Supreme Court of India (Full Bench (FB)- Three Judge)

AA, 4506 of 2015, Judgment Date: May 14, 2015

                                                                  REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4506       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30969 OF 2011)


SAVITRI DEVI                                              ....APPELLANT(S)
           
                                    VERSUS                                    

STATE OF UTTAR PRADESH & ORS.                           .....RESPONDENT(S)          

                                   W I T H

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4830       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27508 OF 2010)

               CIVIL APPEAL NOS.      4508-12         OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS. 33552-33556 OF 2011)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NOS.      4513-17    OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS. 33984-33988 OF 2011)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NOS.  4518-24  OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS. 36334-36340 OF 2011)

                       CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4819  OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 333 OF 2012)

                   CIVIL APPEAL NOS.      4525-26 OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS. 1082-1083 OF 2012)

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4527 OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 1104 OF 2012)


                      CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4529-30  OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 1664-1665 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4531       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 1739 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4532       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 1858 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4533       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2411 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4534       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2537 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4535       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2557 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4536       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2603 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4537       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2607 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4538       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2612 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4539       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2873 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4540       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 3298 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4541       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 3473 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4543       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 3916 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4544       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 3918 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4545       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4021 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4546       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4024 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4547       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4223 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4548       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4242 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4549       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4249 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4550       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4542 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4551       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 5566 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4552       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 5712 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4553       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 5959 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4554       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6013 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4555       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6027 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4556       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6121 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4557       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6196 OF 2012)



                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4558       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6345 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4559       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6353 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4560       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6363 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4561       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6368 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4563       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6369 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4564-67          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6466-6469 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4568-73          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6489-6494 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4575-76          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6534-6535 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4577       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6539 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4578       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6629 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4579-80          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6731-6732 OF 2012)


                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4581-89          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6748-6756 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4591       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7146 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4592       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7436 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4593       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7539 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4594       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7540 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4595       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7541 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4596       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7815 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4597-98          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7934-7935 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4599       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8380 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4600       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8439 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4601       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8528 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4602       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8593 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4603       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8849 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4604       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8851 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4605-07          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8853-8855 OF 2012)



                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4608       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9527 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4609       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9678 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4610       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9748 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4611       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9761 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4612       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10052 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4613-15          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10056-10058 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4616       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10315 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4617       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10597 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4618       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 11303 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4619       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 11304 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4620       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 11879 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4621       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 11993 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4622       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12299 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4623       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12461 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4624       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12844 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4625-30          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 13641-13646 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4631       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15173 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4632       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15905 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4633       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 16007 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4634       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 16336 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4635       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 16337 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4636       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 16380 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4637       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17041 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4638       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 18104 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4639       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19356 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4640       OF 2015
             (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO.15370           OF 2015
                     @ SLP (C) NO.....CC 20540 OF 2012)

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4641 OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23723 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4642-4643        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23724-23725 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4644       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 24203 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4645       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 24720 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4646-4647        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 25551-25552 OF 2012)


                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4648-4650        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26874-26876 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4651       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27023 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4652       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27139 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4653-4660        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27389-27396 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4661-4666        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27502-27507 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4667       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 28140 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4668       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 29279 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4669       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 33860 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4670       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37492 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4671       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37989 of 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4672       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37993 of 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4673       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 38288 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4674       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 38289 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4675       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 38290 OF 2012)




                 CONTEMPT PETITION (C) NOS. 237-238 OF 2013
                                     IN
                       SLP (C) NOS. 1082-1083 OF 2012


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4677       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8631 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4678       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8635 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4679       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 8887 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4680       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9168 OF 2013)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4681       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9297 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4682       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12784 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4683       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 13017 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4690-4691        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 16722-16723 OF 2013)




                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4692       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17635 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4693       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 18090 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4694       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 18735 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4695       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 18866 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4696-4697        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19200-19201 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4698       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19922 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4699       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 20329 OF 2013)

                       CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4700  OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23276 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4701-702         OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23855-23856 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4703-4704        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23857-23858 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4705-4706        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23859-23860 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4707-4709        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 24622-24624 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4710-4711        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26176-26177 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4712       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26178 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4713       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26179 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4714-4715        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26681-26682 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4716       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26868 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4717       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26890 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4718       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30601 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4719       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30859 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4720       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30860 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4721       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30861 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4722       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 30862 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4723       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 32108 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4724       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 33980 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4726       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 34176 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4727       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 35109 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4728       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37793 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4729       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 39351 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4730-4731        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 39697-39698 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4732-4733        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 39699-39700 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4734       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 39701 OF 2013)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4735-4736        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 39702-39703 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4737       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 802 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4738       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2495 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4739       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 4566 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4740-4741        OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 5936-5937 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4742-45          OF 2015
               (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6024-6027 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4746       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 6682 OF 2014)

