Full Judgment Text
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO.5160 OF 2013
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.354 of 2012)
Ramanlal Deochand Shah …Appellant
Versus
The State of Maharashtra & Anr. …Respondents
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO.5161 OF 2013
(Arising out of S.L.P. (C) No.395 of 2012)
Kantilal Manikchand Shah …Appellant
(since deceased by his L.Rs.)
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Versus
The State of Maharashtra & Anr. …Respondents
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J U D G M E N T
T.S. THAKUR, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. These appeals arise out of two separate but similar
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orders dated 14 June, 2011 and 16 March, 2011 passed
by the High Court of Judicature at Bombay whereby First
Appeal Nos.179 of 1992 and 751 of 1992 filed by the
respondent-State of Maharashtra have been allowed and the
judgment and order passed by the Reference Court
enhancing the amount of compensation payable to the
appellants-land owners to Rs.85/- per square meter set
aside.
3. In SLP (C) No.354 of 2012 the appellants prayed for
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enhancement of compensation payable towards compulsory
acquisition of plots no.33, 34, 45 and 46 measuring 1366
square meters each, situated at village Saidapur, Taluq-
Karad, District Satara, Maharashtra. The public purpose
underlying the acquisition was the setting up of a
Polytechnic Engineering College at Karad. The appellant-land
owners claimed compensation @ Rs.25/- per sq. ft. The
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Special Land Acquisition Officer, Satara, however, made an
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Award dated 14 March, 1988 determining the
compensation @ Rs.26.25 per sq. mtr. only. Dissatisfied
with the award made by the Collector the appellant-land
owners got the matter referred to the Civil Court for
determination of the market value of the land under Section
18 of the Land Acquisition Act besides solatium and interest
payable on the same. A similar reference was also made in
SLP (C) No.395 of 2012 for plot no. 47 admeasuring 1366
sq. mtrs. of the same village.
4. The claim made by the appellant-land owners was
contested by the respondent-State giving rise to the
following issues in Reference No.12 of 1988 relevant to SLP
(C) No.354 of 2012:
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(i) Is the claimant entitled to Rs.9,27,064/- in addition to
Rs.2,31,716/- from the opponent-referee by way of
compensation as claimed?
(ii) Is the claimant entitled for interest at the rate of 15%
p.a. on the amount of compensation as claimed?
(iii) Is the claimant entitled to solatium as claimed?
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(iv) What order?
5. Similar issues were framed in the connected Reference
No.4 of 1988 relevant to SLP (C) No.395 of 2012, save and
except that the total amount claimed in the same was lower
having regard to the lesser number of plots acquired in that
case.
6. The Reference Court answered the issues in favour of
the appellants and enhanced the compensation payable to
them to Rs.85/- per sq. mtr. besides interest at the
stipulated rates by similar but separate Awards both dated
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31 January, 1991. While doing so, the Reference Court
relied entirely upon certain observations made by Special
Land Acquisition Officer and the Draft Award prepared by
him. The Reference Court held that from the discussion
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contained in the Draft Award it was not clear as to how the
Special Land Acquisition Officer had awarded compensation
@ Rs.26.25 per sq. mtr. Relying upon the discussion in the
Draft Award and taking advantage of an apparent conflict
between the discussion contained therein and the amount
actually awarded by the Special Land Acquisition Officer the
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Reference Court enhanced the compensation to Rs.85/- per
sq. mtr. as already noticed above. The High Court has, in
the appeals filed by the State Government against the
enhancement of compensation, reversed the view taken by
the Reference Court on the ground that the enhancement
was not justified in the absence of any evidence to show
that the market value of the property in question was higher
than what was awarded by the Special Land Acquisition
Officer. The High Court declared that claimants were in the
position of plaintiffs and the burden to prove that the
amount of compensation awarded by the Special Land
Acquisition Officer was not adequate lay upon them. It was
only if that burden was satisfactorily discharged by cogent
and reliable evidence that the Reference Court could direct
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enhancement. No such evidence having been adduced by
the landowners, the High Court set aside the order passed
by the Reference Court and answered the reference in the
negative thereby dismissing the claim made by the
landowners.
