29 July 1976
Supreme Court
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FARID AHMED ABDUL SAMAD & ANR. Vs MUNICIPAL CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF AHMEDABAD & ANR.

Bench: GOSWAMI,P.K.
Case number: Appeal Civil 481 of 1976


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PETITIONER: FARID AHMED ABDUL SAMAD & ANR.

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MUNICIPAL  CORPORATION OF THE CITY OF AHMEDABAD & ANR.

DATE OF JUDGMENT29/07/1976

BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. BENCH: GOSWAMI, P.K. CHANDRACHUD, Y.V. SHINGAL, P.N.

CITATION:  1976 AIR 2095            1977 SCR  (1)  71  1976 SCC  (3) 719

ACT:             Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporations Act, as applied         in   Gujarat (Bom-59 of 1949), s. 284N--Applicability of  s.         5A, Land Acquisition Act.         Land    Acquisition   Act   (1   of   1894),    s.    5A--If         mandatory--Effect  of non compliance in case  of  beneficial         schemes.

HEADNOTE:             Section 284 (1) of Chapter VI of the  Bombay  Provincial         Municipal  Corporations  Act, 1949, as applied  in  Gujarat,         provides  that if the Corporation is satisfied  that  within         any area in any part of a city under the Act it is expedient         to provide housing accommodation for the poorer classes,  it         shall  cause  such area to be defined on a plan and  pass  a         resolution authorising the Commissioner and the Commissioner         shall thereupon be empowered to provide such  accommodation.         Section 284J(a) provides that the Commissioner may, for such         purposes, acquire any land including any buildings  thereon.         Section  284K( 1 ) provides that the Commissioner may,  with         the  sanction  of the Standing Committee, be  authorised  to         acquire the land by means of a compulsory acquisition  order         made and submitted to the State Government and confirmed  by         it  in accordance with the provisions of Schedule C  to  the         Act; and s. 284K(3) provides that the provisions of Schedule         B to the Act shall have effect with respect to the  validity         and  date of operation of the compulsory acquisition  order.         Clause  2, Schedule C, provides that before  submitting  the         order  to the State Government the Commissioner has to  pub-         lish the order in the Official Gazette and in three or  more         newspapers.   The Commissioner has also to serve on  persons         specified  in el. 2(b) notices calling for  objections  etc.         Clause  3 provides that upon compliance with the  provisions         of cls. 1 and 2 the Commissioner shall submit to the  Stand-         ing  Committee any objections received under el. 2  and  any         suggestions he may wish to make in that respect.  Under  cl.         4, the Standing Committee shall, after consideration of  any         such  objections and suggestions, make such modification  in         respect  of such order as it may think fit and  the  Commis-         sioner shall thereafter submit the order, as modified by the         Standing  Committee, to the State Government  for  confirma-

