Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5089 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Kansing Kalusing Thakore and Ors
RESPONDENT:
Rabari Maganbhai Vashrambhai and Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/11/2006
BENCH:
Dr. AR. Lakshmanan & Altamas Kabir
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (C) Nos. 124-125/2006)
Dr. AR. Lakshmanan, J.
Leave granted.
This is a Public Interest Litigation (in short ’PIL’) by the
villagers of Rasana Nana in Gujarat. The appellants 1-6, who
are the respondents in the public interest litigations before the
High Court, are the appellants in these appeals who also
belong to the same village.
In this PIL, the following question of law of great public
importance arise for consideration of this Court which is,
"whether the High Court failed to appreciate that the process
for rehabilitation was under a policy decision of the
Government of Gujarat and the lands being allotted to the
appellants as an administrative act, which allotments was in
lieu of the lands of the appellants acquired by the Government
decades earlier, the judicial interference in the decision
making process and policy of the Government not warranted
in the facts of the case."
The appellants’ lands were acquired by the State
Government in the year 1954. This was in terms of Section 8
of the Bombay Merged Territory and Areas (Jagir Abolition Act)
of 1953. The reason for the acquirement of the lands of the
appellants by the State Government was for the establishment
of the Dantiwada Agricultural University. As per the
Government Policy, lands of such persons affected by the take
over, allotment and/or reservation of separate land had been
made by the competent authority in the adjacent villages,
including village Rasana Nana.
The appellants herein are challenging only that part of
the impugned order which affects their absolute right over the
land given to them in lieu of their land which was surrendered
by them for the purpose of establishment of the Agricultural
University.
Land in survey Nos. 125 and 126 in village Rasna Nana
though earmarked for rehabilitation was however not handed
over to the persons affected by the take over of the lands for
the purpose of establishment of the University. Several
correspondences were made to the competent authority but for
one reason or another, the land in the said survey nos. could
not be handed over. In the year 2003, some of the appellants
approached the High Court through 3 separate applications
contending that although most of the persons affected had
been given lands as per Government allotment policy dated
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18.07.1973 and 11.02.1997 the appellants had been subjected
to inequitable treatment. Three orders on different dates, i.e.
on 20.09.2003, 14.10.2003 and 26.04.2004 were passed in
the aforesaid 3 applications by the High Court. Directions
were given to the competent authorities to consider and
examine the case of each appellant and to take appropriate
decision thereafter in terms of the policy framed by the State
Government.
On 09.08.2004, the Deputy Collector passed 3 separate
orders. He verified individual cases and took a final decision
after consultation with the Collector whereby the reserved
lands at survey Nos. 125 and 126 of village Rasana Nana were
directed to be granted over to the appellants who also paid the
occupancy price subsequently. It is stated that the order of
the Deputy Collector was in furtherance of the policy decision
of the State and was part of an Administrative Act. The
appellants’ claims were based upon the principles of legitimate
expectation and the reliefs claimed by them were equitable in
nature.
In October, 2004, five persons of the said village filed a
petition before the High Court purportedly under public
interest. They claimed themselves to be "public spirited
individuals". In this petition, the challenge was to the 3 orders
passed by the Deputy Collector allotting land from survey Nos.
125 and 126 of Village Rasana Nana and no challenge was
made to the other allotments of the said village. It was
contended that the lands allocated by this order was reserved
for grazing of cattle i.e. Gauchar lands the
allotment/settlement of which would affect the breeding of
cattle in the village, such lands also serve as the water needs
of the village.
The appellants were deliberately not made parties in the
writ petitions filed allegedly in public interest. According to
the appellants, the petitioners in the alleged PIL are people
holding clout in the village Rasana Nana and who were all
along enjoying illegal possession of the lands contained in
survey Nos. 125 and 126.
In December, 2004, an application was filed by the
present appellants before the High Court and impleaded as
respondents in the alleged PIL. This application was allowed
by the High Court. The Sarpanch of the village filed an
affidavit-in-reply opposing the relief prayed for in the writ
petition. It was stated that the lands in survey Nos. 125 and
126 were deemed to be Government lands w.e.f. 01.08.1954
and were never Gauchar lands or vested in the Panchayat
body.
