Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 3515 of 1997
PETITIONER:
The State of Tripura & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Roopchand Das & Ors., Sudhir Debnath & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/12/2002
BENCH:
Doraiswamy Raju & Shivaraj V. Patil.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RAJU, J.
These two appeals involve common and identical questions of
law and are dealt with together. In C.A.No. 3515 of 1997, the
challenge is to the judgment dated 21.1.97 of the Gauhati High Court,
Agartala Bench, made in Civil Rule No.12 of 1997, whereunder the
High Court, applying the earlier decision rendered in Civil Rule 10 of
1997, directed, while setting aside the order dated 18.9.96 of the
Land Acquisition Collector, the said Collector to consider the petitions
filed by the respondent-landowners under Section 28-A of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (hereinafter referred to as "The Act’’) on merits
and in accordance with law, holding them to be within the period of
limitation stipulated therefor. The appeal in C.A. No.3516/1997 is
against the above noticed earlier decision in Civil Rule 10 of 1997
dated 21.1.97.
So far as C.A. No.3515 of 1997 is concerned, relying upon the
Reference Court’s Award dated 19.9.94 in case Nos. Misc. L.A.29/92
and 30/92, the respondents sought by a petition filed on 16.12.94 for
re-determination of the compensation for their lands invoking Section
28-A of the Act. The Land Acquisition Collector rejected the claim by
his order dated 18.9.96 on the ground that the same was not filed
within the stipulated period of three months inasmuch as, according
to the Collector, the period of limitation had to be calculated from
25.5.94, an earlier Award of the Reference Court in respect of the
lands covered by the same Notification under Section 4 (1) of the Act
and not with reference to the latest or subsequent Awards of the
Reference Court. So far as the appeal in C.A. 3516 of 1997 is
concerned, the Land Acquisition Collector, was moved by the land-
owners for re-determination of compensation in respect of their lands
invoking Section 28-A of the Act, with reference to an award of the
Reference Court made on 5.5.94 in respect of cases Misc.L.A. 34-
36/1992 and on 8.6.94 in Misc. Cases Nos.40, 41, 45 & 46/1992.
The petition was filed on 1.8.94. But the Land Acquisition Collector
by his order dated 18.9.96, rejected the same as time-barred on the
view that in respect of the lands covered by the very same
Notification under Section 4(1) of the Act, there was an earlier Award
passed by the Reference Court on 21.12.93 itself in Misc. Case
Nos.37, 38, 39, 42, 43 and 44/1992 and that the period of limitation
has to be calculated from the earliest of the Awards, which in this
case, as per Collector, was on 21.12.93.
The fact that if the latest Awards are taken into account, the
claim made under Section 28-A of the Act is well within time, is not in
controversy and the Land Acquisition Collector himself noticed the
said aspect. But in view of his opinion that of the Awards by the
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Reference Court when more than one passed on different dates are
available in respect of lands covered by the same Notification, for
purposes of computing the three months period stipulated in Section
28-A of the Act, the date of the earliest one would be relevant and not
the subsequent or latest, the claims came to be rejected. It was this
reasoning of the Land Acquisition Collector that did not meet with the
approval of the High Court, in our view rightly too, in the light of the
decision of this Court in Union of India and Anr. vs. Pradeep
Kumari and Ors. [(1995) 2 SCC 736].
Heard, the learned counsel appearing on either side, who
reiterated the stand taken for the respective parties before the High
Court. This Court in the decision in Pradeep Kumari and Ors.
(supra) categorically held that "the right to make the application under
Section 28-A of the Act arises from the award of the Court on the
basis of which the person making the application is seeking re-
determination of the compensation. There is nothing in Sub-section
(1) of Section 28-A to indicate that this right is confined in respect of
the earliest award that is made by the court after the coming into
force of Section 28-A." Any construction to the contra introducing
such words, not found engrafted in the very provision would amount
to curtailing the amplitude of the provision resulting virtually in
restricting a benefit conferred, particularly of a beneficent provision
normally not permissible by judicial interpretation. It was also held
therein that there is nothing in the wordings of Section 28-A to
indicate that the legislature intended to confer any such limited
benefit thereunder which would have the inevitable consequence of
denying the benefit of higher amount on the basis of the subsequent
award. Such an interpretation as would restrict the benefit of Section
28-A to the first of the Award in the series and in point of time, was
also considered to result more in the perpetuation of the inequality in
the payment of compensation, which the legislature specifically
intended to remove by enacting the provision and that, therefore, the
object underlying Section 28-A would be better served and achieved
by giving the word "an award" in Section 28-A its natural meaning, as
meaning any one of the award(s) made by the court under Part-III,
after the coming into force of Section 28-A. That apart, in our view,
even the later part of Section 28-A which stipulates, "require that the
amount of compensation payable to them may be re-determined on
the basis of the amount of compensation awarded by the Court",
leaves the choice to the person making such an application for re-
determination, without confining or restricting the area of choice of
such person to any one or the other, though it could be availed of
only once and not as many number of times as there are so many
awards.
The principles laid down by a bench of three learned Judges of
this Court in Pradeep Kumari and Ors. (supra) was also followed in
yet another decision of a bench of three learned Judges in Jose
Antonio Cruz Dos R. Rodriguese and Anr. vs. Land Acquisition
Collector and Anr. [(1996) 6 SCC 746], observing as hereunder:
"4. We may now refer to the case-law. A two-
Judge Bench of this Court in Babua Ram vs
State of U.P. dealt with this precise question
and held that the period of limitation begins to
run from the date of the first award made on a
reference under Section 18 of the Act, and
successive awards cannot save the period of
limitation; vide paragraphs 19 and 20 of the
reporter. This view was reiterated by the
same Bench in Union of India vs Karnail
Singh wherein this Court held that the
limitation of three months for an application for
redetermination of compensation must be
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computed from the date of the earliest award
made by a civil court, and not the judgment
rendered by an appellate court. This was
followed by the decision of a three-Judge
Bench in Union of India vs Pradeep Kumari
wherein it was held that the benefit under
Section 28-A can be had within three months
from the date of the award of the Reference
Court on the basis whereof redetermination is
sought. The earlier two decisions in the case
of Babua Ram1 and Karnail Singh2 were
overruled on the limited question that they
sought to confine the right to seek
redetermination to the earliest award made by
the Court under Section 18 of the Act after the
introduction of Section 28-A into the Act.
There is, however, no doubt that the period of
limitation has to be computed from the date of
the Court’s award under Section 18 on the
basis whereof redetermination is sought.
Admittedly, in both the cases at hand, the
applications for redetermination of
compensation under Section 28-A were made
long after the expiry of three months from the
date of the award of the Court which
constituted the basis for seeking
redetermination. We are, therefore, of the
opinion that the High Court was right in taking
the view that both the applications were time-
barred." (Emphasis supplied)
The correctness of Pradeep Kumari’s case (supra) on this
aspect when sought to be raised before the Constitution Bench in the
batch of cases, including the appeals before us in Union of India &
Another vs. Hansoli Devi & Others reported in [(2002) 7 SCC 273],
it was observed, "But since that question has neither been referred to
us under the order of reference made in the present case nor does it
arise in the case in hand, we refrain from answering the same." A
Review Petition filed by the appellants herein before the Constitution
Bench in these appeals, viz., R.P.(C) 1437-38 of 2002, has also been
dismissed. In the light of the above, we see no merit in the challenge
made to the orders of the High Court. The appeals, consequently, fail
and shall stand dismissed. No costs.