10 January 1990
Supreme Court
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SPECIAL MILITARY ESTATES OFFICER Vs MUNIVENKATARAMIAH & ANOTHER

Bench: PUNCHHI,M.M.
Case number: Appeal Civil 204 of 1975


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PETITIONER: SPECIAL MILITARY ESTATES OFFICER

       Vs.

RESPONDENT: MUNIVENKATARAMIAH & ANOTHER

DATE OF JUDGMENT10/01/1990

BENCH: PUNCHHI, M.M. BENCH: PUNCHHI, M.M. RANGNATHAN, S.

CITATION:  1990 AIR  499            1990 SCR  (1)   4  1990 SCC  (2) 168        JT 1990 (1)     1  1990 SCALE  (1)2

ACT:     Requisitioning  and  Acquisition of  Immovable  Property Act,  1952: Sections 11 and 25(1)--Award of compensation  by Arbitrator   under   section  30--Defence   of   India   Act 1962--Appeal--Maintainability of.     Defence of India Act 1962: Section 30--Requisitioning of land-Award    of    compensation    by    Arbitrator--Appeal against--Not maintainable in view of Section 25 Requisition- ing Act in respect of period prior to January 10, 1968.

HEADNOTE:     The Defence of India Act, 1962 was passed by  Parliament in  the  wake  of the Chinese aggression  to  ensure  public safety  and interest in the Defence of India and  Civil  De- fence  and other connected matters. It had been passed  when the  Requisitioning  and Acquisition of  Immovable  Property Act, 1952 was already in force. Under the provisions of both these Acts, immovable property could be requisitioned. Under both Acts compensation on such requisition was  determinable and  payable and any person interested, being  aggrieved  by the  amount  of compensation so determined,  could  have  an Arbitrator appointed to determine the same. The award of the Arbitrator on such determination under Section 8 was appeal- able  under Section 11 of the Requisitioning Act before  the High  Court  within  whose  jurisdiction  the  requisitioned property  was  situated. The award of  the  Arbitrator  made under Section 30 in pursuance of the requisition made  under Section  29 of the Defence Act was apparently final,  though specifically not provided, since no right of appeal  against the award of the Arbitrator had been conferred thereunder on any authority.     The  Defence Act ceased being applicable as it  perished on January 10, 1968. Simultaneously Section 25 in the Requi- sitioning Act was substituted.     Some  lands belonging to the first respondent in  either of the two appeals were requisitioned by the Union of  India under Section 29 of the Defence of India Act, 1962 by  issu- ing a notification to that effect on 5 April  8,  1963  and possession was taken  by  the  military authorities on May 28, 1963. The requisitioned property  was

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not  released  before January 10, 1968 in terms  of  Section 25(1) of the Requisitioning Act.     The  Deputy Commissioner, the competent authority  fixed Rs.280  per acre per annum as crop compensation.  Respondent No. 1 not being satisfied sought a reference from the compe- tent  authority to an arbitrator. The arbitrator  went  into the matter and made an award on June 30, 1971.     The  Special  Military Estates Officer  being  aggrieved with  the award filed two appeals against the orders of  the Arbitrator  in the High Court, taking shelter under  Section 11  of  the  Requisitioning  and  Acquisition  of  Immovable Property Act, 1952.     Since the properties that had been requisitioned had not been released before January 10, 1968, it had to be  treated seemingly  to have been requisitioned by the  competent  au- thority  under the provisions of the Requisitioning Act  for the  purpose  for which such property was  held  immediately before the said date and all the provisions of the said  Act were to apply.     Objections  to the maintainability of the  appeals  were taken relying on proviso (a) to Section 25(1) on the ground, that the word determination’ in the context meant determina- tion  only by the competent authority under the Defence  Act and since such determination held the field and was in force immediately  before January 10, 1968, no  challenge  thereto could be made by appealing against the same, on the premises that a provision amongst all the provisions of the  Requisi- tioning  Act  provided an appellate  forum  challenging  the same. The  High Court upheld the objection and dismissed  the  ap- peals.     The  Special Military Estates Officer appealed  to  this Court by special leave. Partially allowing the appeals, the Court,     HELD:  1.  The right of appeal is  a  substantive  right conferred on a party by the statute. The conferring of  such right  is not circumscribed by the right being available  at the time of the institution of the cause in the court of the first  instance.  In  a given situation it  may  already  be available  at the institution of the cause in the  court  of first instance or 6 may  even  be subsequently conferred. In  either  situation, without   any  distinction,  such  right  is  conferred   by statute.-[10E-F]     2. The Legislature by enacting Section 25 of the  Requi- sitioning  Act and on the perishing of the Defence  Act  has more than impliedly made available a right of appeal regard- ing the rate of compensation for a property remaining  under requisition  for the post 10th January, 1968 period,  recur- ring as the rate of compensation would be. [11G-H]     3.  From  the scheme of things and from the  reading  of Section  25  of  the Requisitioning Act as a  whole,  it  is discernible that for the period of requisition before  Janu- ary 10, 1968, the determination for payment of  compensation under  the Defence Act would remain untouched and  unaltered for appeal had never been provided under the Act. The reason is  not far to seek because the order of the  competent  au- thority under the Defence Act was for the purpose of Defence of  India  Act. That purpose having gone  with  effect  from January  10,  1968, the same determination  for  payment  of compensation  being applicable to the cost-date  period  was seemingly a requisition by the competent authority under the Requisitioning Act and since all the provisions of the  said Act applied to such a requisition, the payment of  compensa-