The appellants herein also filed an affidavit in reply
contending that:
a) There had been no violation of legal rights so as to
maintain a petition under Article 226 of the
Constitution of India.
b) The petitioners in the alleged PIL had made false
statements in as much as they were headstrong
persons of the village having political clout.
c) The petitioners in the PIL had suppressed material
facts including resolutions taken by Panchayat
Authority.
d) The petitioners in the PIL had acted with malafide
intentions by not making necessary and appropriate
parties.
By virtue of the impugned order dated 04.08.2005, the
High Court arrived at a conclusion that there was hardly any
material to indicate that the land in question was pasture land
and that such land was in fact reserved for the rehabilitation
of persons who were adversely affected by the acquisition of
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their lands for the establishment of the agricultural university
and that the appellants herein had an existing right in terms
of the Government policy and hence entitled to equitable relief.
The High Court did not find any infirmity in the order of
the Deputy Collector dated 09.08.2004. However, an
argument was advanced on behalf of the public interest
litigants contending that the grantees i.e. the appellants
herein would not use the land for agricultural purposes and
would sell it away. The High Court imposed the following
conditions:-
I. The respondent Nos. 4 to 53 will not convert the
land into N.A. But they will use the land only for
agricultural purpose.
II. The respondent Nos.4 to 53 shall not transfer the
land either by sale or in any other manner directly
or indirectly by executing power of attorney, to any
other party and even if such power of attorney is
already given in favour of the third party, the
concerned respondents shall revoke the same before
receiving the possession.
The aforesaid conditions imposed by the High Court will
remain in force for a period of 15 years from the date of
possession of the land.
The Deputy Collector, Palanpur was directed to see that
these respondents give undertaking in writing to comply with
the aforesaid conditions imposed by the High Court. Unless
such undertaking is given, the possession shall not be granted
to such respondents. The Deputy Collector was further
directed to ensure before giving possession of land that no
need of Power of Attorney to be executed by any of the
respondents in favour of any other party. If it is found to be
so, he shall forthwith call upon the said respondent to revoke
it and render it ineffective. He is further directed that unless
there is strict compliance of the aforesaid terms and
conditions by the said respondents, he shall not put them into
possession of the land in question.
The High Court, thereafter, directed the Deputy Collector
to give possession to the appellants only after taking written
undertakings of compliance of the aforesaid conditions. It is
this portion of the order which the appellants have challenged.
The appellants preferred a revision petition before the
High Court which, on 11.10.2005, was also dismissed.
Aggrieved by the orders passed by the High Court, the
appellants have preferred the above civil appeals.
We heard Mr. U.U. Lalit, learned senior counsel for the
appellants and Ms. Hemantika Wahi, Mr. Rajiv Mehta and Mr.
Gaurav Agarwal assisted by Mr. Siddhartha Chowdhury,
learned counsel for the respective respondents.
We have perused the resolution passed by the
Government of Gujarat dated 18.07.1973, 11.02.1997 and the
PIL filed by the respondents herein and the counter affidavit
and reply filed by the respective parties and also the various
orders passed by the High Court of Gujarat including the
judgment in appeal.
Mr. U.U. Lalit, learned senior counsel took us through
the relevant pleadings and also the judgments and other
records. He contended that the High Court was not correct in
its approach of imposing further conditions once it was evident
that the lands to be allotted to the appellants was not pasture
lands and reserved for allotment in terms of the Government
policy. He further contended that the conditions imposed by
the High Court was not within the ambit and scope of the PIL
more particularly when the maintainability of the PIL was in
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issue and not decided. It was further urged that the
appellants who were being allotted lands after about 30 years
suffered inequity by imposition of such conditions by the High
Court inasmuch as many persons (whose lands had also been
taken and who were given/allotted lands decades earlier) were
also subjected to such restrictions and conditions. He also
submitted that the High Court was not correct in imposing a
15 year ban/restriction upon the appellants without any
rationale, reason and without any material on record.