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       tion.   Clause 2 of Schedule B provides for an appeal  to  a         Judge of the City Civil Court in Ahmedabad and elsewhere  to         a Judge of the District Court against the order of  acquisi-         tion confirmed by the State Government.  Section 284N refer-         entially  incorporates in the Bombay Act certain  provisions         of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, as detailed in Appendix I         to  the Bombay Act.  Accordingly all the sections in Part  H         of  the  Land Acquisition Act, except s. 4(1), s. 6  and  s.         17(2)  are bodily incorporated in the Bombay Act. Hence,  s.         5A of the Land Acquisition Act, which provides for  personal         hearing  of the objectors to an acquisition, forms  part  of         the Bombay Act.             In pursuance of the authority of the Corporation of  the         City  of Ahmedabad the Commissioner passed an order of  com-         pulsory acquisition under s.284J. published it in the  Offi-         cial Gazette and in local newspapers, and served  individual         notices  on  the  concerned parties.   The  appellants,  who         objected  to  the acquisition were however,  not  given  any         personal hearing by the Commissioner inspite of a request by         them.  The Commissioner submitted the objections with his         suggestions,  to the Standing Committee, and  the  Committee         approved  the  order of compulsory acquisition.   The  State         Government  thereafter confirmed the order.  The  appellants         preferred  an appeal to the City Civil Court on  the  basis,         inter alia, of the denial of personal hearing to them;   but         the  Court  held that the principles of natural justice were         satisfied,  and  the High Court confirmed the order  of  the         City Civil Court.         Allowing the appeal to this Court,         72             HELD: Section 5A, Land Acquisition Act, is applicable in         the  present case. It is not a case of failure of the  rules         of natural justice but one of noncompliance with the  manda-         tory  provision in s. 5A; and since no personal hearing  had         been given to the appellants by the Commisisoner, the  order         of acquisition, and the confirmation by the State Government         are invalid. [78 G-H]             (1) The incorporated provisions of the Land  Acquisition         Act are subject to the provisions of Chap. XVI of the Bombay         Act; that is, if there is any inconsistency between a provi-         sion  in Chap. XVI of the Bombay Act, and that of  the  Land         Acquisition  Act, the former will prevail.  But there is  no         express provision of the Chapter ousting the application  of         s. 5A of the Land Acquisition Act. [76 D-E]             (2) Schedule C does not, even by necessary  implication,         rule out the right to personal hearing.  On the other  hand,         since the Standing Committee is entitled to have the Commis-         sioner’s properly considered suggestions which may enable it         even  to  modify the order of acquisition, it  is  necessary         that the Commissioner gives a personal hearing to the objec-         tors  before he makes his suggestions worthy in the  context         of  the objections lodged, for otherwise,  his.  suggestions         will  be devoid of much practical utility to Committee.  [77         C-D]             (3)  The appeal provided for under Schedule B is  not  a         substitute for the right to personal hearing.  The  applica-         bility  of  s. 5A is therefore not impliedly ousted  by  the         provision for appeal. [78 D]             The  appeal contemplated under Schedule B is  only  with         regard  to the, examination of two aspects, namely,  whether         the  order or approval of the plan is within the  powers  of         the  Bombay Act; and whether the interests of the  appellant         have been substantially prejudiced by any requirement of the         Bombay Act not having been complied with.  But there may  be         other relevant objections which a person may be entitled  to

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       take  before  the Commissioner when the whole matter  is  at         large,  such as, that the land is not suitable for the  par-         ticular purpose, that he himself belongs to a poor class and         would suffer disadvantage by the acquisition, or that  there         is  a good alternative land available which can be  acquired         without  causing  inconvenience  to the  occupants  of  land         sought to be acquired.  Hence, a personal hearing is  neces-         sary.  The appellate court is not required to entertain such         objections in view of its truncated scope and,, even  assum-         ing that all such objections could be entertained by it, the         duty  of hearing objections under the Bombay Act is  of  the         Commissioner  and he alone can hear them and not a Judge  of         the  Civil  Court.  The acquisition order must  be  a  valid         order and the question of appeal arises only after,  confir-         mation of such an order by the State Government. [77 G-H; 78         A-D]             Shri  Mandir  Sita  Ramji  v.  Lt.  Governor  of  Delhi,         [1975] 1 SCR 597 referred to.             (4)  Merely because under s. 284N(4) of the Bombay  Act,         the acquisition is treated to be under s. 17(1), Land Acqui-         sition  Act, and since s. 17(4) is also applicable it  could         not be said that s. 5A is excluded by necessary implication;         because, even under s. 17(4) of the Land Acquisition Act the         appropriate Government has to direct, in a case of  urgency,         that  the provisions of s. 5A shall not apply.  There is  no         automatic  exclusion  of  the section even  under  the  Land         Acquisition Act. [78 E-F]             (5)  If  the order of acquisition is, at  inception  in-         valid, its invalidity cannot be cured by its approval by the         Standing  Committee  or  by its confirmation  by  the  State         Government. [79 A]             (6) The end does not always justify the means, and  even         beneficial  schemes  under welfare legislation  have  to  be         executed  in accordance with the appropriate law.  It is  no         answer that the object of the scheme is such that it  justi-         fies  the implementer of the law to be absolutely  oblivious         of  the manner of enforcement even though the manner  is  an         integral  part of the scheme, imposing under  law,  restric-         tions on the rights of individuals. [79 C]             [Beneficial  laws have to be simple and  self-contained.         The introduction of provisions of another Act  referentially         in   vital   matters  creates   avoidable  difficulties  and         Irrigation. [79 D]         73

