26 April 1963
Supreme Court
Download

NANDESHWAR PRASAD AND ANOTHER Vs THE STATE OF U. P. AND OTHERS

Case number: Appeal (civil) 166 of 1962


1

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 10  

PETITIONER: NANDESHWAR PRASAD AND ANOTHER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: THE STATE OF U. P. AND OTHERS

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 26/04/1963

BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. BENCH: WANCHOO, K.N. GAJENDRAGADKAR, P.B. GUPTA, K.C. DAS

CITATION:  1964 AIR 1217            1964 SCR  (3) 425  CITATOR INFO :  R          1965 SC1017  (9)  F          1965 SC1763  (4,5)  F          1973 SC 689  (20)  R          1973 SC1150  (7)

ACT:      Land Acquisition-Notification by Governor-Land required for construction of industrial tenements-Second notification -Collector    directed   to   take    possession-Collector’s notification   stating  possession  would  be  taken   over- Acquisition  for Kanpur Development Board-Action if must  be taken under s. 114 of the Kanpur Act-Noitification under  s. 6  could be issued without first taking action under s.  5A- Land  acquisition  Act, 1894(1 of 1894),  ss.  4,5,5A,  6,9, 17(1), 17(4), Kanpur Urban Area Development Act, 1945(Act VI of 1945), ss. 71,114.

HEADNOTE: In these two appeals the same questions of law arise and the facts  in C.A. No. 166 of 1962 are similar to those in  C.A. 167 of 1962 which are stated below.      The  appellant in C.A. No. 167 of 1962 is the owner  of certain  lands situated in the city of Kanpur.  The land  is occupied  by a Mill and godowns and no part of the  land  is waste  land  or arable land.  In 1932 the U.  P.  Government sanctioned by a notification a Scheme (Scheme No. XX) of the improvement Trust, Kanpur.  This Trust has been replaced  by the Development Board, Kanpur, by reason of the Kanpur Urban Area Development Act, 1945. 426      In  1955  the Housing Department of the  Government  of U.P, sponsored a scheme -for building industrial  tenements. Part of the scheme concerned the locality in which the  land in  dispute is situated.  In 1956 a notification was  issued under  s.  4  of  the Land Acquisition  Act,  1894,  by  the Governor  of  U.P. to the effect that the plots  in  dispute were  required for the construction of tenements tinder  the subsidized industrial.housing scheme of the U.P.  Government as well as for general improvement and street scheme No.  XX of the Board.  This was followed by a notification under  s. 6  of the Land Acquisition Act stating that the  case  being

2

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 10  

one  of urgency the Governor was pleased under  sub-ss.  (1) and (I-A) of s. 17 of that Act to direct that the  Collector of Kanpur, though no award under s. II had been given, might on  the  expiration  of the notice mentioned  v.  9(1)  take possession of land mentioned in the schedule.   Subsequently a notice under s. 9 was issued which stated that  possession of  the  land will be taken within 15 days.   The  appellant thereupon  filed  a  writ petition under  Art.  226  of  the Constitution in the High Court.  Two main points were raised in  the  petition.  Firstly, it was contended  that  as  the acquisition  was  for the purpose of Scheme No.  XX  of  the Board  action had to be taken in accordance with s.  114  of the Kanpur Act and the schedule thereto and as no action had been so taken the proceedings for acquisition were bad.   In the  second place, it was urged that it was not open to  the Governor  to issue the notification under s. 6 of  the  Land Acquisition  Act  without first taking action  under  s.  5A thereof.  The High Court rejected both these contentions and in  the  result dismissed the writ  petition.   The  present appeal  was  filed  with a certificate issued  by  the  High Court.      In  the  appeal before this Court  the  same  questions which were agitated before the High Court were raised.      Held it is only when the Board proceeds to acquire land by  virtue of its powers under s. 71 that s. 114 comes  into play and the proceedings for acquisition have to take  place under  the Land Acquisition Act as modified by s.  114  read with the schedule.  But where the acquisition is, as in  the present  case, by the Government under the Land  Acquisition Act,  for  public purposes though that purpose  may  be  the purpose  of the Board, the Kanpur Act has no application  at all  and  the  Government  proceeds  to  acquire  under  the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act alone.      From the scheme of the Act it is clear that compliance with   the  provisions  of  s.5-A  is  necessary  before   a notification  427 can be issued under s. 6. Even where the Government makes  a direction under s. 17(1) it is not necessary that it  should also  make  a direction under s. 17(4).  If  the  Government makes a direction only under s. 17(1) the procedure under s. 5-A  would stil -have to be followed before  a  notification under  s. 6 is issued. It is only when the  Government  also makes a declaration under s. 17(4) that it becomes necessary to  take action under s. 5-A and make a  report  thereunder. Under the Land Acquisition Act an order under s. 17(1) or S. 17(4)  can  only be passed with respect to waste  or  arable land  and it cannot be passed with respect to land which  is not waste or arable land on which buildings stand.      just  as s. 17(1) and s. 17(4) are independent of  each other, s. 17(1.A) and s. 17(4) are independent of each other and  an order under s. 17 (I-A) would not  necessarily  mean that an order under s. 17(4) must be passed.      The  right  to  file  objections  under  s.  5-A  is  a substantial   right  when  a  person’s  property  is   being threatened  with acquisition and that right cannot be  taken away  as  if by a side-wind because s. 17(1-A)  mentions  s. 17(1).  Section 17(1-A) mentions s. 17(1) merely to indicate the circumstances and the conditions under which  possession can be taken.      It  was not open to the State Government to say in  the notification  under s. 4 that proceedings under s. 5-A  will not take place.  This part of the notification under s. 4 is beyond the powers of the State Government and in consequence the  notification under s. 6 also, as it was issued  without