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tion  as  from  January 10, 1968, became  appealable  as  an appeal is provided under this Act. [10H; 11A-B]     4. The word ’determination’ so far as it related to  the period  of  requisition  prior to January 10,  1968,  was  a determination,  final in character whether it was  right  or wrong as having been made under the Defence Act. But for the period  thereafter, the word ’determination’ in the  context would  mean ’final determination’ i.e. the determination  of the competent authority if unchallenged and becoming  final, and  if appealed against, final determination by the  appel- late forum. [11C-D]    5.  A harmonious construction of the proviso  to  Section 25(1)  with the whole of parent section indicates  that  the rate of compensation as determined by the competent authori- ty under the Defence Act was valid uptil the period  January 10, 1968, but from that day onward the same rate of  compen- sation  per annum would keep applying till upset or  altered in appeal, because deemingly from that date it is a requisi- tion  under the other Act and of a different worth and  cor- rectable in appeal. [11D-E]     6. The latter portion of proviso (a) cannot therefore be allowed to eat away the applicability of all the  provisions of the Requisition Act, 7 inclusive that of appeal under Section 11 of the Act. [11 D]     7.  In the instant case, the arbitrator passed both  the awards on June 30, 1971, pertaining to the period commencing from  May 28, 1963, the date on which the possession of  the land  requisitioned  was taken. Plainly the award  was  made covering a period not any prior to January 10, 1968 but to a period thereafter. Having regard to section 25 the objection as  raised  before the High Court was valid for  the  period before January 10, 1968, but not beyond the period  commenc- ing  thereafter. The case has therefore to be remitted  back to the High Court for disposal on merits. [11F, 12A]

JUDGMENT:     CIVIL  APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal Nos.  204205 of 1975.     From  the  Judgment and Decree dated 9.8.  1974  of  the Karnataka High Court in M.F. Appeal Nos. 582 and 584 of  197 1.     V.C. Mahajan (N.P.), Tarachand Sharma and C.V. Subba Rao for the Appellant. K.R. Chaudhary (N.P.) for the Respondents. The Judgment of the Court was delivered by     M.M. PUNCHHI, J. It is to establish a right of appeal in the  appellate  forum  of the High Court  that  the  Special Military Estates Officer, Bangalore, the common appellant in these  two Civil Appeals by Special Leave, is here  in  this Court, challenging the common judgment and order of the High Court of Karnataka.     The facts leading to the present appeal are these.  Some lands,  the extent and description of which is not  material here,  belonging to the first respondent in either of  these two appeals, were requisitioned by the Union of India  under Section  29  of the Defence of India  Act,  1962  (hereafter referred to as the Defence Act) by issuing a notification to that  effect on April 8, 1963. The possession of such  lands was  taken by the military authorities on May 28, 1963.  The competent  authority, being the Deputy Commissioner  of  the district, fixed Rs.280 per acre per annum as crop  compensa- tion. Respondent No. 1 was not satisfied with the measure of

