SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
Ashok Kumar & Ors.
Vs
State of Haryana and Another
C.A.No.324 of 2007
(S.B.Sinha and Markandeya Katju,JJ.)
23.01.2007
JUDGMENT
S. Sinha,J.
S.L.P. (Civil) No.233-234 of 2005
1. Leave granted.
2. Appellants herein are owners of lands appurtenant to Khasra Nos. 3829, 3830 and 3831. They acquired the said lands in 1993 and allegedly raised certain construction thereupon. A notification under Section 4(1) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (for short, 'the Act') was issued on 20.12.1996 for acquisition of the said lands. A suit was filed by the appellants herein in the Court of the Civil Judge, Senior Division, Panipat, questioning the validity of the said notification, inter alia, on the premise that the said proceeding was illegal and in any event the constructions raised by them cannot be demolished in view of a policy decision taken by the State. On an application for grant of injunction filed by the appellants, an order of interim injunction was passed on 30.08.1997 in the following terms :
"For written statement, no reply to injunction application and arguments
on the same, to come up on 23.9.1997. In the meantime, the defendants are
restrained from demolishing the construction and initiating further action on
the memo in dispute as according to the Jamabandi disputed property is in the
shape of Gair Mumkin Plots and it is arguable point as to whether the
provisions of Punjab Scheduled Roads Act are applicable to the Gair Mumkin plots
or not."
3. Indisputably, the said interim order was extended from time to time, as
would be noticed hereinafter. By an order dated 24.09.1997 while adjourning the
suit to 29.11.1997, the order of stay dated 30.08.1997 was extended. On
29.11.1997, the following order was passed :
"The case is adjourned to 09.01.1998 for filing of written statement and
reply to the injunction application. Till then stay order dated 30.8.98 is
extended."
[Emphasis supplied]
4. Yet again by an order dated 09.01.1998, the stay order was extended till
23.03.1998. Similar order was passed on 23.03.1998. The matter was, however,
placed on 28.07.1998 on the ground that the Presiding Officer was to remain on
leave on 29.07.1998. The matter was adjourned to 09.09.1998. However, the order
of injunction was not extended.
5. After some adjournments, the suit was dismissed for default on 19.08.2000. A declaration under Section 6 of the Act was issued on 29.11.2000. A writ petition was filed questioning the legality and/or validity of the said direction before the Punjab & Haryana High Court, which was registered as C.W.P. No. 11329 of 2002. By reason of the impugned judgment the said writ petition has been dismissed by a Division Bench of the High Court, inter alia, opining :
"The position, as explained in the written statement, appears to be
correct. Simply because, while adjourning the case the Presiding Officer was
not holding the Court, a day earlier to the date fixed, where orders with
regard to stay are silent, would not mean that stay was vacated. In any case,
case remained pending after the adjourned date, as mentioned above, as well and
it is the positive case of respondents that stay was operative till such time
suit was dismissed in default on 19.8.2000. Even otherwise, we are of the firm
view that if once stay is granted and same is not specifically vacated and the
case is simply adjourned, it cannot be interpreted to mean that stay was
operative only upto a date when case was adjourned without passing any order
with regard to extension or otherwise of stay. The petitioners, it appears,
have intentionally withheld the orders passed after the case was adjourned to
9.9.1998"
6. A review application filed there against was also dismissed. Submission of
Mr. M.N. Krishnamani, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellants, is that having regard to the fact that the order of injunction was
operative only for the period between 24.09.1997 and 09.09.1998, the High Court
went wrong in dismissing the writ petition filed by the appellants herein
inasmuch as the declaration made under Section 6 of the Act on 29.11.2000 was
clearly beyond the period of one year from the date of issuance of notification
issued under sub-section (1) of Section 4 of the Act, as enshrined under
Section 6 thereof.