                      CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4747    OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7019 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4748       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7031 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4749       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 7036 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4750       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10065 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4751-53          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10147-10149 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4754       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 11737 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4755       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 13401 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4756       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 14786 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4757       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12443 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4758       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 13034 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4759-60          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 22298-22299 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4761-63          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 22329-22331 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4764-65          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 22384-22385 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4766-4768        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 22716-22718 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4769-4770        OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36155-36156 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4771       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36436 OF 2014)


                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4772-74          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36647-36649 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4775       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12433 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4776       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 32391 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4777       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 23772 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4778       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 26260 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4779       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17559 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4780       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36242 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4781       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 29351 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4782       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 18356 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4783       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19521 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4784       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19523 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4785       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19525 OF 2014)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4786       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 19777 OF 2014)

                    CONTEMPT PETITION (C) NO. 444 OF 2013
                                     IN
                          SLP (C) NO. 5566 OF 2012

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4787       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 25279 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4788       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 27102 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4789       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36391 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4790       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36390 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4791       OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15397         OF 2015
                      @ SLP (C) NO...CC 21151 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4792       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 36975 OF 2013)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4793       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 9551 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4794-95          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10049-10050 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4796       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 10051 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4797       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12434 OF 2014)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4798-99          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12435-12436 OF 2014)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4800       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12437 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4801       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12438 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4802       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12439 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4803       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12441 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4804       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 12442 OF 2014)

                    CONTEMPT PETITION (C) NO. 21 OF 2015
                                     IN
                          SLP (C) NO. 27023 OF 2012

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4805       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 28167 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4806       OF 2015
                  (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 2057 OF 2015)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4807       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17686 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4808       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37126 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4809       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15636 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4810-18          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17088-17096 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4837       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 35143 OF 2013)




                       CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4807  OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 17686 OF 2014)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4809       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15635 OF 2012)

                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4808       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 37126 OF 2012)


                     CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4809       OF 2015
                 (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NO. 15636 OF 2012)

                  CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4810-18          OF 2015
              (ARISING OUT OF SLP (C) NOS. 17088-17096 OF 2012)

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2197 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2195 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2198 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2199 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2225 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2226 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2704 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2705 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 3022 OF 2013

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4902 OF 2014

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO. 4928 OF 2014

                               J U D G M E N T

A.K. SIKRI, J.
                 These matters  were  heard  in  detail  for  few  days  and
hearing was concluded on 05.02.2015.  Thereupon, we communicated the  result
in the open Court  by  pronouncing  that  appeals  were  dismissed  and  the
reasons shall follow.  These are,  thus,  our  reasons  for  dismissing  the
appeals.
                 Leave is granted in all the special leave petitions.

PROLOGUE :

The subject matter of most of these appeals are the Notifications dated  12-
03-2008 issued by the State of U.P. under Section 4 of the Land  Acquisition
Act (“Act”  for  short)  read  with  Section  17  of  the  Act  as  well  as
declaration issued under Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act  (hereinafter
referred to as the 'Act') vide Notification dated 30.06.2008.  Land  situate
in various villages of Noida and Greater Noida  in  Tehsil  Dadri,  District
Gautam Budh  Nagar  was  acquired.   Some  other  Notifications  under  same
provisions of the Act in  respect  of  lands  of  these  villages  was  also
acquired by earlier Notifications.  The purpose stated in the  notifications
was 'Planned Industrial  Development'.   Urgency  provisions  under  Section
17(1) and 17(4) of the Act were invoked thereby dispensing  with  the  right
of objection otherwise given to the land holders under  Section  5A  of  the
Act. The total land which was acquired by  these  notification  was  589.188
hectares.  Some writ petitions were initially filed in  the  High  Court  of
Allahabad challenging the said Notifications, with primary  contention  that
invocation of emergency  provision and taking away  valuable  right  of  the
land holders under Section 5A of the Act was illegal, mala  fide,  arbitrary
and colourable exercise of power. Some of the writ petitions came up  before
the Division Bench of the said High Court.  One was Writ Petition (C)  45777
of 2008 in the case of Harish Chand and Others v. State of U.P.  and  Others
wherein the High Court upholding the very same  Notifications,  on  arriving
at the conclusion that invocation of Section 17 of the  Act  was  justified,
dismissed that writ petition.  It so happened that  another  Division  Bench
of the same High Court decided Writ Petition (C) No. 17068 of  2009;  titled
Karan Singh v. State of U.P. and others. The  Division  Bench  rendered  its
judgment  dated  19-07-2011  in  the  said  case  accepting  the   aforesaid
contention  of  the  writ  petitioners  and  holding  that   invocation   of
provisions of Section 17 of the Act  was  not  justified.  Accordingly,  the
Division Bench quashed these Notifications.