3

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 10  

taking action under s. 5-A, must fail.

JUDGMENT: CLVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeals Nos. 166 and 167 of 1962.      Appeals from the judgment and decrees dated October 25, 1957 of the Allahabad High Court in Special Appeals Nos. 140 and 139 of 1957. J.B. Goyal, for the appellants (in C.A.No. 166 of 62). 1 C. B. Agarwala and P. C. Agarwala, for the appellants  (in C.A. No. 167 of 62). 428 K.   S. Hajela and C. P. Lal, for respondent No. I (in  both the appeals). C.   P. Lal, for respondent No. 2 (in both the appeals).      1963.   April  26.   The  judgment  of  the  Court  was delivered by      WANCHOO J.-These two appeals on certificates granted by the Allahabad High Court raise common questions and will  be dealt  with together.  It will be enough if we  mention  the facts  in appeal No. 167, for the facts in the other  appeal are  exactly the same, except that the lands in dispute  are different in the two cases, though lying in the same area in the city of Kanpur.      Deoki  Nandan,  appellant  in appeal No.  167,  is  the lessee  of two plots in Anwarganj, Bans Mandi,  Kanpur,  and his  lease is for a period of 99 years from 1943.  On  these plots there exists a mill known as Om Cotton Ginning and Oil Mill.  Besides the mill there are pacca godowns also on  the plots  and two-thirds of the area is under  buildings  while onethird  is  open land paved with bricks.  No part  of  the land is waste or arable.      It  appears that in February 1932 the Government of  U. P.  sanctioned  by notification a scheme known  as  Pechbagh Dalelpurwa Scheme No. XX (hereinafter referred to as  scheme No.  XX)  of  the  Improvement  Trust  Kanpur.   It  may  be mentioned  that  the Improvement Trust Kanpur has  now  been replaced  by  the  Development  Board  Kanpur   (hereinafter referred  to  as  the  Board)  by  the  Kanpur  Urban   Area Development Act, No. VI of 1945, (hereinafter referred to as the  Kanpur Act), which repealed the U. P. Town  Improvement Act,  No. III of 1920, insofar as it applied to Kanpur.   It is not clear what  429 happened  to  scheme No. XX after 1932; but it  does  appear that it was not fully carried out.      It  appears that in 1955 a scheme known  as  subsidized industrial   housing   scheme  was  sponsored   by   Housing Department  of the U. P. Government.  This scheme was to  be put  in  force in four phases. and we are concerned  in  the present  appeal with the fourth phase.  For that  phase  the Government  of India had sanctioned over rupees  two  crores and  it  was decided to build 6973 tenements of  which  1368 were  to  be  in  an Ahata on the  Hamirpur  road.   We  are concerned  with  this part of the scheme, for the  lands  in dispute  are  in  this  locality.   The  decision  in   this connection was taken by the Government of U. P. in May 1955. Thereafter  on  January 6, 1956, a notification  was  issued under s. 4 of the Land Acquisition Act, (No.  I of 1894)  by the  Governor of U. P. to the effect that the two  plots  in dispute  were required for the construction of tenements  in the fourth phase of the subsidized industrial housing scheme sponsored by the Government of U. P. as well as for  general

