Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
HARI SINGH & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF U.P. AND ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT06/04/1984
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
BENCH:
VENKATARAMIAH, E.S. (J)
SEN, A.P. (J)
CITATION:
1984 AIR 1020 1984 SCR (3) 417
1984 SCC (2) 624 1984 SCALE (1)625
CITATOR INFO :
F 1984 SC1380 (1)
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894-s. 4 and s.6-Acquisition
proceedings (Notification u/s.4 incorporating order u/s. 17
(4) exempting application of s. 5A and notification u/s. 6
containing order u/s. 17 (1) authorising Collector to take
possession issued and published in official Gazette)-
Validity of acquisition proceedings challenged by way of
writ petition after a period of over two years-Whether
petition could be dismissed on ground of delay-Whether court
could interfere when facts alleged in petition are disputed.
HEADNOTE:
On January 8, 1980 the respondent State issued a
notification under Sec. 4 (1) of the Land Acquisition Act of
1894 for acquisition of 60 adjoining plots of land of two
small villages for construction of a market yard. The
notification also contained an order of the Government made
under Sec. 17(4) of the Act directing that Sec. 5A would not
apply to the said proceedings. The notification was
published in the Official Gazette dated January 9, 1980.
That notification was followed by another notification dated
January 9, 1980 issued under Sec. 6 of the Act. This
notification contained an order made under Sec. 17 (1) of
the Act authorising the Collector to take possession of the
plots. The notification was published in the official
Gazette dated January 10, 1980. The possession of the plots
was taken in course of the acquisition proceedings. In or
about June 1982 notices were issued by the Collector to the
interested persons for determining the compensation payable
to them. By filing a writ petition in the High Court the
appellants questioned the validity of the acquisition
proceedings in regard to certain plots on the grounds that:
(1) they had no knowledge of the acquisition proceedings and
were prejudiced by the order made under sec. 17 (4); (2)
there was no urgency sufficient in law to sustain the order
made under Sec. 17 (4); and (3) Sec. 17 (4) would not be
applicable because on a part of a plot of land there was a
house. The High Court dismissed the writ petition. Hence
this appeal.
Dismissing the appeal,
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HELD: In a small place where these plots are situate,
the acquisition of these lands would be the talk of the town
in a shortwhile and it is difficult to believe that the
appellants who are residents of that place would not have
known till July 1982 that the impugned notification had
418
been published in 1980. Any interference in this case filed
after two and a half years with the acquisition proceedings
is likely to cause serious public prejudice. This appeal
should, therefore, fail on the ground of delay alone. [420G-
H]
Appellant No. 1 claims to be the owner of plot No. 249.
On behalf of the respondents it is urged that appellant No.
1 is recorded only as a co-tenure holder alongwith five
others and they have not impeached the notifications. With
regard to the allegations about the existence of a house on
this plot, it is seen that the said fact is denied. The
respondents rely upon some statements recorded by the
revenue authorities suggesting that there was no house on
this plot on the date of the notification. This is a
disputed question of fact. Appellant No. 2 who claims to be
the owner of plot No. 261 is stated to have purchased it on
November 17, 1980 after the impugned notifications were
published. The title of appellant No. 3 to plot No. 133 is
denied by R.K. Kannaujia, Secretary, Krishi Utpadan Mandi
Samiti, Kheragarh. In this State of affairs where there are
disputed questions of facts it cannot be said that the
appellants have made out any case for interference under
Article 226 of the Constitution. [421B-D]
There is no ground to held that the order made under
section 17 (4) of the Act exempting the operation of section
5-A of the Act is bad in law even though there appears to be
some administrative delay in commencing the construction of
the Market Yard. [421F-G]
State of Punjab v. Gurdial Singh & Ors., [1980] 1
S.C.R. 1071, referred to.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 5313 of
1983.
Appeal by Special leave from the Judgment and Order
dated the 17th January, 1983 in CMWP. No. 8397 of 1982.
Shanti Bhushan and S. Markandeya for the Appellant.
Gopal Subramaniam and Mrs. S. Dikshit for the
Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
VENKATARAMIAH, J. About 45 plots of land of Kheragarh
village and about 15 adjoining plots of land of Nagala
Udaiya village situated in the district of Agra were
notified under section 4 (1) of the Land Acquisition Act,
1894 (Act No. 1 of 1894) (hereinafter referred to as ’the
Act’) for acquisition for a public purpose, namely, for the
construction of the Market Yard of the Krishi Utpadan Mandi
Samiti, Kheragarh under a notification dated January 8, 1980
issued by the Government of the State of Uttar Pradesh. As
the plots of land in question which
419
were agricultural lands were urgently required for the
aforesaid purpose and the Government was of the view that it
was necessary to direct that section 5-A of the Act should
not apply to the said acquisition proceedings, it
simultaneously made an order under section 17 (4) of the Act
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directing that section 5-A would not apply to the said
proceedings and incorporated the said order also in the
notification issued. under section 4 (1) of the Act. The
notification was published in the Official Gazette dated
January 9, 1980. This was followed by a notification dated
January 9, 1980 under section 6 of the Act published in the
Official Gazette dated January 10, 1980. That notification
contained an order made under section 17 (1) of the Act
authorising the Collector to take possession of the plots on
the expiration of fifteen days from the publication of the
notice under section 9 (1) of the Act though no award under
section 11 of the Act had been made. The above said plots of
land which were in all about 60 in number belonged to a
number of persons. The total extent of land proposed to be
acquired was about 41.46 acres. The possession of all the
plots of land was also taken in the course of the said
acquisition proceedings. In or about June 1982, notices were
issued by the Collector to various persons having interest
in the said plots under section 9 (3) of the Act for the
purpose of determining the compensation payable to them.