According to Mr. Lalit, the stringent conditions imposed by the
High Court are not sustainable in law inasmuch as the same
amounts to judicial interference in purely administrative acts
where there is no involvement of any malafide and allocations
sought to be made are only in lieu of lands acquired earlier by
the Government, in furtherance of a policy decision aiming for
rehabilitation. Arguing further, Mr. Lalit submitted that the
High Court was also not correct in appreciating the fact that
the only restriction in transferring the land was provided for in
Section 43 of the Bombay Tenancy and Agricultural Land Act
and such restricted tenure land can also be transferred after
obtaining permission from the Collector under the Bombay
Land Revenue Code. In the instant case, by adding these two
conditions, entire transfer to the appellants was given a
discriminatory treatment. Concluding his argument, Mr. Lalit
submitted that the High Court was not right in presuming
without any material that the appellants/allottees will sell
their land to the builders for constructing commercial
complex.
Learned counsel appearing for the State and for the
Sarpanch invited our attention to the counter affidavit filed in
the writ petition. The Deputy Collector stated that the
petitioners in the PIL had personal interest involved and they
were actually encroachers and had been removed therefrom
and that the process of rehabilitation was a policy decision
and that the public interest litigants does not deserve any
relief in the writ petitions.
The Sarpanch of Village Rasana Nana filed an affidavit in
reply opposing the relief prayed for in the writ petition. It was
stated that the lands in survey Nos. 125 and 126 were deemed
to be Government lands w.e.f 01.08.1954 and were never
gauchar lands and are vested in the Panchayat body. It was
further submitted that after receipt of the notice from the High
Court, the same was placed before the Panchayat in its
meeting dated 16.02.2005 and the Panchayat after detailed
deliberation and careful consideration taken the decision by
resolving that the Panchayat had no objection in the land
being granted to the ousted persons on account of setting up
of Agricultural University.
Two panchnamas were made in furtherance of orders
made by the Circle Officer and Surveyor of the Survey
Department. It is recorded that all encroachments in the
lands sought to be granted were unauthorized and possession
was recovered. Mr. Gaurav Agarwal, learned counsel for the
contesting respondent, after reiterating the contentions raised
in the writ petition, submitted that a) the lands allocated by
order dated 09.08.2004 was not available for any purpose
other than to fulfill the water needs for the population of the
village b) lands so allotted were reserved for grazing i.e.
gauchar land (pasture) and c) land allocated vide order dated
09.08.2004 would affect cattle breeding.
We have given our careful consideration for the rival
submissions made by the respective counsel appearing for the
respective parties. The writ petition filed by the respondents
herein is an abuse of the process of the Court. By this PIL, the
respondents sought to ventilate/redress their personal
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grievances inasmuch as they are able to holding clout in
Village Rasana Nana and were enjoying illegal possession in
several lands contained under said survey Nos. 125 and 126.
The appellants herein were deliberately not made parties to
the writ petition allegedly filed in public interest. It is a matter
of record that the writ petitioners are the people who
encroached upon the land sought to be granted to the
appellants herein and hence having no legal right to continue
their illegal occupancy, devised means to approach the High
Court in alleged public interest. This would be evident from
the affidavit of the Deputy Collector filed on 24.03. 2005. The
maintainability of the writ petition at the instance of the
respondents was specifically raised before the High Court.
The maintainability of the PIL which was in issue was
unfortunately not decided by the High Court. The High Court,
in our opinion, ought to have decided the maintainability of
the PIL maintained at the instance of the encroachers and
land grabbers and rejected the writ petitions at the threshold.
This Court in a catena of decisions held that only a person
acting bonafide and having sufficient interest in the
proceeding of PIL will alone have locus standi and can
approach the Court to wipe out the tears of the poor and
needy suffering from violation of their fundamental rights but
not a person for personal gain or private profit or political or
any oblique consideration. The High Court ought to have
rejected the writ petition at the threshold as observed by this
court in (1992) 4 SCC 305 Janta Dal vs. H.S. Chaudhary &
Ors. In our opinion, the writ petition filed by the respondents
was not aimed at redressal of genuine public wrong or public
injury but founded on personal vendetta. It is the duty of the
High Court not to allow such process to be abused for oblique
considerations and the petitions filed by such busy bodies
deserves to be thrown out by rejection at the threshold and in
appropriate cases with exemplary costs.
Even on merits, the respondents have absolutely no case.
