06 April 2009
Supreme Court
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KISHORSINH RATANSINH JADEJA Vs MARUTI CORP..

Case number: C.A. No.-002186-002187 / 2009
Diary number: 13988 / 2008
Advocates: T. MAHIPAL Vs EJAZ MAQBOOL


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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

CIVIL APPEAL NOS.2186-2187 OF 2009 (Arising out of S.L.P.(C)Nos.12854-12855 of 2008)

Kishorsinh Ratansinh Jadeja     ...   Appellant  Vs.

Maruti Corp. & Ors.     ...   Respondents

J U D G M E N T

ALTAMAS KABIR, J.

1. Leave granted.

2. The appellant and the Respondent Nos.2 to 7 are

owners  of  agricultural  land  in  Survey  No.36

measuring  32  acres  and  38  gunthas  situated  in

Village  Nanamauva,  Taluka  &  District  Rajkot

(hereinafter referred to as the ‘suit land’).  On

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19th March, 1980, the appellant and the other joint

owners of the suit land entered into an Agreement

with  Tirupati  Cooperative  Housing  Society  –  a

proposed  Cooperative  Housing  society  –  for

development  of  the  said  land  upon  obtaining

necessary permission under Section 20 of the Urban

Land (Ceiling & Regulation) Act, 1976 (hereinafter

referred to as the ‘Land Ceiling Act, 1976’) for

exemption and for construction of houses for the

weaker  sections.  The  application  made  by  the

proposed Society on 29th April, 1988, under Section

20 of the Land Ceiling Act, 1976, was rejected and

according to the appellant and other joint owners,

on the failure of the proposed Society to get such

permission, the Agreement could not be performed

and, therefore, by Public Notice dated 24th April,

1988,  the  Agreement  was  declared  to  have  been

cancelled.

3. A legal notice was received from one Sharad N.

Acharya, Advocate, denying that the Agreement had

been cancelled, as indicated in the Public Notice.

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Despite  cancellation  of  the  Agreement,  the

Respondent No.1 called upon the appellant to give

effect  to  the  Agreement  dated  19th March,  1980,

executed with the said respondent for development

of the said land.  The Respondent No.1 thereupon

filed  Special  Civil  Suit  No.299  of  1999  on  29th

November, 1999, before the Civil Court at Rajkot

against the appellant,  inter alia, praying for a

declaration  that  the  Respondent  No.1  was  in

possession of the suit land and for a decree for

specific performance of the said Agreement.  In the

alternative, for a decree for refund of the earnest

money of Rs.1,81,000/- and for damages amounting to

Rs.16,30,670/- with interest @12% per annum.  The

Respondent  No.1  also  filed  an  application  for

interim injunction to restrain the appellant from

entering  into  the  said  land  and  disturbing  the

possession of the Respondent No.1 and to further

restrain the appellant from alienating the land to

any  third  party.  The  Civil  Court  at  Rajkot

dismissed the said application by its order dated

29th April, 2002, against which the Respondent No.1

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filed  appeal  from  Order  No.372/2000  before  the

Gujarat High Court, which was ultimately withdrawn

with a direction for expeditious disposal of the

suit within a period of 10 months.  The suit was

thereafter taken up for trial by the Civil Court at

Rajkot,  and  by  judgment  and  order  dated  23rd

November,  2007,  while  rejecting  the  prayer  for

specific  performance,  the  Trial  Court  directed

refund of the earnest money.  

4. The  Respondent  No.1,  thereafter,  filed  an

appeal on 15th February, 2008, being First Appeal

No.853/2008, along with an application, being Civil

Application No.2405/2008,  inter alia, to restrain

the  respondents  therein  from  transferring  or

alienating the land in question to any third party

till  the  disposal  of  the  appeal.  Since  the

appellant  was  on  caveat  before  the  High  Court,

after hearing the parties, the Division Bench of

the Gujarat High Court admitted the appeal but did

not  grant  any  stay,  as  prayed  for,  and  only

directed that if the property in question was dealt

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with  in  any  way,  that  would  be  subject  to  the

decision of the appeal.

5. Although, the Respondent No.1 failed to obtain

any order of injunction in the appeal, he issued a

Public Notice through his learned Advocate on 7th

March, 2008, asking the public not to deal with the

property.  In response thereto, the appellant also

caused  a  Public  Notice  to  be  published  on  10th

March, 2008, clarifying that no injunction order

had been passed by the Gujarat High Court.  The

said fact was brought to the notice of the Gujarat

High  Court by the Respondent No.1  by way of an

additional affidavit on the basis whereof, the High

Court passed an order on 22nd April, 2008, directing

that the property in question should not be sold.

