13 January 1994
Supreme Court
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INDER PRASHAD Vs UNION OF INDIA


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PETITIONER: INDER PRASHAD

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: UNION OF INDIA

DATE OF JUDGMENT13/01/1994

BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. VENKATACHALA N. (J)

CITATION:  1994 SCC  (5) 239        1994 SCALE  (2)553

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                            ORDER 1.   The  appellant  admittedly was a lessee of  Nazul  land admeasuring  3.1 acres or thereabout situated at  Block  No. 160 in Delhi having had perpetual lease from the  Government of India on June 14, 1934 on payment of premium of Rs 10,850 and  annual  rent with stipulations that "and  of  the  land hereinafter reserved and of the covenants on the part of the lessee hereinafter contained, the lessor doth hereby  demise unto the lessee all the plot of land containing...... He was also  entitled  to  retain the  demise  land  in  perpetuity subject  to the right of the lessor to enhance the rent  and the right to re-entry upon the demised land on breach of the covenants.   The  appellant with permission  of  the  lessor constructed  a building on the demised land and was  in  its quiet  enjoyment,  complying  with  the  covenants.   By   a notification  dated March 5, 1967 published in  the  Gazette under  Section 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act,  1894,  for short  ’the  Act’,  the  demised  land  together  with   the building,  along with other lands was acquired for a  public purpose.   The Land Acquisition Collector by an award  dated March  26,  1973  awarded compensation  with  the  following observations:               "Thus   the  land  under  acquisition   is   a               leasehold  held  at present on  lease  by  the               claimant  Shri  Inder Parshad.   The  land  is               Nazul which was given on a perpetual lease  by               Chief Commissioner, Delhi on an yearly rent of               Rs 542/8/- (Rs 542 and 8 annas, i.e. Rs 542.50               P) per annum.  The perpetual lease is  subject               to   the  performance  of  certain   covenants               including  prior permission of the  lessor  to               assign the land to third parties....               All  urbanisable land in Delhi is  covered  by               the  master  plan which was framed  under  the               Delhi   Development  Act,  1957.   The   total               compensation payable in respect of interest of

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             lessor and lessee is not, however, arrived  at               by separately calculating the interest of  the               lessor  and the lessee.  It is necessary  that               the  amount should be divided between them  in               such  proportion  as represents the  value  of               their respective shares." 2.   After  determining the compensation the Collector,  who was not able to decide at what proportion the appellant  and the  Government were entitled to receive  the  compensation, made a reference under Section 30 of the Act to 241 the  civil  court.   The District Court  by  judgment  dated November 15, 1976 held that the Government and the appellant were  entitled to compensation at the proportion of 33%  and 67% respectively.  On further appeal by the appellant, while upholding  the title to the compensation by  the  Government and the appellant, the High Court altered the proportion  to 75%  and  25%  between  the  appellant  and  the  Government respectively.   The  Government did not  question  the  said proportion  at  which the compensation was  payable  to  the appellant and the respondent.  The appellant being aggrieved for  apportionment of 25% of the compensation in  favour  of Government filed this appeal by special leave. 3.   Sri Kailash Vasudev, learned counsel for the appellant, contended  that the Government being the owner of  the  land cannot acquire its own interest therein.  What was  acquired is  only of the sum total of the right and interest held  by the  appellant  in the perpetual lease and,  therefore,  the appellant  is entitled to the total compensation  determined by  the  award.  In support thereof he  placed  reliance  on Collector of Bombay v. Nusserwanji Rattanji Mistri 1.   With a  view to appreciate the contention it is necessary to  see the relevant provisions of the Act. 4.   It is seen that after making the award under Section 11 and  deposit  of  the  compensation,  the  Land  Acquisition Collector  is entitled under Section 16 of the Act  to  take possession  of  the land for that provision says  that  "the land shall thereupon vest absolutely in the Government  free from  all encumbrances".  Thus by exercise of the  power  of eminent  domain  Government has  divested  the  pre-existing right,  title  and interest held by the lessee of  the  land which  stood vested absolutely in the Government  free  from all  encumbrances  thereafter.  But,  the  Land  Acquisition Officer  in  his  award  under  Section  11  has  fixed  the compensation  payable not only for the  pre-existing  right, title and interest of the lessee but also of the lessor  the Government. 5.   In this case admittedly the Government being the  owner of  the land, the appellant held the demised land as  lessee with superstructure built thereon and was in possession  and enjoyment  of  the  same on the date  of  acquisition.   The contents   of  the  award  extracted  hereinbefore   clearly indicate  that  the  Land Acquisition  Collector  could  not determine   compensation  payable  towards   the   leasehold interest  held  by  the  appellant.   Being  an  owner   the Government  is not enjoined to acquire its own  interest  in the land or land alone for public purpose.  When its land is granted  on lease in favour of a lessee its power to  resume the  land  is  subject to non-fulfilment of  the  terms  and conditions  of  the  lease by the lessee.  So  long  as  the lessee acts and complies with the covenants contained in the lease or the grant, the right to resumption in terms of  the lease  or  grant  would not arise.  But  when  the  land  is required  for  public  purpose, the  Government  should  get absolute   title   thereof  free  from   all   encumbrances.

