Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
COLLECTOR OF KAMRUP AND OTHERS
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
KAMAKHYA RAM BAROOAH AND OTHERS
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
11/09/1964
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
BENCH:
SHAH, J.C.
GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. (CJ)
CITATION:
1965 AIR 1301 1965 SCR (1) 265
ACT:
Assam Land (Requisition and Acquisition) Act (Assam 25 of
1948) ss. 3, 4 and 11-Scope of.
HEADNOTE:
Under r. 75-A of the Defence of India Rules, 1939, the
respondents land and building thereon were requisitioned.
while that requisition order was subsisting, an order for
acquisition of the land and building was passed under s. 4
of the Assam Land (Requisition and Acquisition) Act (Assam
25 of 1948). Realising later that the power under s. 4
could be exercised only when there was a
requisition order under s. 3, the defect was sought to be
rectified by passing an order of requisition to take effect
from a date anterior to the order of acquisition. The
respondents applied for a reference under s. 8 of the Act
and, the Subordinate Judge to whom the reference was made
and the High Court on appeal held the acquisition invalid.
In appeal to the Supreme Court, it was contended that
notwithstanding the illegality the order of acquisition was
saved by s. II of the Act, as an order made in exercise of
power conferred by or under the Act.
HELD : The power which was exercisable under s. 4 being
expressly a power to acquire land which was under
requisition under s. 3 and there being no effective order of
requisition under that section the acquisition was not made
in exercise of the power conferred by or under the Act.
section 11 was not therefore a bar to the maintainability of
the objection raised as to the validity of the acquisition.
[267H; 268A].
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos. 412-414
of 1962.
Appeals from the judgment dated February 10, 1958 of the
Assam High Court in Appeals from Original Decrees Nos. 10 to
21 of 1953.
Naunit Lal, for appellants Nos. 1 and 2 (in all the
appeals).
B. Sen and B.R.G.K. Achar, for appellant No. 3 (in all the
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appeals).
Beharul Islam and R. Gopalakrishnan, for the respondents
in all the appeals) .
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
Shah J. These three appeals raise a common question as to
the validity of certain acquisition proceedings commenced by
the Collector of Kamrup, State of Assam, under s. 4 of the
Assam Land (Requisition and Acquisition) Act, 1948.
We may in dealing with these appeals set out the facts
which give rise to appeal No. 412 of 1962. The respondents
in this appeal are owners of a plot of land at Bharalumukh,
Gauhati, on
266
which stands a residential building In exercise of the
powers conferred by rule 75-A of the Defence of India Rules,
1939, the Government of India in 1943, requisitioned the
land and the building for the use of the defence forces.
Since the date of the requisition the land and the building
continued in possession of the Government of India. The
Collector of Kamrup passed an order on February 9, 1949 for
acquisition of the land and building purporting to exercise
powers under s. 4 of the Assam (Requisition and Acquisition)
Act, 1948. At this time the requisition order made by the
Government of India was subsisting. Thereafter by order
dated August 4, 1949 the Collector requisitioned the land in
exercise of the power conferred by s. 3 of the Assam Act
1948, and ordered that the requisition do take effect from
February 7, 1949. The Collector assessed compensation
payable to the respondents under s. 7 of the Act. The
respondents applied for a reference to the Civil Court under
s. 8 of the Act and simultaneously challenged the authority
of the Collector to acquire the land in the manner he had
done. The Subordinate Judge, Gauhati to whom the reference
was made, held that there was no valid acquisition of the
land and the building of the respondents. He, however,
assessed compensation which would be payable to the
respondents if the acquisition was valid. In appeal to the
High Court of Assam, the order passed by the Subordinate
Judge, holding that the acquisition was invalid was
confirmed. The State of Assam has filed this appeal with
certificate granted by the High Court.
Acquisition of the land and building belonging to the
respondents was not made under the Land Acquisition Act I of
1894, but under the provisions of the Assam Land
(Requisition and Acquisition) Act, 1948. The Act was
enacted, as the preamble state for the requisition and
speedy acquisition of promises and land for certain
purposes. By s. 3 if in the opinion of the Provincial
Government or any person authorised in that behalf by the
Provincial Government, it is necessary so to do, for main-
taining supplies and services, essential to the life of the
community or for providing proper facilities for
accommodation, transport, communication, irrigation or
drainage, to requisition land, the Provincial Government or
the person authorised may by order in writing, do so and
make such further orders as appear to it or to him to be
necessary or expedient in connection with the requisition.
Section 4 by sub-s. (1) provides :
"Where any land has been requisitioned under
section 3. the Provincial Government may use
or deal with
267
it in such manner as may appear to it to be
expedient and may acquire such land by
publishing in the Official Gazette, a notice
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to the effect that the Provincial Government
has decided to acquire such land in pursuance
of this section."
Sub-section (2) provides
"Where a notice as aforesaid is published in
the Official Gazette, the requisitioned land
and premises shall, on and from the beginning
of the day on which the notice is so
published, vest absolutely in the Provincial
Government free from all encumbrances and the
period of requisition of such land shall end."
The power to acquire land under s. 4 may, it is plain from a
bare perusal of sub-s. (1), be exercised where the land has
been requisitioned under s. 3 and not otherwise. In the
present case, an order for acquisition of the land was made
in the first instance and presumably because it was realized
that the order was defective and irregular, it was sought to
be rectified by passing an order on August 4, 1949,
requisitioning the land with effect from February 7, 1949.
By this expedient, an illegal order of acquisition could not
be validated.
It is true that at the date when the order of acquisition
was passed under s. 4, the land was under requisition for
use of the defence forces. That order of requisition was
passed not under s. 3 of the Assam Act, but under Rule 75-A
of the Defence of India Rules, 1939. The previous
requisition under the Defence of India Rules which was at
the date of the order of acquisition outstanding could not
confer any authority upon the Provincial Government of Assam
to acquire the land belonging to the respondents under s. 4
of the Act.
It was urged that notwithstanding the illegality in the
acquisition, the order of acquisition was saved by s. 1 1 of
the Assam Act, which provides :
"Save as otherwise expressly provided in this
Act, no decision or order made in exercise of
any power conferred by or under this Act shall
be called in question in any Court."
It cannot, however, be said that the order passed under s. 4
acquiring the land of the respondents was made in exercise
of the power conferred by or under the Act. The power which
was exercisable under s. 4 being expressly a power to
acquire land
268
which is under requisition under S. 3, and there being no
effective order of requisition under that section, S. I 1 is
no bar to the maintainability of the objection raised to the
validity of the acquisition. The High Court was, therefore,
in our judgment, right in holding that the acquisition was
illegal.
The appeals fail and are dismissed with costs.
Appeals dismissed.
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