Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
BABUBHAI & CO. & ORS.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF GUJARAT & ORS
DATE OF JUDGMENT09/04/1985
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
BENCH:
TULZAPURKAR, V.D.
KHALID, V. (J)
CITATION:
1985 AIR 613 1985 SCR (3) 614
1985 SCC (2) 732 1985 SCALE (1)658
CITATOR INFO :
R 1986 SC 468 (32)
R 1989 SC1949 (10)
ACT:
Bombay Town planning Act 1954 , s 54 read with
Rule 27 of Bombay Town planning Rules 1955 Provision for
summary eviction of lands required for public purpose-
Absence of a corrective machinery by the appeal or revision-
validity of.
HEADNOTE:
The respondent-State issued notice u/s. 54 of the
Bombay Town Planning Act 1954 (for short the Act) read with
Rule 27 of the Bombay Town Planning Rules 1955 (for short
the Rules) to the appellants to hand over possession of
their lands lying within the limits of Borough Municipality
of Ahmedabad to the Municipal Corporation of Ahmedabad as
the same had vested absolutely - in the Municipal
Corporation free from all encumbrance u/s 53 (a) of the Act
and were required for construction of roads and other public
purposes. The appellants challenged before the High Court
under Art. 226 the constitutional validity of s. 54 of the
Act and Rule 27 of the Rules. The High Court dismissed the
writ petitions holding; (i) that the rights of the local
authority (to own and obtain possession of such lands) with
the corresponding liability of the occupants to suffer
eviction therefrom did not exist under the general 11’ law
prior to the making of the Final Scheme , that such rights
and liabilities were created for the first time by the Final
Scheme which is to be read as part of the Act and since the
Act while creating these new rights and liabilities provided
for a special and particular remedy for enforcing them under
s. 54 , the remedy of summary eviction must be held to be
an exclusive remedy and the liability to eviction arising
under s. 53 (a) or (b) cannot be enforced by the ordinary
remedy of a suit; (ii) that s 54 conferred upon the local
authority a quasi-judicial power and not administrative
power and as such it was bound , in conformity with the
principles of natural justice , to give an opportunity of
hearing to the occupants before taking the threatened action
of summary eviction and therefore no question of section
being bad in law arose; and (iii) that since Rule 27 did not
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contain any express exclusion of such hearing and since s.54
impliedly required the observance of principles of natural
justice on the part of the local authority
615
while exercising the power of summary eviction , the said
requirement must also be read in Rule 27 and so read the
Rule could not be regarded as ultra vires the section.
In appeals to this Court , the appellants contended
that even proceeding on the basis that s. 54 impliedly
required a hearing to be given and consequently such a
requirement could be read into Rule 27 which was
asubordinate piece of legislation , there was no corrective
machinery provided for by way of an appeal or revision to
any superior authority against an adverse order that may be
passed by the local authority acting under Rule 27 and in
the absence of any such corrective machinery the entire
provision must be held to be bad in law and therefore the
impugned notices served on the appellants should be quashed.
Dismissing the appeals ,
^
HELD: (1) Mere absence of a corrective machinery by way
of appeal or revision by itself would not make the Power
unreasonable or arbitrary , much less would render the
provision invalid. Regard will have to be had to several
factors , such as , on whom the power is conferred whether
on a high official or a petty officer , what is the nature
of the power-whether the exercise thereof depends upon the
subjective satisfaction of the authority or body on whom it
is conferred or is it to be exercised objectively by
reference to some existing facts or tests , whether or not
it is a quasi-judicial power requiring that authority or
body to observe principles of natural justice and make a
speaking order etc.; the last mentioned factor particularly
ensures application of mind on the part of the authority or
body only to pertinet or germane material on the record
excluding the extraneous and irrelevant and also subjects
the order of the authority or body to a judicial review
under the writ jurisdiction of the Court on grounds of
perversity , extraneous influence , malafides and other
blatant infirmities. Moreover all these facts will have to
be considered in the light of the scheme of the enactment
and the purpose intended to be achieved by the concerned
provision. If on an examination of the scheme of the
enactment as also the purpose of the concerned provision it
is found that the power to decide or do a particular thing
is conferred on a very minor or petty officer , that the
exercise thereof by him depends on his subjective
satisfaction , that he is expected to exercise the power
administratively without any obligation to make a speaking
order then , of courtesy , the absence of a corrective
machinery will render the provision conferring such absolute
and unfettered power invalid. But it is the cumulative
effect of all these factors that will render the provision
unreasonable or arbitrary and liable to be struck down.
