Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
STATE OF GUJARAT
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
BHOGILAI, KESHAVLAL & ANR.
DATE OF JUDGMENT27/11/1979
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
BENCH:
SEN, A.P. (J)
SHINGAL, P.N.
CITATION:
1980 AIR 367 1980 SCR (2) 284
1980 SCC (1) 556
CITATOR INFO :
F 1988 SC1615 (7)
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894, Sections 4 & 6-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
The first respondent owned certain Land forming part of
a town planning scheme, situated within the city limits. At
the request of the second respondent, a Corporative Housing
Society, the State Government issued a Notification under
section 4 of the Act on August 3, 1960 stating that the land
was likely to be needed for a public purpose and it was
followed by a further notification of the State Government
under Section 6 of the Act dated August 21, 1961 that the
land was to be acquired at the expense of the Cooperative
Housing Society for the public purpose specified in column 4
of the Schedule to the notification. The entire expense of
the acquisition was to be borne by the second respondent.
The first respondent moved the High Court under Article
226 of the Constitution challenging the validity of the
notification under section 6 of the Act. During the pendency
of the Writ Petition, the appellant by a notification dated
May 27, 1963 cancelled the earlier notification under
section 6 and issued a fresh notification. The High Court
struck down the second notification dated September 10, 1964
issued under section 6 of the Act. In the appeal to this
Court, on the question of the validity of the 2nd
notification dated September 10, 1964.
^
HELD: (i) The High Court was in error in striking down
the second notification under section 6 of the Act issued on
September 10, 1964.
(ii) This Court in Valjibhai Muljibhai Soneji v. State
of Bombay [1964] 3 S.C.R. 686 has held that the Government
has no power to issue a notification for acquisition of land
for a public purpose, where the compensation is to be
entirely paid by a company. [287 C-D]
In the instant case the first notification issued by
the Government for acquisition of land for a public purpose
at the expense of the second respondent, the cooperative
society was therefore, invalid and the Govt. was justified
in issuing the second notification under section 6 after
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removing the lacuna by providing for acquisition of the land
for public purpose, at public expense. [287 D-E]
(iii) The acquisition of land for cooperative housing
society is a public purpose. The Govt. is the best judge to
determine whether the purpose in question is a public
purpose or not. It cannot be said that a Housing Scheme for
a limited number of persons cannot be construed to be a
public purpose. When a notification under section 6 of the
Act is invalid, the Govt. may treat it as ineffective and
issue a fresh notification under section 6 of the Act 2nd
nothing in section 48 of the Act precludes the Government
from doing so. [291 C-E]
285
Girdharilal Amratlal Shodan & Ors. v. State of Gujarat
JUDGMENT:
Madhya Pradesh & Ors. [1964] 6 S.C.R. 636, Pandit Jhandu Lal
& Ors. v. The State of Punjab & Ors. [1961] 2 S.C.R. 459
Ratilal Shankarbhai & Ors. v. State of Gujarat & Ors. A.I.R.
1970 S.C. 984, Ram Swarup v. The District Land Acquisition
Officer, Aligarh & Ors. A.I.R. 1972 SC 2390, referred to.
(iv) In the instant case, tho Respondent had not taken
any ground in the Writ Petition with regard to the delay in
the issuance of the second notification. The High Court was
therefore, not justified in observing that "the appellant
had not explained the delay by filing any affidavit." If
there was no ground taken, there could be no occasion for
filing of any such affidavit. [292 B-C]
(v) There is nothing in the Act which precludes the
Govt. from issuing a fresh notification under s. 6 of the
Act if the earlier notification is found to be ineffective.
The delay of one year and four months between the date of
cancellation and the issue of the second notification cannot
be regarded to be unreasonable. [292 E-F]
Gujarat State Transport Corpn. v. Valji Mulji Soneji
[1979] 3 S.C.R. 202, referred to D
&
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1479 of
1971.
From the Judgment and Order dated 25-4-1969 of the
Gujarat High Court in SCA No. 271/65.
G.A. Shah, N.S. Pande and M.N. Shroff for the
Appellant.