4

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 10  

improvement and street scheme No. XX of the Board.  This was followed   by  a  notification  under  s.  6  of  the   Land Acquisition  Act  on January 31,  1956.   That  notification further said that the case being one of urgency the Governor was pleased under sub-ss. (1) and (I-A) of s. 17 of the Land Acquisition  Act  to direct that the  collector  of  Kanpur, though  no  award under s. 11, has been made, might  on  the expiration  of  the  notice  mentioned  in  s.  9  (1)  take possession  of lands, buildings and structures forming  part of  the land mentioned in the schedule for public  purposes. Then  followed  a  notice under s. 9  by  the  Collector  on February 10, 1956, which said that possession would be taken over 15 days after the issue of the notice i. e. on February 25, 1956.  On receipt of this notice, Deoki Nandan appellant filed  his objections before the Collector on  February  21, 1956, 430 Two  days  later, on February 23, 1956, he  filed  the  writ petition  in the High Court out of which the present  appeal has arisen.      In  this  writ petition two main points were  urged  on behalf  of  the appellant.  It was first urged that  as  the acquisition  was  for the purposes of scheme No. XX  of  the Board,  action had to be taken in accordance with s. 114  of the Kanpur Act and the schedule thereto and as no action had been so taken, the proceedings for acquisition were bad.  In the  second place, it was urged that it was not open to  the Governor  to issue the notification under s. 6 of  the  Land Acquisition  Act  without first taking action under  s.  5-A thereof.   It  is not in dispute that no  action  was  taken under s. 5-A and no report was made as required therein.      The  writ petition was dismissed by the learned  Single judge who heard it.  On the first question he held that this was  not  a case to which the Kanpur Act  applied.   On  the second  question,  he  held  that  s.  17  (4)  applied  and therefore it was not necessary to take proceedings to comply with  s. 5-A before issuing a notification under s. 6.  Then followed  an appeal which was heard by a Division  Bench  of the  High Court.  The appeal court upheld the view taken  by the learned Single Judge and dismissed the appeal.  However, the  appeal court granted a certificate as prayed  for,  and that is how the matter has come up before us.      The same two questions which were agitated in the  High Court have been raised before us.  In the first place, it is urged  that as the acquisition was for scheme No. XX of  the Board,  action should have been taken under the  Kanpur  Act and  as  this was Dot done the entire  proceedings  are  bad including  the issue of the notifications under s. 4 and  s. 6. In the second place, it is urged that s. 17 (4) could not  431 apply  in  the present case and no notification under  s.  6 could be issued unless s. 5-A had been complied with.  As no such compliance was admittedly made, the notification  under s. 6 in any case is bad, even if the notification under s. 4 is good.      Turning  now to the first point, the main  reliance  of the  appellant is on s. 114 of’ the Kanpur Act, which is  in these terms :-               "Modification  of  the Land  Acquisition  Act,               1894-For  the  purpose of the  acquisition  of               land for the Board under the land  Acquisition               Act, 1894-               (a)   the  said  Act shall be subject  to  the               modification specified in the Schedule to this               Act;