As a sequel, spate of writ petitions came to be filed challenging the  lands
acquired not only by the notification dated 12-03-2008 but even  by  earlier
notifications  as  well.   When  these  petitions  came  up  before  another
Division Bench it noticed the aforesaid two conflicting views  expressed  by
two different Division Benches. This led the said Division  Bench  to  refer
the matter to the larger Bench and orders dated 26-07-2011  were  passed  in
this behalf.  This is how the matters were placed before the Full Bench  and
by that time as many as 471 writ petitions had accumulated.  All these  writ
petitions were taken up analogously by the Full Bench and disposed  of  vide
judgment dated 21.10.2011 with leading case known as  Gajraj  vs.  State  of
U.P. (W.P. (C) 37443 of  201!).  The  Full  Bench  of  the  High  Court  has
accepted the plea of the land holders that invocation  of  emergency  clause
contained in Section 17 of the Act was impermissible and  unwarranted.    At
the same time, the High Court also noticed that in respect of land  of  many
villages, possession had already  been  taken  and  substantial  development
work carried out.  Even compensation  was  paid  in  such  cases,  the  High
Court, instead of quashing the Notifications in respect of  those  villages,
chose to adopt the middle path in an endeavour to balance  the  equities  of
both sides.   Thus,  it  enhanced  the  provisional  compensation  and  also
directed allotment of developed Abadi  land  to  the  extent  10%  of  their
acquired land subject to maximum of 2500 sq. mtrs.  However, in  respect  of
three villages, when it found that no development work had been carried  out
at all by the Authorities during the  intervening  period,  the  High  Court
chose  to  quash  the  Notifications  including  consequential  actions  and
directed restoration of the land to the respective land owners.

It may also be noticed at this stage that when  there  was  flurry  of  writ
petitions in the High Court challenging the invocation  of  Section  17  and
the Division Bench of the High Court in  Harkaran  Singh  (supra)  had  held
invocation of urgency powers to be bad in law, some land owners  whose  land
was acquired much earlier by invoking clause (some of the  Notifications  of
such land date back to 1979 or early 1980s as well)  took  adventurous  step
to  file  the  writ  petitions  in   the   year   2011   challenging   those
Notifications. All these writ petitions, however,  have  been  dismissed  by
the impugned judgment of the High Court on the ground that  they  are  filed
with inordinate delay and laches.
From the aforesaid, it is clear that three sets of directions are issued  by
the  High  Court,  namely,  (I)  dismissing  writ   petitions   filed   with
unexplained delays and laches; (ii) quashing the Notification in respect  of
three villages where no development work  had  taken  place;  and  (iii)  in
respect of other villages, instead of quashing the action of acquisition  of
land in spite of accepting the plea that Section 17 was wrongly invoked,  it
has  enhanced  the  compensation  as  well  as  extent  of  entitlement  for
allotment of developed Abadi plot.
The State Government/U.P. Development Board as  well  as  many  land  owners
have challenged the said Full Bench decision of the High Court.  Insofar  as
special leave  petitioners/appeals  of  the  Government  and  Authority  are
concerned, they have already been dismissed. In these  batches  of  matters,
thus, we are concerned with the appeals of the land owners.
Most of these appeals are filed against the Full  Bench.  However,  some  of
the appeals arise against the earlier Division Bench judgment  dated  25-11-
2008 whereby the High Court had upheld the same Notifications  and  rejected
the challenge to the acquisition of land.   Some appeals are  filed  by  the
NOIDA authority where the Division Bench had quashed the notification.

After narrating these preliminaries of the matters, we advert to  the  facts
and events of the cases.  For the sake of convenience, we will refer to  the
facts appearing in the writ petition of Gajraj as that  was  the  lead  case
before the High Court as well.

FACTUAL MATRIX
This writ petition was filed by 27 writ petitioners claiming  themselves  to
be Bhumidaars with transferable right and owners of different plots of  land
situate in Village Patwari, Pargana, Tehsil – Dadri,  District  Gautam  Budh
Nagar.   The  Notification  dated  12-03-2008  was  issued  by   the   State
Government under Section 4(1) read with Section 17 of the  Land  Acquisition
Act, 1894 notifying that the land mentioned in the schedule  is  needed  for
the public purpose namely,  for  the  “planned  industrial  development”  in
Gautam Buddha Nagar.  Inquiry under Section 5A having  been  dispensed  with
vide Notification dated 12-03-2008,  State  Government  proceeded  to  issue
declaration under Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act dated 30-06-2008.

