Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2121 of 2001
PETITIONER:
Hans Raj Agarwal & Anr.
RESPONDENT:
Chief Commnr. of Income Tax & Ors.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 20/12/2002
BENCH:
Ruma Pal & B.N.Srikrishna.
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
RUMA PAL, J.
The appellants’ challenge under Article 226 to the order
passed by the Appropriate Authorities under Section 239 UD
(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (referred to hereafter as ’the
Act’) was turned down by the Andhra Pradesh High Court.
They have therefore assailed the decision of the High Court
before us.
The property which was the subject matter of the order
under Section 269 UD (1) was part of premises situated at
Road No. 3, Banjara Hills, Hyderabad. The entire premises
covered an area of about 7100 sq. mts and was jointly owned
by one Leila D. Lean and her two sisters. On 13th March
1988, the three owners agreed to sell the entire premises to the
appellants. Before the conveyance could be executed, Leila
Lean died. The executor named in her will, through a general
Power of Attorney Holder, one Sri Armugham, entered into a
fresh agreement with the appellants on 27th April 1989 agreeing
to sell Leila Lean’s 1/3 undivided share in the property. The
two other sisters appointed the appellants as their power of
attorney holders. In their capacity as the power of attorney
holders the appellants sold demarcated portions of the property
to nominees of the appellants by eight separate agreements
executed and registered between 28th April 1989 and 31st May
1989.
On 1st June 1989, Chapter XX-C of the Act which
statutorily provides for the compulsory purchase by the Central
Government of immovable properties in certain cases of
transfer came into force in the State of Andhra Pradesh. The
Chapter was introduced in an effort to curb tax evasion by
under valuation of the property sold. The substance of the
provisions of Chapter XX-C which are relevant for the
determination of the issues raised in this appeal are briefly
considered.
Section 269 UC places conditions on the transfer of
immovable property valued at over Rs.5 lakhs. The conditions
include (a) that an agreement for transfer must be entered into
between the intended transferor and the intended transferee at
least four months prior to the intended date of transfer, (b) the
reduction in writing of the agreement in the form of a statement
by each of the parties or by any of them acting for the other, (c)
the statement being furnished to the Appropriate Authority
within a prescribed period and in the prescribed form.
After the receipt of the statement under Section 269 UC
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then notwithstanding anything contained in any other law or
instrument or agreement, the Central Government or the
Appropriate Authority can make an order under Section 269 UD
for the purchase by the Central Government of such immovable
property at an amount equal to the amount of apparent
consideration. Under the proviso to Section 269 UD(1), no
order of purchase, " shall be made in respect of any immovable
property after the expiration of a period of two months from the
end of the month in which the statement referred to in section
269-UC in respect of such property is received by the
Appropriate Authority’.’
Where an order for the purchase of any immovable
property is made under sub-section (1) of section 269-UD the
property vests in the Central Government and under Section
269-UF, the Central Government "shall pay, by way of
consideration for such purchase, an amount equal to the
amount of the apparent consideration’. The amount of
consideration payable under Section 269-UF is required to be
tendered to the person or persons entitled thereto within a
period of one month. If there is any dispute as to who is
entitled to the amount of consideration or if the person entitled
to receive the amount of consideration does not consent to
receive it, the Central Government is required to deposit the
amount of consideration with the Appropriate Authority within
the same period. (Section 269-UG) If the Central Government
fails to either tender or deposit the amount then under Section
269-UH the order under Section 269-UD would stand
abrogated and the immovable property shall stand re-vested in
the transferor after the expiry of the aforesaid period. If the
’Appropriate Authority’ decides not to make an order under sub-
section (1) of Section 269-UD or if the order stands abrogated
under Section 269-UH, "the Appropriate Authority shall issue a
certificate of no objection referred to in sub-section (1) or, as
the case may be, sub-section (2) and deliver copies thereof to
the transferor and the transferee". [Section 269UL(3)]
On 15th June 1989 the appellants and Sri Armugham,
representing the estate of Leila Lean, filed a joint statement
under Section 269-UC in Form 37-I which is the prescribed
form under the Act in respect of Leila Lean’s share in the
premises. The consideration for the sale was stated to be
Rs.15,33,333/33. The date of agreement of transfer was given
as 13th March 1988.
The Appropriate Authority did not accept the statement.