P.R. Mridul, Vimal Dave and Miss Kailash Mehta for
Respondent No. 1.
I. N. Shroff and H. S. Parihar for Respondent No. 2.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
SEN, J.-This appeal on certificate from a judgment of
the Gujarat High Court raises a question as to the validity
or otherwise or a fresh notification issued by the
Government of Gujarat under s. 6 of the d Acquisition Act,
1894, consequent upon an earlier notification under s. 6 of
the Act being discovered to be invalid.
The first respondent in this case owned certain land
bearing Final Plot No. 38 forming part of Town Planning
Scheme No. III (Ellis-bridge) situate within the city of
Ahmedabad. At the request of the second respondent Sri
Ayodhya Nagar Co-operative Housing Society Ltd., registered
under the Bombay Co-operative Societies Act, 1925, now
deemed to be registered under the Gujarat Co-operative
Societies Act, 1961, formed with the object of enabling its
members to construct houses, the State Government on August
3, 1960 issued a notification
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286
under s. 4 stating that the land was likely to be needed for
a public purpose. This was followed by a notification of the
State Government dated August 21, 1961 under s. 6 of the Act
stating that the land was to be acquired at the expense of
Sri Ayodhya Nagar Cooperative Housing Society Ltd. for the
public purpose specified in column 4 of the schedule annexed
thereto. The public purpose specified in column 4 of the
schedule was ’For construction of houses for Sri Ayodhya
Nagar Co-operative Housing Society Ltd., Ahmedabad. The
entire expense of the acquisition was to be borne by the
second respondent, i.e., the Co-operative Housing Society.
The first respondent moved the High Court under Art. 226 of
the Constitution challenging the validity of the
notification under s. 6 on the ground that the acquisition
of the land for a public purpose at the expense of the
second respondent was legally invalid. On December 4, 1961
the High Court issued an ad interim injunction restraining
the appellant from proceeding with the acquisition
proceedings. While this writ petition was pending, the State
Government by its notification dated May 27, 1963 cancelled
the notification under s. 6. on September 10, 1964 the State
Government issued a fresh notification under s. 6 stating
that the land was to be acquired at the public expense, for
the public purpose specified in column 4 of the schedule.
The public purpose specified in column 4 in the schedule was
’For housing scheme undertaken by Sri Ayodhya Nagar Co-
operative Housing Society Ltd.
The High Court following its earlier decision in
Dosabhai Ratansha Keravala v. State of Gujarat & Ors. struck
down the second notification under s. 6 dated September 10,
1964. It held inter. alia that the first notification under
s. 6 issued on August 21, 1961 being an acquisition for a
society at its cost, was valid and the Government could have
proceeded to complete the acquisition under it but, under a
false sense of apprehension as to its validity, the
Government cancelled it on May 27, 1963. There was no
justification for cancelling the first notification under s.
6 and even if the Government wanted to cancel it out of a
feeling of apprehension as to its validity, the Government
need not have taken one year and ten months to do so. (2)
After the issue of the first notification under s. 6 on
August 21, 1961, the notification dated August 3, 1960 under
s. 4 was exhausted and, therefore, could not be used to
support the second notification issued under s. 6 on
September 11, 1964. (3) The cancellation of the first
notification under s. 6 by the notification dated May 27,
1963 did not have the effect of reviving the notification
under s. 4 so as to make it available for supporting the
second notification under s. 6. The second notifi-
287
cation under s. 6 not being supported by any notification
under s. 4 Was consequently invalid. (4) A notification
under s. 6 in order to be valid must follow within a
reasonable time after the issue of a notification under s.
4. The notification under s. 4 was issued on August 3, 1960
and the second notification under s 6 on September 10, 1964
and there was thus an interval of about four years and one
month between the two notifications. This interval of time,
could not be regarded as reasonable. Even tested by the
yardstick of reasonable time provided by the legislature in
the second proviso introduced in s. 6 by the Land
Acquisition (Amendment and Validation) Act. 1967, namely
three years, the period of about four years and one month
between the two notifications under s. 4 and s. 6 would be
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clearly unreasonable. The second notification must,
therefore, be held to be invalid on this ground also.
