The artificial definition of family in section 2 (f)
of the Act is valid. As a result of the artificial
definition of "family" in section 2(f), a Joint Hindu family
is excluded from the purview of section 2 of the Act, but
such a total exclusion of Joint Hindu Family does not render
the Act void and unconstitutional as violative of Article
14. Parliament deliberately excluded a joint family from the
purview of the section as it was beset with difficulties in
imposing a ceiling. The Act applies to Hindus, Mohammedans
and Christians alike. By the exclusion of a Joint Hindu
Family the members of a Joint Hindu family, whether governed
by the Mitakshara school or the Dayabhaga school were
brought at par with others. Therefore, there is nothing
wrong in the exclusion. [937E-H, 938A, C-E]
3.1 The contention that the amount fixed by sub-section
(6) of section (1) of the impugned Act is totally arbitrary
and illusory since there is no nexus between the value of
the property and the amount fixed and, therefore, the
maximum amount fixed under sub-section (6) makes the Act
confiscatory in total abrogation of the fundamental right
guaranteed under Article 31(2) cannot be accepted. [938 F-A]
3.2 The Constitution (Twenty-fifth Amendment) Act,
1971, has placed the matter of adequacy of compensation
beyond the pale of controversy by substituting the word "
amount" for the word "compensation" in Article 31(2) and
made the adequacy of the amount payable for acquisition or
requisition of the property nonjusticiable. When the Court
has no power to question the adequacy of the amount under
Article 31(2), it cannot be said, that the amount determined
according to the principles laid down in sub-section (1)
subject to the maximum fixed under sub-section (6) thereof
is illusory merely because of inadequacy. The legislature in
its wisdom has laid down the principles and fixed a ceiling
on the maximum amount payable and considers that Rupees Two
Lakhs is a fair and just recombines. That is a legislative
judgment and the Court has no power to question it. [938 G,
939 FG, 942 E-F,G]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 61
H.H. Kesavananda Bharati v. State of Kerala [1973]
Supp. SCR P.I; R.C. Cooper v. Union of India [1970] 3 SCR
531; State of Kerala v. Gwalior Rayan
874
Silk Manufacturing Co. [1974] 1 SCR 671; State of Karnataka
v. Ranganatha Reddy [1978] 1 SCR 641 followed.
4.1 Sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of section 23 and the
opening words "subject to the provisions of sub-sections
(1), (2) and (3) in sub-section (4) of section 23 are ultra
vires of the Parliament [935 B-C]
4.2 Apart from the five pillars or the Constitution,
namely, Sovereign Democratic Republic, Equality of status
and opportunity, Secularism, Citizen s right to worship and
the Rule of law-, the concept of social and economic
justice-to build a welfare State-, is equally a part of the
basic structure or the foundation upon which the
Constitution rests. The provisions of sections 23(1), (2)
and (3) and the opening words in sections 23(4) are the very
antithesis of the idea of a welfare State based on social
and economic justice. Since these provisions permit
acquisition of property under the Act for private
purposes, they offend against the Directive Principles of
State Policy of Article 39 (b) and (c) and are also
violative of Article 31(2) and therefore, not protected
under Article 31-B, [934 G-H 935 A-B]
Indira Nehru Gandhi v. Raj Narain, [1976]2SCR 347
relied on
H.H. Kesavananda Bharyti v. State of Kerala [1973]
Supp. SCR p.1 explained.
4.3 It is extremely doubtful whether compulsory
acquisition of all the excess vacant land in all urban
agglomeration throughout the country for a bold, indefinite
and unspecified objective like ’ industry", simpliciter
would be a valid exercise of the power of eminent domain.
[928H-929A]
4.4 Although the impugned Act is enacted with a
laudable object to subserve the common good, in furtherance
of the Directive Principles of State Policy under Article
39(b) and (c), in terms of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of
section 23 it would be permissible to acquire vacant land in
urban agglomerations and divert it for private purposes, the
whole emphasis being on industrialisation. The opening words
in section 23 (4) "subject to the provisions of sub section
(1), (2) and (3)" make the provisions of section 23(4)
subservient to section 23(1), which make it lawful for the
allottee that is the industrialist to hold such land in
exceess of the ceiling limit. [928 D-F]
4.5 The provisions of sub-section(1), (2) and (5) of
section 23 cannot be read in the light of the Preamble of
the Act or the Directive Principles under Article 39(b) and
(c). [929 B-C]
When the language of the section is clear and explicit,
its meaning cannot be controlled by the Preamble. It is not
for the Court to restructure the section. The restructuring
of a statute is obviously a legislative function. The matter
is essentially of political expediency and as such it is the
concern of the statements and, the therefore, the domain of
the legislature and not the judiciary. [929 C-E]
875
The use of the words "subject to the provisions of sub-
sections (1), (2) and (3)" in section 23(4) takes away the
compulsion on the State Government to adhere to the
Directive Principles under Article 39 (b) and (c) in making
allotment of the vacant lands in an urban aggolomereration
acquired under the Act. The words "-subject to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 61
provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in section
23(4), appearing in the context means " in addition to if
anything is left over after the allotment under section
23(1)"[929 F-G]
A legislation built on the foundation of Article 39(b)
and (c) permitting acquisition of private property must be
for a Public purpose. that is to subserve the common good
Sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of section 23 of the Act
negate that principle. Furthermore, Article 31(2) consists
of three prerequisites, namely, (i) the property shall be
acquired by or under a valid law; (ii) it shall be acquired
only for a public purpose, and (iii) the person whose
property has been acquired shall be given an amount in lieu
thereof. The definition of ’industry ’ in Explanation (b) to
section 23(1) is wide enough to include any business, trade
or vocation carried on for private grain. There cannot be
"mixed purpose of public and private to substain under
legislation Article 39(b) and (c) The vice lies in section
23(1) and the Explanation (b) thereto, which on a combined
reading, frustrate the he very object of the legislation.
[930 A-C]
4.6 The concept of "public purpose" necessarily implies
that it should be a law for the acquisition or requisition
of property in the interest of the general public, and the
purpose of such a law directly and vitally subserves public
interest. If In reality the object of the acquisition under
the Act is to set up industries in the private sector as is
permissible from the provisions of section 23(1) of the Act,
nothing prevents the State from taking recourse to section
40 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, for which there must
be quid pro quo that is, payment of compensation according
to the market value.
[930 F-G]
4.7 The guidelines issued by the Government of India,
Ministry of Works and Housing clarifying the intent and
purpose of the provisions of the Act cannot supersede or
alter any of the provisions of the Act or the rules made
thereunder. The Guidelines cannot alter the "priorities"
laid in the sections. The guidelines are nothing but in the
nature of Executive Instructions and cannot obviously
control the plain meaning of the section. [930 G-H, 932E]
Where the language of the Act is clear and explicit,
the Courts must give effect to it, whatever may be the
consequences for in that case the words of the statute speak
the intention of the legislature. Therefore, the courts
cannot be called upon the interpret the provisions of
section 23 of the Act in the light of the Guidelines issued
by the Government of India, Ministry of Works and Housing.
932 E-F]
4.8 The provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) of
section 23 and the opening words "subject to the provisions
of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3) in section 23(4) which
makes the setting up of industries the dominent object for
876
the acquisition of vacant land in urban agglomerations under
the Act are not in keeping with Part IV of the Constitution
and, therefore, not protected under Article 31-C. [932 G-H]
4.9 A legislation which directly runs counter to the
Directive Principles of State Policy enshrined in Article
39(b) and (c) cannot by the mere inclusion in the Ninth
Schedule receive immunity under Article 31-B. The Directive
Principles are not mere homilies. Though these Directives
are not cognizable by the Courts and if the Government of
the day fails to carry out these objects no court can make
the Government ensure them , yet these principles have been
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 61
declared to be fundamental to the governance of the country.
In short, the Directives emphasise, in amplification of the
Preamble, that the goal of the Indian policy is not laissez
faire, but a welfare State, where the State has a positive
duty to ensure to its citizens social and economic justice
and dignity of the individual. It would serve as an
"Instrument of Instructions" upon all future governments,
irrespective of their party creeds. 933A-B, E-F]
5.1 The provisions of sub-section ( 1) of section 27 of
the Act is invalid in so far as it seek to affect a
citizen’s right to dispose of his urban property in an urban
agglomeration within the ceiling limits. [946 B-C]
5.2 The right to acquire, hold and dispose of property
guaranteed to a citizen under Article 19(1)(f) carries with
it the right not to hold any property. As such a, citizen
cannot be compelled to own property against his will [945 G-
H]
There is no justification at all for the freezing of
transactions by way of sale, mortgage, gift or lease of
vacant land or building for a period exceeding ten years or
otherwise for a period of ten years from the date of the
commencement of the Act, even though such vacant land with
or without building thereon falls within the ceiling limits.
[945 E-F]
If vacant land owned by a person falls within the
ceiling limits for an urban agglomeration he is outside the
purview of section 3 of the Act. That being so, such a
person is not governed by any of the provisions of the Act.
[946A]
Excel Wear v. Union of India and Ors. [1979] 1 SCR 1009
relied on.
JUDGMENT:
ORIGINAL JURISDICTION: Writ Petition No. 350/ of 1977
etc.
Under Article 32 of the Constitution of India.
S.K. Jain and S.S. Khanduja for the Petitioners.
R.N. Poddar and Ms. A. Subhashini for the Respondents.
The following Judgments were delivered
877
CHANDRACHUD, C.J.: A large group of persons holding
vacant lands in different urban agglomerations in the
country had filed writ petitions in this Court, challenging
the validity of some of the key provisions of the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 33 of 1976. Those writ
petitions were disposed of on November 13, 1980 by a
Constitution Bench consisting of Krishna Iyer J.,
Talzapurkar J., A.P.Sen J., and the two of us. Each of our
three learned Brethren delivered a full judgment. We
delivered a short judgment and stated that fuller reasons
will follow later.
We had discussed with one another the several points
arising in the writ petitions. But, we were running against
time, not an unusual predicament, since Krishna Iyer J. was
due to retire on November 15, 1980, Tulzarpurkar J. differed
from all of us, holding that the impugned Act is not
protected under Article 31-C or under Article 31-B since, it
did not further the Directive principles contained in
clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39 of the Constitution. The
learned Judge held further that since Chapter III of the
Act, comprising the substratum of the very scheme of the Act
was invalid the entire Act had to be struck down as
unconstitutional. A.P. Sen J. agreed with us on all the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 61
points except that according to him, subsections (1), (2)
and (3) of section 23 and the opening words of section 23(4)
of the Act are unconstitutional, not being protected by
Articles 31-B and 31-C of the Constitution. Krishna Iyer J.
concurred with us in holding that the entire Act is valid
save and except section 27(1), insofar as that section
imposes restrictions on the transfer of any urban or
urbanisable land with a building or a portion of such
building, which is within the ceiling area. We took the view
that the impugned Act was intended to and did in fact
implement or achieve the purpose of clauses (b) and (c) of
Article 39 and that, the vice from which a few provisions of
the Act could be shown to suffer, would not justify a
contrary conclusion.
We are free to confess that if the full text of the
judgment of Krishna Iyer J. were available to us
sufficiently in advance we would not have delivered a
separate order stating that fuller reasons will follow
later. The judgment had to be pronounced on November 13,
1980 since, Krishna Iyer J. was due to retire two days
later. As we have stated earlier, all of us had together
discussed the various points arising in these cases and we
knew the conclusions to which we had respectively come. But,
it is not possible to express agreement with the line of
reasoning of a judgment, without examining
878
the judgment carefully. That opportunity became available to
us latter. We have gone through Krishna Iyer J.’s judgment
closely and find that there is nothing that we can usefully
add to it.
The only further order which we propose to pass now is
say that we agree fully with the reasons given by Krishna
Iyer J. in his judgment reported in 1981(1) S.C.C. 166.
CHANDRACHUD, C.J. We have perused the judgment prepared
by Brother Tulzapurkar with care but, with respect, we are
unable to agree with him that the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act 33 of 1976, does not further the Directive
Principles of State Policy in clauses (b) and (c) of Article
39 of the Constitution. The vice from which a provision here
or a provision there of the impugned Act may be shown to
suffer will not justify the conclusion that the Act is not
intended to or does not, by its scheme, in fact implement or
achieve the purposes of clauses (b) and (c) of Article 39.
The definition of ’family’ in section 2(f), which in
relation to a person means the individual, the wife or
husband, as the case may be, of such individual, and their
unmarried minor children, will not necessarily lead to
concentration of wealth in the hands of a few person or
families. Such is not the intendment, nor the drive, nor the
direct and inevitable consequence of the aforesaid
definition of ’family’.
Section 23 of the Act is in our opinion valid and does
not suffer from any constitutional infirmity. The definition
of the word ’industry’ in clause (b) of the Explanation to
that section is undoubtedly unduly wide since it includes
"any business, profession, trade, undertaking or
manufacture". If sub-section (1) of section 23 were to stand
alone, no doubt could have arisen that the Urban Land
Ceiling Act is a facade of a social welfare legislation and
that its true, though concealed, purpose is to benefit
favoured private individuals or associations of individuals.
But the preponderating provision governing the disposal of
excess vacant land acquired under the Act is the one
contained in sub-section (4) of section 23 whereby, all
vacant lands deemed to have been acquired by the State
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 61
Government under the Act "shall be disposed of...to subserve
the common good". The provisions of sub-section (4) are
"subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)
"but the provisions of sub-section (1)
879
are enabling and not compulsive and those of sub-sections
(2) and (3) are incidental to the provisions of sub-section
(1). The disposal of excess vacant lands must therefore be
made strictly in accordance with the mandate of sub-section
(4) of section 23, subject to this, that in a given case
such land may be allotted to any person; for any purpose
relating to, or in connection with, any ’industry’ or for
the other purposes mentioned in sub-section (1), provided
that by such allotment, common good will be subserved. The
governing test of disposal of excess land being ’social
good’, any disposal in any particular case or cases which
does not subserve that purpose will be liable to be struck
down as being contrary to the scheme and intendment of he
Act. The Preamble to the Act ought to resolve
interpretational doubts arising out of the defective
drafting of section 23, It shows that the Act was passed
with the object of preventing concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and with a view to bringing about
an equitable distribution of land in urban agglomerations to
subserve the common good. ’Common good’ being the writing on
the wall, any disposal which does not serve that purpose
will be outside the scope of the Act and therefore lacking
in competence in diverse senses. Private property cannot
under our Constitution be acquired or allotted for private
purposes though an enabling power like that contained in
sub-section (1) of section 23 may be exercised in cases
where the common good dictates the distribution of excess
vacant land to an industry, as defined in clause (b) of the
Explanation to section 23.
Section 11(6) which provides that the amount payable
under sub-section (1) or sub-section (5) of section 11
shall, in no case, exceed two lakhs of rupees is valid. The
amount thus payable is not illusory and the provision is not
confiscatory. Rupees two lakhs is not like a farthing even
if the excess land may be a fortune.
Finally, we are of the opinion that subsection (1) of
section 27 of the Act is invalid in as far as it imposes a
restriction on transfer of any urban or urbanisable land
with a building or a portion only of such building, which is
within the ceiling area. Such property will therefore be
transferable without the constraints mentioned in sub-
section (1) of section 27 of the Act.
The Writ Petitions are accordingly dismissed except for
the restricted striking down of section 27(1) of the Act.
There will be no order as to costs
880
Fuller reasons will follow latter.
KRISHAN IYER, J. I agree with the learned Chief Justice
both regarding the constitutionality of the legislation and
regarding the partial invalidation of s. 27 (1).
Nevertheless, I consider it necessary to strike a few
emphatic notes of concordance having special regard to the
discordance of my learned brother Tulzapurkar, J. I have
carefully perused the judgment of Tulzapurkar, J, but must
express my deferential disagreement because on a few
fundamentals there is sharp divergence between us.
I proceed to turn the focus only on three issues,
namely, the alleged artificiality of "family’ as defined in
s. 2 (f) of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act,
1976 (for short, the Act), the invalidity of s. 23 of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 61
Act as discriminatory and, therefore, unconstitutional and
the invalidity of s. 11 (6) of the Act on the score that the
compensation offered is illusory and, therefore, violative
of Art. 31 (2) of the Constitution.
The legislation, as its title indicates, is obviously a
measure for inhibiting concentration of urban lands in the
hands of a few persons and fore quitetable distribution of
such land to subserve the common good. Article 39 (b) and
(c) of the Constitution are directly attracted and there is
no doubt that the fullest exploitation of the material
resources of the community undoubtedly requires distribution
of urban land geared to the common good. It is also a
notorious fact that concentration of urban land in private
hands is an effective forbiddance of the maximum use of such
land for industrial purposes at a critical juncture when the
nation is fighting for survival through industrialisation.
It needs no argument to conclude that the objective of the
legislation as set out in the long title and in the
statutory scheme is implementation of Part IV of the
Constitution. The Directive principles of State policy being
paramount in character and fundamental in the country’s
governance, distributive justice envisaged in Art. 39 (b)
and (c) has key role in the developmental process of the
socialist Republic that India has adopted. The conclusion is
inevitable that is a broad measure of State policy, ceiling
on and regulation of urban land ownership is an imperative
of economic independence and is, therefore, on the national
agenda of planned development. Indeed, there was no
controversy on this question before us. One of the points
which has been argued and has found approval with my learned
brother
881
Tulzapurkar, J., turns on the gross inadequacy of
compensation fixed under s. 11 (6) of the Act. There is a
specific case before us that urban land worth a few crores
will fall a prey to acquisition under this Act, but thanks
to s. 11 (6), "the amount" payable in return to the owner
shall not exceed Rs. 2 lakhs. This, it is contended, is an
illusory compensation in reckless disregard of the market
value of the property acquired. I am unable to agree with
this submission.