The petitioners had pleaded in the writ petition that  dispensation  of  the
inquiry under Section 5A can only be an exception where the  urgency  cannot
brook the delay. The respondents, without  application  of  mind,  dispensed
with the inquiry.  The acquisition  proceedings  were  deprecated  as  void,
unconstitutional, tainted with malafide, abuse of  authority/power  and  non
application of mind.  It was pleaded that the procedure under Section 5A  is
mandatory which embodies a just and wholesome principle that a person  whose
property is being acquired or intended to be acquired should  have  occasion
to  persuade  the  authorities  that  his  property  be  not   touched   for
acquisition.  It was also argued  that  land  use  of  village  Patwari  was
changed in the Master Plan 2021 after the issuance  of  notifications  under
sections 4 and  6,  which  is  colourable  exercise  of  powers  and  entire
exercise is arbitrary, illegal  and  infringes  rights  of  the  petitioners
guaranteed under Articles 14, 19 and 300A  of  the  Constitution  of  India.
These petitioners also stated in the writ petition  that  though  there  was
some delay in  filing  the  writ  petition  if  counted  from  the  date  of
notification but the writ petition was filed only  when  it  came  to  their
knowledge that the land use of village Patwari was  changed  in  the  Master
Plan 2021 after the notifications under  Sections  4  and  6  and  land  was
sought to be allotted to the private builders, thereby giving go by  to  the
objective for which the land was acquired.  The petitioners further  claimed
that the part of the property of  the  petitioners  is  situate  in  village
Abadi.  It was pleaded that the authority had executed a  lease  deed  dated
31-03-2010 in favour of respondent no.  4  M/s.  Supertech  Ltd,  a  company
engaged in the  construction,  allotting  2,40,00  square  meters  land  for
constructing multi-storied complexes.  It  was  also  stated  that  although
land was acquired for industrial development  but  the  same  had  now  been
allotted to the builders by  the  Authority  which  clearly  indicates  that
neither  there  was  any  appropriate  plan  and   scheme   for   industrial
development  nor  there  was  any  urgency  in  the  matter  and  the  whole
proceeding amounted to colourable exercise of power.

The State Government as well as Authority contested the  matter  by  putting
its justification to the invocation  of  Section  17  of  the  Act.  It  was
pleaded that land was acquired for the purpose  of  industrial  development.
It  was  also  stated  that  the  Authority  had   been   constituted   vide
Notification  dated  28-01-1998  issued  under  the  U.P.  Industrial   Area
Development Act, 1976 (hereafter referred to as  the  '1976  Act')  and  the
land was to  be  developed  in  accordance  with  the  aims  and  objectives
contained in the said Act included development of the land  for  residential
and other purposes as well and was not confined  to  industrial  development
alone.  Objection was raised to the maintainability of  the  writ  petitions
by  contending  that  except  few  petitioners,  all  other   had   received
compensation on various  dates  and,  therefore,  they  were  estopped  from
challenging the acquisition, once the possession  of  the  land  was  taken,
award was passed and compensation received.   The  Authorities  also  stated
that land owner of about 83% of the land area  had  already  been  paid  the
compensation.  In terms of numbers, out of 1605 persons,  1403  persons  had
accepted the compensation. Development works had been  carried  out  in  the
area in question which had already been  demarcated  into  various  sectors.
The  nature  of  development  carried  out  was  stated  in  detail  in  the
affidavit.  Invocation of urgency clause was also sought to be justified.

M/s. Supertech Limited, to whom certain area was  allotted  for  development
of the  housing  colony  was  also  impleaded  as  the  respondent.  On  its
impleadment, this respondent also filed its counter  affidavit  stating  the
circumstances under which it  was  allotted  the  land  for  development  of
residential units.  It also contended that the substantial work had  already
been undertaken by the said Company. So much so,  out  of  6000  residential
units which were proposed to be constructed, 4471  units  had  already  been
booked by the members  of  public  and  paid  part  considerations.  It  was
pleaded that in this manner third party interest had also been created.   It
would be relevant to point out here that apart from M/s. Supertech  Limited,
there were at least 10 more  such  developers  who  had  been  allotted  the
various chunks of acquired land for similar housing projects etc.

JUDGMENT OF THE HIGH COURT
After noticing the aforesaid facts and the contentions and having regard  to
the plethora of writ petitions which  were  filed  pertaining  to  different
villages, the High Court deemed it  appropriate  to  categorize  these  writ
petitions in different groups, village  wise.  65  village  wise  categories
were, accordingly,  carved  out.  Out  of  these  group  1-41  pertained  to
different villages of Greater NOIDA whereas villages in group 42-65 fell  in
NOIDA. Village Patwari was taken up as group 1. The High Court,  thereafter,
discussed the factual position in respect of each group which  need  not  be
mentioned, as unnecessary for our purposes. However, wherever this  exercise
is deemed proper, we would be referring  to  such  factual  details  at  the
relevant steps.

Keeping in view the various submissions made  by  the  writ  petitioners  in
their petitions, the High Court framed as many as 17 issues  or  the  points
of consideration which had fallen  for  its  discussion  and  decision.   It
would be apposite to take note of those issues at this juncture:
“(i)  Object and Purpose  of  the  1976  Act:  Whether  the  development  of
industries is the dominant  purpose  and  object  of  U.P.  Industrial  Area
Development Act, 1976.