By its order dated 23rd August 1989 it refused to act on its basis
stating that the statement was premature and invalid because
the property belonged to a non-resident and the approval of the
Reserve Bank of India was required for alienating the same.
According to the Appropriate Authority, no such approval
having been taken the transferor was not empowered to
dispose of the property. It was said in the order:
"Therefore we are unable to issue either
a purchase order u/s 269 UD(1) or issue
a No Objection Certificate U/s 269 UL(1).
The statement furnished in Form 37-I is
filed. The transferor/transferees are
however free to come up before the
Appropriate Authority after the above
defect is cured, if they are so advised."
This order dated 23rd August 1989 (hereafter referred to
as the ’filing order’) was accepted both by the transferor and
transferees. On 8th September 1989, the appellants and the
said Armugham representing the estate of Leila Lean submitted
a second statement in Form 37-I with the Appropriate Authority
after getting the permission of the Reserve Bank of India. This
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statement was accepted by the Appropriate Authority and on
28th November 1989, an order was passed by the Appropriate
Authority under Section 269-UD(1) for the purchase of property.
( hereinafter referred to as the ’first purchase order’) Within a
month i.e. on 22nd December 1989, the Central Government
deposited an amount equivalent to the apparent consideration
with the Appropriate Authority. The purchase was, therefore
complete and the said Arumugham handed over possession of
the property to the Central Government.
On 18th December 1989 an affidavit was filed by the said
Armugham representing the estate of Leila Lean before the
Appropriate Authority giving the exact description of the
demarcated portion of the share of Leila Lean in the property.
On 28th December 1989 the Appropriate Authority sought to
amend the first purchase order in purported exercise of power
for rectification of mistakes granted under Section 269-UJ, by
including the description of Leila Lean’s property.
A writ petition (referred to as the first writ petition ) was
thereafter filed by the appellants before the High Court at
Andhra Pradesh (W.P. No.1731/89) impugning the
constitutional validity of Chapter XX-C and seeking the setting
aside of the order passed under Section 269-UD(1) basically on
the ground that it was passed in violation of natural justice and
was otherwise unconstitutional.
While the appellants’ first writ petition was pending, this
Court in C.B. Gautam V. Union of India and Others 1993 (1)
SCC 78 held that even though Section 269-UD did not provide
for an opportunity of hearing being afforded to the intending
purchaser and the seller of the property, a reasonable
opportunity of showing cause against an order for compulsory
purchase was to be given under Section 269 UD(1) to the
interested parties. Reasons were also to be recorded by the
Appropriate Authority to support its order. Otherwise the order
issued under Section 269 UD(1) was bad in law. However,
taking into consideration the laudable object with which
Chapter XX-C had been introduced in the Act, this Court inter
alia directed that in all cases where the orders under Section
269 UD were invalid consequent upon this Court’s decision,
and were the subject matter of challenge in writ proceedings,
the statement in Form 37-I submitted would be treated as if it
were submitted on the date of the disposal of those
proceedings and the Appropriate Authority could if it so thought
fit issue a show cause notice within a period of two months
calculating the commencement of the period under the proviso
to Section 269-D(1) from that date. It was also made clear that
as far as completed transactions were concerned i.e. where
after the order of compulsory purchase under Section 269-
UD(1), possession had been taken and compensation paid and
accepted by the owner without protest, nothing said in the
judgment would invalidate such purchases.
The appellants’ first writ petition was disposed of by the
High Court on 16th February 1994. In view of this Court’s
decision in C.B. Gautam’s case the first purchase order under
section 269 UD(1) dated 31st August 1989 was quashed. The
Appropriate Authority was directed to give an opportunity to the
appellants of being heard before passing any order "in the light
of the observations made by the Supreme Court in Gautam’s
case and in accordance with law". It was said:
"That having regard to the directions
given by the Supreme Court in the case
referred above Forms 37-I filed by the
petitioners in these cases would be
deemed to have been filed as on today
and this is without prejudice to the
contentions that filing of the Form for the
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second or the third time as the case
may be, was only pursuant to the
directions of the Appropriate Authority
and that no valid order of preemptive
purchase under chapter XX-C can be
made by the Appropriate Authority
beyond the statutory period from the
date of filing of the first Form 37-I in
each case.