JUDGMENT:                  CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No.  431                  of 1976.                      (Appeal by Special Leave from the judgment  and                  order dated 31-3-1975 of the Gujarat High Court  in                  Special Civil Application No. 2355 of 1974).                      G.L. Sanghi, K.J. John, S.R. Kureshi and D.  N,                  Mishra, for the appellants.                  I.  N. Shroff and H.S. Parihar, for Respondent  No.                  1.                  M.N.  Shroff, for Respondent No. 2.                  The Judgment of the Court was delivered by             GOSWAMI,  J.   The  only question that  arises  in  this         appeal by special leave is whether the order of  acquisition         passed  by the Municipal Commissioner under section 284J  of         the  Bombay Provincial Municipal Corporations Act, 1949,  as         applicable  to Gujarat, is invalid and void for  non-compli-         ance with section 5A of the Land  Acquisition  Act, 1894.

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           The  Municipal  Corporation  of the  city  of  Ahmedabad         (briefly the Corporation) by its resolution of December  15,         1966, authorised its Commissioner under section 2841 of  the         Bombay  Provincial Municipal Corporations Act 1949  (briefly         the  Bombay  Act) to provide housing accommodation  for  the         poorer  classes.   In  pursuance of this  authority  of  the         Corporation  the Commissioner passed the impugned  order  of         compulsory  acquisition  on October 9, 1967,  under  section         284J of the Bombay Act in respect of 33,357 sq. yds. of land         final  plots Nos. 11 to 25 of Town Planning Scheme No. V  of         Dariapur, Kazipur Ward.             Out  of this area the land belonging to  the  appellants         measures  about 1694 sq. yds.  It is averred by  the  appel-         lants that this area is "predominantly a commercial area and         is almost fully built upon".             The  aforesaid order of compulsory acquisition was  pub-         lished  in the official gazette of January 25, 1968  and  in         the  local newspapers  of February 10/11, 1968.   Individual         notices  were also served on  the concerned parties  in  ac-         cordance  with law inviting objections from the  owners  in-         cluding  the appellants which were lodged  in  due   course.         These  objections were submitted to the  Standing  Committee         by  the Commissioner with his suggestions and the  Committee         by its resolution No. 1942 of January 21, 1969, approved the         said order of compulsory acquisition.  The State  Government         thereafter confirmed  the  said order on January 6, 1972.             The appellants had requested for a personal hearing with         regard  to their objections and their grievance is that  the         same  was   denied  to them.  It is common  ground  that  no         personal hearing was given to the appellants with regard  to         their objections by  the  Commissioner. Even so a period  of         nearly five years was taken in the process of finalising the         order.             After  confirmation of the order of acquisition  by  the         Government there is a provision for appeal under Schedule  B         to the Bombay Act.         7--1003 Sc1176         74         The  appellants preferred an appeal to the City Civil  Court         at  Ahmedabad and amongst several other grounds  raised  the         question  of  the denial of personal hearing to  them.   The         learned  Judge of the  City  Civil Court did not  accede  to         the contention and by his order of April 10, 1974, held that         the  principles  of natural justice were satisfied  in  this         case  inasmuch  as  they had been given  an  opportunity  to         submit their objections to the acquisition.             The appellants then took the matter to the High Court of         Gujarat under article 227 of the Constitution where the same         grievance as to the denial of personal hearing was reiterat-         ed.   The High Court by its order of March 31, 1975  refused         to  interfere with the order holding that section 5A of  the         Land Acquisition Act was duly complied with. The High  Court         also  held  that  the City Civil Court Judge  was  right  in         rejecting  the  submission since "no oral hearing  was  ever         claimed  in the objection".  Hence this appeal,  by  special         leaye, which was ordered by this Court to be expedited.             From  a perusal of the judgment of the City Civil  Court         as  well  as that of the High Court we are of  opinion  that         there  was   no  proper appraisal of the real issue  in  the         matter.  It appears that both the City Civil Judge  and  the         High  Court  were only concerned with whether the  rules  of         natural justice were complied with in the matter of acquisi-         tion  of the land in question.  We think, as will  be  shown         below, that the City Civil Court and the High Court are  not         right in their approach.

