05 September 1966
Supreme Court
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UNION OF INDIA Vs THE METAL CORPORATION OF INDIA LTD. & ANR.

Case number: Appeal (civil) 1222 of 1966


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PETITIONER: UNION OF INDIA

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE METAL CORPORATION OF INDIA LTD. & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 05/09/1966

BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) BENCH: RAO, K. SUBBA (CJ) SHELAT, J.M.

CITATION:  1967 AIR  637            1967 SCR  (1) 255  CITATOR INFO :  R          1968 SC1138  (60)  O          1969 SC 634  (1,18,30,49,50)  RF         1970 SC 564  (97,202)  RF         1973 SC1461  (601,709,1175,1756,1979,1980,2  E&R        1978 SC 215  (15)  RF         1979 SC 248  (10,13,14)  RF         1980 SC1955  (29)  RF         1986 SC 468  (28,30)

ACT: Constitution  of India, 1950, Art. 31(2)-Law for  compulsory acquisition laying down Principles of compensation-Test  for constitutional    validity-Metal   Corporation   of    India (Acquisition  of  Undertaking)  Act (44  of  1965)-If  ultra vires.

HEADNOTE: The Metal Corporation of India (Acquisition of  Undertaking) Act, 1965, was enacted for acquiring in the public interest, the undertaking of the Metal Corporation of India.  The  Act provided  that the Corp-oration was to vest in  the  Central Government  on the commencement of the Act; and that in  the absence  of  an  agreement between the  Government  and  the Corporation, the compensation payable to the Corporation was to  be an amount equal to the sum total of the value of  the properties and assets of the Corporation on the date of  the commencement  of the Act calculated in accordance  with  the provisions of Paragraph 11 of the Schedule to the Act,  less the liabilities on -the said date, calculated in  accordance with  the provisions of Paragraph III of the Schedule.   One of the clauses laying down principles of compensation, viz., clause  (b)  of  para 11 is in two parts.   The  first  part provides  for  the valuation of plant,  machinery  or  other equipment  which has not been worked or used and is in  good condition, and the second part provides for the valuation of any other plant, machinery or equipment.  The former have to be valued at the actual curt incurred by the Corporation  in acquiring  them  ’and the latter, at the  writtendown  value determined in accordance with the provisions of the  Income- of the constitutional validity of the Act. HELD  : The Act contravened Art. 31(2) of  the  Constitution and was therefore void. [265 C]

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Under Art. 31(2), no property shaft be compulsorily acquired except  under  -a law which provides  for  compensation  and either  fixes  the amount of compensation or  specifies  the principles on which and the manner in which the compensation is  to  be  determined and given.  If  the  compensation  is illusory  or if the principles prescribed are irrelevant  to the  value  of  the property at or about  the  time  of  its acquisition,  the law is bad.  The law, to  justify  itself, has to provide for the payment of a "just equivalent" to the property  acquired,  or lay down principles  which  are  not arbitrary  but  which  are  relevant  to  the  fixation   of compensation.   It  is only when the principles  stand  this test, that the adequacy of the resultant compensation  falls outside  judicial  scrutiny under the second  limb  of  Art. 31(2).  In the instant case, the two principles laid down in cl.  (b)  of Para 11 of the Schedule are irrelevant  to  the fixation  of  the value of the machinery as on the  date  of acquisition.   In  the case of unused machinery, if  it  was Purchased in 1950 for Rs. 100 and, for some reason, had  not been  used  in the working of the Undertaking but  had  been maintained in good condition, it may cost Rs. 1000 in  1965. A  compensation of Rs. 100 for that machinery could  not  be said  to be -a "just equivalent" of it.  Similarly,  in  the case of used machinery, if it was purchased in 1950 for  Rs. 1000, 256 the  aggregate of all the depreciation allowances made  year after  year  may exhaust the sum of Rs. 1000 in  ten  years, with the result that, under the Income-tax Act, the assessee will  not  be entitled to any depreciation after  the  tenth year.   It could not, however, be said that after the  tenth year, the machinery had no value and that the owner was  not to  be  given any compensation.  Indeed, such  a  machinery, because  of subsequent rise in prices, may be sold  in  1965 for  Rs. 10,000.  Further the constitutional  invalidity  of cl. (b) of Para II of the Schedule affect& -the totality  of the  compensation payable; for, machinery is the major  part of the undertaking, the entire Undertaking is acquired as  a unit,  and,  in the context of compensation for  the  entire Undertaking,  the clauses of Para H of the Schedule  to  the Act  are  not severable.  Therefore, the mere fact  that  in regard to some parts of the Undertaking, the principles laid down  in Para H provide for compensation does no affect  the question,  especially  when it has not been shown  that  the working out of any one or more of the principles would  give a  higher compensation to some parts of the  Undertaking  so that  the  excess  paid  under one  head  would  offset  the deficiency under another head. [261 F-H; 262 B; 264 B-C,  F- H; 265 A-El Vajravelu  v. Special Deputy Collector, [1965] 1 S.C.R.  614 and Jeejeebhoy v. Assistant Collector, [1965] 1 S.C.R.  636, followed.