7. Mr. Ravindra Shrivastava, learned Senior Counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondents, on the other hand, would submit that having regard to the nature
of the order of injunction passed on 30.08.1997, it must be held to have
remained operative till 19.08.2000 when the suit was dismissed for default.
8. The short question which arises for consideration in this appeal is as to
whether the order of ad interim injunction granted by the learned Civil Judge,
Senior Division, Panipat, was operative till 09.09.1998 or 19.08.2000. We have
noticed hereinbefore the nature of the orders passed by the learned Civil
Judge. Although in its order dated 30.08.1997, the learned Civil Judge, used
the term "In the meantime", which was repeated in its order dated
24.09.1997, but in the subsequent orders beginning from 29.11.1997, the
expression used was "till then".
9. The term of the order of the learned Judge, in our opinion, does not leave
any manner of doubt whatsoever that the interim order was only extended from
time to time. The interim order having been extended till a particular date,
the contention raised by the respondents herein that they were under a bona
fide belief that the injunction order would continue till it was vacated cannot
be accepted.
10. In our considered opinion, the purport of the order passed by the learned
Civil Judge, Senior Division, Panipat, in extending the order of injunction is
absolutely clear and explicit. It may be true that the date was preponed to
28.07.1998, but from a bare perusal of the order passed by the learned Civil
Judge, Senior Division, it is evident that the order of injunction was not
extended. Even on the subsequent dates, the order of injunction was not
extended. In fact, no order extending the period was passed nor any fresh order
of injunction was passed by the learned Civil Judge, Senior Division,
subsequent thereto. Proviso (ii) appended to sub-section (1) of Section 6 of
the Act clearly debars making of any declaration in respect of any particular
land covered by a notification issued under sub-section (1) of Section 4 after
the expiry of one year from the date of publication thereof. Explanation (1)
appended to the said proviso, however, stipulates that in computing any of the
periods referred to in the first proviso, the period during which any action or
proceeding to be taken in pursuance of the notification issued under Section,
4(1), is stayed by an order of a Court, shall be excluded. On a plain reading
of the aforementioned provisions, there cannot be any doubt whatsoever that the
period which is required to be excluded would be one, during which the action
or proceeding taken was subjected to any order of stay passed by a competent
court of law.
11. Provisions of the Act should be construed having regard to the purport and
intent thereof. Section 6 of the Act is beneficent to the land owners. In Hindustan
Petroleum Corporation Ltd. v. Darius Shapur Chenai and Others1 it
was held :
"The Act is an expropriatory legislation. This Court in State of M.P. v.
Vishnu Prasad Sharma observed that in such a case the provisions of the statute
should be strictly construed as it deprives a person of his land without
consent. [See also Khub Chand v. State of Rajasthan and CCE v. Orient
Fabrics (P) Ltd."
12. We have noticed hereinbefore that the proviso appended to sub- section (1)
of Section 6 is in the negative term. It is, therefore, mandatory in nature.
Any declaration made after the expiry of one year from the date of the
publication of the notification under sub-section (1) of Section 4 would be
void and of no effect. An enabling provision has been made by reason of the
explanation appended thereto, but the same was done only for the purpose of
extending the period of limitation and not for any other purpose. The purport
and object of the provisions of the Act and in particular the proviso which had
been inserted by act 68 of 1984 and which came into force w.e.f. 24.09.1984
must be given its full effect. The said provision was inserted for the benefit
of the owners of land. Such a statutory benefit, thus, cannot be taken away by
a purported construction of an order of a court which, in our opinion, is
absolutely clear and explicit.
13. There is no warrant for the proposition, as was stated by the High Court
that unless an order of stay passed once even for the limited period is vacated
by an express order or otherwise; the same would continue to operate.
14. We, therefore, are of the opinion that the judgment of the High Court
cannot be sustained, which is set aside accordingly. The appeal is allowed. In
the facts and circumstances, there shall, however, be no order as to costs.
Judgment Referred.
1(2005) 7 SCC 0622