5

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 10  

             (b)   the  award  of  the  Tribunal  shall  be               deemed to be the award of the court under  the               Land Acquisition Act, 1894." We may also refer to s. 108 which provides for  constitution of the tribunal and s. 109 which lays down that the tribunal shall  perform the functions of the court with reference  to the  acquisition  of  land  for the  Board  under  the  Land Acquisition Act, 1894.  Further, it is necessary to refer to s. 71 (1) also which provides that "the Board may, with  the previous  sanction  of the State  Government,  acquire  land under  the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894,  as modified by the provisions of this Act, for carrying out any of the purposes of this Act".  The argument on behalf of the appellants  is that where land is acquired for the  purposes of  the  Board action has to be taken under ch.   VII  which provides  for various kinds of development schemes  for  the Board and the procedure for making such schemes.  After this  procedure laid down in ch.  VII is gone through,  (and it is not in dispute that no s c procedure was gone  through in the present case insofar as scheme No. XX is  concerned), s. 114 comes 432 into  play  and  acquisition has to  take  place  under  the modified  provisions of the Land Acquisition Act even  where the  Government  is  acquiring the  land.   Stress  in  this connection is laid on the words "acquisition of land for the Board"  in  s. 114, and it is said that  whenever  there  is acquisition of land for the Board, action can only be taken, even  though  it is the Government which  is  acquiring  the land, under the modified provisions of the Land  Acquisition Act ,contained in the Kanpur Act.      We are of opinion that this argument is fallacious.  If one  looks at the scheme of the Kanpur Act, one  finds  that ch.   VII provides for various kinds of development  schemes and the procedure for finalising them.  After the scheme  is finalised  under  ch.  VII power is given to  the  Board  to purchase  the  land required for the scheme or  take  it  on lease  under s. 70.  Then s. 71 provides in the  alternative that  the Board may with the previous sanction of the  State Government  acquire  land under the provisions of  the  Land Acquisition Act as modified by the provisions of the  Kanpur Act.  It is only when the Board proceeds to acquire land  by virtue of its powers under s. 71 that s. 114 comes into play and the proceedings for acquisition have to take place under the Land Acquisition Act as modified by s. 114 read with the schedule.   It is true that s. 114 speaks of acquisition  of land  for  the Board, and the argument is that when  s.  114 speaks  of acquisition of land for the Board, it applies  to acquisition of land for the Board by the Government and  not to acquisition by the Board, which is provided by s. 71 (1). This interpretation of’ s. 114 is in our opinion  incorrect. Section 71 certainly provides for acquisition of land by the Board when it says that the Board may acquire land under the provisions  of the Land Acquisition Act as modified  by  the Kanpur  Act;  but  that’ acquisition is also  by  that  very section for carrying out the  433 purposes  of the Act i.e. for the Board.  Therefore when  s. 71  authorises  the  Board to acquire land  under  the  Land Acquisition   Act  as  modified  by  the  Kanpur  Act,   the acquisition is for the Board.  Section 71 further speaks  of the  modification of the provisions of the Land  Acquisition Act.  This modification is not provided in s. 71 itself.  In order to find out the modification we have to go to s.  114. Therefore, s.114 merely serves the purpose of indicating the

6

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 10  

modification which has been mentioned in s. 71.  There is no reason  to hold, because the words "acquisition of land  for the Board" appear in s.114, that this acquisition is by  the Government  for  the Board.  The scheme of  the  Kanpur  Act clearly  shows  that  the Board frames  a  scheme  and  then decides to acquire the land for itself tinder s. 71 with the previous  sanction  of  the  State  Government.   If  it  so decides, s. 114 applies to such an acquisition by the  Board for  itself  with  the necessary modification  in  the  Land Acquisition Act.  We may in this connection refer to s. 109, which describes the duties of the tribunal.  Now there is no doubt that where the Board is acquiring land under" s. 71 of the Kanpur Act, it is the tribunal which takes the place  of the court in the Land Acquisition Act.  But s. 109 also uses the  same words, namely acquisition of land for  the  Board. As the acquisition by the Board is also for the Board, there can  be no doubt that the scheme of the Kanpur Act  is  that the  Board  first proceeds under ch.  VII, then  decides  to acquire  land under s. 71. and if it so decides s.114  comes into play with the modifications in the Land Acquisition Act mentioned  in  the  schedule.   Two  modifications  in   the schedule  are the replacement of the notification under  s.4 by  the  notification  under  s. 53  in  ch.   VII  and  the replacement  of notification under s. 6 by the  notification under s.60 also in chap.  VI I. It is obvious that ch.  VII, s.  ’11, s.1 14 and the other provisions in ch.  XI  dealing with modifications and the modifications in the schedule are all part of one scheme, where the Board is acquiring 434 land  itself for its own purpose with the previous  sanction of  Government;  but  where the acquisition is,  as  in  the present  case, by the Government under the Land  Acquisition Act,  for  public  purpose though that purpose  may  be  the purpose  of the Board, the Kanpur Act has no application  at all.,  and  the  Government proceeds to  acquire  under  the provisions   of  the  Land  Acquisition  Act   alone.    The contention  therefore on behalf of the appellants  that  the Kanpur  Act  has not been complied with  and  therefore  the proceedings for acquisition of land are bad has no force and must be rejected.      We now come to the second point raised on behalf of the appellants.   For that purpose we may briefly refer  to  the scheme  of  the Land Acquisition Act,  The  proceedings  for acquisition start with a preliminary notification under s.4. By  that notification the Government notifies that  land  in any  locality  is needed or is likely to be needed  for  any public  purpose.  On that notification certain  consequences follow  and  authority is conferred on  an  officer  ’either generally or specially by Government and on his servants and workmen to enter upon and survey and take levels of any land in  such locality, to dig or bore into the sub-soil,  to  do all  other acts necessary to ascertain whether the  land  is adapted  for such purpose, to set out the boundaries of  the land proposed, to be taken, and so on.  Then s. 5-A provides that  any  person  interested in any  land  which  has  been notified in s.4, may within thirty days of the issue of  the notification  object to the acquisition of the land  .or  of any  land  in the locality as the case  maybe.   Every  such objection shall be made to. the Collector in writing and the Collector  has to give the objector an opportunity of  being heard.   After  hearing  all  objections  and  after  making further inquiry if any, as he thinks fit, the Collector  has to  submit  the  case for the  decision  of  the  Government together with the record of the proceedings held by him  and the report