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compensation.  He  sought  a reference  from  the  competent authority to an arbitrator. The Arbitrator so appointed went into the matter and finally made an award on June 30, 8 1971, whereby he worked out rental compensation at the  rate of  Rs.6969.60 per acre per annum on the premises  that  the value of the land worked out to be Rs.1,16,160 per acre  and if 6 per cent interest were to be awarded thereon the figure arrived at would be Rs.6969.60 per acre, which could well be the  rental  income per annum. Obviously, the  increase  was sharply contrasted being Rs.280 per acre per annum as award- ed  by the competent authority and almost Rs.7,000 per  acre per  annum as awarded by,the Arbitrator. The aggrieved  Spe- cial Military Estates Officer filed two appeals against  the orders  of the Arbitrator in the High Court of Karnataka  at Bangalore,  taking shelter under Section 11 of the  Requisi- tioning  and  Acquisition of Immovable  Property  Act,  1952 (hereafter  referred to as the Requisitioning Act).  At  the time  of their final disposal, a preliminary  objection  was raised  on behalf of the respondents that the  appeals  were not  maintainable, which found favour with the  High  Court. The  appeals  were consequently held  not  maintainable  and accordingly  dismissed. This has led the  appellant--Special Military Estates Officer, to this Court.     It is not far history that the Defence Act was passed by the  Parliament  in the wake of the Chinese  aggression,  in order  to  provide, inter alia, special measures  to  ensure public safety and interest in the Defence of India and Civil Defence and other connected matters. It had been passed when the  Requisitioning  Act  was already in  force.  Under  the provisions  of  both the Acts, immovable property  could  be requisitioned.  Reference  for  the purpose may  be  had  to section  3 of the Requisitioning Act and Section 29  of  the Defence  Act. Under both Acts compensation on such  requisi- tion is determinable and payable and any person  interested, being aggrieved by the amount of compensation so determined, can have an Arbitrator appointed to determine  compensation. The  award  of the Arbitrator on  such  determination  under Section 8 is appealable under Section 11 of the Requisition- ing Act before the High Court within whose jurisdiction  the requisitioned property is situate. The award of the Arbitra- tor  made under Section 30 in pursuance of  the  requisition made  under  Section  29 of the Defence  Act  is  apparently final,  though specifically not provided so, since no  right of  appeal  against  the award of the  Arbitrator  has  been conferred  thereunder  on  any authority.  The  Defence  Act ceased being applicable as it perished on January 10,  1968. Simultaneously  Section  25 in the  Requisitioning  Act  was substituted. The substituted Section 25 reads as follows: "25(1)  Notwithstanding anything contained in this Act,  any immovable property requisitioned by the Central 9 Government or by any officer or authority to whom powers  in this  behalf have been delegated by that  Government,  under the Defence of India Act, 1962, and the rules made  thereun- der  (including any immovable property deemed to  have  been requisitioned  under  the said Act) which has not  been  re- leased  from such requisition before the th  January,  1968, shall,  as from that date, be deemed to have  been  requisi- tioned  by the competent authority under the  provisions  of this  Act for the purpose for which such property  was  held immediately  before the said date and all the provisions  of this Act shall apply accordingly. Provided that: (a)  all determinations, agreements and awards for the  pay-

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ment of compensation in respect of any such property for any period  of  requisition before the said date  and  in  force immediately  before the said date, shall continue to  be  in force  and  shall apply to the payment  of  compensation  in respect  of that property for any period of  requisition  as from the said date;  (b) anything done or any action taken (including any  orders,  notifications  or  rules made or  issued)  by  the Central  Government or by any officer or authority to whom powers  in this behalf have been delegated by that Government, in  exercise of the powers conferred by or under Chapter VI of  the  Defence of India Act, 1962, shall, in so far as it  is not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act, be  deemed to have been done or taken in the exercise of the powers  conferred  by or under this Act as if this section  was  in force on the date on which such thing was done or action was  taken. (2)  Save  as  otherwise provided in  sub-section  (1),  the provisions of the Defence of India Act, 1962, and the  rules made thereunder, in so far as those provisions relate to the requisitioning of any such immovable property as is referred to  in sub-Section (1), shall as from the th January,  1968, cease to operate except as respect things done or omitted to be  done  before such cesser and Section 6  of  the  General Clauses Act, 1897, shall apply upon such cesser of operation as  if such cesser were ,a repeal of an enactment by a  Cen- tral Act. 10     The  requisitioned property admittedly was not  released before  January 10, 1968, in terms of Section 25(1)  of  the Requisitioning Act, afore quoted, Since the requisition  had not  been  released before January 10, 1968, from  that  day onwards it had to be treated deemingly to have been requisi- tioned  by the competent authority under the  provisions  of the  Requisitioning  Act  for the  purpose  for  which  such property  was held immediately before the said date and  all the  provisions of the said Act were to  apply  accordingly. The  objection to the maintainability of the appeals  rested on  proviso (a), afore-quoted, on the ground that  the  word ’determination’  in the context meant determination only  by the competent authority under the Defence Act and since such determination  held the field and was in  force  immediately before January 10, 1968, no challenge thereto could be  made by appealing against the same, on the premises that a provi- sion  amongst all the provisions of the  Requisitioning  Act provided an appellate forum challenging the same. The objec- tion  was met on the argument that the word  ’determination’ when considered in the context of the proviso, meant  ’final determination’ and not merely determination of  compensation at the level of the competent authority. The High Court,  as said before, upheld the objection, dismissing the appeals.     It is settled law that the right of appeal is a substan- tive right conferred on a party by the statute. The  confer- ring  of right of appeal is not circumscribed by  the  right being available at the time of the institution of the  cause in the court of the first instance. The right of appeal in a given situation may already be available at the  institution of the cause in the court of the first instance or may  even be subsequently conferred. In either situation, without  any distinction,  such right is conferred by statute.  Here,  as would be seen, Section 25(1) substantively provides that the requisition  of  property under the Defence  Act  continuing upto  January  10, 1968, is deemingly a requisition  by  the competent authority under the provisions of the Requisition-