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           We  find  that there is reference to section 5A  of  the         Land  Acquisition Act in the order of the High Court and  it         is  apparently assumed by the High Court that the said  sec-         tion is applicable.  All the same the High Court erroneously         thinks  that no personal hearing was necessary and the  sec-         tion  is  fully completed with by mere  submission.  of  the         written  objection  particularly because "no  oral   bearing         was  ever claimed".             Mr.  Sanghi  submits that so far as the  appellants  are         concerned  they did request for a personal hearing and  that         there  is no denial by the respondents of their averment  to         that effect in their special leave petition.  The City Civil         Judge  also noted in his judgment that "some of  the  appel-         lants  had  in terms demanded a personal  hearing  in  their         objections  memorandum".  Be that as it may section  5A   of         the  Land Acquisition Act does not rest on a person’s demand         for  personal  hearing.  The matter may be  different  if  a         person  whose property is acquired abandons the right  to  a         personal  hearing with which aspect we are not concerned  in         this appeal.             Although  the  judgment  of the High  Court,  as  stated         earlier apparently rests on the asumption that section 5A of         the Land Acquisition Act is applicable Mr. Shroff  appearing         on behalf of  the  respondents submits that that section  is         unavailable in the case of acquisition under the Bombay Act,         Mr.  Sanghi also, fairly enough, has not taken advantage  of         the assumption in the judgment and has submitted by  drawing         our  attention  to the various provisions of  the  Act  that         section  5A is clearly attracted in a matter of  acquisition         under the Bombay Act.         75             We will, now, examine the rival contentions with  regard         to  the applicability of section 5A of the Land  Acquisition         Act.             The  title  of Chapter XVI of the  Act  is  "Improvement         Schemes"  and  opens with section 270.   There  are  various         sub-headings  in  this Chapter and we are concerned in  this         appeal with only a few sections under the sub-title  "Provi-         sion of housing accommodation for the poorer classes",  This         sub-title in the Chapter opens with section 2841:                        2841 (1) "If the Corporation, upon considera-                  tion  of a representation from the Commissioner  or                  other  information in its possession, is  satisfied                  that within any area in any part of the City it  is                  expedient to provide housing accommodation for  the                  poorer  classes and that such accommodation can  be                  conveniently  provided   without  making   an   im-                  provement  scheme, it shall cause such area  to  be                  defined on a plan and pass a resolution authorising                  the  Commission and  the Commissioner shall  there-                  upon be empowered to provide such accommodation--"                  *         *        *         *         *         *                       Section  284J provides that "the  Commissioner                  may  for the  purposes of the foregoing section  on                  behalf  of  the Corporation (a)  acquire  any  land                  including  any-buildings thereon as a site for  the                  erection of buildings for the poorer classes".                  *             *             *              *                  Section 284K provides as follows :--                         284K.  (1)  "Land for the  purposes  of  the                  foregoing  section may be acquired by  the  Commis-                  sioner  by  agreement upon obtaining the  requisite                  sanction  under  section 77, or he  may,  with  the                  sanction  of the Standing Committee, be  authorised                  to  acquire land for those purposes by means  of  a