We are clearly of the opinion that the High Court was
in error m striking down the second notification under s. 6
issued on September 10, 1964. In Valjibhai. Muljibhai
Soneji. v. State of Bombay the Court held that the
Government has no power to issue a notification for
acquisition of land for a public purpose, where the
compensation is to be entirely paid by a company. The first
notification issued by the Government under s. 6 for
acquisition of the land for a public purpose, at the expense
of the second respondent, the Co-operative Society, was,
therefore, invalid. The State Government was, there- fore,
justified in issuing the second notification under s. 6
after removing the lacuna i.e., by providing for acquisition
of the land for the said public purpose, at public expense.
In an endeavour to support the judgment, counsel for
the first respondent advanced a three-fold contention. It
was urged, firstly, that successive notifications cannot be
issued under s. 6 placing reliance on State of Madhya
Pradesh & Ors. v. Vishnu Prasad Sharma & Ors. It was pointed
out that the Land Acquisition (Amendment and Validation)
Act, 1967 had a limited scope and it validated only
successive notifications issued under s. 6 in respect of
different parcels of land but did not validate successive
notifications in respect of the same land. Further, it was
urged that the Act was not retrospective in operation and,
therefore, the validity of the second notification dated
September 10, 1964 had to be Adjudged with reference to the
pre-amendment law, i.e., according to the law as declared by
this Court in Vishnu Prasad Sharma’s case. Secondly, it was
urged, on the strength of the deci-
288
sion in Dosabhai Ratansha Karevala’s case (supra) that a
notification under s. 4 is exhausted when it is followed by
declaration under s. 6 It was urged that the first
notification under s. 6 dated August 21, 1961 was valid and
the High Court was, therefore, justified in holding that
with its cancellation, the notification under s. 4 lapsed.
Thirdly, it was urged that there was unreasonable delay in
issuing the second notification under s. 6 and, this, by
itself, was sufficient to invalidate it.
In Vishnu Prasad Sharma’s case the Court held that ss.
4, S-A and 6 are integrally connected and present a complete
scheme for acquisition and, therefore, it was not open to
the Government to make successive declarations under s. 6.
Wanchoo J. (as he then was), speaking for himself and
Mudholkar J., observed:
"It seems to us clear that once a declaration
under s. 6 is made, the notification under s. 4(1) must
be exhausted, for it has served its purpose. There is
nothing in ss. 4, 5-A and 6 to suggest that s. 4(1) is
a kind of reservoir from which the government may from
time to time draw out land . and make declarations with
respect to, it successively. If that was the intention
behind sections 4, S-A and 6 we would have found some
indication of it in the language used there in But as
we read these three sections together we can only find
that the scheme is that s. 4 specifies the locality,
then there may be survey and drawing of maps of the
land and the consideration whether the land is adapted
for the purpose for which it has to be acquired,
followed by objections and making up of its mind by the
government what particular land out of that locality it
needs. This is followed by a declaration under s. 6
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specifying the particular land needed and that in our
opinion completes the process and the notification
under s. 4(1) cannot be further used there after. At
the stage of s. 4 the land is not particularised but
only the locality is mentioned; at the stage of s. 6
the land in the locality is particularized and
thereafter it seems to us that the notification under
s. 4(1) having served its purpose exhausts itself."
Sarkar J., in a separate but concurring judgment, observed:
"My learned brother has said that ss. 4, 5A and 6
of the Act have to be read together and. so read, the
conclusion is clear that the Act contemplates only a
single declaration under s. 6 in respect of a
notification under s. 4."
289
After rejecting the contention that the Government may have
difficulty A in making the plan of its projects complete at
a time, particularly where the project is large, and
therefore, it is necessary that it should have power to make
successive declarations under s. 6, he observed:
"I cannot imagine a Government, which has vast
resources, not being able to make a complete plan of
its project at a time. Indeed, I think when a plan is
made, it is a complete plan. I should suppose that
before the Government starts acquisition proceedings by
the issue of a notification under s. 4, it has made its
plan for otherwise it cannot state in the notification,
as it has to do, that the land is likely to be needed.