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Compensation  becomes  payable for the  leasehold  right  or interest held by the lessee or grantee when the land is 1 (1955) 1 SCR 1311 : AIR 1955 SC 298 242 acquired.   The  point  becomes  clear  from  the  following illustrations.   Take  a case where the  Government  granted lease  of  agricultural land on the annual payment  of  rent with  a covenant that the Government is entitled  to  resume the  land  when  needed for public purpose or  as  when  the Government  finds  that  the land  is  required  for  public purpose.   In  terms  of the covenants,  the  Government  is entitled  to  exercise  its option to  determine  the  lease though  the lessee has been complying with the condition  of payment  of  annual premium or rent and resume the  land  in accordance with terms of the grant.  In that event the  need to  take  recourse to acquisition and to  make  compensation does  not arise.  Take a case where the  Government  granted the lease of the open land with, permission to the lessee to construct   a   building  for  his  quiet   enjoyment   with appropriate   covenants  and  the  lessee  with   permission constructed the building and by complying with the covenants of  the  lease  was  in  quiet  enjoyment.   The  self  same property,  when required for public purpose, the  Government cannot  unilaterally determine the lease and call  upon  the lessee to deliver the possession.  Therefore, the Government is  required  to  exercise the power of  eminent  domain  by invoking  the provisions under the Land Acquisition Act  for getting  such land.  The Collector shall have  to  determine the compensation towards the leasehold interest held by  the lessee,   if   assessable  separately  and   determine   the compensation.    The   lessee  being  the   owner   of   the superstructure  and  the Government being the owner  of  the land, if compensation is determined for both the components, then  the same has to be apportioned between them.  At  what proportion the lessor and the lessee are entitled to receive the  compensation has to be determined.  In the  absence  of any covenant in the lease for payment and in the absence  of any  specific  data available to him, the Collector  has  to determine the respective shares at which the compensation is to be apportioned between the Government and the lessee, the course  open  to  the  Land  Acquisition  Collector  is   to determine  the total compensation, make an award and make  a reference  to the civil court under Section 30 for  decision on appointment.  Exactly that is the situation on the  facts of  this case.  Take another illustration.   The  Government grants  a  patta  of its land subject  to  payment  of  land revenue.   Later, the land is required for  public  purpose. The  payment of land revenue is at par with the  payment  of land  revenue payable by a private owner to the  State.   By grant  of patta, the title has been vested in  the  grantee. Therefore, the grantee is entitled to the full  compensation of the acquired land. 6.   The   Land   Acquisition   Collector   determined   the compensation  for  the  sum total of the  right,  title  and interest held by the lessor and the lessee together and made a reference to the civil court under Section 30 to determine the  proportion  in  which the lessor  and  the  lessee  are entitled to receive the compensation.  In a given case where it is possible to determine the compensation payable towards leasehold   interest,  it  could  also  be  done   and   the compensation payable towards the interest held by the lessee could  be  deposited in the Court and paid  subject  to  the provision in the Act.  Since the Land Acquisition  Collector was not in a position to determine the 243