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                compulsory acquisition order made and submtited  to                  the State Government and confirmed by it in accord-                  ance with the provisions of Schedule C to this Act.                  *              *           *           *          *                  *                         (3) The provisions of Schedule B to this Act                  shall have effect with respect to the validity  and                  date of operation of a compulsory acquisition order                  made under this section".                  *              *          *           *           *                  *                  The  next important section is section  284N  which                  reads as under :--                         284N.  "The Land Acquisition Act,  1894  (in                  this  and the next succeeding sections referred  to                  as ’the Land Acquisition Act’) shall to the  extent                  set  forth in Appendix I regulate and apply to  the                  acquisition  of land under this Chapter,  otherwise                  than  by agreement, and shall for that  purpose  be                  deemed  to  form part of this Chapter in  the  same                  manner as if enacted                  76                  in  the body thereof, subject to the provisions  of                  this Chapter and to the provisions following namely                  :--"                  *                       *                         *                  *             Thus,  section  284N referentially incorporates  in  the         Bombay Act certain provisions of the Land Acquisition Act as         detailed  in  Appendix I to the Bombay Act.   Out  of  those         provisions we are only concerned with Part 1I  (Acquisition)         of  the  Land Acquisition Act containing sections  4  to  17         including  section  5A.   According to Appendix  I  all  the         sections  in  Part  Il of the Land  Acquisition  Act  except         subsection  (1) of section 4, section 6 and sub-section  (2)         of  section  17 are bodily incorporated in the  Bombay  Act.         Those   provisions  are deemed to be part and parcel of  the         Bombay  Act.   Hence  section 5A is clearly a  part  of  the         Bombay Act in terms of Appendix I.             It is true section 284 N provides that the  incorporated         provisions  of the Land Acquisition Act are subject  to  the         provisions of Chapter XVI and to those contained in  section         284N itself.  That is to say, if there is any  inconsistency         between  a provision in Chapter XVI of the Bombay Act or  in         section  284N itself and that in the Land  Acquisition  Act,         the former will prevail over the grafted provisions of  the.         Land  Acquisition  Act.  This is, however, not to  say  that         where  section  5A is deemed to be part of the  Bombay  Act,         there is a further requirement to show in the Bombay Act  an         express  provision for affording an opportunity of  personal         hearing.   This is the error into which, earlier,  the  City         Civil  Judge  fell.   The heart of section 5A  of  the  Land         Acquisition Act is the hearing of objections and under  sub-         section (2)  of  that section a personal hearing is mandato-         rily provided for.  When, therefore, section 5A of the  Land         Acquisition  Act   is  applicable  under Appendix I  of  the         Bombay  Act  and there is nothing to show  expressly  or  by         necessary  implication that the said section or any part  of         it is excluded under section 284N or under any other  provi-         sion in Chapter XVI as a whole the right to personal hearing         under the Bombay Act cannot vanish or be defeated.             Mr. Shroff fairly and, in our opinion, rightly  concedes         that  there is no express ouster of section 5A of  the  Land         Acquisition  Act under the provisions of Chapter XVI of  the         Bombay  Act.  He, however, submits that there is  a  special

