Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
SMT.DAROTHI CLARE PARREIRA & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF MAHARASHTRA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 25/07/1996
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
BENCH:
RAMASWAMY, K.
G.B. PATTANAIK (J)
CITATION:
JT 1996 (7) 113 1996 SCALE (5)539
ACT:
HEADNOTE:
JUDGMENT:
O R D E R
This appeal by special leave arises from the judgment
of the Division Bench of the Bombay High Court made on
September 24, 1982 in W.P. No.877/79.
The undisputed facts are that the appellant were the
erstwhile owners of G.T.S. Nos.13/1, 13/2 and 13/3 in Pune
on land of an extent of 20,948.40 sq. meters. After the
Urban Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act, 1976 (33 of 1976)
[for short, the "Act"] had come into force, the appellants
filed their return under Section 6 of the Act. The competent
authority had issued notice on September 20, 1977. The
appellants had filed their objections on December 7, 1977.
They also filed application under Section 20 for exemption.
By proceedings dated December 22, 1977, the objections on
final statement were over-ruled and the appellants were
found to be in possession of surplus land admeasuring
13,410.88 sq. meters. Then the objection on final statement
came to be called and the same was under Section 10(2) of
the Act considered and rejected. Notification under Section
10(3) of the Act was published vesting the excess land in
the Government w.e.f. March 12, 1979 and the same came to be
published in the State Gazette on February 16, 1978.
Thereafter the appellants have filed an appeal which came to
be dismissed on the ground of laches. The appellants filed
the writ petition challenging the validity of the
notification under Section 10(3) which was upheld.
From the record, it would appear that the application
filed under Section 20 was disposed of on January 22, 1979
and thereafter the publication under Section 10(3) came to
be made. It also now turns out that on March 29, 1979, the
appellants made an application under Section 21 and
simultaneously, they filed writ petition in the High Court
challenging the notification issued under Section 10(3). The
Division Bench held that the procedure followed by the
competent authority was not vitiated by any error of law.
Since the land had already been vested in the State on March
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12, 1979 pursuant to the notification published under
Section 10(3), the question of further opportunity to the
appellants did not arise. When the matter was heard by this
Court on November 21, 1995, Shri Bhimrao Naik, learned
senior counsel, had drawn our attention to the fact that his
application made under Section 21 as pending consideration.
The appellants had not mentioned the fact of their filing
application under Section 20 and rejection thereof before
the publication of the notification under Section 10(3).
Since it was contended that the application was pending, we
directed the counsel for the State to find out as to the
stage of the matter. In furtherance thereof. we were
informed that the application was pending. An affidavit was
filed by Mr. P.A. Mane, Additional Collector in this Court
that the application was pending consideration and sought
permission of its disposal. Accordingly, by order dated
February 22, 1996, time was granted to the Government to
consider and dispose of the application within six weeks
from the date of the receipt of the said order. An order
dated 8.7.1996 disposing of the application under Section 21
has been placed before us.
Shri Naik, learned senior counsel for the appellants,
has contended that until the application under Section 21 of
the Act was considered and disposed of, the competent
authority had no power to have the notification under
Section 10(3) published. What all the competent authority
could do under the Act was to finalise the determination of
the excess land and then await the decision of the authority
under Section 21 and thereafter notification under Section
10(3) could be published. In support thereof, he placed
reliance on the instruction issued by the Government of
India dated September 15, 1976 under Section 36 or the Act
as well as the direction issued by the Government of
Maharashtra dated May 22, 1989 following the decision of
another Division Bench of the Bombay High Court as to the
manner of the disposal of application under Sections 20 and
21 and the action to be taken thereon by the competent
authority. In that light, the publication of the
notification under Section 10(3) was illegal. He also
contended that the manner of the disposal of the application
under Section 21 is not correct in law. He points out
paragraphs 17 and 18 of the order dated July 3, 1996
disposing of the application under Section 21 contending
that since the Government have already taken the decision
for allotment of the land to Pune Housing & Area Development
Board and received the money from it, the rejection of the
application of the application on that ground is illegal. He
contends that the appellants have valuable right under
Section 91 to formulate the scheme which was required to be
considered. The scheme was already drawn and approved by the
MHRDA and the validity of the scheme was not scrutinized.