That the first respondent shall consider
these and other contentions that might
be raised by the petitioners in reply to
the show cause notice and pass
reasoned orders in accordance with law
in the light of the observations of the
Supreme Court in the above case".
Within a period of two months from the date of the order
of the High Court, namely on 20th May 1994, the Appropriate
Authority passed a fresh order (referred to as the second
purchase order) under Section 269-UD(1) after issuing notice to
the parties and considering their replies. Elaborate reasons
were given by the Appropriate Authority for directing the
compulsory purchase of Leila Lean’s property by the Central
Government.
The appellants’ challenged the second purchase order
under Section 269-UD by way of an application under Article
226. The petition was rejected by the High Court on 27th April
2000. The appellants’ filed a special leave petition challenging
the High Court’s decision. An interim order was passed by this
Court on 19th June 2000 allowing the auction sale of Leila
Lean’s property to be held subject to the result of the special
leave petition. On 22nd June 2000, the Central Government
advertised the property for sale. The sale was duly held and
M/s Vansh Builders of Hyderabad was declared the highest
bidder of Leila Lean’s property at a sum of Rs. Four crores and
five lakhs. M/s Vansh Builders made an application for
intervention before this Court which was allowed on 28th
September 2000.
The appellants’ have challenged the first order of
purchase on the ground that although the issue of limitation had
been left open by the earlier order of this Court disposing of the
first writ petition, the Appropriate Authority had failed to
consider the issue. According to the appellants, it was settled
by this Court in Appropriate Authority vs. Tanvi Trading &
Credit (P) Ltd: (1991) 191 ITR 307 that the Appropriate
Authority was bound to either pass an order for purchase under
Section 269-UD or issue a No Objection Certificate under
Section 269-UL. It could not question the title of the vendor.
Since it was not in dispute that the Appropriate Authority had
done neither within the prescribed period, it is contended by the
appellants that the Appropriate Authority could not extend the
period of limitation for issuing a compulsory purchase order on
such basis. It is contended that merely because a second
statement in Form 37-I has been filed by the parties beyond
that period, it would not operate as a waiver either in law or in
the facts. It was emphasized that the first statement in Form
37-I was a valid statement and had been filed on 15th June
1989. The period for exercising the power under Section 269
UD(1) had expired on 31st August 1989. Since no decision was
taken to purchase the property then, the Appropriate Authority
was bound to issue a ’No objection’ certificate under S.269
UL(3). The first purchase order had been made on 28th
November 1989 beyond the prescribed time and was,
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therefore, invalid.
The second submission of the appellants was that the
power to purchase the property under Section 269-UD was
limited to the purchase of the property which was the subject
matter of the agreement for transfer dated 27th April 1989 and
the statement in Form 37-I. The property in both the agreement
and statement had been described as the undivided share of
Leila Lean . In the second purchase order, the Appropriate
Authority had wrongly purported to purchase a demarcated
share in the premises which was neither the subject matter of
the agreement nor the statement filed under Section 269 UC.
The second purchase order was incompetent and could not be
given effect to. The appellants also contended that the
Appropriate Authority’s determination that the stated
consideration did not reflect the true market value of the
property when the agreement for sale was entered into was
based on immaterial and irrelevant considerations.
The next submission of the appellants was that they had
taken possession of the entire premises pursuant to the
agreement of sale dated 13th March 1988. There was,
therefore, a complete transfer of the property to the appellant
for the purposes of the Income Tax Act as Section 2(47)
defines transfer, in relation to a capital asset as including, "any
transaction involving the allowing of the possession of any
immovable property to be taken or retained in part performance
of a contract of the nature referred to in section 53A of the
Transfer of Property Act, 1882". According to the appellants’
the transfer having taken place before Chapter XX-C came into
operation in the State of Andhra Pradesh, it was not open to the
Appropriate Authority to initiate any proceeding under that
Chapter in respect of Leila Lean’s property.
It was finally submitted that the Central Government had
not deposited the consideration money nor paid it to the
transferor as required under the provisions of Section 269-UG
and, therefore, in terms of Section 269-UH the premises stood
re-vested in the transferor. In the light of all these
circumstances, it is submitted by the appellants, that the
Appropriate Authority should now be directed to issue a ’No
Objection’ under Section 269UL(3).