Thereafter, on 6th May, 2008, a further application

for  injunction  No.5618/2008  was  filed  in  the

pending First appeal by the Respondent No.1 herein

indicating that constructions were being raised on

the land in question.  On the basis of the above,

the Division Bench of the Gujarat High Court, on 7th

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May, 2008, passed the following order impugned in

these appeals :

“By this application, learned counsel for the applicant submits that inspite of the directions  of  this  court  issued  vide orders  dated  29.02.2008  and  22.04.2008, the constructions are being raised in the disputed land.

Learned counsel Mr. Pahwa, the respondent No.2 submits that the constructions were raised about 6 months back, and part of the property was already sold.

To  avoid  further  complications  and multiplicity of litigations, we order that no construction be raised on the disputed land.  In  spite  of  our  direction,  if further  construction  is  raised,  the applicant will be at liberty to approach the  concerned  police  authority,  and  the concerned  police  authority  is  also directed to take immediate steps to stop the construction on the disputed land.

Civil application stands disposed of.”

6. Appearing  for  the  appellants,  Mr.  Mukul

Rohtagi, submitted that the Respondent No.1, Maruti

Corporation  (plaintiff  in  the  suit),  came  to  be

registered as a partnership firm on 21st June, 1989,

but has sought specific performance of an agreement

alleged  to  have  been  entered  into  with  the

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appellant on 19th March, 1980, executed on a Non-

judicial stamp paper dated 17th March, 1990.  Mr.

Rohtagi urged that it was obvious that the claim of

the Respondent No.1 in the plaint had no valid,

legal and/or factual foundation, on the basis of

which the interim orders could have been passed by

the  High Court.  He submitted  that none of the

three orders impugned in the appeal were speaking

or reasoned orders.  As the orders would themselves

reveal,  they  were  simply  reactions  to  new  facts

brought to the notice of the Court from time to

time and orders were passed on the basis thereof

without even giving the appellant herein or other

interested parties a proper opportunity of meeting

the  allegations  or  questioning  the  same.  Mr.

Rohtagi submitted that the several interim orders

passed by the Division Bench were devoid of any

reason and were liable to be set aside.  

7. Mr. Ranjit Kumar, learned senior counsel, who

appeared for the Respondent Nos.2 to 7, who were

the  joint  owners  of  the  property  with  the

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appellant,  while  adopting  Mr.  Rohtagi’s

submissions,  supplemented  the  same  by  contending

that  the  original  agreement  with  Tirupati

Cooperative  Housing  Society  stipulated  that  the

said proposed Housing Society would have to apply

to the authorities of the Land Ceiling Act, 1976,

under Section 20 thereof, for exemption and leave

to construct on the vacant land.  Learned counsel

submitted that such application had been made by

Tirupati Cooperative Housing Society, but the same

was  rejected  and  on  such  rejection,  a  public

announcement was made discontinuing the agreement

between the owners of the land and the proposed

Tirupati Cooperative Housing Society.

8. Mr. Ranjit Kumar urged that the owners of the

property had never entered into any agreement with

Maruti  Corporation-Respondent  No.1  herein,  which

filed a suit identical to that filed by Tirupati

Cooperative Housing Society, relying on the same

cheques by which Tirupati had advanced certain sums

to the owners of the property. Mr. Ranjit Kumar

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also urged that, in any event, even if the case of

the Respondent No.1 is accepted as correct, for 19

years it had not applied for exemption to develop

the land under Section 20 of the Land Ceiling Act,

1976, without which it was not possible to develop

the property.  It is only after the repeal of the

Land Ceiling Act, 1976, on 19th March, 1999, that

the  Respondent  No.1  filed  the  aforesaid  suit

seeking enforcement of an agreement alleged to have

been entered into between the parties on 19th May,

1980, when exemption under Section 20 of the said

Act was no longer required.  

9. Mr. Ranjit Kumar submitted that initially when

the  First  Appeal  of  the  Respondent  No.1  was

admitted in the Gujarat High Court, an order was

also passed in Civil Application No.2405 of 2008 to

the effect that if the property in question was

dealt with in any way the same would be subject to

the decision in the appeal. Learned counsel urged

that since in its order the High Court had embodied

the principles of Section 52 of the Transfer of

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Property  Act, 1882 and there was  no bar to the

alienation of the property, as many as 280 plots

had been sold to different purchasers by way of

registered  sale  deeds  and  they  had  started

construction on the plots which they had acquired

presumably  after  obtaining  necessary  development

permission  sanctioned  by  the  Rajkot  Municipal

Corporation. It was submitted that up to such point

there  could  be  no  objection  with  regard  to  the

orders  passed  in  the  First  Appeal.   Thereafter,

when the interim order was modified on 22nd April,

2008, on the same application and the owners of the

property were restrained from selling the same, the

said modification, though not called for, was still

capable of being defended.