Therefore, the rejection was not valid in law. Shri Bobde,
learned senior counsel for some of them, further contended
that by operation of Section 3 of the Act, operation of
Sections 10 [3] and 21 should he read together. If so read,
the consequence would be that until the application under
Section 21 is disposed of, the notification under Section
10(3) should not be published. He further points out that
since the issue had already been pre-judged, namely,
allotment of the land to the Pune Housing & Area Development
Board, this is not a valid consideration. Therefore, the
direction may be given either to the State or to the
competent authority to reconsider the matter. It is
contended by Mr. R.P.Bhatt. learned senior counsel for the
Board and Dr. R.B. Masodkar, learned counsel for the
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respondents, that in the writ petition before the High
Court, no objection have been taken as regards the omission
on the part of the competent authority to take action under
Section 21. Only the legality of the procedure adopted under
the Act for determination of the surplus land was canvassed.
The High Court answered the questions against them and the
correctness thereof is not canvassed before this Court. The
action taken by the competent authority is in accordance
with law. It is further pointed out that the rejection of
the application under Section 21 was valid because the
Government had taken decision to allot the land to the
Housing & Area Development Board equally for public purpose.
Therefore, the rejection cannot be considered to be invalid.
Having considered the respective contentions, the
question that arises for consideration is: whether
publication of the notification under Section 10(3) of the
Act in the Gazette is in accordance with law? No doubt, this
question was not squarely put in issue before the High Court
in the manner in which Shri Naik and Shri Bobde have posed
before us. Having considered the scheme of the Act, we find
that there is no force in their contentions. It is true that
Section 3 postulates that except as otherwise provided in
the Act, on and from the commencement of the Act, no person
shall be entitled to hold any vacant land in excess of the
ceiling limit in the territories to which the Act applies
under sub-section (2) of Section 1. Sections 6 to 10
prescribe the procedure for determination of the excess
urban land. Admittedly after filing of statement,
opportunity had been given, they had been heard and excess
land over the ceiling limit had been determined. Pursuant to
the decision taken under Section 10(1) of the Act,
objections came to be filed under Section 10(2) and
objections also were considered and an opportunity was given
before their consideration and objections came to be
rejected. The question then is: whether the competent
authority had to await the decision under Section 20 and 21
before declaring and publishing the excess and under Section
10(3) by a notification in the Gazette. The scheme of the
Act does indicate that until the date of the publication in
the Gazette prescribing a date on an from which the excess
land stands vested in the State, the owner continues to be
the owner of the excess land and entitled to remain in
possession thereof. On publication of the notification under
Section 10(3) and after putting a date from which the land
stands vested in the State and after publication of the
notification in the Gazette and on the from the date
mentioned therein, the excess vacant land stands vested in
the State free from all encumbrances, subject to the
decision in appeal, if any, filed according to law.
The previous owner stands divested or right, title and
interest in the land subject to the right to make
application provided under Sections 20 and 21. It is
difficult to accept the contention of the learned counsel
for the appellants that the competent authority has no power
to have the notification under Section 10(3) published in
the Gazette until the application either under Section 20 or
21 is disposed of. The very language of Sections 20 and 21
and the exercise of the power thereunder would arise only
when the land stands vested in the Government. The power of
examination and exemption would arise only when the
Government becomes the owner and the erstwhile owner seeks
to obviate the hardships under Section 20 or to subserve the
housing scheme for weaker sections under Section 21 as
envisaged thereunder. Thereat, the Government is required to
consider whether the proposals made by the erstwhile owner
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for undertaking the scheme as envisaged under Section 21 or
hardships as envisaged under Section 20 for exemption would
merit consideration. In this case, admittedly, the
application under Section 20 came to be filed though that
was suppressed before the High Court and this Court and came
to be dismissed before notification under Section 10(3) of
the Act was published. It also appears, as stated earlier,
that application under Section 21 was filed on March 29,
1979, the date on which the appellants had filed the writ
petition in the High Court. It would, therefore, be seen
that the application came to be filed much after the date of
the vesting and publication of the notification under
Section 10(3) of the Act. The effect of the vesting is not
contingent upon filing an application for disposal under
either Section 20 or 21. We do not go into the correctness
of the order passed by the Government under Section 21 for
the reason that it would be open to the Government and the
Government have stated in their order that they have already
decided to allot the land for another equally efficacious
public purpose. Therefore, we cannot sit over the decision
taken by the Government holding it illegal.
Considered from this perspective, there is no merit in
the appeal. It is accordingly dismissed. No costs.