Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
NUTAKKI SESHARATANAM
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
SUB-COLLECTOR, LAND ACQUISITION VIJAYAWADA AND ORS. ’
DATE OF JUDGMENT31/10/1991
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
BENCH:
KANIA, M.H.
SAHAI, R.M. (J)
CITATION:
1992 AIR 131 1991 SCR Supl. (2) 115
1992 SCC (1) 114 JT 1991 (4) 274
1991 SCALE (2)921
ACT:
Land Acquisition Act, 1894: Section 4(1)---(As amended
by Andhra Pradesh (Amendment) Act, 1983).
Land Acquisition---Notification--Publication of sub-
stance of Notification within 40 days from the date of
Notification is mandatary---Noncompliance vitiates the
acquisition.
Acquisition proceedings--Consent given for acquisition
of land--Nature and effect of--Held consent amounts to offer
in terms of the Contract Act--Can be withdrawn before it is
accepted.
HEADNOTE:
Proceedings for acquisition of appellant’s land were
initiated. and a Notification under section 4(1) of the Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 was published in the Government Ga-
zette. The substance of the said Notification was published
in the locality long after 40 days within which it was
required to be published under Section 4(1) of 1894 Act’as
amended by the Andhra pradesh(Amendment) Act, 1983. During
the course of enquiry regarding the fixation of compensa-
tion, the appellant consented to his land being acquired
provided he was given compensation in a lump-sum. However,
before any award was made he withdrew his consent and filed
a petition challenging the validity of the acquisition
proceedings. A Single Judge of the High Court dismissed his
petition by holding that since he gave his consent to the
acquisition of land he could not challenge the acquisition
proceedings. On appeal the decision of the Single Judge was
confirmed by the Division Bench of the High Court. Against
the decision of the Division Bench of the High Court, an
appeal was filed in this Court.
Allowing the appeal, this Court,
HELD: 1. The Single Judge and the Division Bench of
the. High Court were clearly in error in dismissing the
respective writ petition and the appeal filed by the appel-
lant respectively. The appellant’s statement- that he was
willing to accept the acquisition provided a lump-sum com-
pensation was awarded to him -- amounted
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in law to no more than an offer in terms of the Contract
ACt. The said offer was never accepted by the Land Acquisi-
tion Officer to whom it was made. Leave alone, making the
award of lump-sum compensation, no award at all was made by
the said officer awarding compensation to the appellant till
the aforesaid-offer was withdrawn by the appellant or even
till the writ petition was filed. Till the offer was accept-
ed there was no contract between the parties and the appel-
lant was entitled to withdraw his offer. There was nothing
inequitable or improper in withdrawing the offer, as the
appellant was in no way bound to keep the offer open indefi-
nitely. 1117 G-H, 118-A]
2. The acquisition of the appellant’s land is bad in
law because the substance of the Notification was not pub-
lished in the locality within forty days of the publication
of the Notification in the Government Gazette. The time-
limit of forty days for such publication in the locality has
been made mandatory by section 4(1) of the 1894 Act as
amended by the Andhra Pradesh (Amendment) Act, 1983. Such
non-compliance renders acquisition bad in law. [118-C]
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1720 of
1986.
From the Judgment and Order dated 5.7.1985 of the Andhra
Pradesh High Court in Writ Appeal No. 577 of 1985.
B. Kanta Rao for the Appellant.
K. Madhava Reddy and G. Prabhakar for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
KANIA, J. This is an appeal by Special Leave from the
judgment of a Division Bench of the Andhra Pradesh High
Court dismissing the Writ Appeal No.577 of 1985 filed in
that Court.
Very few facts are necessary for the disposal of this ap-
peal.