10. The real problem was created when on 7th May,

2008, on a fresh Civil Application for Injunction

No.5618 of 2008 filed on 6th May, 2008, an order was

passed by the Division Bench which not only had

serious consequences for the transferees but also

for the owners of the land who were parties to the

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suit.  The  order  which  has  been  extracted

hereinabove directed that no construction be raised

on  the  disputed  land  and  if  any  further

construction was raised, the Respondent No.1 herein

would  be  at  liberty  to  approach  the  concerned

police  authorities  who  were  directed  to  take

immediate  steps  to  stop  the  construction  on  the

disputed land.  Mr. Ranjit Kumar emphasised that

the cryptic manner in which the said application

was  disposed  of  by  such  a  mandatory  order,  was

contrary  to  all  legal  principles  and  even

procedural law.  He submitted that no liberty to

deal with the fresh application filed on 16.5.2008

was  even  given  by  the  Division  Bench  to  the

respondents in the appeal and on the very next day

on 7th May, 2008, without even giving any reasons

for passing such an order, it disposed of the same

finally to the severe prejudice of the appellant

and  the  Respondent  Nos.  2-7  herein  and  the  280

transferees  to  whom  plots  had  been  conveyed  and

that too when they were not parties to the appeal.  

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11. It was also submitted that no thought was even

given  to  the  principles  embodied  in  Order  XXXIX

Rules 1 and 2 of the Code of Civil Procedure before

such a drastic order of injunction was passed by

the High Court in the First Appeal.  Mr. Ranjit

Kumar  submitted  that  the  basic  principles  for

granting injunction involving the making out of a

prima facie case, the balance of convenience and

inconvenience,  and  irreparable  loss  and  injury,

were  not  even  taken  into  consideration  when  the

orders of injunction were passed.   

12. In addition to the above, Mr. Ranjit Kumar also

referred to the decision of this Court in Mandali

Ranganna & others vs. T. Ramachandra [(2008) 11 SCC

1] wherein an additional principle was sought to be

enunciated relating to grant of injunction by way

of an equitable relief. This Court held that in

addition  to  the  three  basic  principles,  a  Court

while  granting  injunction  must  also  take  into

consideration the conduct of the parties. It was

observed that a person who had kept quiet for a

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long  time  and  allowed  others  to  deal  with  the

property exclusively would not be entitled to an

order  of  injunction.   The  Court  should  not

interfere  only  because  the  property  is  a  very

valuable one.  Grant or refusal of injunction has

serious  consequences  depending  upon  the  nature

thereof and in dealing with such matters the Court

must make all endeavours to protect the interest of

the parties.

13. Mr. Ranjit Kumar submitted that having filed

the suit for enforcement of its purported rights

under the Agreement of 1980 in the year 1999 and

having allowed the owners of the property to deal

with  the  same  and  certain  rights  having  been

created in favour of third parties when there was

no restraint orders of the Courts, the High Court

erred in granting such an interim order with such

drastic  consequences  without  even  giving  the

persons, who were to be adversely affected by the

order, an opportunity of being heard.

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14. Opposing the submissions made on behalf of the

appellant and the Respondent Nos.2 to 7, Mr. Soli

J. Sorabjee, learned senior counsel, submitted that

it was necessary to clear the impression that had

been  given  that  the  Respondent  No.1-Maruti

Corporation came into existence only on 21st June,

1989.  He submitted that, on the other hand, the

Respondent No.1 was in existence even in 1980, but

as an unregistered partnership, and that it became

a registered partnership on 21st June, 1989.  Mr.

Sorabjee  submitted  that  the  question  of  the

existence of Maruti Corporation or the validity of

the agreement executed between Maruti Corporation

and the owners of the property would have to be

considered  on  evidence  and  till  a  decision  was

arrived at in the matter, it was only appropriate

that the status-quo of the property be maintained,

particularly when a large number of transfers are

alleged to have been made, which could make the

relief sought for by the Respondent No.1 a mere

paper relief, if it ultimately succeeded.

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15. Mr.  Sorabjee  also  contended  that  when  the

application  for  a  restraint  order  against

construction  was  sought  to  be  filed  on  6th May,

2008,  neither  the  appellant  nor  the  other

respondents  had  disclosed  the  fact  that  such

transactions had already taken place and that the

transferees had started raising their construction

on the basis of such conveyances.   