(ii)   Whether  Acquisition  Compulsory:  Whether  for  carrying   out   the
development of  industrial  area  under  1976  Act,  it  is  compulsory  and
necessary to acquire the land by the Authority?

(iii) Delay and Laches : Whether the delay and laches in the  facts  of  the
present case can bar the invocation or Constitutional remedy  under  Article
226 of the Constitution of India.

(iv)  National Capital Regional Planning Board Act, 1985, its  Consequences:
Whether the Authority can carry out development, utilise the  land  acquired
as per its Master Plan  2021  without  its  approval/clearance  by  National
Capital Regional Planning Board, and what is effect on its function of  land
acquisition after enforcement of 1985 Act?

(v)   Invocation  of  Sections  17(1)  and  17(4):   Whether  invocation  of
Sections 17(1) and 17(4) of the Land Acquisition  Act  and  dispensation  of
inquiry under section 5A was in accordance with law in the cases  which  are
under consideration?

(vi)  Pre-notification and Post-notification  delay:  Whether  delay  caused
before issuance of notification under Section 4 and delay caused  subsequent
to notification under Section 4 can be relied for determining as to  whether
urgency was such that invocation of Section 17(1) and 17(4) was necessary?

(vii)  Colourable  Exercise  of  Power:  Whether  acquisition  of  land  are
vitiated due to mala fide and colourable exercise of powers?

(viii)       Taking of  possession:  Whether  the  possession  of  the  land
acquired was taken under Section  17(1)  of  the  Land  Acquisition  Act  in
accordance with law?

(ix)  Vesting: Whether after taking possession under Section  17(A)  of  the
Act the challenge to the notifications under Section 4 read with  17(1)  and
17(4) and Section 6 cannot be entertained due to the reason that land  which
has already been vested in the State cannot be divested?

(x)   Section 11A; Whether acquisition under  challenge  has  lap0sed  under
Section 11A of the Act due to non-declaration of the award within two  years
from the date of publication of the declaration made under section 6?

(xi)  Section 17(3A): Whether non payment of  80%  of  the  compensation  as
required by Section 17(3A) of the Land  Acquisition  Act  is  fatal  to  the
acquisition o proceedings?

(xii) Waiver: Whether the petitioners  who  have  accepted  compensation  by
agreement have waived their right to challenge the acquisition proceedings?

(xiii)      Acquiescence: Whether the petitioners  due  to  having  accepted
the compensation by agreement have acquiesced to  the  proceedings  of  land
acquisition  and  they  are  estopped  from  challenging   the   acquisition
proceedings at this stage?

(xiv) Third Party Rights,  Development  and  Construction:  Whether  due  to
creation of third party rights, development carried  out  by  the  Authority
and developments and co0nstructions made by the allottees  on  the  acquired
land subsequent to the acquisition, the petitioners  are  not  entitled  for
the relief of quashing the notifications under Section 4 read  with  Section
17(1) and 17(4) and Section 6 of the Act?

(xv)  Effect of  Upholding  of  some  of  the  notifications  in  some  writ
petitions earlier decided: What are the consequences and effect  of  earlier
Division Bench judgment upholding several notifications  which  are  subject
matter of challenge in some of these writ petitions?

(xvi) Conflicts in views of Division Benches: Which of  the  Division  Bench
decisions i.e. Harkaran Singh's case  holding  that  invocation  of  Section
17(1) and 17(4) was invalid or earlier Division  Bench  judgment  in  Harish
Chand's case holding that invocation of  Section  17(1)  and  17(4)  was  in
accordance with law, has to be approved?

(xvii)  Relief: To what relief, if any,  the  petitioners  are  entitled  in
these writ petition?”


We are purposely eschewing the detailed discussion by the High Court on  all
the aforesaid issues. Suffice it to  state  here  that  after  noticing  the
object and purpose of 1976 Act and discussing its  provisions  contained  in
this Act with reference to case law explaining the legal  position  of  such
statutory authorities entrusted with the  task  of  development  works,  the
High Court concluded that the stand of the Authority that  unless  the  land
is acquired by it. It cannot carry out any development works until the  1976
Act was misconceived  and  incorrect.  The  High  Court  remarked  that  the
Authority was labouring under the aforesaid  misconception  and,  therefore,
concentrated only on acquisition of the land without taking  care  of  other
modes and means of  industrial  development  and  excessive  acquisition  of
fertile agriculture land was due to the  above  mindset  of  the  Authority.
Insofar as issues pertaining to compulsive  acquisition  and  invocation  of
Section 17(1) and 17(4) are concerned, the  High  Court  has  arrived  at  a
finding  that  such  invocation  of   emergency/urgency   clauses,   thereby
depriving the land owners of their most invaluable right to file  objections
under Section 5A of the Act, was illegal and unwarranted.  As this issue  is
decided in favour of the  land  owners  and  against  this  finding  appeals
preferred  by  the  State  as  well  as  the  Authority  have  already  been
dismissed, it is not necessary to explain the  raison  d'etre  behind  these
findings.  We would be proceeding on the basis that  invocation  of  Section
17(1) and Section 17(4) was wrong.  Similarly,  the  findings  of  the  High
Court that exercise of power by the State was colourable and arbitrary  need
not be restated in detail, the same reason.