JUDGMENT: CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1222 of 1966. Appeal  from  the  judgment and order dated  March  14  1966 Appeal of the Punjab High Court (Circuit Bench), at Delhi in Civil Writ No. 832-D of 1965. S.   V. Gupte, Solicitor-General, N. S. Bindra, R. H. Dhebar and B.    R. G. K. Achar, for the appellant. M.   C. Setalvad, B. C. Dutt, Santosh Chatterjee, B. Partha- sarathy,  0. C. Mathur, and Ravinder Narain, for  respondent

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No. 1. B.   C.  Dutt,  Santosh  Chatterjee, Anand  Prakash,  0.  C. Mathur -and Ravinder Narain, for respondent No. 2. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by Subba  Rao,  C.  J. This appeal by  certificate  raises  the question  of  the  constitutional  validity  of  the   Metal Corporation of India ,(Acquisition of Undertaking) Act  (No. XLIV of 1965), hereinafter called the Act. The  relevant  facts  lie  in  a  small  compass.   The  1st respondent,   The  Metal  Corporation  of   India   Limited, hereinafter  called the ,Corporation, was a limited  company constituted  under the Indian Companies Act, having for  its objects, inter alia, the development of zinc and lead  mines at Zawar in the State of Rajasthan and the construction of a zinc  smelter  and  other  connected  works  for   producing electrolytic  zinc  and  by-products.   The  Government  was ,satisfied  that  it  was  necessary  to  acquire  the  said Corporation in public interest and on October 22, 1965,  the President of India 257 promulgated  an Ordinance (No. 6 of 1965) providing for  the acquisition  of the Corporation by the  Central  Government. Pursuant  to  the said Ordinance, on or  about  October  23, 1965,  the  Central  Government took  over  the  possession, control  and  administration of the said  Corporation.   The Corporation,  the 1st respondent and its Managing  Director, the  2nd respondent filed a Writ Petition under Art. 226  of the  Constitution  in the High Court of Judicature  for  the State of Punjab, Circuit Bench at New Delhi, being  Petition No.  631-D  of 1965, challenging the validity  of  the  said Ordinance.   In the meantime, the Parliament passed the  Act on  the same terms as contained in Ordinance No. 6 of  1965: it received the assent of the President of India on December 12, 1965.  The respondent filed another writ petition in the said High Court, being Writ Petition No. 832-D of 1965,  for a declaration that the Act was ultra vires the Constitution. The  said  High Court held that the Ordinance  and  the  Act contravened  the  relevant  provisions of  Art.  31  of  the Constitution  and,  therefore, were  constitutionally  void. The present appeal is preferred against the said judgment of the High Court. It  will  be convenient at this stage to read  the  relevant provisions  of  the  Act.  The  preamble  and  the  relevant provisions of the Act read: "Preamble.               An  Act to provide for the acquisition of  the               undertaking of the Metal Corporation of  India               Limited  for  the  purpose  of  enabling   the               Central  Government in the public interest  to               exploit, to the fullest extent possible,  zinc               and lead deposits in and around the Zawar area               in the State of Rajasthan and to utilise those               minerals  in  such manner as to  subserve  the               common good               Section  3. On the commencement of  this  Act,               the  undertaking  of  the  company  shall,  by               virtue  of  this Act, be transferred  to,  and               vest in, the Central Government.               Section  10. (1) The Central Government  shall               pay  compensation  to  the  company  for   the               acquisition of the undertaking of the  company               and  such compensation shall be determined  in               accordance  with the principles  specified  in               the Schedule and in the manner hereinafter set               out, that is to say,