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ing  Act and all the provisions of the said Act shall  apply thereto  accordingly.  Proviso (a) however,  says  that  all determinations,  agreements  and awards for the  payment  of compensation in respect of any such property for any  period of requisition before the said date and in force immediately before  the  said date, shall continue to be  in  force  and shall  apply  to the payment of compensation in  respect  of that property for any period of requisition as from the said date.  It is discernible from the scheme of things and  from the  reading  of Section 25 of the Requisitioning Act  as  a whole that for the period of requisition before January  10, 1968, the determination for payment of compensation 11 under  the Defence Act would remain untouched and  unaltered for  appeal  had  never been provided under  that  Act.  The reason  is not far to seek, because the order of the  compe- tent authority under the Defence Act was for the purpose  of Defence of India. That purpose having gone with effect  from January  10,  1968, the same determination  for  payment  of compensation  being applicable to the post-date  period  was deemingly a requisition by the competent authority under the Requisitioning Act and since all the provisions of the  said Act applied to such a requisition, the payment of  compensa- tion  as  from  January 10, 1968, became  appealable  as  an appeal  is provided under this Act. In that sense, the  word ’determination’,  so  far  as it related to  the  period  of requisition prior to January 10, 1968, was a  determination, final  in character whether it was right or wrong as  having been made under the Defence Act. But for the period thereaf- ter,  the  word ’determination’ in the  context  would  mean ’final  determination’ i.e. the determination of the  compe- tent  authority if unchallenged and becoming final,  and  if appealed  against,  final  determination  by  the  appellate forum.  In  this sense, the latter portion  of  proviso  (a) cannot  be allowed to eat away the applicability of all  the provisions  of  the Requisitioning Act,  inclusive  that  of appeal  under Section 11 of the Act. Thus a harmonious  con- struction  of  the  said proviso with the  whole  of  parent section  persuades us to hold that the rate of  compensation as  determined by the competent authority under the  Defence Act was valid uptil the period before January 10, 1968,  but from that day onward the same rate of compensation per annum would keep applying till upset or altered in appeal, because deemingly from that date it is a requisition under the other Act and of a different worth and correctable in appeal.  The Arbitrator as it appears had passed both the awards on  June 30, 197 1, pertaining to the period commencing from May  28, 1963, (the date on which the possession of the land requisi- tioned  was  taken) and valid for the period  following  and ensuing.  Plainly the award was made covering a  period  not only  prior to January 10, 1968 but to a  period  thereafter also.  As we have interpreted Section 25, the  objection  as raised before the High Court was valid for the period before January  10,  1968,  but not beyond  the  period  commencing thereafter. The High Court’s view , in sustaining the objec- tion  for the later period as well, does not commend to  us. The Legislature by enacting Section 25 of the Requisitioning Act  and on the perishing of the Defence Act, has more  than impliedly  made  available a right of appeal  regarding  the rate of compensation for a property remaining under requisi- tion for the post th January, 1968 period: recurring as  the rate of compensation would be. We hold it accordingly. 12     For  the  view  above taken, we  partially  allow  these appeals  and  remit these cases back to the  High  Court  of

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Karnataka for disposal on merits in accordance with law. We, however, make no order as to costs in the appeals before us. N.V.K.                                     Appeals   allowed partly. 13