As far as the  issue  no.  4  pertaining  the  NCR  planning  Board  Act  is
concerned, the High Court has held that land could not be  acquired  without
the permission of the Board. Opinion of the High Court on  this  aspect  was
questioned by the State of  U.P.  as  well  as  Authority  in  its  appeals.
However, it was found that as a matter of fact, insofar as these  cases  are
concerned consent of the Board had been obtained.   Having  regard  to  this
position, while dismissing the appeals of the State/Authority, we have  left
the said question of law open, namely,  whether  permission  of  the  deemed
under the Act of 1985 is a pre-condition before  acquisition  of  the  land.
Therefore, that aspect also  needs  no  elaboration  at  our  end  in  these
appeals.

It becomes clear from the above that the High Court arrived at a  conclusion
that since invocation of Section  17(1)  and  17(4)  was  uncalled  for  and
unwarranted, the acquisition of  the  land  of  the  appellants  herein  was
illegal.  Notwithstanding, the same,  the  High  Court  did  not  grant  the
relief of setting aside the entire acquisition and  restoring  the  land  to
the appellants. After the aforesaid findings, the High Court  observed  that
insofar  as  grant  of  particular  relief  to  the  land  owners  in   land
acquisition proceedings  is  concerned,  it  depends  on  several  important
factors. Thus, the issue of 'reliefs' has been  discussed  specifically  and
independently  under  the  aforesaid  caption.  Here,  the  High  Court  has
observed that the creation of third  party  rights,  development  undertaken
over the land in dispute as well as the  steps  taken  by  the  land  owners
after declaration made under Section 6 of the  Act  would  be  the  relevant
consideration in determining the kind of relief that is  to  be  granted  to
the land owners. Discussing the aforesaid aspects in the contexts  of  these
proceedings, the High Court pointed out that  in  majority  of  cases  third
party rights had been created after issue of  declaration  under  Section  6
and after taking possession of the land, substantial developments  including
constructions had been undertaken. Thus, in those  cases  where  substantial
development had taken place and/or third party rights had been created,  the
High Court deemed it proper not to interfere with the acquisition.   At  the
same time in order to balance the equities, it felt  that  grant  of  higher
compensation and better share in the developed land  to  these  land  owners
would meet the ends of justice.   The exact  relief  given  in  this  behalf
shall be stated at the appropriate stage.

The High Court also found that in three villages no such third party  rights
had been created and no developments  had  taken  place.  So  far  as  these
villages are concerned, the High Court deemed it  apposite  to  release  the
land in favour of the land owners of those villages.

The High Court also found that many writ petitions  were  filed  challenging
the  acquisitions  in  respect  of  which  notifications  were  issued  much
earlier, were totally stale and suffered from  laches  and  delays.  In  the
opinion of the High Court, all  those  writ  petitions  which  pertained  to
notifications issued prior to the year 2000  and  the  writ  petitions  were
filed in the year 2011, these writ petitions deserved  to  be  dismissed  on
the ground of inordinate delay and laches.

In nutshell, relief was categorised in  three  compartments.  In  the  first
instance, those writ petitions which were filed  belatedly  were  dismissed.
In the second category, three villages, namely, Devala (Group  40),  village
Yusufpur Chak Sahberi (Group 38)  and  Village  Asdullapur  (Group  42)  the
acquisition was set aside.  Land acquisition  in  respect  of  remaining  61
villages is concerned,  the  acquisition  was  allowed  to  remain  but  the
additional compensation was increased to 64.7% with further entitlement  for
allotment of development abadi plot to the extent of  10%  of  the  acquired
land of those land owners subject to maximum of 2500 sq. mtrs.