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             (2)   Notwithstanding that separate valuations               are calculated under the principles  specified               in  the  Schedule in respect  of  the  several               matters referred to therein, the               258               amount  of compensation to be given  shall  be               deemed to be a single compensation to be given               for the undertaking as a whole.               (3)                                THE SCHEDULE                Principles for determining compensation for               acquisition of    the undertaking.               Paragraph  I.-The compensation to be  paid  by               the  Central  Government  to  the  company  in               respect of the acquisition of the  undertaking               thereof  shall be an amount equal to  the  sum               total  of  the  value of  the  properties  and               assets   of  the  company  on  the   date   of               commencement   of  this  Act   calculated   in               accordance with the provisions of paragraph II               less  the  sum total of  the  liabilities  and               obligations of the company as on the said date               calculated  in accordance with the  provisions               of paragraph 111.               Paragraph II.-(a) The market value of any land               or buildings;               (b)   the actual cost incurred by the  company               in  acquiring  any plant, machinery  or  other               equipment  which has not been worked  or  used               and is in good condition and the  written-down               value  (determined  in  accordance  with   the               provisions of the Income-tax Act, 1961  (XLIII               of  1961),  of any other plant,  machinery  or               equipment;               (c)   the   market   value  of   any   shares,               securities  or other investments held  by  the               company;               (d)   the total amount of the premium paid  by               the  company  in  respect  of  all   leasehold               properties  reduced in the case of  each  such               premium  by  an  amount which  bears  to  such               premium  the  same proportion as  the  expired               term  of  the lease in respect of  which  such               premium  shall  have been paid  bears  to  the               total term of the lease;               (e)   the amount of debts due to the  company,               whether secured or unsecured, to the extent to               which  they  are reasonably considered  to  be               recoverable.               (f)   the amount of cash held by the  company,               whether in deposit with a bank or otherwise;               (g)   the  value  of all tangible  assets  and               properties other than those failing within any               of the preceding clauses.               Paragraph III.-The total amount of liabilities               and  obligations  incurred by the  company  in               connection with                                    259               the  formation, management and  administration               of the undertaking and subsisting  immediately               before the commencement of this Act." The gist of the said provisions may be given thus.  The  Act was  made to acquire in public interest the  undertaking  of the  Corporation,  On  the  commencement  of  the  Act,  the undertaking  was  transferred  and  vested  in  the  Central