[619F-H; 620A-D]
(2) In the instant case , it is at the stage of
execution of a town planning scheme that the power of
summary eviction of occupants who have ceased to be entitled
to occupy the plots in their occupation has been conferred
upon the Local Authority itself-a highly responsible body ,
and that the power is required to be exercised by it in
objective manner (it is to be found by reference to the
Final Scheme and its interpretation whether the occupants
are occupying
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lands which they are not entitled to occupy.) Further , as
already held by the High Court , the power conferred upon
the local Authority is a quasi-judicial power which implies
that the same has to be exercised after observing the
principles of natural justice , and that too by passing a
speaking order which implies giving of reasons and that
ensures the application of mind to only germane or relevant
material on the record eschewing extraneous and irrelevant ,
Moreover any order of summary eviction based on any
extraneous , non- germane , irrelevant or malafide
considerations would be subject to the writ jurisdiction of
Court. [625E - H; 622A]
C. R. H. Ready money Ltd. case in AIR 1956 Bombay
304 , Chandrakant Krishnarao’s case , in [1952] 3 SCR 108
, Lala Hari Chand Sarda’s case , [ 1967] 1 SCR 1012 and
Excel Wear’s case in [1979] 1 SCR 1009 , referred to
Organo Chemical Industries & Another v- Union India
and Others , relied upon.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeals Nos
2084 2089 (N) of 1972 a
From the Judgment dated 24.12.1971 of the High
court of Gujarat in Special Civil Applications Nos. 650/71 ,
652-654/71 , 81/71 and 64/71
Soli J. Sorabiee , Kamal Mehta , Aditya Narayan and
Mrs. A.K. Verma for the Appellants
M.N. Phadke and R.N. Poddar for the Respondents.
S.T. Desai and H.S.Parihar for Respondent Nos. 2 & 3.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
TULZAPURKAR , J. There is no substance in these
appeals preferred by the appellants against a common
judgment rendered in a batch of writ petitions by the High
Court on 24th December 1971 wherein the High Court has
upheld the constitutional validity of s. 54 of the Bombay
Town Planning Act 1954 (for short the Act) and Rule 27 of
the Bombay Town Planning Rules 1955 (for short the Rules).
By a notification dated 21st July , 1965 the State
Government of Gujarat sanctioned the final Town Planning
Scheme in respect
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of certain areas lying within the limits of Borough
Municipality of Ahmedabad and directed that the said Final
Scheme shall come into force on 1st September , 1965. The
lands in the possession of the appellants were allotted or
reserved for construction of roads and other public purposes
in that Scheme and therefore , being lands required by the
Municipal Corporation they vested absolutely in Municipal
Corporation (local authority) free from all encumbrances
under s. 53 (a) of the Act. Thereafter by notices issued
under s.54 read with Rule 27 the Municipal Corporation
called upon the appellants to hand over possession of the
lands in their - occupation , which , since such vesting ,
they were not entitled to occupy; in other words , the
procedure or the remedy for summary eviction of the
appellants was resorted to by the Municipal Corporation.
By writ petitions filed under s. 226 of the
Constitution the appellants challenged the validity of these
notices on two grounds:
(a) that s 54 confers absolute discretion upon the
local authority to adopt for eviction the
occupants of such lands either the normal remedy
of a civil suit or the drastic remedy of summary
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eviction under it without any guide-lines being
prescribed or indicated for the exercise of such
discretion and therefore the section was violative
of Art. 14 inasmuch as the local authority could
pick ’and choose at its sweet will some of such
occupants for subjecting them to the more drastic
remedy;
(b) that s. 54 which provides for summary eviction by
service of notice contemplated thereunder was
opposed to principles of natural justice inasmuch
as no opportunity was contemplated to be afforded
to the occupants of such lands to show cause
against the proposed eviction and as such was bad
in law; and in any event even if s. 54 was , on
proper construction held to include the affording
of such opportunity Rule 27 was ultra vines the
said section inasmuch as it laid down the
procedure which did not conform to principles of
natural justice.