7. We have heard learned counsel for the parties at some
length. It is trite that in a reference under Section 18 of the
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Land Acquisition Act on the question of adequacy of
compensation determined by the collector, the burden to
prove that the collector’s award does not correctly determine
the amount of compensation payable to the landowner is
upon the owner concerned. It is for the claimant to prove
that the amount awarded by the Collector needs
enhancement, and if so, to what extent. The claimant can do
so by adducing evidence, whether oral or documentary
which the Reference Court would evaluate having regard to
the provisions of Sections 23 and 24 of the Land Acquisition
Act while determining the compensation payable to the
owners. To that extent the claimant is in the position of a
plaintiff before the Court. In the absence of any evidence to
prove that the amount of award by the Collector does not
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represent the true market value of the property as on the
date of the preliminary notification, the Reference Court will
be helpless and will not be justified in granting any
enhancement. The Court cannot go by surmises and
conjectures while answering the reference nor can it assume
the role of an Appellate Court and enhance the amount
awarded by reappraising the material that was collected and
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considered by the Collector. What is important to remember
is that a reference to a Civil Court is not in the nature of an
appeal from one forum to the other where the appellate
forum takes a view based on the evidence before the forum
below. The legal position is settled by the decisions of this
Court to which we may at this stage refer. In Chimanlal
Hargovinddas v. Spcl. Land Acquisition Officer & Anr.
(1988) 3 SCC 751 , the controversy related to a correct
valuation of a piece of land that was under acquisition. This
Court found that the Reference Court had virtually treated
the award to be a judgment under appeal hence fallen in
error on the fundamental question of the approach to be
adopted while answering a reference. The Court observed:
(1) A reference under Section 18 of the Land
Acquisition Act is not an appeal against the award and
the court cannot take into account the material relied
upon by the Land Acquisition Officer in his award
unless the same material is produced and proved
before the court.
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(2) So also the award of the Land Acquisition
Officer is not to be treated as a judgment of the trial
Court open or exposed to challenge before the court
hearing the reference. It is merely an offer made by
the Land Acquisition Officer and the material utilised
by him for making his valuation cannot be utilised by
the court unless produced and proved before it. It is
not the function of the court to sit in appeal against
the award, approve or disapprove its reasoning, or
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correct its error or affirm, modify or reverse the
conclusion reached by the Land Acquisition Officer, as
if it were an appellate court.
(3) The court has to treat the reference as an
original proceeding before it and determine the
market value afresh on the basis of the material
produced before it.
(4) The claimant is in the position of a plaintiff who
has to show that the price offered for his land in the
award is inadequate on the basis of the materials
produced in court. Of course the materials placed and
proved by the other side can also be taken into
account for this purpose.”
(emphasis supplied)
8. In the Spcl. Land Acquisition Officer & Anr. etc.
etc. v. Siddappa Omanna Tumari & Ors. etc., 1995
Supp (2) SCC 168 , a three Judge Bench was dealing with a
case where the question that fell for determination was
whether it was open to a Reference Court to determine the
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amount of compensation exceeding the amount of
compensation determined in the award without recording a
finding on consideration of the relevant material therein,
that the amount of compensation determined in the award
under Section 11 was inadequate. Answering the question
this Court considered the entire legislative scheme
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underlying the Act and clarified that a claimant was in the
position of a plaintiff on whom lay the burden of proving his
case that the compensation awarded by the Collector was
inadequate. The following passage in this regard is apposite:
| under | |
| Section 11 by the claimant was as regards the<br>amount of compensation awarded for the land<br>thereunder. The Collector has to state the grounds<br>on which he had determined the amount of<br>compensation where the objection raised by the<br>claimant in his application for reference under<br>Section 18 was as to inadequacy of compensation<br>allowed by the award under Section 11, as required<br>by Sub-section (2) of Section 18 itself. Therefore,<br>the legislative scheme contained in | |
| Sections 12 , 18 and 19 w | |
| entitles the claimant not | |
| under Section 11 as to th |
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and by application of correct principles of valuation,
either with reference to the contents of the award
itself or with reference to other evidence aliunde
adduced before the Court. Therefore, if the initial
burden of proving the amount of compensation
allowed in the award of the Collector was
inadequate, is not discharged, the award of the
Collector which is made final and conclusive
evidence under Section 12 , as regards matters
contained therein will stand unaffected. But if the
claimant succeeds in proving that the amount
determined under the award of the Collector was
inadequate, the burden of proving the correctness of
the award shifts on to the Collector who has to
adduce sufficient evidence in that behalf to sustain
such award. Hence, the Court which is required to
decide the reference made to it under Section 18 of
the Act, cannot determine the amount of
compensation payable to the claimant for his land
exceeding the amount determined in the award of
the Collector made under Section 11 for the same
land, unless it gets over the finality and conclusive
evidentiary value attributed to it under Section 12,
by recording a finding on consideration of relevant
material therein that the amount of compensation
determined under the award was inadequate for the
reasons that weighed with it.”