We now reproduce the exact nature of direction  given  by  the  High  Court,
which reads as follows:
“In view of the foregoing conclusions we order as follows:

1.  The Writ Petition No. 45933 of 2011, Writ Petition  No.  47545  of  2011
relating to village Nithari, Writ Petition No. 47522  of  2011  relating  to
village Sadarpur, Writ Petition No. 45196 of 2011, Writ Petition  No.  45208
of 2011, Writ Petition No. 45211 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 45213  of  2011,
Writ Petition No. 45216 of 2011, Writ  Petition  No.  45223  of  2011,  Writ
Petition No. 45224 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 45226 of 2011,  Writ  Petition
No. 45229 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 45230 of 2011, Writ Petition No.  45235
of 2011, Writ Petition No. 45238 of 2011, Writ Petition No.  45283  of  2011
relating to village Khoda, Writ Petition No. 46764 of  2011,  Writ  Petition
No. 46785 of 2011 relating to village Sultanpur, Writ Petition No. 46407  of
2011 relating to village Chaura Sadatpur and  Writ  Petition  No.  46470  of
2011 relating to village Alaverdipur which have been filed  with  inordinate
delay and laches are dismissed.

2(i). The writ petitions of Group 40 (Village  Devla)  being  Writ  Petition
No. 31126 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 59131 of 2009, Writ Petition No.  22800
of 2010, Writ Petition No. 37118 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 42812  of  2009,
Writ Petition No. 50417 of 2009, Writ  Petition  No.  54424  of  2009,  Writ
Petition No. 54652 of 2009, Writ Petition No. 55650 of 2009,  Writ  Petition
No. 57032 of 2009, Writ Petition No. 58318 of 2009, Writ Petition No.  22798
of 2010, Writ Petition No. 37784 of 2010, Writ Petition No. 37787  of  2010,
Writ Petition No. 31124 of 2011, Writ  Petition  No.  31125  of  2011,  Writ
Petition No. 32234 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 32987 of 2011,  Writ  Petition
No. 35648 of 2011, Writ Petition No. 38059 of 2011, Writ Petition No.  41339
of 2011, Writ Petition No. 47427 of 2011 and  Writ  Petition  No.  47412  of
2011 are allowed and the notifications dated  26.5.2009  and  22.6.2009  and
all consequential actions are quashed.  The petitioners  shall  be  entitled
for restoration of their land subject to deposit of compensation which  they
had received under agreement/award before the authority/Collector.

2(ii) Writ petition No. 17725 of 2010 Omveer and others Vs.  State  of  U.P.
(Group  38)  relating  to  village  Yusufpur  Chak   Sahberi   is   allowed.
Notifications dated 10.4.2006 and 6.9.2007  and  all  consequential  actions
are quashed.  The petitioners shall be entitled  for  restoration  of  their
land  subject  to  return   of   compensation   received   by   them   under
agreement/award to the Collector.

2(iii)      Writ Petition No. 47486 of 2011 (Rajee and others Vs.  State  of
U.P. and others) of Group-42 relating  to  village  Asdullapur  is  allowed.
The notification dated 27.1.2010 and 4.2.2010  as  well  as  all  subsequent
proceedings are quashed.  The petitioners shall be entitled  to  restoration
of their land.

3.  All other writ petitions except as mentioned above at (1)  and  (2)  are
disposed of with following directions:

(a)   The  petitioners  shall  be  entitled  for   payment   of   additional
compensation to the extent of same ratio (i.e. 64.70%) as paid  for  village
Patwari in  addition  to  the  compensation  received  by  them  under  1997
Rules/award which payment shall be ensured by  the  Authority  at  an  early
date.  It may  be  open  for  Authority  to  take  a  decision  as  to  what
proportion of additional compensation be asked  to  be  paid  by  allottees.
Those petitioners who have not yet been paid compensation may  be  paid  the
compensation as well as  additional  compensation  as  ordered  above.   The
payment of additional compensation shall be without any prejudice to  rights
of land owners under section 18 of the Act, if any.
(b)  All the petitioners shall be entitled for allotment of developed  Abadi
plot to the extent of 10% of their acquired land subject to maximum of  2500
square meters.  We however, leave it open to the Authority  in  cases  where
allotment of abadi plot to the extent of 6% or 8%  have  already  been  made
either to make allotment of the balance of the area or  may  compensate  the
land owners by payment of the amount  equivalent  to  balance  area  as  per
average rate of allotment made of developed residential plots.

4.  The Authority may  also  take  a  decision  as  to  whether  benefit  of
additional compensation and allotment of abadi plot to the extent of 10%  be
also given to;
(a)   those  land  holders  whose  earlier  writ  petition  challenging  the
notifications have been dismissed upholding the notifications; and
(b)  those land holders who have not come to  the  Court,  relating  to  the
notifications which are  subject  matter  of  challenge  in  writ  petitions
mentioned at direction No.3.

5.  The Greater NOIDA  and  its  allotees  are  directed  not  to  carry  on
development and not to implement the Master Plan 2021 till the  observations
and  directions  of  the  National  Capital  Regional  Planning  Board   are
incorporated in Master  Plan  2021  to  the  satisfaction  of  the  National
Capital Regional Planning Board.  We  make  it  clear  that  this  direction
shall not be applicable in  those  cases  where  the  development  is  being
carried on in accordance with the earlier Master Plan of Greater NOIDA  duly
approved by the National Capital Regional Planning Board.