The taking over of large conglomerations of vacant land
is a national necessity if Art. 39 is a constitutional
reality. "Law can never be higher than the economic order
and the cultural development of society brought to pass by
that economic order." (Marx). Therefore, if Art. 38 of the
Constitution which speaks of a social order informed by
economic justice, is to materialise, law must respond
effectively and rise to the needs of the transformation
invisioned by the founding fathers. But it is contended that
any legislation which violates Art. 31 (2) or Art. 19 (1)
(f) (both of them have since been deleted by the 44th
Amendment to the Constitution although on the relevant date
they were part of part III) must fail notwithstanding the
fact that Arts. 31B and 31 C shield the legislation in
question. It is said that the Act is vulnerable for the
reason that right to property armoured by the above two
Articles is inviolable unless the taking is for a public
purpose in contrast to a private industry and the payment in
return, even if not an equivalent, is be fair enough so as
not to be castigated as illusory. The various amendments to
Art. 31 culminating in the present provision which provides
for the payment of an "amount" disclose a determined
approach by parliament in exercise of its constituent power
to ensure that full compensation or even fair compensation
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 61
cannot be claimed as a fundamental right by the private
owner and that short of paying a ’farthing for a fortune’
the question of compensation is out of bounds for the court
to investigate.
The question is whether in the light of Kesavananda
Bharati (especially the observations of Chandrachud, J), a
sum of Rs. 2 lakhs in s. 11 (6) is a farthing for a fortune.
I repudiate the proposition that payment of a sum of Rs. 2
lakhs, whatever the total value of the property in the
market may be is so fictitious and flimsy as to be a
farthing. There are no absolutes in law as in life and the
compulsions of social realities must unquestionably enter
the judicial verdict.
882
What is the dimension of Indian penury? What is the basis of
our constitutional order? What is the goal of the Republic?
What is the meaning of the egalitarian ethos of our society?
What do we mean by "We, the people of India"? Unless these
profound roots of our social constitutional order are
probed, we can never reach an effective answer to legal
formal issues. The roots and fruits of our National Charter
depend on a clear grasp of the constitutional fundamentals.
In this context, it is important to remember what, right at
the beginning even as the proceedings of the constituent
Assembly were culminating, Nehru had warned:
If we cannot solve this problem soon, all our
paper constitutions will become useless and
purposeless. If India goes down, all will go down; if
India thrives, all will thrive; and if India lives, all
will live.
He had repeated with emphasis:
The first task of this Assembly is to free India
through a new constitution, to feed the starving people
and to clothe the naked masses, and to give every
Indian the fullest opportunity to develop himself
according to his capacity.
Indeed, the tryst with destiny that India made when it
became free found expression in a historic speech by the
then Prime Minister, Jawahar Lal Nehru:
The service of India means the service of the
millions who suffer. It means the ending of poverty and
ignorance and disease and inequality of opportunity.
The ambition of the greatest man of our generation has
been to wipe every tear from every eye. That may be
beyond us, but as long as there are tears and
suffering, so long our work will not be over.
We must notice the Indian human condition. "Indian
poverty, to many who have an acquaintance with poverty in
similar societies is unique", writes Segal in his book The
Crisis of India: "It is unique in its depths, which seems
incapable of supporting life at all; unique in its blatancy,
for it is everywhere, in city and village, and concealed
among chimneys or trees, not isolated like an epidemic in an
883
inaccessible slum, but everywhere, on the movement of one’s
feet, always some where in the circle of one’s sight; unique
in its sheer magnitude for in India the poor are not to be
numbered in hundreds of thousands, but in hundreds of
millions; unique in the quality of its submission, which
registers a kind of glazed pride." In this context we may
also read what Rajen Babu stated as a framer of the
Constitution:
To all we give the assurance that it will be our
endeavour to end poverty and squalor and its companions
hunger and disease, to a abolish distinctions and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 61
exploitation and to ensure decent conditions of living.
We may have to remember that a galaxy of Constitution-makers
like Sardar Patel and B. Pant and Rajagopalachari, not to
speak of Jawahar Lal Nehru, where doubtful about the court
being given the power to pronounce upon the question of
compensation when the State acquired property. Indeed, it is
revealing to read the debates in condensed form given by
Granville Austin:
Sardar Patel closed the debate with a speech that
sounded like a requiem for land-lords....What did
’public use’ mean he wondered. Pant then said: Suppose
the government acquires zamindari rights and then
abolishes them. Or what if the Government takes over
Connaught Place (the central shopping and office area
of New Delhi) and then redistributes the buildings to
the tenants? The first stage is acquisition. Does that
come under this clause? To Ayyar’s answer of
’Certainly’, Pant replied that he opposed the wording
if it means that the government would not be free to
determine the compensation it would have to pay. If
this clause covers all cases of acquisition said
Rajagopalachari, then the question of the justness of
compensation will go to the courts ’with the result
that government functioning will be paralysed’.
Panikkar suggested that they should take out the ’just’
so that it would not be justiciable. Pant replied that
if this covered acquisition for social purposes, ’then
I submit payment of compensation should not even be
compulsory’. Patel concluded the discussion.
884
’If the word ’just’ is kept,’ he said, ’we come to the
conclusion that every case will go to the Federal
Court.’ Therefore "just" is dropped ........The
Assembly greeted the committee’s actions favourably.
We need not go into the details except to state that even
Gandhiji took the view that anything like compensation could
possibly not be given when property was taken from the
property owners by the State for community benefit. I
mention this only to drive home the point that right to
property is not part of the basic structure of the
Constitution even as right to poverty is not the basic
structure of India for ever. The whole adventure of the
Constitution is to remove poverty and in that process remove
concentration of property, not for a return, but for almost
free, if the justice of the situation commended it self to
the legislation to take it that way. Of course, it may be a
deception to say that an "amount" is paid if nothing is paid
except a tittle. So what we have to consider is whether the
amount of Rs. 2 lakhs is so utterly deceptive and totally
nominal as to be discarded as a farthing with contempt.
Having regard to the human condition of a large percentage
of pavement dwellers and slum dewllers in our urban areas
and proletarian miserables in our rural vastnesses, any one
who gets Rs. 2 lakhs can well be regarded as having got
something substantial to go by. In a society where half of
humanity lives below the breadline, to regard Rs. 2 lakhs as
a farthing is farewell to poignant facts and difficult to
accept. In my view, with the greatest respect for my learned
brother, I am unable to assent to the view that s. 11 (6)
contravenes Art. 31 (2) because the Payment stipulated is a
mere mockery.
To put a ceiling on the maximum amount payable when
property is taken is reasonable and does not spell
discrimination unless the maximum itself is a hoax, being
trivial. In a Constitution which creates a Socialist
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 61
Republic egalite is the rule of life and where gross
inequalities mar the economic order, a measure of
equalization is but one strategy of promoting equality and
has to be viewed as part of the dynamics of social justice.
Indeed, even in the Income Tax Act, at a certain stage,
almost all the income is taken away by a steep rate of tax
leaving next to nothing to the income earner. We have to be
pragmatic and show empathy with the values
885
of the Constitution. Chief Justice Earl Warren’s statement
is apposite as a reminder to our judicial conscience:
Our judges are not monks or scientists, but
participants in the living stream of our national life,
steering the law between the dangers of rigidity on the
one hand and of formlessness on the other. Our system
faces no theoretical dilemma but a single continuous
problem: how to apply to ever-changing conditions the
never-changing principles of freedom.
I have no hesitation in holding s. 11(6) as invulnerable.
’Family’ as defined in s.2(f) has been held invalid by
my learned brother Tulzapurkar, J, as an arbitrary,
artificial creation of the statute inconsistent with the
natural unit prevalent in the country. Here again. I must
emphasise that law is never static and must respond to the
challenges of change:
The law is not an end in itself, nor does it
provide ends. It is preeminently a means to serve what
we think is right .....Law is here to serve! To serve
what? To serve, insofar as law can properly do so,
within limits that I have already stressed, the
realization of man’s ends, ultimate and mediate, Law
cannot stand aside from the social changes around it.
It is possible that in the last century the prevalent
concept of family was of a certain pattern. Indeed, in the
diversity of Indian social structure the concept of ’family’
has varied from region to region and even from community to
community and we cannot postulate any parameters in this
behalf. Moreover, fission, not fusion, is the modern trend
and wherever might have been the situation in Indian rural
life in the 1950s there is no doubt that nuclear families
are becoming the vogue in the late 1970s and 1980s of Indian
urban life. In the Western countries the family unit
consists of the parents and their minor children and the
West has invaded the East in life-style
886
atleast in our cities. Whatever may be the pastoral life of
old or the idyllic picture we may cherish the social facts
tell a different tale in contemporary India of the cities.
There is hardly space for a unclear family to live in urban
conditions and to think of large joint families as the
natural unit is to resurrect by gone ways of life and turn
the blind eye to the rapid growth of the small family of man
and wife-’we two and we shall have two’ is the desideratum
and social factum. In these days of family planning and
self-reliance of the adult we cannot condemn as arbitrary,
by a process of judicial ratiocination, the legislative
provision that a family shall be defined as the parents plus
their minor children. I, therefore, hold that ’family’ as
defined in s. 2(f) of the Act accords with the current
lifestyle in urban conditions and is neither artificial nor
arbitrary nor violative of Act 14. It is noteworthy that
many agrarion legislations have been upheld by this court in
a spate of recent cases where the definition of ’family’ is
substantially the same.
I may permit myself a few observations on s. 23 of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 61
Act and the grounds of invalidation relied on by the
challengers. The section has been loosely or ambivalently
drafted and runs thus:
23. Disposal of vacant land acquired under the Act.
(1) It shall be competent for the State Government
to allot, by order, in excess of the ceiling limit any
vacant land which is deemed to have been acquired by
the State Government under this Act or is acquired by
the State Government under any other law to any person
for any purpose relating to, or in connection with, any
industry or for providing residential accommodation of
such type as may be approved by the State Government to
the employees of any industry and it shall be lawful
for such person to hold such land in excess of the
ceiling limit.
Explanation-For the purposes of this section,
(a) where any land with a building has been
acquired by the State Government under any other
law and such building has been subsequently
demolished by the State Government, than, such
land shall be deemed to be vacant land acquired
under such other law:
887
(b) "industry" means any business,
profession, trade, undertaking or manufacture.
... ... ...
(4) Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1),
(2) and (3), all vacant lands deemed to have been
acquired by the State Government under this Act shall
be disposed of by the State Government to subserve the
common good on such terms and conditions as the State
Government may deem fit to impose.
Certain basics must be remembered as ideological tools
of legal interpretation. The purpose of the enactment,
garnered from the Preamble, is to set a ceiling on vacant
urban land, to take over the excess and to distribute it on
a certain basis of priority. The whole story of the
legislation, the long gestation of pre-legislative
consideration, the brooding presence of Art. 39(b) and (c)
and the emphasis in s. 23(4) on common good as the guiding
factor for distribution point to public purpose, national
development and social justice as the cornerstone of the
policy of distribution. It is not and never can be
compulsory taking from some private owners to favour by
transfer other private owners. The prevalent pathology of
corrupt use of public power cannot be assumed by the court
lest the same charge be levelled against its echelons. The
wide definition of ’industry’ or the use of general words
like ’any person’ and ’any purpose’ cannot free the whole
clause from the inarticulate major premise that only a
public purpose to subserve the common good and filling the
bill of Art. 39(b) and (c) will be permissible. Even a
private industry may be for a national need and may serve
common good. Even a medical clinic, legal aid bureau,
engineering consultant’s office, private ambulance garage,
pharmacist’s shop or even a funeral home may be a public
utility. Professions for the people, trade at the service of
the community and industry in the strategic sector of the
nation’s development may well be in private hands in the
transitional stage of our pluralist economy undergoing a
fabian transformation. Why should lands allotted to such
private industries or professionals be condemned? The
touchstone is public purpose, community good and like
criteria. If the power is used for favouring a private
industrialist or for nepotistic reasons the oblique act will
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 61
meet with its judicial Waterloo. To presume as probable
graft, nepotism, patronage, political cloth,
888
friendly pressure or corrupt purpose is impermissible. The
law will be good, the power will be impeccable but if the
particular act of allotment is mala fide or beyond the
statutory and constitutional parameters such exercise will
be a casualty in court and will be struck down. We must
interpret wide words used in a statute by reading them down
to fit into the constitutional mould. The confusion between
the power and its oblique exercise is an intellectual
fallacy we must guard against. Fanciful possibilities, freak
exercise and speculative aberrations are not realistic
enough for constitutional invalidation. The legislature
cannot be stultified by the suspicious improvidence or worse
of the Executive.
I wholly agree with the perspective of my learned
brother Sen, J. that Part IV which seeks to build a Social
Justice Society, is basic to our constitutional order. Any
transgression of Art. 39(b) and (c) is beyond the scope of
s. 23(1) and disposal of land thereunder must subserve the
common good and not the reverse. This limitation on the wide
words of s. 23(1) is a matter of semantics and reading down
meanings of words with loose lexical amplitude is
permissible as part of the judicial process. To sustain a
law by interpretation is the rule. To be trigger-happy in
shooting at sight every suspect law is judicial legicide.
Courts can and must interpret words and read their meanings
so that public good is promoted and power misuse is
interdicted. As Lord Denning said: "A judge should not be a
servant of the words used. He should not be a mere mechanic
in the power-house of semantics". May Lord Denning live
long, and his shadow never grow less."
The power of judicial review to stricke at excess or
mala fides is always there for vigilant exercise untrammeled
by the narrow precedents of Victorian vintage. Prof. H.W.R.
Wade’s note of judicial activism, in his recent Hamlyn
Lectures, will set the sights right:
Brainwashed though British lawyers are in their
professional infancy by the dogma of legislative
sovereignty, they ought to excuse rather than criticise
the logical contortions and evasions to which Judges
must resort in their struggle to preserve their powers.
I do not see how
889
they can fairly be accused, to borrow words used by
Lord Devlin, of moving too far from their base. They
would be much more open to criticism if they remained
content with the wretchedly narrow base to which they
confined themselves 30 years ago, when they took
clauses of the "if the minister is satisfied" type at
face value. For judicial control, particularly over
discretionary power, is a constitutional fundamental.
In their self-defensive campaign the judges have almost
given us a constitution, establishing a kind of
entrenched provision to the effect that even Parliament
cannot deprive them of their proper function. They may
be discovering a deeper constitutional logic than the
crude absolute of statutory omnipotence.
I have no doubt even the crude drafting of s. 23 (4) by
the unwanted ’subject to’ will not whittle down the power,
why the obligation, to distribute vacant land, not according
to personal, political or official fancy but strictly geared
to the good set down in Art. 39 (b) and (c)
The question of basic structure being breached cannot
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 61
arise when we examine vires of an ordinary legislation as
distinguished from a constitutional amendment. Kesavananda
Bharati cannot be the last refuge of the proprietariat when
being legislation takes away their ’excess’ for societal
weal. Nor, indeed, can every breach of equality spell
disaster as a lethal violation of the basic structure.
Peripheral inequality is inevitable when large-scale
equalisation processes are but into action. If all the
judges of the Supreme Court in solemn session sit and
deliberate for half a year to produce a legislation for
reducing glaring economic inequality their genius will let
them down if the essay is to avoid even peripheral
inequalities Every large cause claims some martyr, as
sociologists will know. Therefore, what is a betrayal of the
basic feature is not a mere violation if Art. 14 but a
shocking, unconscienable or unscrupulous travesty of the
quintessence of equal justice. If a legislation does go that
far it shakes the democratic foundation and must suffer the
death penalty. But to permit the Bharati ghost to haunt the
corridors of the court brandishing fatal writs for every
feature of
890
inequality is judicial paralysation of parliamentary
function. Nor can the constitutional fascination for the
basic structure doctrine be made a Trojen horse to
penetrated he entire legislative camp fighting for a new
social order and to overpower the battle for abolition of
basic poverty by the ’basic structure’ missile. Which is
more basic? Eradication of die-hard, deadly and pervasive
penury degrading all human rights or upholding of the legal
luxury of perfect symmetry and absolute equality
attractively presented to preserve the status quo ante? To
use the Constitution to defeat the Constitution cannot find
favour whit the judiciary I have no doubt that the strategy
of using the missile of ’equality’ to preserve die-hard,
dreadful societal inequality is a stratagem which must be
given short shrift by this court. The imperatives of
equality and development are impatient for implementation
and judicial scapegoats must never be offered so that those
responsible for stalling economic transformation with a
social justice slant may be identified and exposed of. Part
IV is a basic goal of the nation and now that the court
upholds the urban ceiling law, a social audit of the
Executive’s implementation a year or two later will bring to
light the gaping gap between verbal valour of the statute
book and the executive slumber of law-in-action. The court
is not the anti-hero in the tragedy of land reform urban and
agrarian.
After all, in a rapidly changing society running on the
rails of the rule of law and operated according to
constitutional paradigms, the proprietariat is bound to
suffer but the country cannot defer the transformation
because, then, hunger will know no law. This is the root of
the matter. And then comes the irony of continual litigative
Clamour and the periodic chorus for property.
Dosn’t thou ’ear my ’erse’s, as they canters
awaay? Proputty, proputty, proputty-than’s what I ’ears
’em saay.
And holders and hoarders of wealth may pensively reflect:
Few rich men own their own property. The property
owns them.
891
I have not had the leisurely advantage of my learned
brothers’ full judgments save some discussions but my
impending retirement impels a hurried recording of my
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 61
reasons for subscribing to the order passed just now.