(emphasis supplied)
9. In Major Pakhar Singh Atwal and Ors. v. State of
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Punjab and Ors., 1995 Supp (2) SCC 401 also this Court
reiterated the position that a reference under section 18 of
the Land Acquisition Act is not an appeal against the award
of the LAO. It merely is an offer. The proceeding before the
Reference Court is of such nature that it places the claimant
in the position of a plaintiff and the Reference Court is akin
to a court of original jurisdiction. The Court observed:
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| It is now settled law that the award is an offer | ||||||||||||
| and whatever amount was determined by the | ||||||||||||
| Collector is an offer and binds the Improvement | ||||||||||||
| Trust. However, the Collector also is required to | ||||||||||||
| collect the relevant material and award | ||||||||||||
| compensation on the basis of settled principles of | ||||||||||||
| determination of the market value of an acquired | ||||||||||||
| land. The Improvement Trust, therefore, cannot go | ||||||||||||
| behind the award made by the Collector. | ||||||||||||
| Reference | is not an appeal. It is an origina l | |||||||||||
| proceeding. It is for the claimants to seek the | ||||||||||||
| determination of proper compensation by producing | ||||||||||||
| sale deeds and examining the vendors or the | ||||||||||||
| vendees | as to passing of consideration among them, | |||||||||||
| the nearness of the lands sold to the acquired lands, | ||||||||||||
| similarly of the lands sold and acquired | and also by | |||||||||||
| adduction of other relevant and acceptable evidence | . | |||||||||||
| In this case, for the Court under | Section 18 | of the | ||||||||||
| Act, the Tribunal is constituted. | Therefore, if the | |||||||||||
| claimants intend to seek higher compensation to the | ||||||||||||
| acquired land, the burden is on them to establish by<br>proof that the compensation granted by the Land | ||||||||||||
| Acquisition Officer is i<br>entitled to higher com | nadequate and they are<br>pensation. That could be | |||||||||||
| established only by add | uction of evidence of the | |||||||||||
| comparable sale transacti | ons of the land acquired or | |||||||||||
| the lands in the neighbou | rhood possessed of similar | |||||||||||
| potentiality or advantage | s. … … … | No doubt, in the | ||||||||||
| award itself, the Land Acquisition Officer referred to | ||||||||||||
| the sale transactions. Since the Land Acquisition | ||||||||||||
| Officer is an authority under the Act, he collected the | ||||||||||||
| evidence to determine the compensation as an offer. | ||||||||||||
| Though that award may be a material evidence to be | ||||||||||||
| JUDGMENT<br>looked into, but the sale transactions referred to | ||||||||||||
| therein cannot be relied upon implicitly, if the party | ||||||||||||
| seeking enhancement resists the claim by adducing | ||||||||||||
| evidence independently before the Court or the | ||||||||||||
| Tribunal. In this case, since no steps were taken to | ||||||||||||
| place the sale transaction referred in the award, they | ||||||||||||
| cannot be evidence. So they can neither be relied | ||||||||||||
| upon nor can be looked into as evidence | .” |
(emphasis supplied)
10. It is not in dispute that the landowners, appellants
before us, did not lead any evidence in support of their claim
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before the Reference Court to prove that the market value of
the land acquired from the ownership was more than what
was awarded as compensation by the Collector. Neither the
order passed by the Reference Court nor that passed by the
High Court make any reference to such evidence. Absence of
any such evidence was, therefore, bound to go against the
appellants. So long as the appellants failed to discharge the
burden cast on them, there was no question of the
Reference Court granting any enhancement. The High Court
was, in that view, justified in holding that the enhancement
granted in the absence of any evidence was unjustified.