7

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 10  

435 containing  his  recommendations  on  the  objections.   the decision of the Government on the objections is final.  Then comes  the notification under s.6, which provides that  when the  appropriate government is satisfied  after  considering the  report, if any, made under s. 5-A that  any  particular land is needed for a public purpose, a declaration shall  be made  to that effect and published in the official  gazette. After  such a declaration has been made under s.6,  the  Co- llector  has to take order for acquisition of land.   It  is marked out, measured and planned under s. 8 if necessary and notice  is  given  under s. 9 to  persons  interested.   The Collector then holds inquiry under s. II and makes an award. After  the award is made the Collector has got the power  to take  possession of the land under s. 16 and the  land  then vests   absolutely   in  the  Government   free   from   all encumbrances.      It will be clear from this scheme that compliance  with the provisions of s. 5-A is necessary before a  notification can  be  issued  under  s. 6. As  soon  as  the  preliminary notification is issued under s.4, the officer authorised  by Government  may enter upon the land to survey it and  to  do all  other necessary acts to ascertain whether the  land  is adapted for the purpose for which it is to be acquired,  and this action, if taken, will give sufficient notice to  those interested to object.  If objections are made the  Collector will  consider those objections and make his  recommendation thereon  in his report to Government.  If no objections  are made  the Collector will report that no objection  has  been made   and   the  Government  then  proceeds  to   issue   a notification   under  s.6.  In  either  case  however,   the Collector has got to make a report with his  recommendations on the objections if they are filed or inform the Government that  there  are  no objections filed in  pursuance  of  the notification  under  s.  4 and it  is  thereafter  that  the Government is empowered under s. 6 to issue a  notification. This, as We have said,is the usual procedure to be followed 436 before  the notification under s.6 is issued: To this  usual procedure there is however an exception under s.17, and that is  why  in s. 6 we find the words "if any"  in  the  clause after  considering the report , if any, made under  s.  5A". When action is taken under s. 17 (4), it is not necessary to follow the procedure in s. 5-A and a notification under  s.6 can  be issued without a report from the Collector under  s. 5-A.   In the present appeals we are concerned with  ss.  17 (1) and 17 (4), which we now read:-               "17  (1).  In cases of urgency,  whenever  the               appropriate Government so directs, the Collec-               tor, though no such award has been made,  may,               on  the  expiration of fifteen days  from  the               publication of the notice mentioned in section               9,  sub-section  (1), take possession  of  any               waste   or  arable  land  needed  for   public               purposes  or  for a company, such  land  shall               thereupon  vest absolutely in the  Government,               free from all encumbrances."               "17 (4).  In the case of any land to which, in               the opinion of the appropriate Government, the               provisions  of sub-section (1) or  sub-section               (2) are applicable, the appropriate Government               may  direct that the provisions of section  5A               shall  not apply, and if it does so direct,  a               declaration  may be- made under section  6  in               respect  of  the land at any  time  after  the