’Tomorrow to fresh woods and pastures new’, but to-day must
be fulfilled before tomorrow arrives, and so, I deliver this
judgment as is my duty to do,
TULZAPURKAR, J. By these writ petitions the
petitioners, who are holders of vacant land in the urban
agglomerations in various States, are seeking to challenge
the vires of some of the salient provisions of the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 (33 of 1976) and
since, according to them, some of the impugned provisions
are pivotal and non-severable, having an impact on its
entire scheme, the whole Act is liable to be struck down as
being invalid and unconstitutional. The petitioners have,
therefore, prayed for an order quashing notices issued to
them by the concerned competent authorities under the Act
and a mandamus directing the respondents not to implement
the provisions thereof against them.
The impugned enactment has its genesis in the
resolutions passed by eleven sponsoring States under Art.
252 (1) of the Constitution. The State Legislatures of
Andhra Pardesh, Gujarat, Haryana, Himachal Pradesh,
Karnataka, Maharashtra, Orissa, Punjab, Tripura, Uttar
Pradesh and West Bengal considered it desirable to have an
uniform legislation enacted by Parliament for the imposition
of ceiling on urban property for the country as a whole and
as required by the first part of Art. 252 (1) of the
Constitution passed a resolution to that effect. Parliament
accordingly enacted the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation)
Act, 1976. It received the assent of the President on
February 17, 1976 and, in the first instance, it come into
force on that day in all the Union Territories and the 11
States which had passed the requisite resolution under the
first part of Art. 252 (1). Subsequently, the Act was
adopted, by passing resolutions under the second part of
Art. 252 (1) by the State Legislatures of Rajasthan on March
9, 1976, Manipur on March 12, 1976, Assam on March 25, 1976,
Bihar on April 1, 1976, Meghalaya on April 7, 1976 and
Madhya Pradesh on September 9, 1976. Thus, the enactment is
in force in 17 States and all the Union Territories in the
country. It seeks to impose ceiling on vacant lands in urban
agglomerations having a population of two lakhs or more and
for that purpose classifies such urban agglomerations in
various cities and towns in all the State and Union
Territories into four categories
892
and fixes the ceiling limit for each of the categories thus:
Ceiling limit on vacant land is fixed at 500 sq. metres for
the urban agglomerations of the metropolitan areas of Delhi,
Bombay, Calcutta and Madras having a population exceeding
ten lakhs falling under category ’A’, at 1,000 sq. metres
for urban agglomerations with a population of ten lakhs and
above, excluding the four metropolitan areas, falling under
category ’B’, at 1,500 sq. metres for urban agglomerations
with a population between three lakhs and ten lakhs falling
under category ’C’ and at 2,000 sq. metres for urban agglo
merations with a population between two lakhs and three
lakhs falling under category ’C’: vide s.4 read with
Schedule I of the Act. The said Schedule does not mention
the urban agglomerations having a population of one lakh and
above but if a particular State which passed a resolution
under Art. 252 (1) (first part) or if a State which
subsequently adopts the Act by passing a resolution under
Art. 252 (1) (second part) wants to extend the Act to such
areas, it could do so by a Notification under s. 2 (n) (A)
(ii) or s. 2 (n) (B), as the case may be, after obtaining
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 61
the previous approval of the Central Government. Chapter
III, being the main Chapter, comprising ss. 3 to 24, deals
principally with imposition and limits of ceiling on vacant
land, acquisition and vesting in the State Government of
vacant land in excess of the ceiling limits, payment to be
made to the holders for such acquisition, disposal of excess
vacant land so acquired and exemptions from the
applicability of this Chapter. Chapter IV comprising ss. 25
to 30 deals with regulation of transfer and the use of urban
property; while Chapter V which includes ss. 31 to 47, deals
with appeals, revisions, offences and punishments and other
miscellaneous matters.
The primary object and purpose of the Act, as its long
title and the Preamble show, is to provide for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein and with a view to bring about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, presumably in furtherance of the Directive
Principles of State policy contained in Art. 39 (c) and (b)
respectively. The enactment has also been but in the Ninth
Schedule as Item 132 by the Constitution (Fortieth
Amendment) Act, 1976, in other words, the enactment enjoys
the benefit of protective umbrella
893
of both the articles, Art. 31B and 31C as it stood prior to
its amendment by the Constitution (Forty-second Amendment)
Act, 1976.
Dealing with these two articles, namely, Arts. 31B and
31C and the protective umbrella provided by them in the
context of the decision in Kesavananda Bharati’s case this
Court in Waman Rao and others v. Union of India & others,
has by its order passed on May 9, 1980, held thus:
"In Kesavananda Bharati decided on April, 24, 1973
it was held by the majority that Parliament has no
power to amend the Constitution so as to damage or
destroy its basic structure. We hold that all
amendments to the Constitution which were made before
April 24, 1973 and by which the 9th Schedule to the
Constitution was amended from time to time by the
inclusion of various Acts and Regulations therein, are
valid and constitutional. Amendments to the
Constitution made on or after April 24, 1973 by which
the 9th Schedule to Constitution was amended from time
to time by the inclusion of various Acts and
Regulations therein, are open to challenge on the
ground that they, or any one or more of them, are
beyond the constituent power of the parliament since
they damage the basic or essential features of the
Constitution or its basic structure. We do not
pronounce upon the validity of such subsequent
constitutional amendments except to say that if any Act
or Regulation included in the 9th Schedule by a
constitutional amendment made after April 24, 1973 is
saved by Article 31C as it stood prior to its amendment
by the 42nd Amendment, the challenge to the validity of
the relevant Constitutional Amendment by which that Act
or Regulation is but in the 9th Schedule, on the ground
that the Amendment damages or destroys a basic or
essential feature of the Constitution or its basic
structure as reflected in Articles 14, 19 or 31, will
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 61
became otiose.
894
Article 31C of the Constitution, as it stood prior
to its amendment by section 4 of the Constitution (42nd
Amendment) Act, 1976, is valid to the extent to which
its constitutionality was upheld in kesavonanda
Bharati. Article 31C, as it stood prior to the
Constitution (42nd Amendment) Act does not damage any
of the basic or essential features of the Constitution
or its basic structure."
Since the impugned Act has been put in the Ninth Schedule by
the Constitution (Fortieth Amendment) Act, 1976 i. e. after
April 24, 1973, the said Constitutional Amendment would be
open to challenge on the ground that the same is beyond the
constituent power of the Parliament if it damages the
essential features or basic structure of the Constitution;
but at the same time the impugned Act has, apparently,
received the protective umbrella of Art. 31C as it stood
prior to its amendment by 42nd Amendment Act inasmuch as it
seems to have been enacted in furtherance of the Directive
Principles contained in Art. 39 (b) and (c) with the result
that in order to succeed in their challenge the petitioners
will have to cross two hurdles. In the first place they will
have to establish that the Act is outside the pale of the
protective umbrella of Art. 31C which they can do by showing
that though purporting to do so, it does not, in fact,
further any of the said Directive Principles. A scrutiny of
the Directive Principles contained in Art. 39 (b) and (c)
clearly shows that the basic postulate underlying the former
obviously is that diffusion of ownership and control of the
material resources of the community is always in public
interest and hence the State is directed to ensure such
distribution (equitable) there of as best to subserve the
common good, while the postulate underlying the latter
obviously is that concentration of wealth as well as means
of production in the hands of few is detrimental to common
interest and hence the State is directed to ensure such
economic system to operate which prevents such
concentration. It would, therefore, be clear that if by the
impugned enactment the aforesaid objectives of these
Directive Principles are not furthered or if the provisions
of the enactment run counter to these objectives the Act
would lose the benefit of the protective umbrella of Art. 31
C. Secondly, after crossing this hurdle, the petitioners
will have to show further that the 40th Amendment Act by
which the impugned Act was included in the Ninth Schedule
was beyond the constituent power of the Parliament since it
has damaged the basic structure or the
895
essential features of the Constitution as reflected in Arts.
14, 19 and 31, which of course, they will be able to do by
showing that the impugned Act itself flagrantly violates
aspects of Arts. 14, 19 and 31 which constitute the basic
structure or the essential features of the Constitution.
It may be stated that Counsel for the petitioners
principally attacked four provisions of the impugned Act (a)
artificial definition of ’family’ given in s. 2 (f) in
relation to the prescription of ceiling area, (b) provision
contained s. 11 relating to amounts payable in respect of
excess vacant land acquired by the State (c) provision
containedins. 23 relating to disposal of excess vacant land
acquired by the State and (d) prohibition or restriction on
transfer of a building or a part thereof or a flat therein,
though unconcerned with excess vacant land, without
permission, as being flagrantly violative of those aspects
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 61
of the petitioners’ fundamental rights under Arts. 14, 19
and 31 as constitute the essential features or basic
structure of the Constitution. Counsel for the petitioners
also contended that some of the aforesaid impugned
provisions which are pivotal and have an impact on the
entire scheme of the Act, in fact, run counter to the
Directive Principles of Art. 39 (b) and (c) and, there fore,
but the entire Act outside the pale of the protective
umbrella of Art. 31C of the Constitution. Counsel,
therefore, urged that both the 40th Amendment to the extent
it inserted the impugned Act in the Ninth Schedule and the
impugned Act deserve to be struck down.
On the other hand, the learned Attorney General
appearing on behalf of the Union of India and counsel for
the concerned States of Rajasthan, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar
Pradesh and for the concerned competent authorities under
the Act, refuted the contentions urged on behalf of the
petitioners. It was denied that any provision of the Act
runs counter to the Directive Principles of Art. 39 (b) and
(c) of the Constitution. It was pointed out that the
impugned Act having been put in the Ninth Schedule and
having been enacted in further of the Directive Principles
of the State policy contained in Art. 39 (b) and (c) of the
Constitution was protected both under Art. 31B and 31C of
the Constitution. It was disputed that any provision of the
Act violated the petitioners’ fundamental rights under Arts.
14, 19 and 31 and, it was contended that even if there was
any such violation, the Act and its provisions could not be
896
challenged by the petitioners on that ground because of the
protective umbrella of Art. 31B and 31C of the Constitution
and, therefore, the petitions were liable to be dismissed.
I shall first deal with those impugned provisions of
the Act, which according to the petitioners, not merely
violate their fundamental rights but also have an adverse
impact on the protective umbrella afforded by Art. 31C of
the Constitution. In this behalf counsel for the petitioners
referred to two provisions, namely. s. 2(f) which gives an
artificial definition of ’family’ in relation to
prescription of ceiling area and s. 23 which contains
provision relating to disposal of excess vacant land
acquitted by the State.
Re: s. 2(f) in relation to prescription of ceiling
area.
It is by s. 3 of the Act that the ceiling on vacant
land in any urban agglomeration is imposed. That section
runs thus:
"3. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, on
and from the commencement in this Act, on person shall
be entitled to hold any vacant land in excess of the
ceiling limit in the territories to which this Act
applies under sub-section (2) of section 1."
The ceiling limits referred to in the above section, as
stated earlier, have been fixed at 500 sq. metres, 1,000 sq.
metres, 1,500 sq. metres and 2,000 sq. metres for vacant
lands in urban agglomerations falling in categories A,B,C
and D respectively under s. 4(1). Section 2(i) defines
’person’ as including an individual, a family, a firm, a
company, or not association or body of individuals, whether
incorporated or not; while s. 2(f) defines ’family’ thus:
"Family", in relation to a person means the
individual, the wife or husband, as the case may be, of
such individual and their unmarried minor children."
And the Explanation to this clause states that "minor" means
a person who has not completed his or her age of eighteen
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 61
years. There is no doubt that the aforesaid definition of
’family’ is an artificial one inasmuch as is evcludes from
its scope major children two
897
are normally included in the concept of a family; it further
completely ignores the normal Joint Hindu Family. Counsel
for the petitioners pointed out that if this artificial
definition of ’family’ is considered in the context of
ceiling limits prescribed under s. 4(1) it produces
discriminatory results because of adoption of double
standard for fixing the ceiling limit-one for the artificial
family as defined and another for a normal family which
includes major children or for Joint Hindu Family governed
by Mitakshara Law obtaining in several parts of the country.
For instance, in an urban agglomeration falling under
category ’A’ where the ceiling limit is prescribed at 500
sq. metres, a family of a father, mother and say three minor
sons (being in all five) together will be entitled to retain
for itself only 500 sq. metres of vacant land whereas a
family of a father and four major sons (being in all five)
will be entitled to retain for itself 2,500 sq. metres of
vacant land (500 sq. metres for father as a person and 500
sq. metres each for four sons as persons). Counsel urged
that such discrimination or inequality arises from the
classification made between minor children and major
children belonging to a family but such classification is
not based on any intelligible differentia having any nexus
to the object sought to be achieved by the Act, which is to
acquire excess vacant land after leaving the ceiling area to
a family and as such the same is clearly violative of Art.
14 of the Constitution. Counsel strongly relied upon two
decisions of this Court in this behalf, namely, decisions in
Karimbil Kunhikoman v. State of Kerala and A.P. Krishnasami
Naidu etc. v. State of Madras, where on similar ground the
whole of Chapter III of Kerala Agrarian Relations Act, 1961
and the whole of Chapter II of the Madras Land Reforms
(Fixation of Ceiling on Land) Act, 1961, respectively were
struck down by this Court inasmuch as the artificial
definition of family together with adoption of double
standard for fixing ceiling limit formed the basis of the
concerned Chapter in each Act. I find considerable force in
counsel’s contention.
I may point out that when the agricultural ceiling
matters were argued before us counsel for the petitioners
therein had raised a similar contention in the context of
the artificial definition of ’family’ and the adoption of
double standard for fixing ceiling limits obtaining in the
several concerned Acts and in support of such contention
counsel had placed reliance on the aforesaid two decisions
of this
898
Court but we rejected the contention on the ground that
ample material had been produced before the Court justifying
the adoption of artificial definition of ’family’ and double
standard for fixing the ceiling limits in those Acts.
Production of such justifying material distinguished the
agricultural ceiling matters before us from the said two
decisions relied upon by counsel but in the instant case no
material whatsoever has been placed before the Court by the
respondents justifying the adoption of the artificial
definition of ’family’ in s. 2(f) and double standard of
fixation of ceiling in the impugned Act. It has not been
shown that the so-called nuclear families allegedly in vogue
have replaced normal families which include major sons or
joint Hindu families in urban areas. Besides, if the object
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 61
of the impugned Act is to acquire excess vacant land in
urban agglomerations after leaving permissible ceiling area
to a family the classification made between minor children
and major children belonging to a family has no nexus
whatsoever to that object. In my view, therefore, the
artificial definition of ’family’ given in s. 2(f) when
considered in relation to the prescription of the ceiling
area under s. 4(1) is clearly violative of and strikes at
the root of the equality clause contained in Art. 14 of the
Constitution. It cannot be disputed that this artificial
definition together with the double standard adopted for
fixing the ceiling area runs though and forms the basis of
Chapter III of the Act and the discriminatory results or
inequalities produced thereby are bound to have an impact on
the scheme of that Chapter and, therefore, along with it the
whole Chapter III must fall as being violative of Art. 14.
There is yet one more aspect which needs consideration
in connection with this adoption of the artificial
definition of ’family’ given in s.2 (f) and the double
standard for fixing ceiling area. Apart from the
discriminatory results which it produces the question is
what is its impact in the context of the directive principle
contained in Art. 39 (c) of the Constitution? As stated
earlier the postulate underlying the said directive
principle in that concentration of wealth in the hands of
few is deterimental to common interest and as such the State
should ensure such economic system which prevents such
concentration and the Act has been put on the Statute book
professedly to achieve that objective. But, by adopting the
artificial definition of ’family’ in s. 2(f) and having
double standard for fixing ceiling limit a contrary result
is obtained inasmuch as the Act actually permits an
unwarranted and unjustified concentration of
899
wealth (urban vacant land) in the hands of a family having
major sons in it as compared to the family having minor
children. In the illustration given above a family of a
father with four major sons is allowed to retain with itself
2,500 sq. metres of vacant land while a family of a father
mother and three minor sons is permitted to retain only 500
sq. metres. The position becomes more glaring if I take the
illustration of a Joint Hindu Family consisting of five
brothers, each having five major sons, as, in such a case
the said Joint Hindu Family will be entitled to retain
15,000 sq. metres of vacant land as against 500 sq. metres
permitted to be retained by the artificial family. It cannot
be said that large joint Hindu families are unknown in urban
agglomerations in various cities and towns of the country
and instances more glaring than the preceding illustration
could be multiplied. In other words, by adopting the
artificial definition of ’family’ and double standard for
fixing the ceiling area the Act enables unwarranted and
unjustified concentration of wealth in the hands of few
rather than preventing the same and this certainly would be
in teeth of and not in furtherance of the directive
principle of Art. 39(c); in fact, it is a negation of that
principle. It is not possible to take the view that the
Parliament out of inadvertance ignored joint Hindu Family or
forgot the possible concentration of vacant land in the
hands of major members of large joint Hindu families,
because in another context the concept of Joint Hindu Family
was present to the mind of the draftsman as is clear from s.
4(7) of the Act. In my view, therefore, the adoption of the
artificial definition of ’family’ and double standard for
fixing ceiling area one for a family with minor children and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 61
another for a family with major children and completely
ignoring the concept of Joint Hindu Family in relation to
prescription of ceiling area clearly lead to results which
run counter to the directive principle contained in Art.
39(c) of the Constitution. The Act which contains such
provision being in teeth of that directive principle must
fall outside the pale of protective umbrella of Art. 31C.
Re: s.23 relating to disposal of excess vacant land
acquired under the Act.