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Government.   Under s. 10 of the Act, the  Government  shall pay compensation to the undertaking as a whole: but, in  the absence  of  an  agreement between the  Government  and  the Corporation, the compensation payable to the Corporation has to  be  ascertained under the principles  specified  in  the Schedule  in  respect  of the several  matters  referred  to therein.   Paragraph 1 of the Schedule lays down the  manner in which the compensation to be paid to the Corporation  for the  acquisition  of the undertaking is to  be  ascertained. The  said compensation shall be an amount equal to  the  sum total  of  the  value of the properties and  assets  of  the Corporation  on  the  date of the commencement  of  the  Act calculated in accordance with the provisions of paragraph It less  the  liabilities  on  the  said  date  calculated   in accordance  with  the  provisions of paragraph  III  of  the Schedule.   Broadly,  the  said  paragraph  lays  down   the principles  for ascertaining the value of lands,  buildings, machinery and equipment, amounts due to the undertaking  and other tangible assets and properties.  The different clauses of  the paragraph adopt different principles for  valuation. But  what  is  important  for the  present  purpose  is  the principle  embodied  in cl. (b) of para II.  It  is  in  two parts:  the  first  provides for  the  valuation  of  plant, machinery  or other equipment which has not been  worked  or used  and is in good condition, and the second provides  for the  valuation of any other plant, machinery  or  equipment. The  former has to be valued at the actual cost incurred  by the Corporation in -acquiring the same and the latter at the writtendown   value  determined  in  accordance   with   the provisions of the Indian Income-tax Act, 1961. The  High  Court  held,  on  a  construction  of  the   said provisions,  that  the  principle contained in  cl.  (b)  of paragraph  11  of  the Schedule to the  Act  in  respect  of machinery   etc.    "cannot  be  called  relevant   to   the determination of ’just equivalent’, as it takes no notice of the  notorious  fact that prices have been  steadily  rising during  the  past several years,  particularly  of  imported machinery and plant".  It also held, "that depreciation rule does  not even pretend to determine the actual  depreciation in   a  particular  case  and  it  is  obvious   that   such depreciation has no real relationship with the actual  value of any machinery at any particular point of time".  On  that reasoning,  it came to the conclusion, having regard to  the decision  of  this  Court in  Vajravelu  v.  Special  Deputy Collector(1) that the said provision in respect of machinery did. (1)  [1965] 1 S.C.R. 614. 260 not  lay down a principle for fixing compensation i.  e.,  a just equivalent to the machinery acquired. The reasoning of the High Court was attacked by the  learned Additional  Solicitor-General on the ground that it did  not appreciate the true scope of the said decision of this Court and  that,  in  any  view, it went  wrong  in  applying  the principle of the said decision to the provisions of the Act. He contended that the Act laid down the broad principle that compensation  shall be paid for the entire undertaking as  a unit, but provided different modes for the ascertainment  of the value of different parts thereof in such a way that  the deficiency  in the valuation of one part was offset  by  the liberal  valuation  of  the other part.  In  that  view,  he contended,  the  Act embodied a principle  relevant  to  the ascertainment  of compensation for the undertaking  acquired and,  therefore,  the  product worked  out  under  the  said principle pertained only to the realm ,of adequacy which was

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beyond   the  ken  of  judicial  review.   He   added   that compensation  in  Art.  31 of the  Constitution  meant  that cornpensation  which was regarded as just in the context  of public  acquisitions  and  that test was  satisfied  in  the present case. Mr.  M.  C. Setalvad, learned counsel for  the  respondents, contended  that though under the Act compensation was to  be given  to  the undertaking as one unit, the  Act  laid  down principles  for  arriving at the valuation of the  parts  to arrive  at the valuation of the whole and  that,  therefore, every such principle should stand the test laid down by this Court.    So  judged,  the  argument  proceeded,  both   the principles  laid down in cl. (b) of para 11 of the  Schedule had  no nexus to the ascertainment of compensation  for  the machinery acquired, for in the case of unused machinery, its cost  price was the guide and in the case of used  machinery its  written-down value was the criterion and that both  the methods were arbitrary. We  find  it difficult to appreciate the  arguments  of  the learned  Solicitor-General.  It is true that under s. 10  of the  Act the Central ,Government shall pay compensation  for the  acquisition of the undertaking to the  Corporation  and the said compensation arrived at in the manner prescribed in the  Schedule  to the Act shall be ,deemed to  be  a  single compensation to be given to the undertaking as a whole.  But it will be noticed that though a single compensation for the undertaking is given, the said compensation shall be  deter- mined  in  accordance with the principles specified  in  the Schedule.   Under  the Schedule, the  compensation  for  the entire  undertaking  shall be the amount equal  to  the  sum total  of  the  value of the properties and  assets  of  the Corporation calculated in accordance with the provisions  of para II of the Schedule.  Under the said para 11,  different principles  are  laid  down for ascertaining  the  value  of different  parts  of  the  undertaking.   If  all  the  said principles  laid  ,down in para 11 of the  Schedule  do  not provide for the just equivalent 261 of  all the parts of the undertaking mentioned therein,  the sum total also cannot obviously be a just equivalent of  the undertaking.   So too, if some of them do not provide for  a just  equivalent  and  others do so, the  sum  total  cannot equally  be  a just equivalent to the undertaking.   In  the case  of the undertaking in question, the machinery  is  the most  valuable part of the undertaking.  Apropos the  unused machinery in good condition, how can the price for which the said  machinery was purchased years ago  possibly  represent its  price  at  the  time  of  its  acquisition?   A  simple illustration will disclose the irrelevance of the principle. Suppose  in 1950 a machinery was purchased for Rs. 100  and, for some reasons, the same has not been used in the  working of   the  undertaking  but  has  been  maintained  in   good condition.   That machinery has not become  obsolescent  and still can be used effectively.  If purchased in open  market it will cost the owner Rs. 1,000.  A compensation of Rs. 100 for that machinery cannot be said to be a just equivalent of it.   It is common knowledge that there has been  an  upward spiral in prices of the machinery in recent years.  The cost price  of  a machinery purchased about ten years  ago  is  a consideration  not relevant for fixing compensation for  its acquisition  in  1965.   The principle must be  such  as  to enable  the ascertainment of its price at or about the  time of its acquisition.  Nor the doctrine of written-down  value accepted  in  the Income-tax law can afford  any  guide  for ascertaining   the  compensation  for  the  used   machinery