8

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 10  

             publication of the notification under  section               4, subsection (1)." It will be seen that s. 17 (1) gives power to the Government to direct the Collector, though no award has been made under s. 11, to take possession of any waste or arable land needed for public purpose and such land thereupon vests  absolutely in the Government free from all encumbrances.  If action  is taken under s. 17 (1), taking possession and vesting which  437 are  provided  in  s. 16 after the award  under  s.  11  are accelerated  and  can  take place  fifteen  days  after  the publication  of the notice under s. 9. Then comes s..17  (4) which  provides  that  in  case of any  land  to  which  the provisions of sub-s. (1) are applicable, the Government  may direct that the provisions of s. 5-A shall not apply and  if it  does so direct, a declaration may be made under s. 6  in respect of the land at any time after the publication of the notification under s. 4 (1).  It will be seen that it is not necessary even where the Government makes a direction  under s.  17 (1) that it should also make a direction under s.  17 (4).   If the Government makes a direction only under s.  17 (1)  the  procedure  under s. 5-A would  still  have  to  be followed before a notification under s. 6 is issued,  though after  that procedure has been followed and  a  notification under  s. 6 is issued the Collector gets the power  to  take possession  of the land after the notice under s. 9  without waiting for the award and on such taking possession the land shall   vest   absolutely  in  Government  free   from   all encumbrances.   It is only when the Government also makes  a declaration  under s. 17 (4) that it becomes unnecessary  to take  action under s. 5-A and make a report thereunder.   It may  be  that generally where an order is made under  s.  17 (1), an order under s. 17 (4) is also passed; but in law  it is  not necessary that this should be so.  It will  also  be seen  that under the Land Acquisition Act an order under  s. 17 (1) or s. 17 (4) can only be passed with respect to waste or arable land and it cannot be passed with respect to  land which is not waste or arable and on which buildings stand.      This  brings us to s. 17 (I-A) introduced in s.  17  of the  Land  Acquisition Act by the Land  Acquisition  (U.  P. Amendment) Act, (No.  XXII of 1954).  Section 6 of that  Act is in these terms :-               "After  sub-section (1) of section 17  of  the               Principal Act (i. a. Land Acquisition Act) the               438               following  shall  be inserted as  a  new  sub-               section (I-A):               ,(I-A).   The power to take  possession  under               sub-section  (1) may also be exercised in  the               case of other than waste or arable land, where               the land is acquired for or in connection with               sanitary  improvements of any kind or  planned               development." It is not in dispute before us that the land in the  present case  was  required  for  planned  development.    Therefore subsection (1-A) as inserted by the U. P. Act into the  Land Acquisition  Act applies.  The contention on behalf  of  the appellants  however is that sub’s. (1-A) gives merely  power to  take possession of land other than waste or arable  land where  the land is acquired for or in connection with  sani- tary improvements of any kind or planned development.  It is further urged that sub-s. (1) is mentioned in sub-s. (I  -A) merely  to  import the circumstances in which the  power  to take possession may be exercised with respect to land  other than  waste  or arable and the time when such power  may  be