It may be stated that under s.6 every person holding
vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit at the
commencement of the Act is required to file within the
period prescribed a statement before the competent authority
having jurisdiction giving full particulars there of
890
and also specifying the vacant land within the ceiling limit
which he desires to retain. Sections 8 and 9 provide for
preparation of draft statement as regards vacant land held
in excess of the ceiling limit, holding of an inquiry in
that behalf and preparation of final statement and service
thereof on the concerned person by the competent authority,
Section 10 provides for acquisition of excess vacant land by
the concerned State Government and determination of claims
of all persons interested in such excess vacant-land and
under sub-s.(3) it is provided that upon the publication of
a notification in that behalf such excess vacant land as may
be specified therein shall be deemed to have been acquired
by the State Government and the same shall vest absolutely
in the State Government free from all encumbrances with
effect from the date specified in the notification. Then
comes s.23 which deals with disposal of such excess vacant
land acquired by the State Government under the Act. It runs
as follows:
"23.(1) It shall be competent for the State
Government to allot, by order, in excess of the ceiling
limit, any vacant land, which is deemed to have been
acquired by the State Government under this act or is
acquired by the State Government under any other law,
to any person for any purpose relating to, or in
connection with, any industry or for providing
residential accommodation of such type as may be
approved by the State Government to the employees of
any industry and it shall be lawful for such person to
hold such land in excess of the ceiling limit.
Explanation,-For the purposes of this section,-
(a) Where any land with a building has been acquired
by the State Government under any other law and
such building has been subsequently demolished by
State Government, then, such land shall be deemed
to be vacant land acquired under such other law;
(b) "Industry" means any business, profession, trade,
undertaking or manufacture.
(c) In making an order of allotment under sub-section
(1), the State Government may impose such
conditions
901
as may be specified therein including a condition
as to the period within which the industry shall
be put in operation or, as the case may be, the
residential accommodation shall be provided for:
Provided that if, on a representation made in
this behalf by the allottee, the State Government
is satisfied that the allottee could not put the
industry in operation, or provide the residential
accommodation, within the period specified in the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 31 of 61
order of allotment, for any good and sufficient
reason, the State Government may extend such
period to such further period or periods as it may
deem fit.
(3) Where any condition imposed in an order of
allotment is not complied with by the allottee, the
State Government shall, after giving an opportunity to
the allottee to be heard in the matter, cancel the
allotment with effect from the date of the non-
compliance of such condition and the land allotted
shall revest in the State Government free from all
encumbrances.
(4) Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1),
(2) and (3), all vacant lands deemed to have been
acquired by the State Government under this Act shall
be disposed of by the State Government to subserve the
common good on such terms and conditions as the State
Government may deem fit to impose.
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub
sections (1) to (4), where the State Government is
satisfied that it is necessary to retain or reserve any
vacant land, deemed to have been acquired by that
Government under this Act, for the benefit of the
public, it shall be competent for the State Government
to retain or reserve such land for the same."
Five or six aspects or peculiar features emerge clearly from
the provisions contained in s. 23 in the context of the
entire Act. In the first place unlike agrarian ceiling which
deals with land as means of production, urban ceiling under
the impugned Act deals with vacant
902
land in urban agglomerations not as a means of production
but as a part of the holder’s wealth or capital asset.
Secondly, unlike agrarian ceiling which has the objective of
distributing surplus agricultural land straightway among
landless persons, under the impugned Act excess vacant land
in urban agglomerations is acquired by and vests in the
State to be disposed of as indicated in the section; clearly
a legislation in exercise of the State’s power of eminent
domain (i.e. power of compulsory acquisition of private
property). Thirdly, such excess vacant land thus acquired is
to be disposed of by the State Government "for any purpose
relating to or connected with industry or for providing
residential accommodation to the employees of any Industry".
Fourthly, under cl. (b) of the Explanation, ’industry’ has
been very widely defined for the purposes of this section to
mean any business, profession, trade, undertaking or
manufacture; the word ’any’ clearly suggests that business,
profession, trade, undertaking or manufacture even in
private sector is included. Fithly. sub-s. (1) confers
absolute power and discretion on the State Government to
allot any amount of such excess vacant land to any person
for any industry. Reading the fourth and fifth aspects
together, it is clear that it is open to the State
Government to allot any extent of such excess vacant land to
any professional person, say a lawyer a medical practitioner
or even an astrologer for the purpose of carrying on his
private profession. Sixthly, the section contemplates
utilisation of such excess vacant land by the State
Government in three ways: (a) allotment for industry (b)
allotment to subserve the common good and (c) retention or
reservation for the benefit of the public, but, the
priorities in the matter of disposal or distribution of such
excess vacant land have been peculiarly fixed in the section
these priorities, as indicated in sub-ss. (1) and (4),
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 32 of 61
are:=(i) allotment for the purpose of an industry, namely
any business, profession, undertaking trade or manufacture,
(ii) allotment for the purpose of construction of houses for
the employees of an industry specified in item (i) above and
(iii) disposal to subserve the common good which would
include allotment of vacant land for governmental purpose or
local authorities or for institutions etc. In other words,
it is after the disposal of such excess vacant land for
items (i) and (ii) above that the balance thereof can be
disposed of "to subserve the common good" which means
private purposes have precedence over public purposes, and
this is clear from the fact that disposal under sub-s. (4)
is "subject to" the prior disposal under sub-s. (1) for
purposes of industry. In fact, disposal of excess vacant
land for subserving the common good is last in the
priorities Sub. s (5) undoubtedly has an
903
overriding effect over sub-ss. (1) to (4) but that provision
deals not with disposal or distribution of excess vacant
land but with retention and reservation of such vacant land
by State Government for the benefit of the public like
social housing and provision for basic arenities etc.
Having regard to the aforesaid peculiar features that
energe from a consideration of the provisions contained in
s.23, counsel for the petitioners contended that the
acquisition of excess vacant land in urban agglomerations
cannot be said for a public purpose at all and hence the
ehactment which is primarily for compulsory acquisition of
private property runs counter to a valid exercise of the
State’s power of ’eminent domain’. He pointed out that no
scheme for any industrial development for any urban
agglomeration has been indicated in the Act, nor any such
scheme seems to have been prepared by any State Government
or even by the Union Government before undertaking the
legislative measure in hand and no definite public purpose
of industrialisation with any plan or blue print with set
specifications or standards seems to have been within the
contemplation of the sponsoring States or the Union
Government; at any rate no material in that behalf has been
placed on record before the Court and, therefore, according
to counsel, compulsory acquisition of all excess vacant land
in all urban agglomerations throughout the Union Territories
and the 17 States of the country for achieving a bald,
indefinite and unspecified objective of an ’industry’ would
not be a valid exercise of the power of eminent domain.
Alternatively, counsel contended that even if it were
assumed for the purpose of argument that a bald, indefinite
and unspecified objective of ’industry’ is a public purpose,
when that concept of ’industry’ is widely defined so as to
include any business, trade or profession in private sector,
the purpose sheds its character as a real public purpose,
which position is further componded by the priorities laid
down in the section and the acquisition becomes acquisition
for private purpose amounting to an invalid exercise of the
States’s power of eminent domain. Counsel, therefore, urged
that s. 23 flagrantly violates Art. 31 (2) and is,
therefore, ultra vires and unconstitutional and since it is
a pivotal provision having an impact on the entire Ceiling
scheme and at the same a non-severable provision from the
rest of the provisions contained in that chapter, the whole
of Chapter III must fall with it.
Article 31 of the Constitution has more than one facet,
it undoubtedly confers upon individuals (including non-
citizens) and
904
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 33 of 61
corporate bodies a fundamental right to property but because
of conflict of views in Keshavanada Bharati’s case (supra)
it may be debatable whether that right forms part of basic
structure or not, but that apart, Art. 31 incorporates in
our Constitution the concept of State’s power of eminent
domain i. e. power of compulsory acquisition of private
property and prescribes two conditions precedent to the
exercise of the power, namely, (i) such acquisition cannot
be except for a public purpose and (ii) it must be on
payment of compensation (now termed ’amount’) to the
claimant having interest in the property. In Kameshwar
Singh’s case this position has been clarifie where Mahajan,
J., after referring to some authoritative books has summed
up the definition of the concept in one sentence thus
"Authority is universal in support of the amplified
definition of ’eminent domain’ as the power of the sovereign
to take property for public use without the owner’s consent
upon making just compensation," The requirement of just
compensation under the latter condition is diluted to
payment of non-illusory amount under the 25th Amendment of
the Constitution and subsequent decisions of this Court. But
it is well settled that these two conditions precedent are
sine qua non for the exercise of the State’s power of
eminent domain’ and, in my view, represent those aspects of
the right to property under Art. 31 which constitute the
essential or basic features of our Constitution and for that
matter these would be so of any democratic constitution and,
therefore, any law authorising expropriation of private
property in breach of any one of those conditions would
damage or destroy the basic structure of our constitution.
It is extremely doubtful whether a bald, indefinite and
unspecified objective like ’industry’ simpliciter without
any attempt at dovetailing it by having a proper scheme for
industrial development will constitute a valid public
purpose for the exercise of the power of ’eminent domain’.
It is because of the absence of any definite scheme for
industrial development with plans or blue prints with set
specifications or standards for any of the urban
agglomerations that wide power has been conferred on the
State Government under sub-s. (1) in vague terms to allot
any extent of such excess vacant land to any person for any
industry. I am conscious that in Kameshwar Singh’s case
(supra) this Court speaking through Mahajan, J., observed
that "the phrase ’public purpose’ has to be
905
construed according to the spirit of times in which the
particular legislation is enacted" and held that so
construed, acquisition of estates for the purpose of
preventing the concentration of huge blocks of land in the
hands of a few individuals and to do away with
intermediaries was for a public purpose. But that case dealt
with three statutes (the Bihar Land Reforms Act, 1950, the
M. P. Abolition of proprietory Rights Act, 1950 and the U.
P. Zamindari Abolition and Land Reforms Act, 1950), the
common aim of which, generally speaking, was to abolish
zamindaries and other proprietory estates and tenures in the
three States, so as to eliminate the intermediaries by means
of compulsory acquisition of their rights and interests and
to bring the raiyats and other occupants of lands in those
areas into direct relation with the Government and
therefore, that case is distinguishable and its ratio would
not apply to the instant case where the purpose of
acquisition of excess vacant (urban) land is a bald
objective like ’industry’ simpliciter, surely different
considerations would apply. In my view it is extremely
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 34 of 61
doubtful whether compulsory acquisition of all the excess
vacant land in all urban agglomerations throughout the
country for a bald, indefinite and unspecified objective
like ’industry’ simpliciter would be a valid exercise of the
power of ’eminent domain’. However, it is not necessary for
me to decide this larger question inasmuch as in my view the
alternative submission of counsel for the petitioners
clinches the issue in this case. Assuming that a bald
objective of ’industry’ simpliciter partakes of the
character of a public purpose, what Parliament intended by
the said objective has been expressly clarified by cl. (b)
of the Explanation where ’industry’ has been very widely
defined so as to include any business, trade or profession
in private sector which makes a mockery of such public
purpose. Whatever be the merits or demerits of a wide
definition of ’industry’ for the purposes of industrial-cum-
labour relations, adoption of such wide definition of the
concept in the context of eminent domain is clearly
suicidal. By adopting such definition for the purposes of s.
23 the State Government has been empowered under sub-s. (1)
to allot any extent of such excess vacant land to any
businessman, trader or professional man like a lawyer,
doctor and astrologer to enable him to carry on his private
business, trade or profession. In other words, acquisition
of excess vacant land in urban agglomeration would clearly
be for private purposes and what is worse is that under the
priorities laid down such private purposes are to be catered
to first and then comes the disposal or distribution thereof
to subserve common good. This clearly smacks of depriving
peter of his property to give it to Paul
906
and, therefore, clearly amounts to an invalid exercise of
State’s power of ’eminent domain’. Section 23, which thus
authorises compulsory acquisitions of property for private
purposes flagrantly violates those aspects of Art. 31 which
constitute the essential or basic features of the
Constitution and is, therefore, ultra vires and
unconstitutional. Further, indisputably it is the most
vital, integral and non-severable part of the entire scheme
of urban ceiling as without it the scheme will merely remain
a scheme for unjust and illegal enrichment of the State and,
therefore, the whole of Chapter III, in which it occurs,
must fall with it.
Apart from the unconstitutionality of s.23 as indicated
above, it is clear that the wide definition of ’industry’
and the priorities for disposal or distribution of excess
vacant land laid down therein have adverse impact on the
directive principle contained in Art.39(b). In the first
place instead of confining the objective of
industrialisation to public sector or cooperative sector and
the like where benefit to community or public at large would
be the sole consideration, the concept is widely defined to
include any business, trade or profession in private sector
which enables the disposal or distribution of excess vacant
land for private purposes and sub-s.(1) authorises the State
Government to allot any extent of such land to individuals
or bodies for private purposes. Secondly, the priorities in
the matter of disposal or distribution of the excess vacant
land under sub-sections (1) and (4) are as indicated above,
which show that disposal or distribution of excess vacant
land for subserving the common good comes last in the
priorities. I have already indicated that the postulate
underlying the directive principle of Art. 39(b) is that
diffusion of ownership and control of the material resources
of the community is always in the public interest and,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 35 of 61
therefore, the State is directed to ensure such distribution
(equitable) thereof as best to subserve the common good but
the priorities prescribed in sub-ss. (1) and (4) of s.23 in
regard to distribution of material resource produce contrary
results or results in the opposite direction inasmuch as
private purposes receive precedence over common good. The
enactment which contains such provisions that produce contra
results cannot be said to be in furtherance of the directive
principle of Art. 39(b) and cannot receive the benefit of
the protective umbrella of Art. 31C.
Counsel for the respondents, however, relied upon three
aspects to counter-act the aforesaid result flowing from the
priorities
907
given in s. 23(1) and (4). It was urged that the disposal of
excess vacant land acquired by the State under the Act will
be guided by the Preamble which says that enactment was put
on the Statute Book with a view to bringing about the
equitable distribution of land in urban agglomerations to
subserve the common good. In the first place, it is well
settled that it is only when there is some ambiguity in test
of any provision in the enactment that the preamble could be
looked at and here there is no ambiguity whatsoever in
s.23(1) and (4). Secondly, far from there being any
ambiguity there is express provision in s.23(1) and (4)
indicating the priorities in the matter of disposal or
distribution of excess vacant land, in face of which, the
preamble cannot control, guide or direct the disposal or
distribution in any other manner. Next, reliance was placed
on s. 46(1) which empowers the Central Government to make
rules for carrying out the provisions of the Act and the
disposal or distribution of excess vacant land could be
prescribed by rules. It may, however be stated that no rules
under s.46 have so far been framed by the Central Government
and, in any event, no rules framed thereunder can over-ride
the express provisions of s.23. Lastly, reliance was placed
on certain guidelines issued by the Central Government in
its Ministry of Works and Housing under the Act and at page
83 of the "Compendium of Guidelines" (a Govt. of India
publication dated February 22, 1977) a note containing
guidelines on utilization of excess vacant land acquired
under the Act is published. Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the said
Note deal with the topic of priorities. In para 3 the
disposal or distribution of excess vacant land as per the
priorities in s. 23 has been set out (which are the same as
given above) while para 4 sets out the priorities in
accordance with the recommendations made by the 9th
Conference of State Ministers of Housing and Urban
Development held at Calcutta on the 17th, 18th and 19th
December, 1976, which considered the matter and the
priorities indicated are: (i) Retention/reservation for the
’benefit of the Public’ like social housing, provision of
basic amenities, etc. (ii) Disposal ’to subserve common
good’ which may include allotment of vacant land for
Government purposes, local authorities, institutions’ etc.
(iii) Allotment for the purpose of construction of houses
for the employees of industries specified in item (iv) A
below (v) Allotment for the purpose of industry, viz., any
business, profession trade, undertaking of non-polluting
manufacture; cottage and small scale and wherever possible
ancillary industry; manufacture. It will appear clear that
the recommendations made by the 9th Conference of State
Ministers of Housing and Urban Development seek to furnish
908
improved guidelines but in the process reverse the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 36 of 61
priorities given in the section in the matter of disposal or
distribution of excess vacant land. It is obvious that the
priorities given in s. 23 and as have been summarised in
para 3 of the Note must prevail over the priorities
indicated in the guidelines contained in para 4 of the Note
and the latter are of no avail. It is thus clear that the
priorities as given in s. 23(1) and (4) in the matter of
disposal or distribution of excess vacant land acquired
under the Act run counter to and in a sense operate to
negate the directive principle of Art.39(b).
It was then faintly argued by counsel for the
respondents that the law in order to receive the protection
of Art. 31C need not fulfil the objectives of both Art.
39(b) and (c) and even if it fulfils the objective under
Art. 39(c) and not under Art. 39(b) it will be protected by
Art. 31C. But here s. 23 by no stretch deals with the
objective of Art. 39(c) at all but only deals with the
objective underlying the directive principle of Art. 39(b)
and its provisions as discussed above clearly run counter to
that objective and as such the enactment which contains such
provisions must forfeit the benefit of the protective
umbrella of Art. 31C.
Faced with the situation that the constitutional
invalidity of s. 23 was likely to have adverse repercussion
not only on Chapter III in which it occurs but also on the
entire Act, counsel for the respondents made a valiant
effort to salvage the said section by indulging in
interpretative acrobatics with a view to relieve it from the
two vices attaching to it, namely, (i) the adoption of the
wide definition of ’industry’ in cl. (b) of the Explanation
which makes a mockery of the Public purpose indicated by the
bald objective like ’industry’ simpliciter and (ii) the
priorities mentioned therein governing the disposal or
distribution of excess vacant land acquired under the Act.