Even if it had not then completed its plan, it would
have enough time before the making of a declaration
under s. 6 to do so. I think, therefore, that the
difficulty Of the Government, even if there is one,
does not lead to the conclusion that the Act
contemplates the making of a number of declarations
under s. 6."
In the present case, the question, however, does not
arise as the first notification under s. 6 dated August 21,
1961 being invalid, the Government was not precluded from
making a second notification. Due to the invalidity of the
notification under s. 6, the notification under s. 4 still
held the field and on its strength another notification
under s. 6 could be issued. It is, therefore, not necessary
to deal with the effect of the validating Act.
The matter is squarely covered by the decision of the
Court in Girdharilal Amratlal Shodan & Ors. v. State of
Gujarat & Ors. The Court rejected the contention that by
cancelling the first notification under s. 6, as here, the
Government must be taken to have withdrawn from the
acquisition and consequently could not issue a second
notification under s. 6. there also the first notification
under s. 6 was invalid and of no effect, as the Government
had no power to issue a notification for acquisition for a
public purpose where the compensation was to be paid
entirely by a company? as held by this Court in Sham Behari
& Ors. v. State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors.
It will be noticed that in Girdharilal Amratlal
Shodan’s case the facts were identical. On August 3, 1960
the Government of Gujarat issued a notification under s. 4
in respect of certain land falling in Final Plot No. 460 of
the Town Planning Scheme No. III of Elisbridge in the city
of Ahmedabad, stating that the land was likely to be needed
for a public purpose, viz., for construction of houses for
Sri Krishna-
290
kunja Government Servants’ Co-operative Housing Society Ltd.
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On July 18, 1961 the State Government issued a notification
under s. 6 stating that the land was to be acquired for the
aforesaid public purpose at the expense of Sri Krishnakunj
Government Servants’ Co-operative Housing Society Ltd. On
September 22, 1961, the landholder filed a writ petition in
the High Court for an order quashing the notification under
s. 6. During the pendency of the proceedings, the Government
issued a notification dated April 28, 1964 cancelling the
aforesaid notification dated July 18, 1961. On August 14,
1964 the Government issued a fresh notification under s. 6
stating that the land notification under s. 6 staling that
the land was needed to be acquired at the public expense for
a public purpose viz, for the housing scheme undertaken by
Sri Krishnakunj Government Servants’ Co-operative Housing
Society Ltd.
The contention was that by cancelling the first
notification under s. 6, the Government must be deemed to
have withdrawn from the acquisition and cancelled the
notification under s. 4, and therefore, could not issue the
second notification under s. 6, without issuing a fresh
notification under s. 4. It was also urged that the power of
the State Government to issue a notification under s. 6 was
exhausted, and the Government could not issue a fresh
notification under s. 6. The Court rejected both the
contentions observing:
"Having regard to the proviso to’ s. 6, of the
Act, a declaration for acquisition of the land for a
public purpose could only be made if the compensation
to be awarded for it was to be paid wholly or partly
out of public revenues or some fund controlled or
managed by a local authority. The Government had no
power to issue a notification for acquisition for a
public purpose where the compensation was to be paid .
entirely by a company. The notification dated JULY 18,
1961 was, therefore, invalid and of no effect, see
Shyam Behari v. State of Madhya Pradesh. The appellants
filed the writ petition challenging the aforesaid
notification on this ground. The challenge was
justified and the notification was liable to be quashed
by the Court."
"The State Government realised that the
notification was invalid, and without waiting for an
order of Court. cancelled the notification on April 28,
1964. The cancellation was in recognition of the
invalidity of the notification. The Government had no
intention of withdrawing from the acquisition. Soon
after the cancellation, the Government issued a fresh
notification under s. 6 whereas in this case the
notifi-
291
cation under s. 6 is incompetent and invalid, the
Government may treat it as ineffective and issue a
fresh notification under s. 6. This is what, in
substance, the Government did in this case. The
cancellation on April 28, 1964 was no more than a
recognition of the invalidity of the earlier
notification."