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       machinery under section 284K of the Act disclosed in  Sched-         ule C and in Schedule B attached to the Bombay Act and since         section  284N  is subject to the provisions of  Chapter  XVI         these  Schedules  form part of the Chapter.   Assuming  that         Schedule  C  and Schedule B are part of Chapter XVI  we  are         unable  to  read in the provisions contained  in  these  two         Schedules any exemption from  the right to personal  hearing         mandatorily  required under section 5A of the Land  Acquisi-         tion Act.             It  is  true that the mode of acquisition  of  land  for         housing accommodation is provided for under section 284K and         that the order of compulsory acquisition made by the Commis-         sioner  has to be confirmed by the State Government  in  ac-         cordance  with  the provisions of Schedule C to  the  Bombay         Act.   Broadly, clause 2 of Schedule C provides that  before         submitting   the   order  to  the   State   Government   the         Commissioner,         77         inter alia, has to publish the order in the official gazette         and  in three or more newspapers. The Commissioner has  also         to serve on persons specified in clause 2(b) notices calling         for objections, etc.  Clause 3 provides that upon compliance         with  the  provisions of clauses 1 and  2  the  Commissioner         shall  submit to the Standing Committee any  objections  re-         ceived  under  clause 2 and any suggestions he may  wish  to         make in that respect.  Under clause 4 the Standing Committee         shall after consideration of any such objections and sugges-         tions make-suCh modification in respect of such order as  it         may  think fit and the Commissioner shall thereafter  submit         the order as modified by the Standing Committee to the State         Government for confirmation. It is manifest that the  proce-         dure  under the scheme of Schedule C will be   breached   if         the  Commissioner does not afford a personal hearing to  the         objectors  even in order to be able to fortify  his  sugges-         tions which he has to submit to the Standing Committee along         with the objections.  Since the Standing Committee is  enti-         tled  to have his properly considered suggestions which  may         enable  it  even to modify the order of  acquisition  it  is         necessary that the Commissioner gives a personal hearing  to         the  objectors  before he is able to  make  his  suggestions         worthy  in the context of the objections lodged.   Otherwise         it will be only an empty formality and the suggestions  will         be  devoid of much of practical utility  to  the  Committee.         Schedule  C, therefore, does not even by necessary  implica-         tion rule out a right to personal hearing.             Clause 2 of Schedule B provides for an appeal to a Judge         of  the City Civil Court .in Ahmedabad and elsewhere  to   a         Judge  of the District Court whose decision shall be  final.         Mr. Shroff submits that provision for an appeal against  the         acquisition  order after confirmation by’ the State  Govern-         ment  provides  for  appropriate remedy  before  a  judicial         Tribunal.  This also, says Mr. Shroff, goes to indicate,  by         necessary implication, that personal hearing required  under         section 5A of the Land Acquisition Act is dispensed with and         the  remedy provided for under the provisions of the  Bombay         Act read with the two Schedules is exhaustive and necessari-         ly excludes the application of section 5A of the Land Acqui-         sition Act and with it the right of personal hearing provid-         ed thereunder.             We should make it clear that provision for appeal is not         a  complete substitute for a personal hearing which is  pro-         vided  for  under section 5A of the  Land  Acquisition  Act.         This will be evident from a perusal of clause 3 of  Schedule         B  itself.  The character of the appeal  contemplated  under         clause  3(ii)  of Schedule B is only with   regard   to  the