The appellant is the owner of a plot comprising roughly
2 acres of land in Ramavarappadu village, Vijayawada Taluk,
in the Krishna District in Andhra Pradesh. The Government of
Andhra Pradesh sought to acquire about 1 acre and 89 cents
out of the aforesaid land for a public propose. A Notifica-
tion under section 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894
(hereinafter referred to as "the said Act") was published in
the Government
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Gazette on February 9, 1976. The substance of the said
notification was published in the locality where the land
proposed to be acquired is situated, on April 2, 1978, long
after the period of 40 days within which it was required to
be published as per the provisions of section 4(1) of the
said Act as amended by the Andhra Pradesh (Amendment) Act,
1983, (Act 9 of 1983). Enquiry under section 5A of the said
Act was dispensed with invoking the urgency clause as per
section 17(4) of the said Act. Notification under section 6
was published on the same day as the publication of the
notification under section 4(1) of the said Act. An inquiry
was conducted regarding the fixation of compensation to be
awarded to the appellant and others whose lands were ac-
quired under the said notification. It appears that during
the course of the said inquiry the appellant stated to the
Land Acquisition Officer concerned that he was willing to
agree to the land being acquired provided he was given
compensation in a lump-sum. Probably the reason was that if
the compensation was awarded in a lump-
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sum without delay, the appellant might have been able to
purchase some other land, as his holding was under the
ceiling limit. The aforesaid facts have been found by the
Trial Court and accepted by the High Court. On November 9,
1979, before any award was made, the consent to the acquisi-
tion of the land given by the appellant, as aforestated, was
withdrawn by him and on May 14, 1981, the appellant filed a
writ petition in the High Court questioning the validity of
the land acquisition proceedings. The learned Single Judge
before whom the said writ petition along with another writ
petition came up for hearing held that the appellant had
agreed to the acquisition of the said land on compensation
being paid as aforestated, and hence it was not open to the
appellant to challenge the validity of the said notifica-
tions issued under section 4(1) and section 6 of the said
Act. It was held by him that the withdrawal of the said
representation or consent by the appellant did not in any
manner assist him. The learned Judge dismissed the writ
petition filed by the appellant without going into the
merits of the aforesaid petition on the aforesaid basis.
This judgment was upheld by the Division Bench of the High
Court which dismissed the aforesaid writ appeal. It is the
correctness of these decisions which is impugned before us.
In our view, the learned Single Judge and the Division
Bench of the High Court of Andhra Pradesh were, with re-
spect, clearly in error in dismissing the respective writ
petition and the appeal filed by the appellant on the ground
that the appellant had stated that he was willing to accept
the acquisition provided a lump-sum compensation was awarded
to him. The statement of the appellant amounted in law to no
more than an offer in terms of the Contract Act. The said
offer was never accepted by the Land Acquisition Officer to
whom it was made. Leave alone, making
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the award of lump-sum compensation, no award at all was made
by the said officer awarding compensation to the appellant
till November 9, 1979, when the aforesaid offer was with-
drawn by the appellant or even till the writ petition was
filed. Till the offer was accepted there was no contract
between the parties and the appellant was entitled to with-
draw his offer. There was nothing inequitable or improper in
withdrawing the offer, as the appellant was in no way bound
to keep the offer open indefinitely. The writ petition,
therefore, ought not to have been dismissed on the ground of
the appellant having made a statement or consented as afore-
stated before the Land Acquisition Officer.
On the merits, it is clear that the acquisition of the
land is bad in law because the substance of the notification
under section 40) of the said Act was not published in the
locality within forty days of the publication of the notifi-
cation in the Government Gazette. The time-limit of forty
days for such publication in the locality has been made
mandatory by section 4(1) of the said Act as amended by the
Andhra Pradesh (Amendment) Act. It is well-settled that such
non-compliance renders acquisition bad in law.
In the result, the appeal succeeds and Rule in the writ
petition is made absolute. It is declared that the acquisi-
tion of the aforesaid land of the appellant is bad in law.
If the possession has been taken, the same must be returned
to the appellant.
The appeal is allowed as aforestated with costs throughout.
T.N.A. Appeal
Allowed.
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