After the issue of the said notices, three persons Hari
Singh (appellant No. 1), Pooran Chand (appellant No. 2) and
Munna Lal (appellant No. 3) filed a writ petition in Civil
Misc. Writ Petition No. 8397 of 1982 on the file of the High
Court of Allahabad questioning the validity of the
acquisition proceedings as regards 6 plots of land in
Kheragarh village out of the total of about 60 plots of land
which had been acquired by the State Government in the above
said proceedings. Appellant No. 1 claimed to be the owner of
plots Nos 249, 250 and 252. Appellant No 2 claimed to be the
owner of plot No. 261 and appellant No 3 claimed to be the
owner of plots Nos. 133 and 134. Appellant No. 1 pleaded
that there was a house situated on plot No. 249 and that he
had also installed a flour mill on it. They all pleaded that
they had no knowledge of the acquisition proceedings and
were prejudiced by the order made under section 17 (4) of
the Act exempting the operation of section 5-A of the Act in
the case of these proceedings. They further pleaded that
there was no urgency sufficient in law to sustain the order
made under section 17 (4) of the Act as nothing had been
done on the lands for nearly two years. Appellant No. 1 also
pleaded that
420
section 17 (4) of the Act would not be applicable because on
a part of his land there was a house. They also applied for
an interim order restraining the Collector from
dispossessing them from the plots in question. On September
9, 1982 the High Court made an interim order restraining the
respondents from dispossessing the appellants from the plots
until further orders, unless they had already been
dispossessed. But on January 17, 1983, the High Court
rejected the writ petition at the stage of admission after
hearing the advocates for both the parties. This appeal by
special leave is filed by the appellants under Article 136
of the Constitution on against the order of the High Court.
The High Court has not given any reasons for its order
dismissing the writ petition. The order reads: ’Rejected’.
We have been taken through the writ petition, counter
affidavits and other papers filed in the High Court and in
this Court.
At the out set we are of the view that the writ
petition filed in July, 1982 questioning the notification
issued in January, 1980 after a delay of nearly two and a
half years is liable to be dismissed on the ground of laches
only. It is no doubt true that the appellant have pleaded
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that they did not know anything about the notifications
which had been published in the Gazette till they came to
know of the notices issued under section 9 (3) of the Act
but they have not pleaded that there was no publication in
the locality of the public notice of the substance of the
notification as required by section 4 (1) of the Act. It
should be presumed that official acts would have been
performed duly as required by law. It is significant that a
large number of persons who own the remaining plots have not
challenged the acquisition proceedings. The only other
petition in which these proceedings. are challenged is Civil
Misc. Writ Petition No. 11476 of 1982 on the file of the
High Court filed subsequently by Amar Singh and four others.
Moreover in a small place like Kheragarh where these plots
are situate, the acquisition of these lands would be the
talk of the town in a shortwhile and it is difficult to
believe that the appellant who are residents of that place
would not have known till July, 1982 that the impugned
notification had been published in 1980. Any interference in
this case filed after two and a half years with the
acquisition proceedings is likely to cause serious public
prejudice. This appeal should, therefore, fail on the ground
of delay alone.
421
Now even on merits there appears to be no substance in
the case of the appellants.
At the hearing of this appeal, the appellants have
confined their case to plots Nos. 249, 261 and 133 and have
given up their case in regard to plots Nos. 250, 252 and
134.
Appellant No. 1 claims to be the owner of plot No. 249.
On behalf of the respondents it is urged that appellant No.
1 is recorded only as a co-tenure holder alongwith five
others and they have not impeached the notifications. With
regard to the allegation about the existence of a house on
this plot, it is seen that the said fact is denied. The
respondents rely upon some statements recorded by the
revenue authorities suggesting that there was no house on
this plot on the date of the notification. This is a
disputed question of fact. Appellant No. 2 who claims to be
the owner of plot No. 261 is stated to have purchased it on
November 17, 1980 after the impugned notifications were
published. The title of appellant No. 3 to plot No. 133 is
denied by R. K Kannaujia, Secretary, Krishi Utpadan Mandi
Samiti, Kheragarh. In this state of affairs where there are
disputed questions of fact it cannot be said that the
appellants have made out any case for interference under
Article 226 of the Constitution.
On behalf of the appellants reliance is, however,
placed on a decision of this Court in State of Punjab v.
Gurdial Singh & Ors.(I) In that decision the main point made
out was that the acquisition proceedings had been engineered
mala fide by a State Minister. We do not have any such
allegation in the present case. In the circumstances of this
case we do not find that there is any ground to hold that
the order made-under section 17 (4) of the Act exempting the
operation of section 5-A of the Act is bad in law even
though there appears to be some administrative delay in
commencing the construction of the Market Yard. Some
photographs of the land produced before us, however, show
that the work of construction has already been commenced.
We do not, therefore, find that there is any ground to
interfere with the order of the High Court dismissing the
writ petition. The appeal fails and it is dismissed with
costs.
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H.S.K. Appeal dismissed.
422