It was suggested that the definition of ’industry’ should be
read down by the court so as to confine the same to
industries in public sector or co-operative sector or the
like where benefit to community or public at large would be
the sole consideration, so that allotment of excess vacant
land acquired under the Act to private entrepreneurs for
private purposes which runs counter to the doctrine of
eminent domain would be completely eschewed. It is
impossible to read down the definition in the manner
suggested because parliament has for the purposes of the
section (i.e. for purposes of disposal or distribution
909
of such excess vacant land) deliberately and in express
terms adopted a vary wide definition which includes within
its scope not merely trading or manufacturing activity but
also any business or profession in private sector and
reading down the definition as suggested would be doing
violence to the Parliament’s intention stated in express
terms. It was then submitted that sub-s. (1) of s. 23 should
be construed as an enabling provision which merely permits
the State Government to allot excess vacant land for the
purposes of industry, while the real obligation in the
matter of disposal of excess vacant land arises under sub-s.
(4) which speaks of disposal of such land "to subserve the
common good"; in other words, the disposal under sub-s. (4)
should over-ride the disposal under sub-s. (1); at any rate
the "common good" spoken of in sub-s. (4) should permeate
the disposal under sub-s. (1). It is impossible to read sub-
s. (1) of s.23 as containing merely an enabling provision;
the scheme of sub-ss. (1) and (4) read together clearly
shows that the disposal of the excess vacant land is first
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 37 of 61
to be done under sub-s.(1) and disposal under sub-s.(4)
comes thereafter. The opening words of sub-s.(4) "subject to
sub-ss.(1), (2) and (3)" cannot be read as constituting a
non obstante clause giving an over-riding effect to sub-s.
(4) nor can sub-s.(4) be read as if the opening words were
absent. By indulging in such interpretative acrobatics the
Court cannot reach the opposite result than is warranted by
the plain text of the provision. Further, to say that every
disposal of excess vacant land under sub-s.(1) must be for
"common good" is to read into that sub-section something
which is not there; it amounts to re-writing that sub-
section, which cannot be done, the Preamble notwithstanding.
It is the conferral of such unrestricted power (not its
oblique exercise) that is being attacked and hence the
submission to read into sub-s.(1) this kind of limitation.
These submissions require the re-structuring of the entire
section a function legitimately falling within the domain of
the Legislature. Moreover, sub-ss.(1), (2), (3) and (4) of
s.23 are integral parts of one whole scheme dealing with
disposal of excess vacant land acquired under the Act and as
such cannot be severed from one another. The attempt to
salvage s.23, either wholly or in part, by seeking to free
it from the two vices must, therefore, fail.
The next provision challenged by the petitioners as
being violative of their fundamental rights is s. 11 (6)
which puts the maximum limit of Rs. two lakhs on
compensation (called ’amount’) payable to the holder of
excess vacant land irrespective of the extent of such excess
vacant land. For the purpose of determining the
910
quantum of compensation s.11 (1) divides vacant land in
urban agglomerations into two categories -(i) vacant land
from which income is derived and (ii) vacant land from which
no income is derived and in regard to the former category
cl, (a) of sub-s. (1) fixes the quantum payable at an amount
equal to eight and one third times the net average annual
income actually derived from such land during the period of
five consecutive years immediately preceding the date of
publication of the notification issued under s. 10 (1) and
the net average annual income is to be calculated in the
manner and in accordance with the principles set out in
Schedule II, while in respect of the latter category, cl.
(b) of sub-s. (1) fixes the quantum payable at an amount
calculated at a rate not exceeding-(i) Rs. 10 per sq. metre
in the case of vacant land situated in urban agglomerations
falling with categories A and B and(ii) Rs.5 per sq. metre
in the case of vacant land situated in urban agglomerations
falling within categories C and D. In other words, for
vacant land yielding income the method of capitalisation of
the income for certain number of years is adopted while for
vacant land yielding no income maximum rates of compensation
for A and B categories at Rs. 10 per sq. metre and for C and
D categories at Rs 5 per sq. metre have been fixed.
Compensation (called ’amount’) once determined is payable to
the holder under s. 14 (2) in a certain manner, namely, 25 %
there of will be paid in cash and the balance 75% in
negotiable bonds redeemable after expiry of 20 years
carrying interest at 5% per annum. Section 11 (6) which puts
the maximum limit of two lakhs on the quantum payable in
respect of excess vacant land acquired under the Act runs
thus:
"11 (6)-Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1) or sub-section (5) the amount payable under
either of the said sub-sections shall, in no case,
exceed two lakhs of rupees."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 38 of 61
Counsel for the petitioners contended that s. 11 (6)
which puts the maximum limit of Rs. two lakhs on the amount
payable to a claimant irrespective of the extent of the
excess vacant land acquired under the Act is not only
arbitrary but also results in illusory payment and violates
Arts. 14 and 31 (2) respectively. Counsel pointed out that a
person holding excess vacant land which at the prescribed
rates is of the value of Rs. two lakhs and a person holding
such excess vacant land which even at the same prescribed
rates
911
is of the value of Rs. two crores are treated alike, that is
to say, both will get compensation (termed ’amount’) of Rs.
two lakhs only and is this sense prescribing a limit of
maximum of Rs. two lakhs is clearly arbitrary and violates
Art. 14. Similarly, for a person who holds excess vacant
land which even at the prescribed rates it of the value of
Rs. two crores a payment of Rs. two lakhs only (i.e. 1/100th
of the value at the prescribed rates) must, by any standard,
be regarded as illusory and, therefore, the fixation of
maximum limit at Rs. two lakhs under s. 11(6) irrespective
of the extent of excess vacant land held by a person
violates Art. 31(2) of the Constitution. I find considerable
force in both the submissions of counsel for the
petitioners. In fact, in my view, this provision which puts
the maximum limit of Rs. two lakhs on the amount payable to
a holder of excess vacant land acquired under the Act
irrespective of the extent of such excess vacant land held
by him is not merely violative of Arts. 14 and 31(2) of the
Constitution in the manner indicated above, but would be a
piece of confiscatory legislation, because vacant land in
excess of that portion which at the prescribed rates is
worth Rs. two lakhs stands confiscated to the State without
any payment whatsoever. I do not suggest that a provision
putting a maximum limit upon compensation payable to the
owner or holder irrespective of the extent of the property
acquired whenever or wherever is found in any enactment has
to be regarded as a confiscatory provision. I am aware that
in enactments involving large schemes of social engineering
like abolition of Zamindar is, agrarian reforms,
nationalisation of undertakings and businesses and the like,
such a provision might be justifiably made. In State of
Kerala v. The Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. Co. Ltd., this Court
upheld the validity of Kerala Private Forest (Vesting and
Assignment) Act, 1971 where under private forest lands held
on janman right were acquired without payment of any
compensation on the ground that such acquisition was for
implementing a scheme of agrarian reform by assigning lands
on registry or by way of lease to poorer sections of the
rural agricultural population, the enactment being protected
under Art. 31A (1) of the Constitution. Again the Coal Mines
(Nationalisation Act, 1973 whereunder the right, title and
interest of the owners in relation to their coal mines
specified in the schedule to the Act stood transferred to
and became vested absolutely in the Central Govt. free from
encumbrances in exchange of payment of fixed amounts
specified in that schedule was upheld by this Court.
912
But such cases involving large schemes of social
engineering where avowedly the benefit of the community or
public at large is the sole consideration are
distinguishable from the instant case, where ’industry’ has
been expressly defined to include business, trade or
profession in private sector and where power has been
conferred upon the State Government to allot properties
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 39 of 61
acquired under the enactment to individual businessman,
trader or professional to enable him to carry on his private
business, trade or profession, that is to say, where the
legislation is a fraud on State’s power of eminent domain,
such a provision of putting a maximum limit on compensation
payable in respect of the acquired property irrespective of
its extent will have to be regarded as confiscatory in
nature.
An instance in point is available on the record of
these writ petitions. In writ petition No. 350 of 1977 the
petitioner who happens to be the ex-Ruler of the former Kota
State has averred in paragraphs 17 and 20 of the petition
that the urban vacant land owned and possessed by him in the
city of Kota admeasures 918. 26 acres and that the Assistant
Director, Lands and Buildings Tax, Kota in his assessment
order dated 20.12. 1976 had valued the same at market rate
of Rs. 15.12 per sq. metre at Rs 3,98,05021.84 (say about
Rs. four crores) and inclusive of other items of properties
the total value was put down at Rs. 4.12 crores and these
averments are substantially admitted in the counter-
affidavit filed by S. Mahadeva Iyer on behalf of the Union
of India where in para 9 he has stated thus:
"In reply to para 20 of the writ petition I submit
that the total assessment of the entire property comes
to Rs. 4.56 crores."
In other words, in the case of this petitioner the fact that
he owns urban vacant land of the value of about Rs. four
crores in the city of Kota stands admitted. Now, under s.
11(6) for all this urban vacant land worth nearly Rs. four
crores the petitioner will get only rupees two lakhs, it
works out to a princely sum of eight annas for property
worth Rs. 100, which would clearly be an illusory payment.
In fact, all his vacant land, in excess of that portion
which is worth Rs. two lakhs at the prescribed rates, shall
stand conficated without any payment whatsoever. Such a
glaring instance, available on the record of these
petitions, brings out in bold relief how flagrantly s. 11(6)
913
violates Arts. 14 and 31(2) of the Constitution; it
highlights the aspect that such acquisition takes place in
breach of the other condition precedent attaching to the
power of eminent domain namely, payment of non-illusory
compensation. However, s. 11(6) is clearly a severable
provision, and that alone is liable to be struck down as
being ultra vires and unconstitutional.
The next provision challenged by the petitioners is s.
27 occurring in Chapter IV to the extent to which it imposes
restriction on transfer of an urban land with building or a
flat therein though unconcerned or unconnected with the
excess vacant land as unconstitutional being beyond the
legislative authorisation as also violative of petitioners’
fundamental rights under Arts 14 and 19(1) (f). Section 27,
as its marginal note indicates, deals with the subject of
prohibition of transfer of urban property and sub-s. (1)
thereof runs thus:
"27. (1) Notwithstanding any thing contained in
any other law for the time being in force, but subject
to the provisions of sub-section (3) of section 5 and
sub-section (4) of section 10, no person shall transfer
by way of sale, mortgage, gift, lease for a period
exceeding ten years, or otherwise, any urban or
urbanisable land with a building (whether constructed
before or after the commencement of this Act) or a
portion only of such building for a period of ten years
of such commencement or from the date on which the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 40 of 61
building is constructed, whichever is later, except
with the previous permission in writing of the
competent authority."
Inter alia, the aforesaid provision is clearly applicable to
a building or a portion of such building which would include
a flat therein standing on any urban or urbanisable land
falling within the permissible ceiling area which a holder
of a vacant land is entitled to retain with himself and
under this provision any transfer of such property by way of
sale, mortage, gift or lease for ten years or otherwise, is
prohibited for the period of ten years from the commencement
of the Act except with the previous permission in writing of
the competent authority. Under sub-s. (2) if the holder of
such property falling within the permissible ceiling area is
desirous of effecting a transfer of the type indicated above
has to apply in writing for permission from the competent
authority and under sub-s.(3) the
914
competent authority has been authorised after making such
inquiry as it deems fit to grant the permission or refuse
the same, but a refusal has to be accompanied by written
reasons, copy whereof is to be furnished to the holder. Sub-
s. (4) provides that if within sixty days of the receipt of
the application refusal is not communicated, the permission
shall be deemed to have been granted by the competent
authority.
Counsel for the petitioners made two submissions in
regard to aforesaid restriction as made applicable to
transfers of built-up properties that fall within the limits
of ceiling area permitted to be retained by a holder.
Firstly, such restriction would be outside the legislative
authorisation conferred upon the Parliament as well as
beyond the ambit and scope of the Act which has assiduously
kept built-up properties outside the pale of imposition of
ceiling. Secondly, such restriction requiring permission
from the competent authority is arbitrary and violative of
Art.14 in as much as the power to grant the permission or to
refuse it is unguided and untrammeled which is bound to
produce arbitrary results. In my view both the submissions
have substance in them.
It cannot be disputed that though the authorisation was
for imposition of ceiling on urban immovable property
Parliament deliberately kept out built-up properties from
the purview of the Act and the Act seeks to impose ceiling
only on vacant land in urban agglomerations; that being so
any restriction on transfer of built-up properties or parts
thereof (including flats therein) standing on urban land
falling within the permissible ceiling area would be outside
the purview of the Act. It was urged for the respondents
that such a provision would be incidental or ancillary to
the ceiling contemplated by the Act and would fall within
the phrase "for matters connected therewith" occurring in
the Preamble and the long title of the Act. It is not
possible to accept the contention, for, the words "matters
connected therewith" occurring in the concerned phrase must
be co-related to what precedes that phrase, namely, "an Act
to provide for ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land" (emphasis supplied) and, therefore,
the words "matters connected therewith" must mean matters in
relation to the ceiling imposed by the Act. A reference to
objective under Art. 39(b) and (c) (for the achievement of
which the enactment is allegedly taken in hand) in the
Preamble or long title cannot enlarge
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 41 of 61
915
the ambit or scope of the Act. Any restriction imposed on
built-up properties falling within the permissible ceiling
area left with the holder would, therefore, be outside the
ambit and scope of the Act.
The next question is whether the restriction which
requires the holder of such property to seek permission of
the competent authority before effecting any transfer
thereof by way of sale, mortgage or gift, etc. is violative
of Art. 14 of the Constitution. The contention is that the
requirement in the absence of any guidelines governing the
exercise of the power on the part of the competent authority
in the matter of granting or refusing to grant the
permission is highly arbitrary, productive of discriminatory
results and, therefore, violates the equality clause of Art.
14. Counsel for the respondents fairly conceded that the
section itself does not contain any guidelines but urged
that the objectives of "preventing concentration,
speculation and profiteering in urban land" recited in the
Preamble would afford the requisite guidance for the
exercise of the power to grant the permission sought or to
refuse the same. Firstly, which of the three objectives
mentioned in the Preamble should guide the exercise of power
by the competent authority in any given case is not clear
and in any case no standard has been laid down for achieving
the objectives of preventing concentration, speculation, and
profiteering in urban land or urban property and in the
absence of any standard being laid down by the Legislature-a
purely legislative function, it will be difficult to hold
that these broad objectives recited in the Preamble could
effectively or adequately guide the exercise of power by the
competent authority in the matter of granting or refusing to
grant the permission and in the absence of guidelines the
exercise of the power is bound to produce arbitrary or
discriminatory results. It was also said that against the
order passed by the competent authority under s. 27 an
appeal to the Appellate Authority has been provided for
under s. 33 and revision lies to the State Government under
s. 34 and in view of such provision for appeal and revision
the exercise of the power or discretion vested in the
competent authority cannot be regarded as unfettered or
arbitrary. Here again I feel that in the absence of any
guidelines for the exercise of the power and in the absence
of any standards having been laid down by the Legislature
for achieving the objectives of prevention of concentration,
speculation and profiteering in urban land and urban
property, the provision for appeal and revision would not be
of much avail to preventing arbitrariness in the matter of
granting or refusing to
916
grant the permission. Section 27 which does not adequately
control the arbitrary exercise of the power to grant or
refuse the permission sought, is clearly violative of Art.
14 of the Constitution and as such the requirement of
permission contained therein will have to be struck down as
being ultra vires and unconstitution.
In the result, in view of the aforesaid discussion. I
would like to indicate my conclusions thus:
(1). The impugned Act, though purporting to do so, does
not, in fact, further the directive principles in Art. 39
(b) and (c). Section 2(f) in relation to prescription of
ceiling area, as shown above, permits unwarranted and
unjustified concentration of wealth instead of preventing
the same and is in teeth of the objective under Art. 39(c);
similarly, s. 23, as discussed above, produces results
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 42 of 61
contrary to the objective under Art. 39(b). Therefore, the
impugned Act is outside the pale of the protective umbrella
of Art. 31C.
(2) Section 2(f) which contains the artificial
definition of ’family’ in relation to the prescription of
ceiling area, s. 23 which deals with disposal or
distribution of excess vacant land acquired under the Act as
per priorities laid down therein and s. 11(6) which puts a
maximum limit on the quantum of the amount payable in
respect of excess vacant land acquired from a holder
irrespective of the extent of area held by him these three
provisions flagrantly violate those aspects of Arts. 14 and
31 which constitute the essential and basic features of our
Constitution and hence the protective umbrella of Art. 31B
is not available to the impugned Act inasmuch as the 40th
Constitution Amendment Act 1976 to the extent to which it
inserts the impugned Act in the Ninth Schedule is beyond the
constituent power of the Parliament as the said Amending Act
has the effect of damaging or destroying the basic structure
of the Constitution.
(3). The artificial definition of ’family’ given in s.
2(f) in relation to prescription of ceiling area under s.
4(1) is clearly violative of Art. 14 and as such is ultra
vires and unconstitutional. Similarly, s. 23 which authories
compulsory acquisition of property for private purposes is
in breach of the doctrine of eminent domain and since it
flagrantly violates Art. 31(2) is ultra vires and
unconstitutional.
(4). Since s. 2(f) together with adoption of double
standard for fixing ceiling area runs through and forms
basis of the whole Chapter III and since s. 23 is a vital,
Integral and non-severable part
917
of the entire scheme of urban ceiling envisaged by the
Chapter III, the whole of Chapter III has to fall along with
those two provisions and as such that Chapter is also
declared to be ultra vires and unconstitutional. Further, it
cannot be disputed that Chapter III comprises the substratum
of the entire scheme of urban ceiling contemplated by the
enactment incorporating its main provisions while the other
Chapters deal with arcillary or incidental matters which
from the decorative frills of the main fabric. If the
substratum is found to be diseased, invalid and bad in law
the entire Act has to go and is accordingly struck down as
void and unconstitutional.
