23 November 1976
Supreme Court
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M. MANIKLAL Vs THE STATE OF MYSORE

Bench: KRISHNAIYER,V.R.
Case number: Appeal Civil 1948 of 1968


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PETITIONER: M. MANIKLAL

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF MYSORE

DATE OF JUDGMENT23/11/1976

BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. BENCH: KRISHNAIYER, V.R. KHANNA, HANS RAJ

CITATION:  1977 AIR  361            1977 SCR  (2) 165  1977 SCC  (1) 231

ACT:             City  of Bangalore Improvement Act 1945, Section  15(3),         16(2)-- Rule 10 Notice of acquisition to persons in  Revenue         register--Whether person whose land is acquired is  entitled         to allotment of plot in housing scheme.

HEADNOTE:             The appellant purchased the land in question from  Gili-         teppa and Nanjappa during the pendency of the land  acquisi-         tion proceedings under the city of Bangalore Improvement Act         1945.   The acquisition was for building a house  colony  by         the  Housing  Board  whose statutory  responsibility  is  to         implement  housing  schemes.  The appellant  challenged  the         acquisition before the High Court by filing a writ petition.         The High Court dismissed the writ petition.         In an appeal by special leave the appellant contended :                         1.   There  was  non-compliance   with   the                       mandatory  requirement of s. 16(2) of the  Act                       which requires the service of notice on "every                       person whose name appears in the Land  Revenue                       Register as being primarily liable to pay  the                       property tax or land revenue".                         2.  Section  15(3)’provides  that  the  main                       scheme  may  provide for the  construction  of                       buildings  for the proper and working  classes                       including the whole or part of such classes to                       be displaced in the execution of this  scheme.                       The  appellant  whose land is  acquired  being                       displaced is entitled to allotment of land for                       construction of a building. for his own                       residence.         Dismissing the appeal,             HELD:  (1) The High Court on evidence rightly held  that         in  the revenue register the names of predecessors in  title         of  Giliteppa and Nanjappa were shown and that he was  given         due notice.  The document produced by the appellant was  not         the  revenue  register  as contemplated  by  section  16(2).         [167A-C, F]:’             (2) Section 15(3) does not impose a compulsory duty or a         right  in appellant to Claim a plot.  It is clear from  rule         10  made  under  the Act that the person  displaced  by  the         acquisition may be accomodated.  However, this is a  benefi-

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       cient consideration and not a necessary obligation. [168A-C]             [The Court observed that in case any land is  available,         and  if the appellant fulfils the other criteria  prescribed         by the rules the respondent may consider his claim.]

JUDGMENT:         CIVIL  APPELLATE  JURISDICTION:  Civil Appeal  No.  1948  of         1968’.             Appeal from the Judgment and Order dated the 21st Sept.,         1967 of the Mysore High Court in W.P. No. 1168/65.          S.V. Gupte with S.S. JavaIi and B. Dutta for the appellant.          N. Nettar and K.R. Nagaraja, for respondents.         166         The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             KRISHNA IYER, J. Two short legal issues--both apparently         devoid  of merit--were urged unsuccessfully before the  High         Court and repeated, with a somewhat similar fate, before us,         ii we may anticipate our conclusion.  A Judgment of affirma-         tion may usefully be an abbreviation and so, we shall brief-         ly deal with Shri Gupta’s twin submissions on behalf of  the         appellant  writ petitioner.  The appeal is by special  leave         and  the subject-matter is land compulsorily acquired  under         the  City of Bangalore Improvement Act 1945 (for  short  the         Improvement Act) (Mysore Act V of 1945).             A  concise narration of the necessary facts may  conven-         iently be compressed into a paragraph or two.  The appellant         purchased two portions of S. No. 211 within the District  of         Bangalore   from  two persons Giliteppa and Nanjappa  during         the  pendency  of  land acquisition  proceedings  under  the         Improvement Act.  These  proceedings were for acquisition of         land in S. No. 211 for making a lay-out plan for a  building         colony.   This  limited objective was  completed  after  due         formalities  were complied with and thereafter the land  was         made over to the Housing Board whose statutory responsibili-         ty is to implement housing schemes.  We are told that houses         have  been built on the land already although there is  some         doubt  as to whether 5 acres out of the total  extent  still         remain  vacant.   If the contentions of  the  appellant  are         sound  the  whole scheme will be shot down, a   disaster   a         socially  conscious  court should try to avert  unless  com-         pelled by fundamental legal laws.             What,  then,  are the alleged vital  weaknesses  in  the         acquisition  proceedings  which vitiate  them  altogether  ?         Firstly, a technicality technically countered; and secondly,         a  compassionate  consideration which  has  no  invalidatory         effect.             The appellant has urged before us that Section 16(2)  of         the Improvement Act has a mandatory requirement that service         of  notices  shall be effected on "every person  whose  name         appears  in the  ............  in the land revenue  register         as  being primarily liable to pay the property tax  or  land         revenue assessment on.........land  which it is proposed  to         acquire in executing the scheme"  ..........  This perempto-         ry mandate has not been complied with and that is the  first         vital  flaw  pressed before us.  The  second  contention  is         based upon Section 15 (3 ) of the Improvement Act whereunder         every  improvement scheme "may provide for the  construction         of buildings for the accommodation of the poorer and working         classes,  including the whole or part of such classes to  be         displaced  in the execution of the scheme." This  provision,         it  is argued. clothes the appellant, in his capacity  as  a         displaced  person  with  a right to allotment  of  land  for         construction  of a building for his own residence.  We  will