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       examination of the following aspects :--                     (1  )  whether  the order  or  approval  of  the                  plan .is within the powers of the Bombay Act, and                      (2) whether the interests of the appellant have                  been substantially prejudiced by any requirement of                  this Act not having been complied with.         The  appeal is confined under clause 3 of Schedule B to  the         examination  of  only the twin aspects  referred  to  above.         There  is no provision for entertainment of any other  rele-         vant objection to the acquisition of         78         land.   For  example  a person whose land  is  acquired  may         object  to  the suitability of the land for  the  particular         purpose  acquired.  He may again show that he will be at  an         equal disadvantage if his land and house have to be acquired         in  order to provide accommodation for the poorer people  as         he himself belongs to the same class of the indigent.He  may         further show that tbere is a good alternative land available         and  can  be acquired without causing inconvenience  to  the         occupants   of the houses whose lands and houses are  sought         to  be  acquired.  There may be  other  relevant  objections         which  a person may be entitled to take before  the  Commis-         sioner  when the whole matter is at large. The  Commissioner         will be in a better position to examine those objections and         consider  their.weight from all aspects and may  even  visit         the  locality before submitting his report to  the  Standing         Committee  with  his suggestions.  For this purpose  also  a         personal  hearing is necessary.  The appeal court under  the         Schedule  B  to the Bombay Act, on the other  hand,  is  not         required under clause 3 to entertain all kinds of objections         and it may even refuse to consider the objections  mentioned         earlier in view of the truncated scope of the hearing  under         clause  3(ii) as noted above.  We are, therefore, unable  to         accept  the  submission that the appeal provided  for  under         Schedule B is a complete substitute for a right to  personal         hearing  and  as  such by necessary  implication  ousts  the         applicability of Section 5A of the Land Acquisition Act.             Mr.  Shroff further submits that under the  Appendix  I,         inter  alia,  section 17(4) of the Land Acquisition  Act  is         made applicale in an acquisition proceeding under the Bombay         Act.   It is, therefore, submitted that under section  284N,         sub-section  (4)  any acquisition under the  Bombay  Act  is         treated as an acquisition under section 17 ( 1 ) of the Land         Acquisition Act and since section 17(4) of the Land Acquisi-         tion Act is also brought in under the said Appendix, section         5A  of the Land Acquisition Act, by  necessary  implication,         should  be held as excluded from the purview of  the  Bombay         Act.   We are unable to accept this submission.  Even  under         section  17(4) of the Land Acquisition Act  the  appropriate         Government  has  to direct, in a case of urgency,  that  the         provisions  of  section  5A shall not apply.   There  is  no         automatic exclusion of section 5A even under the Land Acqui-         sition Act. That being the position there is no substance in         the  contention  that because of subsection (4)  of  section         284N, section 5A should be held inapplicable in the case  of         an acquisition proceeding under the Bombay Act.              We are clearly. of opinion that section 5A of the  Land         Acquisition  Act is applicable in the matter of  acquisition         of land in this case and since no personal hearing had  been         given  to the appellants by the Commissioner with regard  to         their  written objections the order of acquisition  and  the         resultant  confirmation order of the State  Government  with         respect to the land of the appellants are invalid under  the         law  and the same are quashed. It should be pointed out,  it         is not a case of failure of the rules of natural justice  as

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       such  as appeared to be the only concern of the  High  Court         and  also of the City Civil Court. It is a case of  absolute         non-compliance  with a mandatory provision under section  5A         of  the Land Acquisition Act which is clearly applicable  in         the matter of acquisition under the Bombay Act.         79             We should also point out that the acquisition order must         be  an order valid under the law and the question of  appeal         arises  only  after confirmation of the order by  the  State         Government.   If  the order is, at inception,  invalid,  its         invalidity  cannot be cured by its approval of the  Standing         Committee or by its confirmation of the State Government.             Besides,  hearing of objections under section 5A of  the         Land  Acquisition Act to be given by the Commissioner  under         the Bombay Act cannot be replaced by a kind of appeal  hear-         ing by the City Civil Judge. The Bombay Act having  assigned         the duty of hearing objections to the Commissioner, he alone         can  hear  them and not the City Civil Judge  even  assuming         that  all objections could be entertained by him in  appeal.         (See  Shri  Mandir  Sita Ramji v. Lt. Governor  of  Delhi  &         Ors.(1)].             Beneficial schemes under welfare legislation have to  be         executed  in accordance with law which creates the  schemes.         The  end   does not always justify the means and  it  is  no         answer that the object of the scheme is such that it  justi-         fies  the implementer of the law to be absolutely  oblivious         of  the manner of enforcement even though the manner  is  an         integral  part  of the scheme, imposing under the  law,  re-         strictions  on the rights of individuals.   Beneficial  laws         have  to be simple and self-contained.  To introduce  provi-         sions of another Act referentially in vital matters  creates         avoidable  difficulties  and litigation highlighted  by  the         case in hand.              It  is  refreshing  that this Court  disposed  of  this         matter  within  about  four months of  granting  of  special         leave.              In the result the appeal is allowed and the judgment of         the High Court is set aside and with it the appellate  order         of the City Civil Judge also falls.  The Commissioner  shall         give a personal hearing to the appellants as required  under         sub-section  (2) of section 5A of the Land  Acquisition  Act         and,  thereafter, dispose of the matter in  accordance  with         law. In the circumstances of the case we will, however, make         no order as to costs in this appeal.         V.P.S.                                          Appeal   al-         lowed.         S.C.R. 597.         80