The High Court has negatived both the grounds of
challenge. As :
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regards ground (a) , relying upon the decision in Wolver-
hampton New Water Works case reported in ( 1859) 6 B. (N.S.)
336 and observations of Willes J. therein (appearing at page
356 of the Report) the High Court took the view that the
rights of the local authority (to own and obtain possession
of such lands) with the corresponding liability of the
occupants to suffer-eviction therefrom did not exist under
the law prior to the making of the Final Scheme , that such
rights and liabilities were created for the first time by
the Final Scheme which is to be read as part of the Act and
since the Act creating these new rights and liabilities
provided for a special and particular remedy for enforcing
them under s. 51 the remedy of summary eviction must be held
to be an exclusive remedy and the liability to eviction
arising under s. 53 (a) or (b) cannot be enforced by the
ordinary remedy of a suit; in other words , the remedy of
summary eviction under s. 54 having been held to be an
exclusive remedy the entire ground of challenge disappeared.
As regards ground (b) the High Court took the view that s.
54 conferred upon the local authority a quasi-judicial power
and not administrative power and as such it was bound ,
conformity with the principles of natural justice , to give
an opportunity of hearing to the occupants before taking the
threatened action of summary eviction and therefore no
question of section being bad in law arose; as regards Rule
27 the High Court held that since the said Rule did not
contain any express exclusion of such hearing and since s.
54 impliedly required the observance of principles of
natural justice on the part of the local authority while
exercising the power of summary eviction , the said
requirement must also be read in Rule 27 and so read the
Rule could not be regarded as ultra vires the section. The
High Court also proceeded to indicate in what ways such
hearing could be afforded by the local authority while
acting under the said Rule. This is how the High Court
upheld the constitutional validity of s. 54 of the Act and
Rule 27 of the Rules.
Counsel for the appellants fairly conceded the validity
of the High Court’s view on the first ground of challenge to
s. 54. It was only in regard to the second ground of
challenge that he pressed one more aspect before us on the
basis of which he contended that s. 54 read with Rule 27 may
have to be struck down. He urged that even proceeding on the
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basis that s. 54 impliedly required a hearing to be given
and consequently such a requirement could be read into Rule
27 which was a subordinate piece of legislation , there was
no
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corrective machinery provided for by way of an appeal or
revision to any superior authority against an adverse order
that may be passed by the local authority acting under Rule
27 and in the absence of any such corrective machinery the
entire provision must be held to be bad in law and therefore
the impugned notices served on the appellants should be
quashed. In support of this contention counsel relied upon
three or four decisions in C.R.H. Ready money Ltd. case(l)
Chandrakant Krishnarao’s case , (2) Lala Hari Chand Sarda’s
case(3) and Excel Wear’s case(4) where a view has been taken
that in the absence of a provision for corrective machinery
by way of appeal or revision , the provision conferring a
power to decide or do a particular thing may have to be
regarded as unreasonable and or un-guided , un-controlled
and arbitrary and hence violative of Article 14 of the
Constitution. It is not possible to accept the contention.
It cannot be disputed that the absence of a provision
for a corrective machinery by way of appeal or revision to a
superior authority to rectify an adverse order passed by an
authority or body on whom the power is conferred may
indicate that the power so conferred is unreasonable or
arbitrary but it is obvious that providing such corrective
machinery is only one of the several ways in which the power
could be checked or controlled and its absence will be one
of the factors to be considered along with several others
before coming to the conclusion that the power so conferred
is unreasonable or arbitrary; in other words mere absence of
a corrective machinery by way of appeal or revision by
itself would not make the power unreasonable or arbitrary ,
much less would render the provision invalid. Regard will
have to be had to several factors , such as , on whom the
power is conferred-whether on a high official or a petty
officer , what is the nature of the power-whether the
exercise thereof depends upon the subjective satisfaction of
the authority or body on whom it is conferred or is it to be
exercised objectively by reference to some existing facts or
tests , whether or not it is a quasi-judicial power
requiring that authority or body to observe principles of
natural justice and make a
(l) A.I.R. 1956 Bom. 304
(2) [1962] 3.S.C.R. 108
(3) [1967] 1.S.C.R. 1012
(4) [1979] 1.S.C.R. 1009
620
speaking order etc; the last mentioned factor particularly
ensures application of mind on the part of the authority or
body only to pertinent or germane material on the record
excluding the extraneous and irrelevant and also subjects
the order of the authority or body to a judicial review
under the writ jurisdiction of the Court on grounds of
perversity, extraneous influence , malafides and other
blatant infirmities Moreover all these factors will have to
be considered in the light of the scheme of the enactment
and the purpose intended to be achieved by the concerned
provision. If on an examinations of the scheme of the
enactment as also the purpose of the concerned provision it
is found that the power to decide or do a particular thing
is conferred on a very minor or petty officer , that the
exercise thereof by him depends on his subjective
satisfaction , that he is expected to exercise the power
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administratively without any obligation to make a speaking
order then , of course , the absence of a corrective
machinery will render the provision conferring such absolute
and unfettered power invalid. But it is the cumulative
effect of all these factors that will render the provision
unreasonable or arbitrary and liable to be struck down. In
three of the decisions referred to by counsel where the
concerned provision was struck down the cumulative effect of
several factors that were present in each was taken into
consideration by the Court , while in C.R.H. Readymoney’s
case the provision was held to be valid .