16. Mr. Sorabjee took pains to point out that while

in the suit all the issues had been decided against

the  plaintiff,  the  issue  relating  to  limitation

had,  however,  been  decided  in  favour  of  the

plaintiff  and  it  was  held  that  the  suit  for

specific relief was not barred by limitation.  Mr.

Sorabjee submitted that since the injunction order

was in force since 7th May, 2008 and more than 10

months had passed since then, without disturbing

the interim order of stay, the High Court could be

requested to dispose of the First Appeal which is

pending before it expeditiously.   

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17. Mr.  Huzefa  Ahmadi,  who  appeared  for  the

Respondent  No.1  -  Maruti  Corporation  in  Special

Leave  Petition  (Civil)  No.  12855  of  2008,  while

adopting Mr. Sorabjee’s submissions, urged that the

Tirupati  Cooperative  Housing  Society  had  been

created  by  Maruti  Corporation  with  a  definite

object in mind.  He submitted that the lands in

question were agricultural in nature and could not,

therefore, be acquired by any other body other than

a cooperative society.   It was on account of such

bar that the Tirupati Cooperative Housing Society

was proposed to be created on grounds of expediency

and was yet to be registered.  He also submitted

that the payments made to the owners by Tirupati

Cooperative Housing Society had been made from the

account of Maruti Corporation and consequently when

exemption under Section 20 of the Land Ceiling Act,

1976, was not granted to the proposed Cooperative

Society, the Respondent No.1 filed a separate suit

for specific performance of the agreement which had

been entered into with the Maruti Corporation and

the payments made by Tirupati Cooperative Housing

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Society were shown to be the payments which had

been made by Maruti Corporation.   Mr. Ahmadi also

submitted that Maruti Corporation could not apply

for exemption under Section 20 of the Land Ceiling

Act, 1976, and as a consequence it filed the suit

for specific performance only after the said Act

was repealed, thereby doing away with the necessity

of obtaining exemption under Section 20 thereof.

Mr. Ahmadi also contended that unless the appellant

and  the  other  joint  owners  of  the  property  and

their  transferees  were  suitably  restrained  from

dealing with the properties during the pendency of

the two appeals before the first Appellate Court,

the  appeals  would  be  rendered  infructuous  as  it

would become impossible once the constructions had

come up, to revert back to the position when the

plots were still undeveloped.   

18. On a careful consideration of the submissions

made on the behalf of the respective parties, the

scenario which emerges is that while on the one

hand the Respondent No.1 is strongly in favour of

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the status quo of the suit lands being maintained

during  the  pendency  of  the  suit  for  specific

performance  filed  by  it,  the  appellant  and  the

other joint owners have projected a case of both

balance  of  convenience  and  inconvenience  and

irreparable  loss  on  being  restrained  from

developing  their  own  property  by  the  Respondent

No.1,  purportedly  on  the  basis  of  a  spurious

document.  Mixed with the aforesaid issues is the

issue of the 280 transferees to whom plots have

been conveyed by the owners and who were enjoying

the  same  by  raising  structures  which  were  at

different  stages  of  construction.   We  are  faced

with a situation where inspite of having obtained

the  said  plots  at  a  point  of  time  when  the

injunction against the owners was not in force, the

transferees, who were not even parties before the

Court, have been restrained by an interim order of

injunction of a mandatory nature which seriously

affects  them,  but  without  giving  them  any

opportunity of hearing.

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19. We have to consider the effect of the third

order passed on 7th May, 2008, on Civil Application

for  Injunction  No.5618  of  2008  filed  of  the

previous  day  on  6th May,  2008,  ordering  that  no

construction be raised on the disputed lands on the

280 transferees who were in the process of raising

their constructions. As will be apparent from the

order itself, the same was passed in great haste

without  even  giving  the  owners  of  the  lands  an

opportunity  of  contesting  the  application.   In

fact, the application was disposed of by a cryptic

order which does not even contain any reason for

passing  the  same.  The  Division  Bench  has  merely

indicated that to avoid further complications and

multiplicity  of  litigation,  the  order  was  being

passed not to raise constructions on the disputed

land, without even taking into consideration the

several  transferees  who  were  to  be  adversely

affected by  such  an  order.   Even  the  appellant

herein and the Respondents No.2 to 7 were not given

an opportunity of filing any affidavit to counter

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the  statements  and  allegations  made  in  the

application for injunction.    

20. It is quite obvious that the High Court was

completely oblivious to the facts of the case and

passed different orders at different times on the

applications  filed  at  regular  intervals  by  the

Respondent No.1 Corporation.   