11. It was argued by learned counsel for the appellants
that although no evidence was adduced by the claimants to
prove that the market value of the acquired land was higher
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than what was awarded by the Land Acquisition Collector,
the claimants could rely on the documents produced by the
respondent-State before the Collector. If that be so, the Sale
Deeds to which the Draft Award made a reference, could be
referred to and relied upon. There is, in our opinion, no
merit in that contention. While it is true that the claimant
can always place reliance upon the evidence that may be
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adduced by a defendant in a suit to the extent the same
helps the plaintiff, but the documents that have not been
relied upon before the Court by the defendants cannot be
referred to or treated as evidence without proper proof of
the contents thereof. In the present case the defendants-
respondents did not produce any documents before the
Reference Court in support of its case. There was indeed no
occasion for them to do so in the absence of affirmative
evidence from the claimants. We specifically asked learned
counsel for the respondents whether copies of any Sale
Deeds had been produced by the defendants before the
Reference Court. The answer was in the negative. That
being so, it is difficult to appreciate how the appellants could
have referred to a document not produced or relied upon by
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the defendants before the Reference Court. Even if the
documents had been produced by the defendants, unless the
same were either admitted by the plaintiff or properly
proved and exhibited at the trial, the same could not by
themselves constitute evidence except where such
documents were public documents admissible by themselves
under any provision. Sale Deeds executed between third
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parties do not qualify for such admission. The same had,
therefore, to be formally proved unless the opposite party
admitted the execution and contents, thereby, in which
event no proof may have been necessary for what is
admitted, need not be proved.
12. Suffice it to say that in the facts and circumstances of
the present case no evidence having been adduced by the
defendants-respondents, whether documentary or
otherwise, there was no question of the appellant relying
upon such non-existent evidence. Merely because some
documents were referred to in the Draft Award by the
Collector, did not make the said documents admissible by
them to enable the plaintiffs to refer to or rely upon the
same in support of a possible enhancement. If a document
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upon which the plaintiffs placed reliance was available, there
was no reason why the same should not have been
produced or relied upon. Inasmuch as no such attempt was
made by the plaintiffs, they were not entitled to claim any
enhancement.
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13. The next question then is whether the appellants-
landowners can be given another opportunity to adduce
evidence at this stage and if so on what terms. The
Reference Court, it is noteworthy, was of the opinion that
the Special Land Acquisition Officer had in the cases at hand
relied upon two sale deeds to record a finding that the true
market price of the land under acquisition was Rs.85/- per
square meter. Having said that the S.L.A.O had for no
reason awarded an amount of Rs.26.25 per square meter
only. This was according to the Reference Court inexplicable.
The Reference Court observed:
“According to the S.L.A.O. the said rate is fair and
reasonable but actually he has not awarded the
compensation accordingly. He has awarded it at the
rate of Rs.26.25 ps. per sq. mtrs. This abstruse to
understand as to how the S.L.A.O has awarded the
compensation accordingly, when he had already
arrived at the conclusion in respect of reasonable
rate of the compensation. Considering all these
things, I hold that the compensation ought to have
been awarded at least at the rate of Rs.85/- per sq.
mtrs. for the lands under acquisition. For the same
reason, I also hold that the claimant is entitled for
compensation at the rate of Rs.85/- per sq. mtrs. for
the lands under acquisition.”
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14. The failure or the omission to lead evidence to prove
the claim appears in the above context to be a case of some
kind of misconception about the legal requirement as to
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evidence needed to prove cases of enhancement of
compensation. We do not in that view see any reason to
deny another opportunity to the landowners to prove their
cases by adducing evidence in support of their claim for
enhancement. Since, however, this opportunity is being
granted ex debito justitiae, we deem it fit to direct that if the
Reference Court eventually comes to the conclusion that a
higher amount was due and payable to the appellant-
owners, such higher amount including solatium due thereon
would not earn interest for the period between the date of
the judgment of the Reference Court and the date of this
order. These appeals are with that direction allowed, the
judgments and orders impugned in the same modified to the
extent that while the enhancement order by the Reference
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Court shall stand set aside, the matters shall stand
remanded to the Reference Court for a fresh disposal in
accordance with law after giving to the landowners
opportunity to lead evidence in support of their claims for
higher compensation. No costs.
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......................………..……J.
(T.S. THAKUR)
......................………..……
J.
New Delhi (GYAN SUDHA MISRA)
July 5, 2013
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