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acquired  under  the Act.  Under the general scheme  of  the Income-tax  Act, the income is to be charged  regardless  of the  diminution in the value of the capital.  But the  rigor of  this  hard principle is mitigated by  the  Act  granting allowances  in  respect  of depreciation  in  the  value  of certain   assets  such  as  machinery,   buildings,   plant, furniture  etc.   These  allowances  are  worked  out  on  a notional basis for giving relief to the income-tax assessee. This artificial rule of depreciation evolved for  income-tax purposes  has no relation to the value of the  said  assets. To  illustrate: a machinery was purchased in the  year  1950 for  Rs.  1,000.   The aggregate  of  all  the  depreciation allowances  made year after year for ten years  may  exhaust the sum of Rs. 1,000 with the result, after the tenth  year, the assessee will not be entitled to any depreciation.  From this  it  cannot  be  said that after  the  tenth  year  the machinery  has no value.  Indeed, a machinery purchased  for Rs, 1,000 in 1950, because of subsequent rise in. prices may be sold in 1965 for Rs. 10,000.  But the application of  the principle laid down in cl. (b) of para 11 of the Schedule to the  Act  in  regard to used machinery gives  the  owner  no compensation   at  all.   Yet,  the  Government  takes   the machinery  worth  Rs.  10,000  gratis.   This   illustration exposes the extreme arbitrariness of the principle.  It  is, therefore,  manifest  that the two principles  of  valuation embodied  in cl. (b) of para II of the Schedule to  the  Act are  not  relevant  to the fixing of  compensation  for  the machinery  at.  the time of its acquisition under  the  Act. The argument, of the 262 learned Additional Solicitor-General that the working out of all  the  principles in respect of different  parts  of  the undertaking  would  result in a product which  would  fairly represent, in the context of public acquisitions, the  "just equivalent" to the undertaking acquired is purely based on a surmise for, it is not shown that the working out of any one or  more of the principles would give a higher  compensation to  some  parts of the undertaking so that the  excess  paid under  one  head would offset the deficiency  under  another head.  Nor can the doctrine of inherent worth of a machinery has  any relevance in the matter of giving compensation  for its  acquisition  at  a particular point of  time,  for  the simple reason that the worth of an article depends upon  the market conditions obtaining at the time of its  acquisition. It   is  impossible  to  predicate,  irrespective  of   such conditions,  that a particular machinery has a fixed  value. for all times. Four  decisions  of  this Court  laid  down  the  principles applicable  to the present case.  Indeed, but for  the  said decisions,   we  would  have  posted  this  case  before   a Constitution  Bench  of five Judges.  But,  as  this  appeal involves  only the application of the construction put  upon Art.  31  of  the Constitution by this  Court  in  the  said decisions,  we did not resort to that course.  The first  of them is The State of West Bengal v. Mrs. Bela Banerjee  (1). There, the validity of the West Bengal Land Development  and Planning  Act, 1948 was under scrutiny.  Section  8  thereof provided  that  compensation to be  awarded  for  compulsory acquisition  to owners of land was not to exceed the  market value  as  on December 31, 1946.  This Court held  that  the said  Act  was ultra vires the Constitution and  void  under Art.  32(2)  thereof.  In that  context,  Patanjali  Sastri, C.J., observed:               "Turning  now  to the provisions  relating  to               compensation  under the impugned Act, it  will