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       presently consider  these two submissions seriatim.             To make short work of the first point we may straightway         state  that the obligation under section 16(2) is  to  serve         notices  on persons whose names appear in the  land  revenue         register  as being primarily liable to pay the land  revenue         assessment.  The complaint made is that the predecessors  of         the appellant Giliteppa and Nanjappa were.         167         entitled  to notice under this provision and ’that they  had         not  been so given.  Of course, there is no  affidavit  from         these  two vendors of the appellant that they have  not  re-         ceived  any  notice.  Apart from that the burden is  on  the         appellant  to  prove that his vendors  were   persons  whose         names  were  borne on the land revenue register. This  is  a         question of fact but the moot point debated before the  High         Court  was what in law was the land revenue register.   Cer-         tainly  notice has been given to Khatedars.  The  return  of         the  respondents  states   that   "notified  Khatedars  were         notified  of the acquisition".  Ex. R-I  produced  alongwith         the  return  shows  one Somayaji as the  Khatedar,  not  the         vendors of the appellant.  This disputed point was  investi-         gated  by  the High Court with a thoroughness  and  intimate         acquaintance with the  local revenue laws which elicits  our         appreciation.  Considering the documentary evidence  adduced         and  the authoritative revenue laws bearing on  the  subject         and  scanning the meaning of  the  entries in  the  extracts         before Court, the learned Judges reached the conclusion that         the  Khatta produced by the appellant was "a mere  tentative         compilation  of information transmitted to the  Revenue  De-         partment by the Inams Abolition Department" and not "Khetwar         Patrak"  which  was  the land revenue  register  within  the         meaning  of section 16(2) of the Improvement Act.  The  High         Court concluded:                             "We  are of the opinion ’that  the  land                       revenue register to which section 16(2) refers                       is  no  other than the register of  lands  the                       Khetwar Patrak, and, that register is not  the                       Khatta which is something very different."                       Further,  on, after full discussion the  Court                       crystallized its conclusions thus:                             "Even though a person may be an occupant                       in  the  sense in which that word  has  to  be                       understood,  so long as it is not proved  that                       his name appears in the land revenue register,                       at  the material point of time, we should  not                       pronounce   against   the  validity   of   the                       acquisition   or   the   publication   of    a                       declaration  under section 18 on  the  slender                       foundation  of insufficient material  such  as                       the certified copy of a tentative Khata  which                       we have referred."         Indeed, the appellant produced some wrong documents but  the         Court  was  too  cute to be misled as is  evident  from  its         observation:                             "It  emerges from the discussion so  far                       made  that  that land revenue register  is  no                       other  than  the  register  of  lands  or  the                       Khetwar  Patrak which has to be maintained  in                       form No. 1 which is set out in volume 2 of the                       Mysore Village Manual at page 8(a), and, we do                       not  have  before us either that  register  of                       lands  or  a  certified  copy  of  it  and  no                       exlplanation has been offered to us as to                       why  the petitioner did not obtain a  copy  of                       that register or produce it."

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       After hearing Shri Gupte at some length we are not  disposed         to  be dislodged from the finding painstakingly recorded  by         the High Court. The first point, therefore, fails.         168             The only other point seriously pressed before us by Shri         Gupte is that under section 15(3) there is an obligation  on         the  part of the Board of Trustees to provide a plot to  the         displaced  appellant.  There is nothing in Section 15(3)  of         the  Improvement Act which warrants. such a compulsive  duty         or  creates a right to claim a plot.   Of course, the  Board         may  consider providing some land for the persons from  whom         acquisitions   have  been  made.   This  is  a   beneficient         consideration, not a necessary obligation.   That this is so         clear also from  the rules for the allotment of sites.  Rule         10  settles the principle  for selection of  applicants  for         allotment of sites.  Rule 10(1) reads:                       "10.  Principles for selection  of  applicants                       for  allotment of sites.--(1) The Board  shall                       consider  the  case of each applicant  on  its                       merits and shall have regard to the  following                       principles in making selection and fixing  the                       priority for allotment :--                           (i) applicants whose lands or houses  have                       been  acquired by the Board provided they  are                       otherwise  qualified for allotment;                           (ii) the status of the applicant, that is,                       whether   he   is married or  single  and  has                       dependent children;                          (iii)  the income of the applicant and  his                       capacity to purchase a site and build a  house                       thereon for his residence;                          (iv) the number of years the applicant  has                       been  waiting for allotment of a site and  the                       fact  that  he did not secure a  site  earlier                       though he is eligible  and  had applied for  a                       site."         The facts before us are that the lands acquired have already         been  transferred to the Housing Board and houses  have  al-         ready been built at least on a substantial part of the land.         All that we can say, at this stage, is that having regard to         the compassionate  factor  that  the appellant’s lands  have         been  acquired  and he has perhaps been displaced  from  the         entirety of his building sites, it should be a fair gesture-         on  the part of the Housing Board if there are vacant  lands         still avail able--the order of stay granted by this Court is         strongly  suggestive of some land being still  available  as         not built upon--to consider ’the claim of the appellant,  if         he applies within three months from today for allotment of a         site for a house, subject, of course, to his eligibility for         allotment  and other criteria for comparative evaluation  of         claims  prescribed by the rules in this behalf.  It  follows         that  beyond  this is not for the Court to direct  and  less         than this is not fair play to the appellant.             The  High  Court  had gone into the  question  of  delay         disentitling the appellant in maintaining his writ petition.         In the view that we have already taken on the merits of  the         substantive points, we are not         169         called upon to consider the deadly effect of the delay  such         as  there is between the dates of the acquisition  notifica-         tion  and the institution of the writ petition.  The  appeal         is dismissed but having consideration for the conspectus  of         circumstances  present in this case we direct that the  par-         ties will bear their own costs throughout.         P.H.P.                                                Appeal

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       dismissed.         170