(5). Section 11(6), a severable provision, being
violative of petitioners’ fundamental right under Art. 31 is
declared to be ultra vires and unconstitutional.
(6). Section 27, being severable, is also declared
ultra vires and unconstitutional to the extent indicated
above as being beyond the ambit of the Act and violative of
Art. 14 of the Constitution.
Before parting with the matter I would like to refer to
the manner in which this important and complicated measure
came to be enacted. It cannot be doubted that the 11
sponsoring State Legislatures passed their resolutions under
Art. 252(1) with a laudable object, namely to clothe the
Parliament with legislative competence to enact a law for
the imposition of ceiling on urban immovable property for
the country as a whole Though initially a model bill based
on the recommendations made by the Working Group in its
Report dated July 25, 1970 had been prepared where ceiling
was proposed to be imposed on urban property on the basis of
monetary value, Parliament later on realized that the
implementation of that proposal was beset with several
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 43 of 61
practical difficulties indicated in the Approach Paper
prepared by a Study Group, and, therefore, it was though
that ceiling in respect of built-up properties should be
brought about through some fiscal and other measures and
ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomerations on the lines
of the impugned Act should be undertaken. In other words,
State wise deep consideration and consultation for over five
years had preceded the preparation of the draft Bill and
this Court in V.B. Chowdhari’s (1)
918
case has upheld the legislative competence of Parliament to
enact such a measure as a first step towards eventual
imposition of ceiling on immovable properties of every other
description. However, after the introduction of the Bill on
the floor of the house on January 28, 1976, the enactment as
drafted in its present form seems to have been rushed
through the attenuated Parliament during the Emergency in
less than seven hours on February 2, 1976. The Lok Sabha
debates clearly show: (a) that the Bill was moved and taken
up for consideration at 11.17 hours on that day, (b) that a
motion moved by a member that the Bill be circulated for the
purpose of eliciting opinion thereon by May 15, 1976 was
negatived, (c) that another motion supported by quite a few
members that the Bill be referred to a Select Committee with
a view to improve the same by removing defects, deficiencies
and omissions therein with instructions to the Select
Committee to report by April 1, 1976, was also negatived,
(d) that though over 150 amendments had been moved (some of
which were received by the members on the very day as
speeches were in progress), an earnest request to postpone
the second reading of the Bill to the following day to
enable the members to consider those amendments (many of
which were neither formal nor clarificatory but of
substance) was also turned down, and (e) that the original
time schedule of six hours fixed by the Speaker for the Bill
was adhered to and the entire process (including general
discussion, clause by clause reading, consideration of the
several amendments and the third reading) was completed in
undue haste by 18.01 hours. In Rajya Sabha also a request to
refer the Bill to a Select Committee went unheeded and the
entire process was completed in one day, February 5, 1976.
The result is that it has, in the absence of adequate study
or discussion about the implications of various provisions
thereof, turned out to be an ill-conceived and ill-drafted
measure. The measure was, undoubtedly, taken in hand with a
view to achieve the unexceptional objectives underlying Art.
39(b) and (c), but as shown above, the enacted provisions
misfire and produce the opposite results and also damage or
destroy the essential features or basic structure of the
Constitution and hence duty-bound I am constrained to strike
down this impugned piece of purported socioeconomic
legislation. The legislative competence of the Parliament
being still there a well-drafted enactment within the
constitutional limitations on the subject would be the
proper remedy.
I would, therefore, allow the petitions and direct
issuance of the appropriate writs sought.
919
SEN J. These writ petitions under Article 32 of the
Constitution seek to challenge the constitutional validity
of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 on
various grounds. The Act has been placed as item No. 132 in
the Ninth Schedule by the Constitution (Fortieth Amendment)
Act, 1976. Questions involved are of far-reaching importance
affecting the national interest.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 44 of 61
The history of the legislation is well-known. The State
Legislatures of eleven States, namely, all the Houses of the
Legislatures of the States of Andhra Pradesh, Gujarat,
Haryana, Himachal Pradesh, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Orissa,
Punjab, Tripura, Uttar Pradesh and West Bengal considered it
desirable to have a uniform legislation enacted by
Parliament for the imposition of a ceiling on urban property
in the country as a whole and in compliance with clause (1)
of Article 252 of the Constitution passed a resolution to
that effect. Parliament accordingly enacted the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976. In the first instance,
the Act, came into force on the date of its introduction in
the Lok Sabha that is, January 28, 1976 and covered Union
Territories and the eleven States which had already passed
the requisite Resolution under Article 252(1) of the
Constitution. Subsequently, the Act was adopted, after
passing resolutions under Article 252(1) of the Constitution
by the State of Assam on March 25, 1976, and those of Bihar
on April 1, 1976, Madhya Pradesh on September 9, 1976,
Manipur on March 12, 1976, Meghalaya on April 7, 1976 and
Rajasthan on March 9, 1976. Thus, the Act is in force in
seventeen States and all the Union Territories in the
country.
The legislative competence of Parliament to enact the
Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976 having been
upheld by this Court in Union of India etc- v. Valluri
Basavaiah Chaudhary,(1) there remains the question of its
constitutional validity.
Schedule I to the Act lists out all States,
irrespective of whether or not they have passed a resolution
under Art. 252(1) authorizing the Parliament to enact a law
imposing a ceiling on urban immovable property, and the
urban agglomerations in them having a population of two lace
or more. The ceiling limit of vacant
920
land of metropolitan areas of Delhi, Bombay, Calcutta and
Madras having a population exceeding ten lacs falling under
category ’A’ is 500 sq. metres, urban agglomerations with a
population of ten lacs and above, excluding the four
metropolitan areas falling under category ’B’ is 1000 sq.
meters agglomerations with a population between three lacs
and ten lacs falling under category ’C’ is 1500 sq. metres
and urban agglomerations with a population between two lacs
and three lacs falling under category ’D’ is 2000 sq.
metres. The schedule does not mention the urban
agglomerations having a population of one lac and above; but
if a particular state which passed a resolution under Art.
252(1), or if a State which subsequently adopts the Act,
wants to extend the Act to such areas, it could do so by a
notification under s.2(n) (B) or s.2 (n) (A) (ii), as the
case may be, after obtaining the previous approval of the
Central Government.
The primary object and the purpose of the Urban Land
(Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976, ’the Act’ as the long
title and the preamble show, is to provide for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering
therein, and with a view to bringing about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, in furtherance of the Directive Principles of
State Policy under Art. 39(b) and (c).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 45 of 61
The Statement, of objects and Reasons accompanying the
Bill reads as follows:
"There has been a demand for imposing a ceiling on
urban property also, especially after the imposition of
a ceiling on agricultural lands by the State
Governments. With the growth of population and
increasing urbanisation, a need for orderly development
of urban areas has also been felt. It is, therefore,
considered necessary to take measures for exercising
social control over the scarce resource of urban land
with a view to ensuring its equitable distribution
amongst the various sections of society and also
avoiding speculative transactions relating to land in
urban agglomerations. With a view to ensuring
921
uniformity in approach Government of India addressed
the State Governments in this regard, eleven States
have so far passed resolutions under Art. 252(1) of
the Constitution empowering Parliament to undertake
legislation in this behalf."
The Act consists of five Chapters. Chapter I contains
the short title and the extant clause and Chapter II
contains section 2, which is the definition section. Chapter
III deals with ’Ceiling on vacant Land Chapter IV deals with
’Regulation of transfer and use of urban land’ and Chapter V
contains miscellaneous provisions,
There can be no doubt that the legislative intent and
object of the impugned Act was to secure the socialisation
of vacant land in urban agglomerations with a view to
preventing the concentration of urban lands in the hands of
a few persons, speculation and profiteering therein, and
with a view to bringing about an equitable distribution of
land in urban agglomerations to subserve to common good, in
furtherance of the Directive Principles of State Policy
under Art. 39 (b) and (c). The Act mainly provides for the
following:
(i) imposition of a ceiling on both ownership and
possession of vacant land in urban agglomerations
unders. 3, the ceiling being on a graded basis
according to the classification of the urban
agglomerations under s.4;
(ii) acquisition of the excess vacant land by the State
Government under s.10(3), with powers to dispose
of the vacant land with the object to subserve the
common good under s.23;
(iii) payment of an amount for the acquisition of the
excess land in cash and in bonds under s. 14(2),
according to the principles laid down in s.11(I)
subject to the maximum specified in s.11(6 )
(iv) granting exemptions in respect of vacant land in
certain cases under ss.20 and 21;
(v) regulating the transfer of vacant land within the
ceiling limits under s.26;
922
(vi) regulating the transfer of urban or urbanisable
land with any building (whether constructed before
or after the commencement of the Act, for a period
of ten years from the commencement of the Act or
the construction of the building whichever is
later under s.27;
(vii) restricting the plinth area for the construction
of future residential buildings under s.29; and
(viii) other procedural and miscellaneous matters.
The Act is thus intended to achieve the following
objectives: (I) to prevent the concentration of urban
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 46 of 61
property in the hands of a few persons and speculation and
profiteering therein; (2) to bring about socialisation of
urban land in urban agglomerations to subserve the common
good to ensure its equitable distribution, (3) to discourage
construction of luxury housing leading to conspicuous
consumption of scarce building materials. and (4) to secure
orderly urbanisation. Thus the dominant object and purpose
of the legislation is to bring about socialisation of urban
land.
In order to appreciate the rival contentions, it is
necessary to set out the relevant provisions: Section 3
which is all important for the purpose of these writ
petitions, provides:
"3. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, on
and from the commencement of this Act, no person shall
be entitled to hold any vacant land in excess of the
ceiling limit in the territories to which this Act
applies under sub-section (2) of section 1."
Section 4 divides the urban agglomerations into four
broad categories, categories A, B, C and D, and fixes the
ceiling limits varying from five hundred sq. metres in
Category A to two thousand sq. metres in Category D thereof.
The word ’person’ is defined in s.2(i) as:
"2(i) "person" includes an individual, a family, a
firm, a company, or an association or body of
individuals, whether incorporated or not."
923
The definition of the word ’family’ in s.2(f) is in the
following terms:
"2(f) "family" in relation to a person, means the
individual, the wife or husband, as the case may be, of
such individual and their unmarried minor children."
In order that the burden of compensation, that is, the
amount payable for such excess vacant lands by the
Government, may not be high, the Act incorporates a specific
provision, namely, sub-section (1) of s.11 which fixes the
amount broadly on the following basis: (1) eight and one-
third of the annual net income from the land during the last
five years or where such annual income is not being derived,
at rates not exceeding Rs. 10 per sq. metre or Rs. 5 per sq.
metre in Categories A and B, and C and D urban
agglomerations respectively, and classifying the area into
different zones. There is also a ceiling on the maximum
amount payable in any single case placed by subsection (6)
of s.11. Sub-section (1) s.27 provides for the freezing of
all transfers of urban land with or without a building or
portion of a building in all agglomerations for a period of
ten years from the date of the commencement of the Act or
from the date on which the building is constructed.
The constitutional validity of the Act which has been
placed in the Ninth Schedule by the Fortieth Amendment, is
challenged principally on the ground that, firstly, it is
violative of the fundamental rights guaranteed under Arts
14, (19(1)(f) and 31(2), since it seeks to alter the "basic
structure" of the Constitution as formulated by this Court
in His Holiness Kesavananda Bharti v. State of Kerala and;
therefore, has not the protective umbrella of Art.31B, and
secondly that it is a law in negation of, and in furtherance
of the Directive Principles of State Policy under Art.39(b)
and (c) and is, therefore, not protected under Art.31C.
In Waman Rao & Ors. v. Union of India Ors. this Court
by its order, in the context of the decision in Kesavananda
Bharati’s case, has laid down.
"Amendments to the Constitution made on or after
April 24, 1973 by which the 9th schedule to the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 47 of 61
Constitution was amended from time to time by the
inclusion of
924
various Acts and Regulations therein, are open to
challenge on the ground that they, or any one or more
of them, are beyond the constituent power of the
Parliament since they damage the basic or essential
features of the Constitution or its basic structure. We
do not pronounce upon the validity of such subsequent
amendments except to say that if any Act or Regulation
included in the 9th Schedule by a constitutional
amendment made after April 24, 1973 is saved by Article
31.C as it stood prior to its amendment by the 42nd
Amendment, the challenge to the validity of the
relevant Constitutional Amendment by which that Act or
Regulation is put in the 9th Schedule, on the ground
that the Amendment damages or destroys a basic or
essential feature of the Constitution or its basic
structure as reflected in Articles 14, 19 or 31, will
become otiose.
Article 31-C of the Constitution, as it stood
prior to its amendment by Section 4 of the Constitution
(42nd Amendment) Act, 1976, is valid to the extent to
which its constitutionality was upheld in Kesavananda
Bharati Article 31-C, as it stood prior to the
Constitution (42nd Amendment) Act does not damage any
of the basic or essential features of the Constitution
or its basic structure."
The validity of the impugned Act is challenged on four
grounds Namely the inclusion of an artificial definition of
’family’ in s.2 (f) results in total exclusion of a joint
Hindu family from the purview of the Act and also in
adoption of double standard between a family with major
sons, each of whom is a separate unit by himself, and a
family with minor children, which constitutes a family unit
for fixing a ceiling and thus s.3 of the impugned Act
offends against the equal protection clause in Art.14, as
persons similarly situate are differentially treated without
any rational basis; (2) the impugned Act is inconsistent
with, takes away and abridges the fundamental right
guaranteed under Art. 31 (2) inasmuch as the fixation of the
maximum amount payable under sub-s. (6) of Sec 11, makes the
Act confiscatory or at any rate, the amount payable
illusory; (3) sub-section (1) of s. 27 of
925
he Act freezing all transfers by way of sale, mortgage,
gift, lease for a period exceeding ten years or otherwise,
of any urban or urbanisable land with a building (whether
constructed before or after the commencement of the Act), or
a portion of such building, for a period of ten years from
such commencement or from the date on which the building is
constructed, whichever is later, except with the previous
permission in writing of the competent authority, even
though such vacant land in an urban agglomeration is within
the ceiling limits, is an unreasonable restriction on the
fundamental right to property guaranteed under Art. 19 (1);
and (4) the ’priorities’ laid down in s.23 of the impugned
Act are not in keeping with part IV of the Constitution and,
therefore, liable to be struck down. It is urged upon these
grounds that the impugned Act is flagrantly violative of
those aspects of the petitioners’ fundamental rights under
Arts. 14, 19 and 31 as constitute the basic structure or
framework of the Constitution, and therefore, it is not
protected under Art. 31B or 31C.
Land in urban areas is a vital physical recourse
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 48 of 61
capable of generating and sustaining economic and social
activities. It should be properly utilised by the community
for social good. But the attraction of urban areas has led
to profiteering and racketeering in land in these areas.
There is also mis-application of this scarce resource of
urban land for undesirable purposes. Therefore, a
comprehensive policy of effective control of land covering
its use. distribution amongst the various sections of the
society and individuals and for different social purposes,
and its disposal by owners subject to their sharing the
profits with the community at large, has been evolved. The
Act has been designed to benefit the weaker sections of the
community. It also grants exemptions in favour of public
institutions and co-operative housing. The imposition of
ceiling on land and plinth area of future dwelling units,
and regulation of transfer of urban property under the Act,
seeks to achieve the objective of social control over the
physical resources of land. A unique feature of the Act is
that it covers seventeen States and all the Union
Territories and provides for aggregation of holdings in
urban agglomerations in the different States where the law
is applicable for purposes of ceiling limits. In other
words, persons holding vacant lands or vacant and other
built-up property with dwelling units therein in different
urban agglomerations throughout the country will have to
make a choice of retaining only one piece of vacant land
within the ceiling limit and surrender excess vacant lands
else-where.
926
Since the Act applies to firms, companies, and undertakings,
future construction of industrial or commercial premises
requiring large areas cannot take place in the notified
urban agglomerations without obtaining the requisite land
from the Government. This enables Government to regulate and
canalise the location of industries and thus serve the broad
policy approach in dispersal of economic activity. Hoarding
of land by industrialists based on prospects for expansion
in the distant future, is thus sought to be avoided.
The fundamental issue is: Whether s. 23 of the impugned
Act impairs the basic structure or framework of the
Constitution being violative of Art. 39 (b) and (c) and Art,
31 (2) of the Constitution and is, therefore, not protected
under Arts. 31-B and 31-C.
The impugned Act is designed as a law for the
imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban
agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess
of the ceiling limit to regulate the construction of
buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith,
with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in
the hands of a few persons, and speculation and profiteering
therein, and with a view to bringing about an equitable
distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the
common good, in furtherance of the Directive Principles
under Art. 39 (b) and (c). The constitutional validity of s.
23 of the Act depends on whether in truth and substance
these objectives have been translated into action. Section
23 of the Act reads:
"23. (1) It shall be competent for the State
Government to allot, by order, in excess of the ceiling
limit any vacant land which is deemed to have been
acquired by the State Government under this Act or is
acquired by the state Government under any other law,
to any person for any purpose relating to, or in
connection with, any industry or for providing
residential accommodation of such type as may be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 49 of 61
approved by the State Government to the employees of
any industry and it shall be lawful for such person to
hold such land in excess of the ceiling limit.
Explanation.-For the purpose of this section,-
927
(a) where any land with a building has been
acquired by the State Government under any other law
and such building has been subsequently demolished by
the State Government, then, such land shall be deemed
to be vacant land acquired under such other law;
(b) "industry" means any business, profession,
trade, undertaking or manufacture.