The respondents have submitted that it was not open to
the appellants to impugn the second purchase order on the
ground that the first purchase order had been issued beyond
the period of limitation. The respondents say that in their writ
petition in challenge to the first order, the appellants had never
raised this issue. The issue was raised for the first time in
answer to the show cause notice issued prior to the second
purchase order. It was also submitted that the Appropriate
Authority had considered the issue and had negatived it.
According to the respondents, the appellants had accepted the
order of the Appropriate Authority which had "filed" the first
statement in Form 37-I holding that it was premature and
invalid. They had acted on that order and submitted the second
statement without protest. The respondents contend that even
if the order refusing to either pass an order under Section 269-
UD or release under Section 269UL(3) were held to be void,
since the appellants had not challenged it till today, they could
not do so collaterally. According to the respondents the order
was at the most wrongly passed but it could not be said that it
was void. According to the respondents, in any event the
decision of this Court in C.B. Gautam (supra) had effectively
wiped out the earlier order passed under Section 269-UD. In
terms of the Supreme Court directions, the date of the disposal
of the appellants’ first writ petition was to be taken as the date
of the filing of the statement under Section 37-I and the
Appropriate Authority had issued the second purchase order
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within the statutory period thereafter. It is contended that the
challenge to the first purchase order did not in the
circumstances, survive.
On the submission of the appellants that the second
purchase order was not in terms of the agreement for sale nor
the statement in form 37-I, the respondents submitted that the
appellants themselves had on divers dates admitted that the
property had been orally partitioned between the three owners.
The eight sale deeds of the other two owners which had been
executed by the appellants representing the owners had
expressly stated that there was an oral partition. It is pointed
out that there is no claim by the appellants that what had been
sold pursuant to the second purchase order was larger than the
share of Leila Lean’s share. It is pointed out that an oral
partition between members of a non-coparcenery family was
also legally permissible as has been held by this Court in
Nanni Bai and Others V. Gita Bai 1959 SCR 479 and
Shankarrao v. Vithalrao AIR 1988 SC 879.
According to the respondents, the appellants’ submission
that the Central Government had defaulted in tendering or
depositing the purchase money was factually wrong. The
deposit had been made with the Appropriate Authority and had
been subsequently withdrawn by the transferor against a bank
guarantee executed by the appellants. It is contended that this
was not an issue which had been raised by the appellants in
their writ petition before the High Court.
It is further submitted by the respondents that the
appellants had expressly given up the argument that the
property had been "transferred" to them within the meaning of
Section 2 (47) of the Income Tax Act prior to coming into force
of Chapter XX-C. This had been recorded by the High Court.
Documents on record as well as the finding of the Appropriate
Authority were referred to to show that the appellants’ had not
in fact taken possession of Leila Lean’s share pursuant to the
agreement of sale dated 13th March 1988. They had entered
into the possession of demarcated portions of Leila Lean’s
sisters’ property after the eight sale deeds had been executed
by the appellants on behalf the sisters and had never taken
possession of Leila Lean’s share.
Finally on the question of valuation, it is stated that the
Appropriate Authority had considered the material on record
which clearly showed that the consideration which the
appellants had agreed to pay to Leila Lean or her
representative did not represent the true market value of the
property either in 1988 or in 1989 when the fresh agreement
for sale was entered into between the executor of Leila Lean’s
estate and the appellants.
We are of the opinion that the respondents’ submissions
are entirely acceptable and the High Court had correctly
rejected the appellants’ writ application. It is really
unnecessary, in this case, to consider whether the ’filing order’
dated 23rd August 1989 was void or merely irregular. We will
assume for the purpose of argument that the ’filing order’ of the
Appropriate Authority refusing to exercise its power under
Section 269UD(1) or 269UL(3) was illegal being in
contravention of the law as laid down in Tanvi’s case (supra).
The appellants could have challenged such refusal. They
chose not to do so till today. Instead they voluntarily filed a
fresh statement in Form 37-I. The necessary implication was
according to the parties, to the first statement, that it was not a
proper one. The fact remains that a second statement in form
37-I had been filed by parties and they requested the
Appropriate authority to act on the second statement. The
transferor who was a party to the second statement has never
contended that the second statement was not valid nor have
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the appellants either before the High Court or before us
contended otherwise. There is no question of the Appropriate
Authority having extended the time under the first proviso to
Section 269-UD nor did it do so. Whatever the reason for their
doing so, it was the appellants and transferor’s act of filing a
fresh statement under Section 269-UC which gave rise to a
fresh period of limitation. Under the first proviso to Section
269UD(1) time is to be computed from the receipt of "the
statement" under form 37-I. In this case, "the statement" was
the second one. It was open to the Appropriate Authority, in
such circumstances, to act on the second statement and pass
the compulsory purchase order within a period of two months
from the receipt of that statement. The first compulsory
purchase order could not, in the circumstances, be said to be
invalid on this ground.