21. The  reasoning  provided  in  the  interim  order

dated  22nd April,  2008,  is,  to  say  the  least,

legally untenable.  Having passed an order earlier

on 29th February, 2008, based on the principle of

lis pendens, the Division Bench of the High Court

in its second order dated 22nd April, 2008, observed

that when the First Appeal was admitted and the

matter  in  dispute  as  regards  the  property  in

question was sub-judice, the properties in question

should not be sold and passed an order which was

contrary to the initial order which was made in

keeping with Section 52 of the Transfer of Property

Act.

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22. It is well established, that while passing an

interim order of injunction under Order XXXIX Rules

1  and 2 CPC, the Court  is required to consider

three basic principles, namely,  

(i) prima facie case;

(ii) balance of convenience and inconvenience;

and  

(iii) irreparable loss and injury.

    None  of  the  said  principles  have  been

considered  by  the  High  Court  while  passing  the

second and third interim orders dated 22nd April,

2008 and 7th May, 2008, nor has the High Court taken

into account the long silence on the part of the

Respondent No.1 Corporation in filing a suit after

19 years.   

23. In our view, while passing the interim order

dated 7th May, 2008, the High Court ought to have

considered the effect which its order would have on

the 280 transferees to whom some portions of the

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land had already been sold and who had commenced

construction thereupon, particularly when they were

not even parties in the appeal, nor were they heard

before they were injuncted from continuing with the

construction work.  Such an order affecting third

party rights in their absence, as they were not

parties  to  the  proceedings,  cannot  be  sustained

having further regard to the manner in which the

said order was passed.  An application for an order

which would have far and wide reaching consequences

was sought to be disposed of by the Division Bench

on the very next day without giving an opportunity

of controverting the allegations made therein even

to those who were parties in the suit, though it

had been brought to the notice of the Court that

conveyances  had  been  executed  in  favour  of  280

purchasers.  This is not a case where the appellant

and the other co-owners had violated any restraint

order passed by the Court in transferring the plots

in question to the said 280 transferees.  The said

transfers were effected at a point of time when

there was no injunction or restraint order against

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the appellant and the other owners of the property

and as far as the said transfers are concerned, the

only order that could have been passed on the said

application is the order which was passed at the

first instance on 29th January, 2008, based on the

principles  of  Section  52  of  the  Transfer  of

Property Act, 1882.  The restraint order on the

transferees must, therefore, be held to be bad and

liable to be set aside.

24. As far as the lands which the appellant and the

other  joint  owners  have  been  restrained  from

alienating  by  the  second  order  dated  22nd April,

2008, are concerned, we are of the view that in the

event the order of 22nd April, 2008, is set aside,

the Respondent No.1 can be compensated in terms of

money and no irreparable loss and injury will be

caused  to it on account thereof.   On the other

hand,  if  the  owners  of  the  property  remain

restrained from developing the same, it is they,

who will suffer severe prejudice, as they will be

deprived of the benefit of the user of their land

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during the said period.  The balance of convenience

and  inconvenience  is  against  grant  of  such

injunction.  The success of the suit for specific

performance filed by the Respondent No.1 depends to

a large extent on tenuous proof of genuineness of

the agreement sought to be enforced after 19 years,

despite the finding of the Trial Court that the

suit was not barred by limitation.

25. The question of conduct of the Respondent No.1

also becomes relevant, inasmuch as, having slept

over its rights for more than 19 years, it will be

inequitable on its prayer to restrain the owners of

the  property  from  dealing  with  the  same,  having

particular regard to the fact that a large portion

of the land has already been conveyed to as many as

280 purchasers who are in the process of erecting

constructions thereupon.

26. We  are,  therefore,  unable  to  sustain  the

interim orders passed by the Division Bench of the

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Gujarat High Court on 22nd April, 2008 and 7th May,

2008 in the appeals pending before it.

27. We,  accordingly,  set  aside  the  orders  dated

22nd April, 2008 and 7th May, 2008, passed by the

Division  Bench  of  the  Gujarat  High  Court  in

F.A.No.853 of 2008 and C.A. Nos.2405 and 5618 of

2008  and  maintain  the  initial  order  dated  29th

February,  2008.   The  appeals  and  the  connected

Interlocutory  Applications  are,  accordingly,

disposed of.

28. The High Court is requested to dispose of the

appeals pending before it at an early date without

being influenced by any observations made in this

judgment.

29. There will be no order as to costs.

______________J. (ALTAMAS KABIR)

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New Delhi    ______________J. Dated:06.04.2009     (CYRIAC JOSEPH)

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