(2) In making an order of allotment under sub-
section (1), the State Government may impose such
conditions as may be specified therein including a
condition as to the period within which the industry
shall be put in operation or, as the case may be the
residential accommodation shall be provided for:
Provided that if, on a representation made in this
behalf by the allottee, the State Government is
satisfied that the allottee could not put the industry
in operation, or provide the residential accommodation,
within the period specified in the order of allotment,
for any good and sufficient reason, the State
Government may extend such period to such further
period or periods as it may deem fit.
(3) Where any condition imposed in an order of
allotment is not complied with by the allottee, the
State Government shall, after giving an opportunity to
the allottee to be heard in the matter, cancel the
allotment with effect from the date of the non-
compliance of such condition and the land allotted
shall revest in the State Government free from all
encumbrances.
Subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2)
and (3), all vacant lands deemed to have been acquired
by the State Government under this Act shall be
disposed of by the State Government to subserve the
common good on such terms and conditions as the State
Government may deem fit to impose.
928
(5) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
sections (1) to (4), where the State Government is
satisfied that it is necessary to retain or reserve any
vacant land, deemed to have been acquired by that
Government under this Act, for the benefit of the
public, it shall be competent for the State Government
to retain or reserve such land for the same."
The submission is that though the impugned Act is
designed as a law for the imposition of a ceiling on vacant
land in urban agglomerations, to subserve the common good,
in furtherance of the Directive principles under Art. 39 (b)
and (c), the dominant object of the impugned Act for the
acquisition of vacant land in urban agglomerations under s.
23 of the Act, was to facilitate the setting up of
industries in the private sector and, therefore, the Act was
not in furtherance of part IV of the Constitution and void
being violative of Art. 31 (2). It was urged that s. 23 of
the impugned Act must, therefore, be struck down as
unconstitutional, it being not in keeping with part IV of
the Constitution was not protected under Art. 31C and that
it cannot also have the protective umbrella of Art. 31B as
it seeks to alter the basic structure of the Constitution.
Although the impugned Act is enacted with a laudable
object, to subserve the common good, in furtherance of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 50 of 61
Directive Principles of state policy under Art, 39 (b) and
(c), it appears from the terms of sub-ss.(1), (2) and (3) of
s. 23 that it would be permissible to acquire vacant land in
urban agglomerations and divert it for private purpose. The
whole emphasis is on industrialisaton. The opening words in
s. 33 (4) "subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1),
(2) and (3)" make the provisions of s. 23 (4) subservient to
s. 23 (1) which enables the Government to allot vacant land
in an urban agglomeration to any person for any purpose
relating to, or in connection with, any industry or for
providing residential accommodation of such type as may be
approved by the state Government to the employees of any
industry. It further makes it lawful for the allottee that
is, the industrialist, to hold such land in excess of the
ceiling limit. The definition of the word ’industry’ in
Explanation (b) to s. 23 (1) is wide enough to include any
business, profession, trade, undertaking or manufacture, and
necessarily includes the private sector. The proviso to s.
23 (2) fortifies that construction of mine. It is
incomprehensible that vacant lands in all urban
agglomerations throughout the country should be acquired for
the
929
purpose of setting up industries. More so, that it should
permissible to allow setting up of industries for private
gain. There is no material placed before us showing that the
Government has prepared any blue print for industrialisation
of all the urban agglomerations in India in the public
sector.
In fact, faced with this difficulty, the learned
Attorney General attempted to justify the provisions
contained in s.23 by submitting that the opening words in s.
23(4) "subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2)
and (3)" must, in the context of the preamble and the
Directive Principles under Art 39(b) and (c), be construed
to mean "notwithstanding anything to the contrary contained
in subsections (1), (2) and (3)" According to him, the
"brooding spirit’, of the Preamble permeates through the
entire section, and, therefore-the provisions of s.23 of the
Act should be read in the light of the preamble. The
contention cannot be accepted. When the language of the
section is clear and explicit, its meaning cannot be
controlled by the preamble. It is not for the Court to re-
structure the section. The re-structuring of a statute is
obviously a legislative function. The matter is essentially
of political expediency, and as such it is the concern of
the statesmen and, therefore, the domain of the legislature
and not the judiciary.
It was, however, urged that s.23(1) of the Act is only
an enabling provision, and the real power was under s.23(4),
and if there is ambiguity in the language of s 23, it was
possible to read the section in the light of the preamble
and the Directive Principles under Art. 39(b) and (c) and as
such s.23(1) is subject to s.23(4). The use of the words
"subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)"
in s.23(4) takes away the compulsion on the State Government
to adhere to the Directive Principles under Art. 39(b) and
(c) in making allotment of the vacant lands in an urban
agglomeration acquired under the Act. The words "subject to
the provisions of subsections (1), (2) and (3)" in s.23(4),
appearing in the context of s.23(1) means ’in addition to;
if anything is left over after the allotment under s.23(1)’.
I cannot, therefore, read the provisions of sub-ss.(1), (2)
and (3) s.23 of in the light of the preamble or the
Directive Principles under Art. 39(b) and (c). By no rule of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 51 of 61
construction can the operation of sub-s(1) of s.23 of the
Act be controlled by the operation of sub-s.(4).
930
A legislation built on the foundation of Art. 39(b) and
(c) permitting acquisition of private property must be for a
public purpose, that is, to subserve the common good. In my
view, sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s.23 of the Act negate
that principle. Furthermore, Art. 31(2) consists of three
pre-requisites namely (i) the property shall be acquired by
or under a valid law, (ii) it shall be acquired only for a
public purpose, and (iii) the person whose property has been
acquired shall be given an amount in lieu thereof. The
definition of’ industry’ in Explanation (b) to s. 23(1) is
wide enough to include any business, trade or vocation
carried on for private gain. There cannot be ’mixed purpose’
of public and private to sustain a legislation under Art.
39(b) and (c). The vice lies in s. 23(1) and the Explanation
(b) thereto, which on a combined reading, frustrate the very
object of the legislation.
One is left with the feeling that sub-ss. (1), (2) and
(3) of s. 23 of the impugned Act are meant to promote the
interests of the business community and further professional
interests. While setting up of an industry in the private
sector may, at times, be for the public good, there cannot
be acquisition of private property for private gain.
Acquisition can only be for a public purpose’. That is to
say, a purpose, an object or aim in which the general
interest of the community as opposed to the particular
interest of the individual, is directly and vitally
concerned. The concept of ’public purpose’ necessarily
implies that it should be a law for the acquisition or
requisition of property in the interest of the general
public, and the purpose of such a law directly and vitally
subserves public interest. If in reality the object of the
acquisition under the Act is to set up industries in the
private sector as is permissible from the provisions of s.
23(1) of the Act, nothing prevents the State from taking
recourse to s. 40 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, for
which there must be quid pro quo, that is, payment of
compensation according to the market value.
Our attention was drawn to the Guidelines issued by the
Government of India, Ministry of Works and Housing
clarifying the intent and purpose of the provisions of the
Act. It may be stated here that these Guidelines cannot
supersede or alter any of the provisions of the Act or the
rules made thereunder. The Guidelines issued under s. 23 are
in these terms:
931
"Section 23 of the Urban Land (Ceiling and
Regulation) Act, 1976, governs, inter alia, disposal of
vacant land acquired under the Act. In brief, this
Section enables the State Government to allot any
vacant land for the purpose of an industry or to
subserve the common good, or to retain or reserve such
land for the benefit of the public.
2. For the purpose of the Section ’industry’ has
been given a wider meaning so as to cover any business,
profession, trade, undertaking or manufacture.
3. The section also enables Government to allot
land for providing residential accommodation of such
type as may be approved by the State Government to the
employees of any industry. Thus the excess vacant land
acquired by the State Government under the Act can be
dealt with in the following manner:
(i) allotted for the purpose of an industry namely,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 52 of 61
any business, profession, trade, undertaking or
manufacture;
(ii) allotted for the purpose of construction of houses
for the employees of an industry specified in
item(i) above;
(iii) disposed of to subserve the common good which may
include allotment of vacant land for Government
purpose, for institutions, etc., and
(iv) retained/reserved for the benefit of the public"
It appears that the Government issued the following
guidelines pursuant to the recommendations made at a
conference of State Ministers of Housing and Urban
Development with a view to implement the policy of
socialisation of urban land:
"The 9th Conference of State Ministers of Housing
and Urban Development held at Calcutta on the 17th,
18th and 19th December, 1976, considered the matter and
932
recommended that, in order to bring about social
objectives of the Act more prominently, the utilisation
of the excess vacant land should be according to the
priorities set down below subject to the prescribed
land uses:
(i) Retain/reserve for the benefit of the public for
social housing, provision of basic amenities, etc.
(ii) Dispose of to subserve common good which may
include allotment of vacant land for Government
purposes, local authorities, institutions, etc.
(iii) Allot for the purpose of construction of houses
for the employees of industries specified in item
(iv) below.
(iv) Allot for the purpose of industry, viz., any
business, profession, trade, undertaking of non-
polluting manufacture; cottage and small scale and
wherever possible ancillary industry,
manufacture."
It is significant to notice that there was an attempt
made in these aforesaid Guidelines to alter the ’priorities’
laid down in s. 23. The Guidelines cannot alter the
’priorities’ laid down in the section. The Guidelines are
nothing but in the nature of Executive Instructions and
cannot obviously control the plain meaning of the section.
Where the language of the Act is clear and explicit, we
must give effect to it, whatever may be the consequences,
for in that case the words of the statute speak the
intention of the legislature. The Court cannot be called
upon to interpret the provisions of s. 23 of the Act in the
light of the Guidelines issued by the Government of India,
Ministry of Works and Housing.
I am, therefore, constrained to hold that the
provisions of sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 23 and the
opening words "subject to the provisions of sub-sections
(1), (2) and (3)" in s. 23(4) which make the setting up of
industries the dominant object for the acquisition of vacant
land in urban agglomerations under the Act, are not in
keeping with Part IV of the Constitution and, therefore, not
protected under Article 31-C.
933
A legislation which directly runs counter to the
Directive Principles of State Policy enshrined in Art. 39(b)
and (c) cannot by the mere inclusion in the Ninth Schedule
receive immunity under Art. 31B. The Directive Principles
are not mere homilies. Though these Directives are not
cognizable by the Courts and if the Government of the day
fails to carry out these objects no Court can make the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 53 of 61
Government ensure them, yet these principles have been
declared to be fundamental to the governance of the country.
Granville Austin considers these Directives to be aimed at
furthering the goals of the social revolution or to foster
this revolution by establishing the conditions necessary for
its achievement. He explains:
"By establishing these positive obligations of the
State, the members of the Constituent Assembly made if
the responsibility of future Indian governments to find
a middle way between individual liberty and the public
good, between preserving the property and the privilege
of the few and bestowing benefits on the many in order
to liberate ’the powers of all men equally for
contributions to the common good’."
In short, the Directives emphasise, in amplification of
the preamble, that the goal of the Indian polity is not
laissez faire, but a welfare State, where the State has a
positive duty to ensure to its citizens social and economic
justice and dignity of the individual. It would serve as an
’Instrument of Instructions’ upon all future governments,
irrespective of their party creeds.
Article 38 requires that the State should make an
effort to promote the welfare of the people by securing and
protecting as effectively as it may a social order in which
justice, social, economic and political, shall inform all
the institutions of the national life. In other words, the
promise made by the Constitution to the citizens of India in
its Preamble is directly included in one of the Directive
Principles of State Policy. Article 39, cl. (a) requires
that all citizens shall have a right to adequate means of
livelihood. Article 39(b) enjoins that the State shall
ensure that the ownership and control of the material
resources of the community are so distributed as best to
934
subserve the common good. Article 39(c) mandates that the
State shall direct its policy towards securing that the
operation of the economic system does not result in the
concentration of wealth and means of production to the
common detriment. Dr. P.B. Gajendragadkar in ’Law, Liberty
and Social Justice’, observes:
"These directive principles very briefly, but
eloquently, lay down a policy of action for the
different State Governments and the Central Government,
and in a sense, they embody solemnly and recognize the
validity of the charter of demands which the weaker
sections of the citizens suffering from social-economic
injustice would present to the respective governments
for immediate relief."
Chandrachud J. (as he then was) in Smt. Indira Gandhi
v. Raj Narain(1) after observing that the ratio of the
majority in Kesevananda Bharti’s case were merely
illustrative of what constitutes the basic structure and are
not intended to be exhaustive, observes:
I consider it beyond the pale of reasonable
controversy that if there be any unamendable features
of the of the Constitution, on the score that they form
a part of the basic structure of the Constitution, they
are that: (i) India is a Sovereign Democratic Republic;
(ii) Equality of status and opportunity shall be
secured to all its citizens, (iii) The State shall have
no religion of its own and all persons shall be equally
entitled to freedom of conscience and the right freely
to profess, practise and propagate religion and that
(iv) the Nation shall be governed by a Government of
laws, not of men. These in my opinion, are the pillars
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 54 of 61
of our constitutional philosophy, the pillars therefore
of the basic structure of the Constitution."
According to him, the pillars of the Constitution are
Sovereign Democratic Republic, Equality of Status and
Opportunity, Secularism, Citizen’s right to religious
worship, and the Rule of Law. With respect, I would add that
the concept of social and economic justice-to build a
Welfare State-is equally a part of the basic structure or
935
the foundation upon which the Constitution rests. The
provisions of sub-ss. (1), (2) and (3) of s. 23 and the
opening words "subject to the provisions of sub-sections
(1), (2) and (3)" in s. 23(4) are the very antithesis of the
idea of a Welfare State based on social and economic
justice. Since these provisions permit acquisition of
property under the Act for private purposes, they offend
against the Directive Principles of State Policy of Art.
39(b) and (c) and are also violative of Art. 31(2) and
therefore, not protected under Art. 31B.
I would, therefore, declare that the provisions of sub-
sections (1), (2) and (3) of s. 23 and the opening words
"subject to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)"
in s. 23(4) are ultra vires of the Parliament.
With the striking down of the invalid provisions what
remains, that is, the remaining provisions of the impugned
Act, including s. 23(4) thereof being in conformity with
Part IV of the Constitution and Article 31(2), are valid
and, therefore, the impugned Act has the protection of both
Article 31-B and Article 31-C.
I find no justification to strike down the whole Act as
it would be against the national interest. Unless it becomes
clear beyond reasonable doubt that the legislation in
question transgresses the limits of the organic law of the
Constitution it must be allowed to stand as the true
expression of the national will. The provisions of sub-ss.
(1), (2) and (3) of s 23 and the opening words "subject to
the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in s.
23(4), which are, in my view, invalid, cannot effect the
validity of the Act as a whole. The test to be applied when
an argument like the one addressed in this case is raised,
has been summed up by the Privy Council in Attorney-General
for Alberta v. Attorney-General for Canada in these words:
"The real question is whether what remains is so
inextricably bound up with the part declared invalid
that what remains cannot independently survive or, as
it has sometimes been put, whether on a fair review of
the whole matter it can be assumed that the legislature
would have enacted what survives without enacting the
part that is ultra vires at all."
936
It is quite clear that the provisions of sub-ss. (1), (2)
and (3) of s. 23 and the opening words "subject to the
provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in s. 23(4)
struck down by me are not inextricably bound up with the
remaining provisions of the Act, and it is difficult to hold
that the legislature would not have enacted the Act at all
without including that part which is found to be ultra
vires. The Act still remains the Act as it was passed, i.e.,
an Act for imposition of ceiling on urban land.
In determining the effect of the law upon the
individual’s right to property, the Court must take judicial
notice of the fact of vast inequalities in the existing
distribution of property in the country. The Court’s concern
lies not merely with applying the pre-existing sets of
theories, concepts, principles and criteria with a view to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 55 of 61
determining what the law is on a particular point. The
proper approach should be to view the principles with the
realisation that the ultimate foundation of the Constitution
finds its ultimate roots in the authority of the people.
This demands that constitutional questions should not be
determined from a doctrinaire approach, but viewed from
experience derived from the life and experience or actual
working of the community, which takes into account emergence
of new facts of the community’s social and economic life
affecting property rights of the individual, whenever, among
others, the validity of a law prescribing preference or
discrimination is in question under the "equal protection"
guarantee.
It should be remembered that the Directive Principles
cannot be regarded only as idle dreams or pious wishes
merely by reason of the fact that they are not enforceable
by a court of law. A rule of law in facts does not cease to
be such because there is no regular judicial or quasi-
judicial machinery to enforce its commands. An attempt to
create a truly social Welfare State also carries with it the
idea that in a country like India concentration of wealth in
the country must be done away with and its distribution on
an equitable basis effected in order to bridge the gap
between the rich and the poor. The very purpose of creating
such a state is to benefit the weaker and poorer sections of
the community to a much greater extent than the rich persons
so that the living standards of the people in general may
improve. In fact, in such a State, all welfare schemes in
their operation generally tend to benefit the poor people to
a much greater extent than others. If an equal protection
guarantee were enough to invalidate such schemes,
improvement in the economic
937
and social conditions of the country would be impossible.
One should not be swayed away by emotions but should be
guided by the real needs of the country. Hence a paradoxical
situation should be avoided by refusing to perpetuate the
existing inequality among the social classes and maintain
that gap to the same extent as before by intending to pay to
the rich compensation at the same full rates as in the case
of the poorer sections of the community.
The impugned Act is meant to remove inequalities with a
view to promote ’the greatest happiness of the greatest
number’. During the last thirty years much has been done to
implement the State’s policy of socialisation of
agricultural land by imposition of a ceiling on agricultural
holding. There is much that still remains to be done. There
is need for prevention of concentration of wealth in a few
hands in the urban areas and to provide for equitable
distribution of vacant land among others. The great
disparity between the rich and the poor is more visible in
the urban areas particularly in the great cities. A majority
of the people in the urban areas are living in abject
poverty. They do not even have a roof over their heads.