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             be seen that the latter part of the proviso to               section 8 limits the amount of compensation so               as not to exceed the market value of the  land               on December 31, 1946, no matter when the  land               is  acquired.  Considering that  the  impugned               Act is a permanent enactment and lands may  be               acquired  under  it many years after  it  came               into force, the fixing of the market value  on               December   31,  1946,  as  -the   ceiling   on               compensation, without reference. to the  value               of the land at the time of the acquisition  is               arbitrary  and  cannot  be  regarded  as   due               compliance  in  letter  and  spirit  with  the               requirement of article 31(2)." The  above decision was followed by this Court in  State  of Madras v. D. Namasivaya Mudaliar(2).  There the  respondents were  owners of certain lands which were to be  compulsorily acquired under (1) [1954] S.C.R. 558, 564. (2) [1964] 6 S.C.R. 936, 945 2 63 Madras  Lignite  (Acquisition of Land) Act, 1953.   The  Act came  into force on August 20, 1953, before Art. 31  of  the Constitution   was  amended  by  the  Constitution   (Fourth Amendment) Act, 1955.  By the said Act compensation for  the acquisition   of  lignite-bearing  bands  under   the   Land Acquisition  Act was to be assessed on the market  value  of the  land prevailing on August 28, 1947, and not on he  date on  which the notification was issued under s. 4(1)  of  the -and  Acquisition  Act.  It also provided that  in  awarding compensation,  the  value of  non-agricultural  improvements commenced  since  April 28, 1.947 would not  be  taken  into consideration.   This Court held that the said Act was  bad, because it contravened Art. 31(2) of the Constitution, as it stood before the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act,  1955. This Court, speaking through Shah, J., observed:               "Assuming that in appropriate cases,  fixation               of  a date anterior to the publication of  the               notification  under s. 4(1) for  ascertainment               of  market value of the land to  be  acquired,               may  not always be regarded as a violation  of               the  constitutional guarantee, in the  absence               of evidence that compensation assessed on  the               basis  of market value on such anterior  date,               awards  to  the  expropriated  owner  a   just               monetary value of his property at the date  on               which   his  interest  is  extinguished,   the               provisions  of  the  Act  arbitrarily   fixing               compensation  based on the market value  at  a               date many years before the notification  under               s.  4(1)  was issued, cannot  be  regarded  as               valid."               Then the learned Judge proceeded to state:               "To deny to the owner of the land compensation               at  rates which justly indemnify him  for  his               loss  by  awarding him compensation  at  rates               prevailing ten years before the date on  which               the  notification  under s.  4(1)  was  issued               amounts  in  the circumstances to  a  flagrant               infringement  of the fundamental right of  the               owner of the land under Art. 31(2) as it stood               when the Act was enacted." These  two  decisions turned upon the construction  of  Art. 31(2)  of the Constitution before the  Constitution  (Fourth Amendment)   Act,   1955.   These  cases   laid   down   two

