28 August 1996
Supreme Court
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POSHETTY'& ORS Vs STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH


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PETITIONER: POSHETTY’& ORS

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: STATE OF ANDHRA PRADESH

DATE OF JUDGMENT:       28/08/1996

BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. BENCH: RAMASWAMY, K. VENKATASWAMI K. (J)

ACT:

HEADNOTE:

JUDGMENT:                          O R D E R      This appeal  by leave  granted by  the  High  Court  of Andhra Pradesh  under Article 133 of the Constitution arises from its Full Bench judgment dated February 21, 1991 in Writ Petition  No.12604   of  1987.  In  this  appeal,  the  only controversy is:  whether service  of notice  of award passed under Section  11 of  the Land  Acquisition Act,  1894  [for short, the  Act"]  along  with  its  enclosure,  is  a  pre- condition under subsection (2) of Section 12 of the Act. The Full Bench of the High Court by judgment dated September 12, 1990 in  Writ Petition  No.13203 of 1985 and batch held that service of  the award  with notice  is  not  necessary.  The learned Judges relying upon the omission of second clause in proviso to  Section 18  (2) of  the Act  held that it is not necessary that  copy of  the award  should be  served. It is contended by  Shri D.  P. Reddy,  learned  counsel  for  the appellants  that   sub-section  (2)   of  Section   (2)  was interpreted by a Division Bench of Andhra Pradesh High Court in  Milap  Carriers,  Transport  Contractor  and  Commission Agent,  Hyderabad   vs.  National  Insurance  Company  ltd., Hyderabad [AIR  1994 A.P  24]. The Full Bench therefore, was not right  in its  construction The controversy is no longer res integra.  This Court  in State  of  Punjab  &  Anr.  vs. Satinder Bir  Singh [(1995)  3 SCC  330 ] has considered the scope of  sub-section (2) of Section 12 vis-a-vis proviso to sub-section (2) of Section 18 and held as under:      "The question  then is  whether the      notice under  Section  12(2)  is  a      valid  notice.   From  a   conjoint      reading of Section 11 and 12, it is      clear that  notice is  only  an  An      intimation of  making of  the award      requiring  the   owner  or   person      interested to  receive compensation      awarded  under   Section   11.   On      receipt  of   the  notice,  if  the      person     interested      receives

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    compensation    without    protest,      obviously  no   reference  need  be      made.    The    determination    of      compensation  becomes   final   and      binds the parties. When he receives      the compensation  under protest  as      contemplated under  Section  31  of      the  Act,  the  need  to  make  the      application  for   reference  under      Section 18(1)  would arise  At that      juncture, it  will be  open to  the      person interested either to make an      inspection of  the award  which was      conclusive  between   him  and  the      Collector  by   operation  of  sub-      section (1)  of Section 12, or seek      a certified  copy of the award from      the  Collector  and  the  contents.      Thereon, he  could  make  necessary      objection  for  the  determination,      inter alia, of compensation for the      land. It  is not necessary that the      notice  should   contain  all   the      details of  the award including his      consideration  and  its  manner  of      determination of  the  compensation      as opined  by the  learned Judge of      the High Court. It is not incumbent      that the  person interested  should      immediately  make   the   reference      application   on    his   receiving      compensation under  Section 31.  In      other words,  receipt of the amount      and    making     the     reference      application are  not  simultaneous.      The    statutory    operation    of      limitation  mentioned   by  Section      18(2)  does   not  depend   on  the      ministerial act of communication of      notice in  any particular form when      the Act or Rules has not prescribed      any form.  The limitation begins to      operate from  the moment the notice      under Section  12(2) is received or      as envisaged by Section 18(2)"      It  is   seen  that   sub-section  (1)  of  Section  12 postulates that  award made  under Section 11 shall be filed in the  Collector’s Office  and the  same shall be final and conclusive evidence as between the Collector and the persons interested, whether  or not  they have respectively appeared before the Collector, of the true area of the land acquired, the value  of the land acquired and the apportionment of the compensation among the persons interested. The Collector is, therefore, required  to issue notice of his award to such of the  persons   interested  who   were  either   not  present personally or  were present through representatives when the Collector  made   his  award.  Sub-section  (2),  therefore, requires him  to give  immediate notice  of  award  to  such interested persons  and not  simply the communication of the award as  contended form  If such  interested person who was present personally or through the representative at the time of makings  of the award, is not required to be supplied the copy of  the award,  would it  be intended  that  the  award should be  served along  with notice to a person who was not present. This  question was considered in the above case and

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it was  held that the service of notice is a ministerial act and the  Act did not intend to supply the copy of the award. The limitation  provided under proviso to sub-section (2) of Section 18  prescribes that  if an  applicant is  present or represented, has to make an application when he receives the compensation under protest within six weeks from the date of the Collector’s  award and  where he  was not present within six weeks  of the  receipt of  the notice from the Collector under sub-section  (2) of Section 12 or within 6 months from the date  of the  Collector’s award,  whichever period shall first expire. In other words, the proviso to sub-section (2) of Section  18 prescribes  the limitation  within which  the application for  reference under  sub-section (1) of Section 18 is  required to  be made  and the failure thereof puts an end of  the right  to the claimant to seek a reference under Section 18.  This Court  has already held that communication of the award is not a pre-condition and, therefore, the Full Bench of  the High  Court was right in its interpretation of the provisions  of Section 18, proviso read with sub-section (2) of  Section 12. The local amendment does not, therefore, make any material change to the aforestated interpretation.      The  appeal   is  accordingly  dismissed  but,  in  the circumstances, without costs.