9

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 10  

exercised  thearguement  further is that s. 17 (4)  was  not amended  by  the  U.P. Act XXII by including  the  new  sub- s.(1.A)  also  in that sub-section.  Sub-section  (4)  still stands  as it was; therefore it still applies to  waste  and arable land only.      There  is  force in this argument.  There has  been  no change  by  the U. P. Act in sub-s. (1) and  therefore  when sub-s. (4) speaks of any land to which sub-s. (1) applies it still refers only to waste or arable land and no other.   It is  true that by sub s. (I-A) as introduced by U. P. Act  in s.  17, power has been given to take possession in  case  of land  other  than  the waste or arable; but  this  does  not necessarily  mean that sub-s. (4) will also apply to a  case of )and other than waste or arable simply because power  has been  439 given by sub-s. (I-A) to take possession of land other  than waste  or  arable.  It seems to us that when sub-s.  (1)  is mentioned in sub-s. (I-A) as introduced by the U. P. Act  it only  means  that  the  power  can  be  exercised  to   take possession  of land other than waste or arable in  the  same circumstances and at the same time as it could be  exercised with  respect to arable or waste land as provided in  sub-s. (1),  and nothing more  Sub-section (I-A) as  introduced  by the U. P. Act therefore has the effect only of  accelerating the taking of possession which normally can take place after the  award  has been made under S. 11 in the  case  of  land other  than waste or arable in the circumstances  and  under the  conditions mentioned in sub-s. (1).  But  sub-s.  (I-A) does not amend sub-s. (1) so as to include within that  sub- section  land  other than waste or arable.   Therefore  when sub-s.  (4)  was  not amended by the U.  P.  legislature  to include sub-s. (1-A) as introduced by it  can apply only  to waste  or  arable land mentioned in sub-s. (1),  which  also remained unamended.  We have already pointed out that it  is not  necessary in law that when an order is passed under  s. 17  (1),  an  order under S. 17 (4)  must  also  be  passed. similarly if an order is passed under sub-S.       (1-A)  it does  not  necessarily follow that an  order  must  bepassed under S. 17 (4).  Sections 17 (1) and 17 (4) are independent of  each other in the sense that an order under  the  former does  not  necessarily require an order  under  the  latter. Similarly  s. 17 (I-A) must be independent of S. 17 (4)  and an  order under S. 17 (I-A) would not necessarily mean  that an  order  under  S.  17  (4)  must  be  passed.   In  these circumstances  it  seems  to  us  that  if  the  legislature intended that provisions of sub-s. (4) should also apply  to a  case falling under sub-s. (I-A), it has failed  to  carry out that intention.  Sub-section (I-A) has been added as  an independent  sub-section  and  no amendment  has  been  made either  in  sub-s. (1) or sub-s. (4); nor has  any  separate provision been made 440 for  applying sub-s. (4) to a case falling under  sub-s.  (I -A) and so subs. (4) cannot be applied to sub-s. (I-A).  The right to file objections under s. 5-A is a substantial right when   a   person’s  property  is  being   threatened   with acquisition  and  we cannot accept that that  right  can  be taken  away  as  if  by a  side-wind  because  sub-s.  (I-A) mentions sub-s. (I).  As we have already pointed out  sub-s. (1)  has been mentioned in sub s. (I-A) merely  to  indicate the circumstances and the conditions under which  possession can  be taken.  The legislature has mentioned sub-s. (1)  in sub-s. (I-A) as a measure of economy; otherwise sub-s. (I-A) would have read as follows :-

10

http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 10  

             "In cases of urgency, whenever the appropriate               Government  so directs, the Collector,  though               no  such  award  has been made,  may,  on  the               expiration   of   fifteen   days   from    the               publication of the notice mentioned in section               9,  sub-section  (1), take possession  of  any               land  other  than  waste or  arable  land  for               public purposes where the land is acquired for               or in connection with sanitary improvements of               any kind or planned development." Now  if there had been Do economy of words and sub-s.  (I-A) had read as we have indicated above, it could Dot have  been possible  to  argue that sub-s. (4) of s.  17  also  covered cases  of  s. 17 (1-A).  Therefore, simply because  for  the sake of economy of words the legislature has used the  words which it did in sub-s. (I-A), it cannot be said that it  was either amending sub-s. (1) or sub-s. (4).  In the absence of such amendment either in sub-s. (1) or sub-s. (4) and in the absence of any specific provision being introduced in s.  17 by which sub-s. (4) was also to apply to the new sub-s.  (I- A), it cannot be said that power was conferred on the  State Government to apply sub-s. (4) also to a case falling  under sub-s. (1-A),  441 simply  by the introduction of sub-s. (I-A) in the  form  in which  it  was  introduced in s. 17.  We  are  therefore  of opinion that it was not open to the State Government to  say in the notification under s. 4 that proceedings under s. 5-A shall  not take place.  This part of the notification  under s. 4 is therefore beyond the powers of the State Government. In  consequence the notification under s. 6 also as  it  was issued  without taking action under s. 5-A must  fall.   The appeals must therefore be allowed and the notification under s.  6  and that part of the notification under s.  4,  which says that the-Governor was pleased to direct that under sub- s. (4) of s. 17, the provisions of s. 5- A shall not  apply, are bad and are hereby set aside.  Rest of the  notification under s. 4 will stand and it will be open to the  Government if  it  so  chooses to proceed with  the  acquisition  after action is taken under s. 5-A and thereafter to issue a noti- fication  under  s. 6 of the Land Acquisition Act.   In  the circumstances we feel that the appellants should be given an opportunity  under s. 5-A now, though the period for  making objections provided in that section expired long ago in view of  the  misunderstanding  of the law on  the  part  of  the Government  by  treating  the  objections  made  before  the Collector  after  the  issue of the notices under  s.  9  as objections  under  s. 5-A.  The appellants  will  get  their costs of this Court from the respondents; one set of hearing fee. Appeals allowed. 442