The records filed in this case clearly go to show that there had
been no violation of legal rights so as to maintain a petition
under Article 226 of the Constitution of India. The petitioners
in the PIL had suppressed material facts including resolutions
taken by bona fide authority and acted with malafide
intentions by not making necessary and appropriate parties.
We have already reproduced the conditions/restrictions
imposed by the High Court against the appellants herein. In
the instant case, the appellants lands were acquired by the
State Government in the year 1954 and as per the government
policy, lands of such persons affected by the take over
allotment and/or reservation of separate land had been made
by the competent authority in the adjacent villages. It is also
evident that the lands to be allotted to the appellants was not
pasture land and reserved for allotment in terms of
government policy and that the appellants were allotted lands
after about 30 years. Under such circumstances, the
appellants are the ones who have suffered inequity for 30
years. The Court is not justified by the imposition of such
stringent conditions and, in particular, imposing a 15 year
ban upon the appellants without any rationale, reason and
without any material on record. The stringent conditions
imposed by the High Court are not sustainable in law and
inasmuch as the same amounts to judicial interference in
purely administrative acts when the allegation sought to be
made are only in lieu of lands acquired earlier by the
Government in furtherance of a policy decision aiming for
rehabilitation. By imposing such conditions, the High Court
has jeopardized the rights of the appellants who have been
displaced and suffering for more than 3 decades. The High
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Court also failed to appreciate the legal provision of Section 6
of the T.P. Act when the transfer of the property can be
prohibited only by provision of the law and not by the
judgment or direction referred in the writ petition under Article
226 of the Constitution of India. The only restriction in
transferring the land is contained in Section 43 of the Bombay
Tenancy and Agricultural Land Act and such restricted tenure
land can also be transferred after obtaining permission from
the collector under the Bombay Land Revenue Code. In the
instant case, by adding these two conditions the entire
transfer of the appellants are given discriminatory treatment.
The Government of Gujarat, by its resolution dated
18.07.1973, considered the question of granting the land to
the affected account holders of these villagers in lieu of the
land at the place possible was under consideration of the
government and after consideration the government has
resolved to adopt the policy to the affected account holders.
It is resolved to grant the land to the account holders,
whose lands shall be acquired for establishing the Head
Quarter of the Agricultural University, including the Main
Campus, as per the following norms in cases where the land
shall be granted to them without the irrigation facility.
LAND TO BE ACQUIRED/ LAND TOBE GRANTED
ACQUIRED LAND. IN EXCHANGE.
1. Upto 4 Acres Entire land.
2. 4 Acres upto 12 Acres 4 Acres.
3. 12 Acres to 15 Acres 1/3rd portion of the
acquired land.
4. Exceeding 15 Acres. 5 Acres.
If the land, which is likely to get the benefit of irrigation
in near future, will be granted to the affected account holders,
it is resolved to grant the land to them as per the following
norms :
LAND TO BE ACQUIRED/ LAND TO BE GRANTED
ACQUIRED LAND. IN EXCHANGE.
1. Upto 3 Acres Entire land.
2. Above 3 Acres and 3 Acres.
Upto 9 Acres.
3. Above 9 Acres and 1/3rd portion of
upto 12 Acres. Acquired land.
4. Above 12 Acres. 4 Acres.
In our opinion, none of the appellants have violated any
of the rights guaranteed to the petitioners in the writ petition
either under the Constitution or under any other law and
hence the PIL filed by the respondents herein is not at all
maintainable and is liable to be dismissed. Now that the civil
appeals are allowed, we direct the respondent-authorities to
grant possession of the land immediately to the appellants
without insisting for any undertaking from the appellants as
directed by the High Court in its impugned judgment. Since
the patience of the appellants have been tested for so long by
the State Government and other authorities and also the
public interest litigant, it is not proper for the government and
other appropriate authorities to ask the appellants to wait for
any longer.
We direct the government and the other appropriate
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authorities to immediately handover possession of the land
allotted to them by way of rehabilitation.
Accordingly, we dismiss the writ petitions filed by the
respondents and allow the above civil appeals and set aside
the order impugned in these civil appeals passed by the High
Court of Gujarat. However, we order no costs.