The first notification issued under s. 6 on August 21, 1961
was obviously invalid and of no effect. By the issue of this
notification, the Government had not effectively exercised
its powers under s. 6. In the circumstances, the Government
could well issue a fresh notification under s. 6 dated
September 10, 1964.
In State of Gujarat v. Musamiyan Imam Haider Bux Razvi
& Anr. etc. this Court while reversing the decision of the
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Gujarat High Court in Dosabhai Ratansha Kerravala (supra) on
which the High Court based its decision, has laid down two
important principles: (1) In view of the decisions of this
Court in Pandit Jhandu Lal & Ors. v. The State of Punjab &
Ors., Ratilal Shankarbhai & Ors. v. State of Gujarat & Ors.
and Ram Swarup v. The District Land Acquisition Officer,
Aligarh & Ors. the acquisition of land for a co-operative
housing society is a public purpose. The Government is the
best Judge to determine whether the purpose in question is a
public purpose or not; and, it cannot be said that a housing
scheme for a limited number of persons cannot be construed
to be a public purpose inasmuch as the need of a section of
the public may be a public purpose. (2) When a notification
under s. 6 is invalid, the government may treat it as
ineffective and issue a fresh notification under s. 6, and
nothing in s. 48 of the Act precludes the government from
doing so, as held by this Court in Girdharilal Amratlal
Shodan.
The High Court had not the benefit of these decisions
when it held that acquisition of land for a co-operative
housing society was not a public purpose and, therefore, the
first notification dated August 21, 1961 issued under s. 6
of the Act was valid. The substratum on which the decision
of the High Court rests has, therefore, disappeared. This
Court in Musamiyan’s case distinguished the decision in
State of Madhya Pradesh & Ors. v. Vishnu Prasad Sharma &
Ors. (supra) by quoting the passage referred to above. The
decision in Vishnu Prasad Sharma’s case is not an authority
for the proposition that where a notification under s. 6 is
found to be invalid it cannot be followed by a fresh
notification under s. 6. In fact, the decision of the High
Court
292
runs counter to what it had observed in Dosabhai Ratansha
Keravala’s case, after referring to the decisions of this
Court in Vishnu Prasad Sharma’s case and Girdharilal
Amratlal Shodan’s case:
"If the first s. 6 notification is invalid, that
is, non est, s. 4 notification cannot be regarded as
exhausted, for its purpose is yet unfulfilled; its
purpose could be fulfilled only by issue of a valid
notification under s. 6."
There remains the question whether the High Court was
right in quashing the second notification under s. 6 on the
ground of unreasonable delay in its issuance. The respondent
had not taken any such ground in the writ petition filed by
him. The High Court was, therefore, not justified in
observing that ’the appellant had not explained the delay by
filing any affidavit’. We fail to appreciate that if there
was no ground taken, there could be no occasion for filing
of any such affidavit. Further, the delay, if any, was of
the respondent’s own making. He had challenged the first
notification under s. 6, presumably on the ground that the
acquisition being for a public purpose, could not be made at
the expense of the second respondent. The challenge was
justified and the State Government, therefore, withdrew the
first notification under s. 6 without waiting for an order
of the High Court. The cancellation was in recognition of
the invalidity of the notification. The Government had no
intention of withdrawing from the acquisition. Thereafter,
the Government issued a fresh notification under s. 6 making
a declaration for acquisition of the land for a public
purpose at public expense. There is nothing in the Act which
precludes the Government from issuing a fresh notification
under s. 6, if the earlier notification is found to be
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ineffective. The delay of one year and four months between
the date of cancellation and the issue of the second
notification cannot be regarded to be unreasonable, in the
facts and circumstances of the case. In somewhat similar
circumstances, this Court recently in Gujarat State
Transport Corpn. v. Valji Mulji Soneji held the delay of
about fifteen years in making the second notification under
s. 6 not to be unreasonable. We cannot, therefore, uphold
the High Court’s decision that the second notification must
be struck down on the ground of delay.
In the result, the appeal succeeds and is allowed with
costs, the judgment of the High Court is set aside, and the
writ petition filed by the first respondent is dismissed.
Respondent No. 1 shall bear the costs.
N.K.A. Appeal allowed.
293