Concentration of wealth in a few hands is not conducive to
the national well-being.
The challenge to the validity of the artificial
definition of ’family’ in s.2(f) of the impugned Act must
fail. The Court has recently upheld the validity of an
identical definition of ’family’ appearing in the different
State laws relating to imposition of ceiling on agricultural
land. Some marginal hardship is inevitable in the working of
the legislation. The ultimate object is to reduce
inequalities in the larger interest. That takes us to the
question whether the definition of ’family’ in s.2(f) of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 56 of 61
Act results in the exclusion of a joint Hindu family.
The definition of ’family’ contained in s.2(f) is in
the following terms:
"2.(f) "family" in relation to a person, means the
individual, the wife or husband, as the case may be, of
such individual and their unmarried minor children."
As a result of the artificial definition of ’family’ in
s.2(f), there is no denying the fact that a joint Hindu
family is excluded from the purview of the Act. Section 3 of
the Act provides that no person, on
938
and from the commencement of the Act, shall be entitled to
hold any vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit in the
territories to which the Act applied. The word ’person’ is
defined in s.2(i) as:
"2.(i) "person" includes an individual, a family,
a firm, a company, or an association or body of
individuals, whether incorporated or not;"
The question is whether the total exclusion of joint
Hindu family renders the Act void and unconstitutional as
violative of Art.14. I do not think that this is so.
Parliament deliberately excluded a joint Hindu family from
the purview of s.3 of the impugned Act. As already pointed
out in Vasavaiah Chaudhary’s case, Parliament was beset with
difficulties in imposing a ceiling on urban immovable
property. While dealing with imposition of ceiling on vacant
urban land it was presumably faced with another difficulty,
viz., the institution of a joint Hindu family. According to
the Mitakshara School of Hindu Law, there is community of
interest and unity of possession. Under the Mitakshara
School a copartner cannot predicate the extent of his share,
while under the Dayabhaga school a member of joint Hindu
family takes as a tenant in common. We, therefore, do not
find anything wrong in excluding a joint Hindu family. The
impugned Act applies to Hindus, Mohamedans and Christian
alike. By the exclusion of a joint Hindu family the members
of a joint Hindu family, whether governed by the Mitakshara
School or the Dayabhaga School, were brought at par with
others. The contention that the impugned Act offends against
Art.14 must, therefore, fail.
The contention that the amount fixed by sub-s.(6) of
s.11 of the impugned Act is totally arbitrary and illusory
since there is no nexus between the value of the property
and the amount fixed and, therefore, the maximum amount
fixed under sub-s.(6) makes the Act confiscatory in total
abrogation of the fundamental right guaranteed under
Art.31(2) cannot be accepted. The Constitution (25th
Amendment) Act, 1971, which came into force on April 20,
1972, by s.2(a) substituted the word ’amount’ for the word
’compensation’ in the new Art.31(2), which reads:
"31(2) No property shall be compulsorily acquired
or requisitioned save for a public purpose and save by
authority of a law which provides for acquisition or
939
requisitioning of the property for an amount which may
be fixed by such law or which may be determined in
accordance with such principles and given in such
manner as may be specified in such law; and no such law
shall be called in question in any court on the ground
that the amount so fixed or determined is not adequate
or that the whole or any part of such amount is to be
given otherwise than in cash."
Under the original Art.31(2), no property could be acquired
for a public purpose under any law, unless it provided for
compensation of, or acquired and either fixed the amount of
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 57 of 61
the compensation, or specified the principles on which, and
the manner in which, the compensation was to be determined
and given.
It will be seen that Art.31(2) provides for acquisition
or requisitioning of the property for an amount which may be
fixed by such law, or which may be determined in accordance
with such principles and given in such manner as may be
specified in such law. No such law can be called in question
on the ground that the amount is not adequate, or that the
whole or any part of it is to be given otherwise than in
cash. Section 2(b) of the 25th Amendment Act inserted a new
clause (2B) to Art.31 which provides:
"31.(2B) Nothing in sub-clause (f) of clause (1)
of article 19 shall affect any such law as is referred
to in clause (2)."
The substitution of the neutral word ’amount’ for the word
’compensation’ in the new Art.31(2) still binds the
legislature to give to the owner a sum of money in cash or
otherwise. The legislature may either lay down the
principles for the determination of the amount or may itself
fix the amount. The choice open to the legislature is that
the amount should be directly fixed by or under the law
itself or alternatively, the law may fix principles in
accordance with which the amount will be determined.
Sub-section (1) of s.11 reads:
"11(1) Where any vacant land is deemed to have been
acquired by any State Government under sub-section (3)
940
of section 10, such State Government shall pay to the
person or persons having any interest therein,-
(a) in a case where there is any income from such
vacant land, an amount equal to eight and one-third
times the net average annual income actually derived
from such land during the period of five consecutive
years immediately preceding the date of publication of
the notification issued under sub-section (1) of
section 10; or
(b) in a case where no income is derived from such
vacant land, an amount calculated at a rate not
exceeding-
(i) ten rupees per square metre in the case of
vacant land situated in an urban agglomeration falling
within category, A or category B specified in Schedule
1; and
(ii) five rupees per square metre in the case of
vacant land situated in an urban agglomeration falling
within category C or category D specified in that
schedule."
In order that the burden of compensation, that is, the
amount payable under Art.31(2) for taking over vacant land
in excess of the ceiling limit in sub-s. (3) of s.10 by the
government may not be high, the Act incorporates a specific
provision in sub-s. (6) of s.11 to fix a ceiling on the
maximum amount payable in any single case. The sub-section
reads:
"11(6) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-
section (1) or sub-section (5), the amount payable
under either of the said sub-sections shall, in no
case, exceed two lakhs of rupees."
It is not suggested that sub-s.(1) of s. 11 does not lay
down any principles for determination of the amount payable
for the taking of excess vacant lands in an urban
agglomeration or that the principles laid down in sub-s.(1)
are not relevant for the determination of the amount
payable. It is also not suggested that payment of the amount
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 58 of 61
at the rate of Rs. 10 per sq. metre and Rs. 5 per sq. metre,
941
for the vacant land in categories and B, and categories C
and D respectively, makes the amount illusory or the Act
confiscatory. The submission is that the fixation of the
maximum amount payable at Rs. 2 lacs in a single case by
sub-s.(6) makes the amount payable under sub-s (1) wholly
illusory and, therefore, the Act is confiscatory. That
cannot be so, because the fixation of ceiling on the maximum
at Rs. 2 lacs under s.11(6) implies that it would affect
only persons owning 20,000 sq. metres of vacant land in
metropolitan cities like Delhi, Calcutta, Bombay and Madras
or large cities like Hyderabad, Bangalore, Poona, Kanpur and
Ahmedabad falling in categories A and B, or persons owning
40,000 sq. meters in big cities like Lucknow, Allahabad,
Nagpur, Jaipur etc. falling in categories C and D. One is
left to wonder how many own such vast tracts of vacant land
in such cities. If any, very few indeed. Even if there are,
the amount cannot be related to the value of the property
taken. It is pure arithmetics. Twenty thousand sq. metres
would make 23,920 sq. yards and forty thousand sq. metres
47,840 sq. yards. In a city like Delhi, Calcutta, Bombay and
Madras the value of a square yards of vacant land would
depend upon the situation of the land. If that be the
criteria, then there can be no ceiling on vacant land in
urban agglomerations, much less geiling on immovable
property in such cities, when it comes to be imposed. The
State has not the capacity to bear the burden. If the
contention were to prevail, then no law for the
implementation of the Directive Principles of State Policy
under Art. 39(b) or (c) can ever be implemented.
We may recall the words of Pandit Jawaharlal Nehru, who
while introducing the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act,
1955, said in Parliament:
"If we are aiming, as I hope we are aiming and
verepeatedly say we are aiming, at changes in the
social structure, then inevitably we cannot think in
terms of giving what is called full compensation. Why ?
Well, firstly because you cannot do it, secondly
because it would be improper to do it, unjust to do it,
and it should not be done even if you can do it for the
simple reason that in all those social matters, laws
etc., they are aiming to bring about a certain
structure of society different from what it is at
present. In that different structure among other things
that will change is this, the big, difference between
the have’s and the havenot’s. Now, if we are giving
full
942
compensation, the have’s remain the have’s and the
have-not’s, have-not’s. It does not change in shape or
form if compensation takes place. Therefore, in any
scheme of social engineering, if I may say so, you
cannot give full compensation-apart from the patent
fact that you are not in a position-nobody has the
resources-to give it."
There can be no scheme for nationalisation of any
industry, there can be no socioeconomic measures enacted if
the concept of ’just equivalent’ were to be introduced even
after the 25th Amendment. To emphasise the point that the
amount of Rs. 2 lacs fixed under sub-s.(6) of s.11 makes the
Act confiscatory, our attention was drawn to the fact that
the petitioner in writ Petition No. 350 of 1977, Maharao
Saheb shri Bhim Singhji, the former Maharana of Kotah owns
971.50 acres of vacant land appurtenant to and covered under
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 59 of 61
his Umed Bhawan Palace in the city of Kotah, which is an
urban agglomeration falling under category ’D’, and which
stands requisitioned under s.23(1) of the Defence and
Internal Security of India Act, 1971. There is no dispute
that the property of the Maharana is valued for the purposes
of the Rajasthan Lands and Buildings Tax Act, 1964, at Rs.
4,12,27,726.84. Does it mean that the amount should be
geared to the value of the vacant land taken under sub-s.
(3) of s 10? When the Court has no power to question the
adequacy of the amount under Art.31(2), can it be said that
the amount fixed determined according to the principles laid
down in sub-s.(1) of s.11, subject to the maximum fixed
under sub-s.(6) thereof is illusory merely because of
inadequacy?
Who are we to say that it should be 10 per cent or
less, or 50 per cent or more. The legislature in its wisdom
has laid down the principles and fixed a ceiling on the
maximum amount payable. That is a legislative judgment and
the Court has no power to question it. Seeravai in his book
on Constitution, 2nd Ed., vol.I, p.656, while dealing with
the Fourth Amendment states that in permitting ’inadequate
compensation’ the 4th Amendment removed a fixed yard-stick
and made all discussion about ’relevant’ and ’irrelevant’
principles meaningless. The learned author says:
"If the questions were asked, why has the law
fixed compensation amounting to 60 per cent and not to
70 or 50 per cent of the market value, the answer would
be that in the legislative judgment the amount fixed by
the law was
943
a fair and just compensation for the acquisition of
property under the at law, and if a law fixing
compensation at amounts ranging from 90 to 50 per cent
or less, of the market value of the property acquired,
cannot be struck down by a Court, equally, principles
of compensation cannot be struck down when they produce
the same result. The consequences of the transformation
brought about by the 4th Amendment is that ’principles
of compensation’ do not mean the same thing before and
after the 4th Amendment."
As the learned author explains, ’considerations of social
justice are imponderable and, therefore no fixed money value
can be put on them by any principle’, and goes on to say
’The question whether the Court can go into the question
whether the amount is illusory is difficult to answer’. The
legislature considers a maximum amount of Rs.2 lacs to be a
fair and just recompense for the acquisition of excess
vacant land in an urban agglomeration. By no standard can an
amount of Rs.2 lacs be considered to illusory.
The 25th Amendment has placed the matter of adequacy of
compensation beyond the pale of controversy by substituting
the word ’amount’ for the word ’compensation’ in Art.31(2)
and made the adequacy of the amount payable for acquisition
or requisition of property nonjusticiable.
In Kesavananda Bharti’s case, the Court upheld the
constitutional validity of the 25th Amendment. The impact of
the new Article 31(2) was also considered as well as the
content and meaning of the word ’amount’. According to the
majority, the amount fixed or determined to be paid cannot
be illusory. But one thing is clear the meaning which the
Court placed on the word ’compensation’ in R. C, Cooper’s
case of adequacy of compensation and on relevant principles
has been held to have been nullified by the 25th Amendment.
The two decisions directly in point are the State of
Kerala & Anr. v. The Gwalior Rayon Silk Mfg. Co. and State
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 60 of 61
of Karnataka v. Ranganatha Reddy. In Gwalior Rayon’s case
the Court upheld
944
the validity of the Kerala Private Forests (Vesting and
Assignment) Act, 1971, which provided for the vesting of
private forest lands held in Janman rights, even though
there was no provision for payment of compensation. The
Court held that since the Act envisaged a scheme of agrarian
reform, it was protected under Art.31A and could not be
challenged on the ground that it take aways, a bridges or
abrogates the fundamental rights guaranteed by Arts.14, 19
and 31. In Ranganatha Reddy’s case the Court upheld a scheme
for nationalisation of contract carriages in the State,
since it laid down the principles for the determination of
the amount payable under Art.31(2) and they were not
irrelevant for the determination of the amount. Untwalia J.
speaking for the majority observed:
"On the interpretations aforesaid which we have
put to the relevant provisions of the Act, it was
difficult rather impossible-to argue that the amount so
fixed will be arbitrary or illusory. In some respects
it may be inadequate but that cannot be a ground for
challenge of the constitutionality of the law under
Article 31(2)."
Krishna Iyer J. in a separate but concurring judgment after
deducing the discernible principles from the decision in
Kesavananda Bharati’s case, held that the 25th Amendment
bars the Court’s jurisdiction to investigate the adequacy of
the amount. In view of these two decisions, the contention
that fixation of maximum amount by sub-s. (6) of s. 11
renders the amount payable under sub-s. (1) illusory or in
the alternative makes the Act confiscatory cannot be
accepted.
There still remains the contention regarding the
invalidity of sub-s. (1) of s. 27, which reads:
"27. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in any
other Law for the time being in force, but subject to
the provisions of sub-section (3) of section 5 and sub-
section (4) of section 10, no person shall transfer by
way of sale, mortgage, gift, lease for a period
exceeding ten years, or otherwise, any urban or
urbanisable land with a building (whether constructed
before or after the commencement of this Act) or a
portion only of such building for a period of ten years
of such commencement or from the date on which the
building is constructed, whichever
945
is later, except with the previous permission in
writing of the competent authority."
It is urged that sub-s. (1) of s. 27 confers arbitrary
and uncontrolled powers on the competent authority to grant
or refuse permission for transfer and that the conferral of
such uncontrolled and uncanalised power without any
guidelines renders the provision illegal and void and
unenforceable being an unreasonable restriction on the right
to acquire, hold and dispose of property guaranteed under
Art. 19(1(f). It is said that the matter is left to the whim
and fancy of the competent authority, and the power so
conferred is capable of misuse and thus be an instrument of
great oppression. The learned Attorney General tried to meet
the contention by urging that there was no reason to think
that the competent authority would refuse to grant
permission where the transaction is bona fide. According to
him, the competent authority would be justified in refusing
to grant permission where the transaction is calculated to
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 61 of 61
defeat the provisions of the Act. It is said that the whole
object of freezing of the transactions was to hold the price
line of urban land. He drew our attention to the guidelines
issued by the Government of India, Ministry of Works and
Housing to the various State Governments directing that all
applications for grant of permission under sub-s. (1) of s.
27 of the Act should be dealt with expeditiously with a view
to prevent any inconvenience to the members of the public
and further that permission should be granted, as a matter
of course, within three days of the receipt of such
application.
In my judgment, there is no justification at all for
the freezing of transactions by way of sale mortgage, gift
or lease of vacant land or building for a period exceeding
ten years, or otherwise, for a period of ten years from the
date of the commencement of the Act, even though such vacant
land with or without building thereon falls within the
ceiling limits. In Excel Wear v. Union of India & Ors. the
Court held that the right to carry on a business guaranteed
under Art. 19(1) (g) carries with it the right not to carry
on business. It must logically follow, as a necessary
corollary, that the right to acquire, hold and dispose of
property guaranteed to a citizen under Art. 19(1)(f) carries
with it the right not to hold any property. It is difficult
to appreciate how could a citizen be compelled to own
property against his will.
946
If vacant land owned by a person falls within the
ceiling limits for an urban agglomeration, he is outside the
purview of s. 3 of the Act. That being so, such a person is
not governed by any of the provisions of the Act. When this
was pointed out to the learned Attorney General, he was
unable to justify the imposition of the restriction imposed
by sub-s. (1) of s. 27 in case of land falling within the
ceiling limits as a reasonable restriction. It must,
accordingly, be held that the provision of sub-s. (1) of s.
27 of the impugned Act is invalid insofar as it seeks to
affect a citizen’s right to dispose of his urban property in
an urban agglomeration within the ceiling limits.
I would for the reasons stated, declare sub-sections
(1) (2) and (3) of section 23 and the opening words "subject
to the provisions of sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in
section 23(4) of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulation)
Act, 1976 as ultra vires of the Parliament and that these
provisions are not protected under Articles 31-B and 31-C of
the Constitution, and further declare that sub-section (1)
of section 27 of the Act is invalid insofar as it imposes a
restriction on transfer of urban property for a period of
ten years from the commencement of the Act, in relation to
vacant land or building thereon, within the ceiling limits.
Having struck down sub-sections (1) (2) and (3) of
section 23 and the opening words "subject to the provisions
of Sub-sections (1), (2) and (3)" in section 23(4) of the
Act, I would declare the remaining provisions of the Urban
Land (Ceiling and Regulation) Act, 1976, including sub-
section (4) of section 23 thereof as valid and
constitutional.
In the result, the writ petitions, except to the extent
indicated, must fail and are dismissed. There shall be no
order as to costs.
S.R. Petitions dismissed.
947