Besides, the appellants’ challenge to first purchase order
dated 28th November 1989 does not really survive after the
disposal of the first writ petition. When the first writ application
was disposed of on 16th February 1994, the High Court had
quashed the first order issued under Section 269-UD(1) on the
basis of the Supreme Court’s decision in C.B. Gautam (supra).
The language is unequivocal and unqualified. It said:
"The impugned order in
F.N.AA/Hyd/9/68/11/89-90 dated
23.8.1989 on the filing of the 1st
respondent herein be and hereby
quashed".
There is no appeal from this order. If the first purchase
order has been set aside without protest, the appellants present
grievance that the first purchase order is otherwise invalid is ill
founded. C.B. Gautam’s directive that the statements in form
37-I were to be deemed to have been filed on the date of the
disposal of pending writ petitions did not make a distinction
between the orders under Section 269UD(1) which were invalid
because of non-compliance with natural justice alone and those
which were also otherwise assailable.
Having quashed the purchase order, the High Court had
also directed, as has been quoted above, that the form 37-I
filed by the appellants would be deemed to have been filed as
on that date. No doubt, the High Court records that the deeming
fiction as to the date of the filing of the statement was without
prejudice to the appellant’s contention that the first purchase
order was passed beyond the period of limitation. However, in
preserving the appellants’ right, the High Court directed the
Appropriate Authority to determine the contention in keeping
with the decision in C.B. Gautam’s case. And as we have
already held that in the light of the decision in C.B. Gautam’s
case, the appellants’ challenge to the first purchase order was
misconceived.
The appellants challenge to the second purchase order
on the ground that it directed the purchase of something which
was not the subject matter of the agreement for sale or the
Form 37-I statement is also unacceptable. The appellants
cannot dispute that the shares of the three owners of the
premises had been demarcated prior to the second purchase
order in November 1989, if not even prior to the filing of the first
statement under Section 269UC. In that statement in
describing the property of Leila Lean, under the heading
’Persons in occupation of the property sought to be transferred
and details thereof’, it was said ’Vacant’. Under the heading
’Persons interest in the property and in consideration specifying
their shares and basis thereof’, it was said ’Self-full’. The
’nature of interest or right proposed to be transferred’ was
described as ’Absolute’ and ’Ownership’ property. There was
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no reference to the undivided interest of the sisters therein.
Secondly, in the several sale deeds executed by the appellants
themselves, as the general power of attorney holders of the two
sisters of Leila Lean between April and May 1989 they had said
in the recital portion in each of the sale deeds:
"And whereas, the said land and building have
fallen to the share of Mrs. Kripa Devi in oral
partition effected amongst the three sisters."
Apart from the repeated references to an oral partition in
the recital portion of the each deed, the deeds also recite that
the property sold under each deed consisted of a specified area
"as detailed in the schedule and the plan annexed". The
boundaries were given and demarcated on the plan in respect
of each of the sisters’ share which was indicated on the plans
forming part of the sale deeds. Apart from this, the vendor
represented by the general power of attorney holder, namely
the said Armugham, had filed an affidavit affirming the fact of
the oral partition giving in detail the demarcated portion of the
premises which was owned by Leila Lean. The Appropriate
Authority had also inspected the premises prior to issuing the
purchase order and had found that the property was in fact
demarcated as recorded in the order under Section 269UD(1).
The reason why the share of Leila Lean has been mentioned as
undivided in the agreement of sale dated 13th March 1988 has
been explained by the appellants themselves in the eight sale
deeds executed by them between April and May 1989 as:
"Though the property had already been divided
equally among the three sisters through an
oral partition and share of each sister was
delineated in the plan, as the agreement
holders wanted to buy the entire said property
for redevelopment, all the three sisters
executed a single agreement of sale."