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propositions:  (1)  "Compensation" under Art. 31(2)  of  the Constitution means a "just equivalent" of what the owner has been deprived of ; and (2) the value of land at an  anterior date is presumed to be no compensation within the meaning of the said Article.  After the Constitution (Fourth Amendment) Act,  1955, this Court had to construe in two  decisions  he amended  provision  of Art. 31(2) vis-a-vis  the  expression "compensation" found therein.  The first decision is that in Vajravelu 264 v.   Special   Deputy  Collector(1).   There,   this   Court observed at p. 625-626:               "A  scrutiny of the amended Article  discloses               that   it   accepted  the   meaning   of   the               expressions "compensation" and "principles" as               defined by this Court in Mrs. Bela  Banerjee’s               case(2)."               .lm0               And  it  held  that, if  the  compensation  is               illusory  or if the principles prescribed  are               irrelevant to the value of the property at  or               about  the time of its acquisition, it can  be               said that the Legislature committed a fraud on               power and, therefore, the law is bad.  One  of               the illustrations given at p. 627 is  relevant               to the present enquiry and that is as  follows               :               if  a law lays down principles which  are  not               relevant’  to the property acquired or to  the               value of the property at or about the time  it               is acquired, it may be said that they are  not               principles  contemplated by Art. 31(2) of  the               Constitution.  If a law says............  that               though  it  (house) is acquired  in  1960  its               value  in  1930  should  be  given.......  the               principles  do  not pertain to the  domain  of               adequacy but are principles unconnected to the               value of the property acquired." Applying  these  principles,  this Court  in  Jeejeebhoy  v. Assistant  Collector(3),  held  that  the  fixation  of   an anterior  date  for the ascertainment of the  value  of  the property   acquired  without  reference  to   any   relevant considerations  which necessitated the fixing of an  earlier date  for  the  purpose of ascertaining the  real  value  is arbitrary.   On  that ground this Court held that  the  Land Acquisition  (Bombay Amendment) Act, 1948, did  not  provide for  payment  of  just  equivalent of  what  the  owner  was deprived  of,  as  it  provided  for  the  ascertainment  of compensation on the basis of the value of lands acquired  as on January 1, 1948 and not as on the date on which the s.   4 notification under the 1894 Act was issued. The  relevant  aspect of the legal position evolved  by  the said  decisions may be stated thus: Under Art. 31(2) of  the Constitution,  no  property shall be  compulsorily  acquired except  under a law which provides for compensation for  the property   acquired   and  either  fixes   the   amount   of compensation  or specifies the principles on which  and  the manner in which compensation is to be determined and  given. The second limb of the provision says that no such law shall be  called in question in any court on the ground  that  the compensation  provided by the law is not adequate.   If  the two concepts, namely, "compensation" and the jurisdiction of the  court are kept apart, the meaning of the provisions  is clear.  The law to (1)[1965] 1 S.C.R. 614.

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(2) [1954]  S.C.R. 558. (3)  [1965] 1 S.C.R. 63 6. 265 justify  itself  has to provide for the payment of  a  "just equivalent"  to  the land acquired or  lay  down  principles which will lead to that result.  If the principles laid down are  relevant  to the fixation of compensation and  are  not arbitrary,  the adequacy of the resultant product cannot  be questioned  in  a  court  of  law.   The  validity  of   the principles, judged by the above tests, falls within judicial scrutiny,  and if they stand the tests, the adequacy of  the product falls outside its jurisdiction.  Judged by the  said tests,  it is manifest that the two principles laid down  in cl.  (b) of Para 11 of the Schedule to the Act, namely,  (i) compensation equated to the cost price in the case of unused machinery in good condition, and (ii) written-down value  as understood  in  the  Income-tax law as  the  value  of  used machinery,  are irrelevant to the fixation of the  value  of the  said  machinery  as on the  date  of  acquisition.   It follows   that  the  impugned  Act  has  not  provided   for "compensation"  within  the  meaning of Art.  31(2)  of  the Constitution and, therefore, it is void. The  mere  fact  that  in  regard  to  some  parts  of   the undertakings  the principles provide for  compensation  does not  affect the real question, for, machinery is  the  major part  of the undertaking and,, as the entire undertaking  is acquired as a unit, the constitutional invalidity of cl. (b) of  Para 11 of the Schedule to the Act affects the  totality of  the compensation payable to the entire undertaking.   In the context of compensation for the entire undertaking,  the clauses  of  Para  11 of the Schedule to  the  Act  are  not severable.  In the result, the Act, not having provided  for compensation, is unconstitutional and the conclusion arrived at by the High Court is, correct. The. appeal fails and is dismissed with costs. V.P.S. Appeal dismissed. 266