In this behalf we might usefully refer to a decision of
this Court in Organo chemical Industries Another V. Union of
India and Others.(1) In this case s. 14B of the Employees
Provident Fund and Miscellaneous Provisions Act 1952 which
conferred power upon the Central Provident Fund Commissioner
to levy and recover punitive damages from a defaulting
employer was challenged on the ground that within the limit
of 100% of the defaulted amount it conferred naked and
unguided power on the Commissioner to impose any quantum of
damages as he fancied that no reasons were required to be
given by him for such imposition and that no appellate or
revisional review was prescribed against any adverse order
that may be made by him and as such the section was
violative of Art. 14 of the Constitution. Negativing the
contention this Court took the
(1) [9801] 1 S.C.R. 61.
621
view that the power under the section had been conferred
upon one of the highest officials of the Government , that
the power to impose damages on a party after hearing him was
a quasi-judicial one that observance of requirements of
natural justice was implicit in such jurisdiction that one
desideratum thereof was spelling out of the reasons for the
order to be made , that giving of reasons ensured rational
action on the part of the Officer because reasons implied
relevant reasons necessitating the application of mind on
the part of the Officer only to pertinent and germane
material on record and that once reasons were set out the
order readily exposed itself to the writ jurisdiction of the
Court so that perversity , illiteracy , extraneous
influence , malafides and other blatant infirmities got
caught and corrected. Under such circumstances this Court
held that the needs of the factual situation and the legal
milieu were such that the absence of appellate review in no
way militated against the justice and reasonableness of the
provision and that the argument of arbitrariness on this
score was untenable.
In the instant case on an examination of the Scheme of
the Act as also the purpose sought to be achieved by s. 54
it will appear clear that the topic of making of town
planning schemes is dealt with in ss. 21 to 53 while s. 54
(and some of the following sections like 55 and 71 to 78)
deal with the aspect of the execution of town planning
schemes and it is at the stage of execution of a town
planning scheme that the power of summary eviction of
occupants who have ceased to be entitled to occupy the plots
in their occupation has been conferred upon the Local
Authority itself-a highly responsible body , and that the
power is required to be exercised by it in objective manner
(it is to be found by reference to the Final Scheme and its
interpretation whether the occupants are occupying lands
which they are not entitled to occupy , ). Further we are in
agreement with the High Court that the power conferred upon
the Local Authority is a quasi-judicial power which implies
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that the same has to be exercised after observing the
principles of natural justice , that is to say , the
decision that the occupants are not entitled to occupy the
plots in their occupation has to be arrived at after hearing
such occupants and that too by passing a speaking order
which implies giving of reasons and that ensures the
application of mind to only germane or relevant material on
the record
622
eschewing extraneous and irrelevant. Moreover any order of
summary eviction based on any extraneous , non-germane ,
irrelevant or malafide considerations would be subject to
the writ jurisdiction of Court. Having regard to these
aspects , more absence of corrective machinery by way of
appeal or review would not in our view render the provision
invalid.
In the result the appeals are dismissed with no order
as to costs.
M.L.A.
Appeals dismissed.
623