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proportion in which the said compensation had to be paid  to the appellant and the lessor-Government, he made a reference to the civil court under Section 30. 7.   In  Nusserwanji Rattanji Mistri case’ the facts are  as under: 8.   In  the island of Bombay certain lands were held  on  a tenure  known as "Foras".  Under Section 2 of Bombay Act  VI of  1851  the  occupants were entitled  to  hold  the  lands subject  only  to  the  payment  of  revenue  then  payable. Between 1864 and 1867 the Government of India acquired these lands  under the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act  (VI of  1857).  On November 22, 1938 the  Governor-General  sold them  to certain persons under whom the present  respondents claimed.   In  April  1942 the appellant  acting  under  the Bombay City Land Revenue Act (Bombay Act 11 of 1876)  issued notices  to the respondents proposing to levy assessment  on the  lands at the rates mentioned therein.  The  respondents thereupon  instituted two suits disputing the right  of  the appellant  to assess the lands to revenue.   They  contended that under the Foras Land Act the occupants had acquired the right to hold the lands on payment of revenue not  exceeding what  was  then payable, that the right to  levy  even  that assessment was extinguished when the Government acquired the lands  under  the Land Acquisition Act, that  the  Governor- General having conveyed the lands absolutely under the  sale deed  dated November 22, 1938 the respondents were  entitled to  hold  them  revenue free and that even  if  revenue  was payable it could not exceed what was payable under the Foras Land  Act.   On  those facts this Court  held  that  if  the Government  has itself an interest in the land, it has  only to acquire the other interests outstanding therein, so  that it  might  be  in a position to pass it  on  absolutely  for public  user.   And  the  Act  primarily  contemplates   all interests  as held outside Government and directs  that  the entire compensation based upon the market value of the whole land  must  be distributed among the  claimants.   When  the Government  possessed  an  interest in  land  which  is  the subject-matter  of acquisition under the Act, that  interest is itself outside such acquisition, because there can be  no question  of  Government  acquiring  what  is  its  own,  an investigation  into  the nature and value of  that  interest will no doubt be necessary for determining the  compensation payable  for the interest outstanding in the  claimants  but that would not make it the subject of acquisition.  In  that case  since  the  claimants are entitled to  pay  only  land revenue and thereafter since sale of the land was made,  the pre-existing  right  in the land which  the  Government  had ceased  and claimants became owners.  Therefore it was  held that   the  claimants  alone  were  entitled  to  the   full compensation.   But  on the facts in this case, it  is  seen that since the Land Acquisition Collector had determined the compensation  of the sum total of the interests held by  the lessor  and  the lessee in the land  under  acquisition  but being  not  able  to decide on  the  apportionment  of  such compensation between Government and the appellant  reference was made to the civil court to determine the  apportionment. The  civil court decided by its award that apportionment  of compensation  fixed  in the award of  the  Land  Acquisition Collector  between the lessee-claimant and  the  Government- landlord shall be 244 in order of 67 per cent and 33 per cent.  The High Court  by its  judgment  and  decree  under  the  present  appeal  has modified the apportionment of compensation payable for  land as  75  per  cent for the lessee and 25  per  cent  for  the

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lessor.   Under these circumstances it cannot be  said  that the   Land   Acquisition  Collector   had   determined   the compensation only towards the leasehold interest held by the appellant and that, therefore, the appellant is entitled  to the   entire  compensation  determined  by  the   Collector. Therefore,  the  judgment and decree under appeal  does  not call  for  interference  and  the  appeal  is,   accordingly dismissed.   But  in  the  circumstances,  the  parties  are directed to bear their own costs. 246