In other words, the oral partition had taken place before
the agreement of sale. For the Appropriate Authority to have
issued the purchase order in respect of the undivided share, in
these circumstances, would mean not only the disruption of the
established state of fact but also a reopening of the appellants’
title to the divided portions of the premises which had been
purchased by them or by their nominees. In any event, it
does not lie in the appellants’ mouths to contend in the face of
these facts that Leila Lean’s share was at any material time in
fact undivided.
The further submission of the appellants that an oral
partition was impermissible in law is erroneous. As far back as
in 1958 in Nanni Bai and Others V. Gita Bai (1959 SCR 479),
it was held:
"Partition in the Mitakshara sense may
be only a severance of the joint status of
the members of the coparcenary, that is
to say, what was once a joint title, has
become a divided title though there has
been no division of any properties by
metes and bounds. Partition may also
mean what ordinarily is understood by
partition amongst co-sharers who may
not be members of a Hindu coparcenary
... ..
For partition in the latter sense of
allotting specific properties or parcels to
individuals coparceners, agreement
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amongst all the coparceners is
absolutely necessary. Such a partition
may be effected orally, but if the parties
reduce the transaction to a formal
document which is intended to be the
evidence of the partition, it has the effect
of declaring the exclusive title of the
coparcener to whom a particular
property is allotted by partition and is,
thus, within the mischief of s. 17(1)(b).."
This view has been affirmed in Roshan Singh and
Others V. Zile Singh and Others AIE 1988 SC 881 at p. 885:
"A partition may be effected orally; but if
it is subsequently reduced into a form of
a document and that document purports
by itself to effect a division and
embodies all the terms of bargain, it will
be necessary to register it."
Apart from all this, the second purchase order directed
the purchase of, ’1/3 share/interest in the property known as
Lilazar bearing No. 8-2-349, Road No. 3, Banjara Hills,
Hyderabad’. Although the purchase order goes on to describe
the 1/3 share/interest with reference to its boundaries, this
would not serve to invalidate the first portion of the order.
The appellants’ submission that they were transferees
within the meaning of S.2(47) of the Income Tax Act is equally
unsustainable. Whether there was a transfer or not would
depend on whether the appellants had, in part performance of
the agreement for sale dated 13th March 1988, taken
possession of Leila Lean’s property. In each of the eight such
sale deeds executed by the appellants of the share of the two
sisters of Leila Lean in April/May, 1989, it is recorded that the
vendor was ’ full and absolute owner and possessor of the
property conveyed’ and that the ’vendor has handed over
vacant possession to the vendee’. In other words, the
appellants or their nominees who were the purchasers of the
property conveyed took possession of demarcated portions of
the premises pursuant to the eight deeds of sale and not prior
thereto. There is no such document which would show that the
appellants had ever taken possession of Leila Lean’s share.
Besides the question is essentially one of fact and the High
Court expressly records that:
"Although a contention has been raised
in the writ petition that the agreement
was given effect to and transferees,
were put in possession even before the
date Chapter XX-C was made
applicable to the State of Andhra
Pradesh, the same has not been
pursued before us."
Having given up the case before the High Court, the
appellants cannot be permitted to reopen the issue at this
stage.
On the question of valuation, the Appropriate Authority
has in great detail considered the several instances of the sale
which had taken place on or about the time that the agreement
of sale was executed on 31st March 1988. Apart from the sale
instances, the location of the property, its frontage and
accessibility were considered by the Appropriate Authority
which after physical inspection came to the conclusion that the
consideration for which Leila Lean’s property had been sold
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was under-stated. The High Court has affirmed this valuation.
We see no reason to disturb the finding of fact on the basis of
material before us. We cannot also be oblivious to the fact that
the property which the appellants had agreed to purchase at
Rs.15,33,333/- in 1988 was agreed to be purchased by the
intervenor in 2000 at Rs. four crores and five lakhs.
The final submission of the appellants that the Central
Government had not deposited or tendered the amount within
the time required under Section 269-UF read with S.269-UG(1)
is an issue of fact which has been raised for the first time by the
appellants before this Court and is liable to be rejected on this
ground alone. Nevertheless, we may note that the deposit had
been made by the Central Government on 22nd December 1989
within one month from the first purchase order and in any case
prior to the second purchase order. Admittedly the payment
has been received by the transferor without any protest
whatsoever.
We, therefore, dismiss the appeal with costs.