6.  We direct the Chief Secretary of  the  State  to  appoint  officers  not
below the level of Principal Secretary (except the  officers  of  Industrial
Development Department who have dealt with the relevant files) to conduct  a
thorough inquiry regarding the acts of Greater Noida (a)  in  proceeding  to
implement  Master  Plan  2021  without  approval  of  N.C.R.P.  Board,   (b)
decisions taken to change the land use, (c) allotment made to  the  builders
and (d) indiscriminate proposals for acquisition  of  land,  and  thereafter
the State Government shall taken appropriate action in the matter.”

We may point  out  at  this  stage  that  in  respect  of  all  these  three
categories, the High Court  has  provided  its  justification  for  granting
relief in the aforesaid nature.  We shall be referring  to  the  same  while
discussing the cases of appellants belonging to one or the other category.

In nutshell, it may be pointed out that 65 villages which were  the  subject
matter of bunch of writ petitions before the Full Bench of  the  High  Court
were  grouped  in  65  groups,  village-wise  and  facts   of   acquisition,
possession, if any, payment of compensation, developments,   the  nature  of
utilisation of those lands, and/or  creation  of  third  party  rights  were
taken note of. Out of these 65 villages, 41 villages fall in  Greater  NOIDA
and 24 in NOIDA. The High Court discussed the issue  of  laches  and  delays
under Issue No. 3, as mentioned above, after referring to various  judgments
of this Court and culling out  the  principles  contained  therein  on  that
basis.   The High Court accepted the plea of  inordinate  delay  insofar  as
acquisition  of  land  in  respect  of  village  Nithari,  Village   Chauyra
Sadedpur,  Village  Khoda,  Village  Sultanpur  are  concerned.  These  writ
petitions are dismissed  on  the  ground  of  delay.  In  respect  of  other
villages,  the  Court  repelled  the  contention  of  delay  raised  by  the
department,  accepting  the  explanation  given  by  land  owners  of  those
villages that they did not oppose the acquisition earlier  at  the  time  of
issuance of notification as the land was taken for  industrial  development.
However, it is only when these land owners had come to know that instead  of
developing the  land  for  the  purpose  for  which  it  was  acquired,  the
acquiring authority had transferred the land  to  the  private  persons  and
builders, that these land owners felt aggrieved and cheated and,  therefore,
there was sufficient explanation for coming to the  Court  at  a  time  when
these land owners discovered that the acquired land had been transferred  to
private persons. The Court, therefore, held that such  writ  petitions  were
to be entertained on merits, ignoring the delay.

Some of the appeals are filed by the land owners  in  respect  of  aforesaid
villages where their petitions are dismissed on  the  ground  of  delay  and
laches. We are of  the  opinion  that  their  writ  petitions  were  rightly
rejected by the High Court applying the principle of delays and  laches.  We
are, thus, dismissing these appeals, upholding the order of the High Court.

      The Arguments: Appellants
Though many  counsel  appeared  on  behalf  of  appellants  and  argued  the
appeals, Mr. Amarendra Sharan,  Mr.  Rajiv  Shankar  Dwivedi,  Mr.  Jitendra
Mohan Sharma, Mr. Mahabir Singh, Mr. Rakesh  Dwivedi,  Mr.  Vijay  Hansaria,
Mr. S.C. Maheshwari, Senior Advocates and Dr.  Suraj  Singh,  Advocate  were
the main architects who  built  the  edifice  of  the  appellants'  appeals.
Among themselves, they covered almost all the aspects which arise  in  these
appeals.  Other counsel either adopted those submissions  or  some  of  them
pointed out some distinctive and peculiar facts of their cases.  It  is  not
necessary to reproduce the  submission  of  each  of  the  aforesaid  senior
counsel separately as we think that better course  of  action  would  be  to
spell out these submissions in consolidated form to  avoid  any  repetition.
The arguments which were advanced by these  counsel,  in  support  of  their
appeals, are recapitulated hereunder:
(I)   In the first instance,  the  illegalities  committed  in  issuing  the
notifications for acquisition of land  were  pointed  out  which  were  even
accepted by the High Court  in  the  impugned  judgment,  in  the  following
manner:
(a)    No  permission  of  NCR  Board   was   taken   before   issuing   the
notifications.
(b)   There was violation of Section 5-A of the Act which goes to  the  root
of the matter, coupled with the  finding  that  it  amounted  to  colourable
exercise of power.
(c)   There was violation of mandatory provision contained in  Section  11-A
of the Act as well.
(d)   Though, Section 17 (1) and Section 17 (4) of  the  Act  were  invoked,
80% of the compensation, which is mandatory requirement,  was  not  paid  to
the appellants.
(e)   After acquiring the land purportedly for  the  purpose  of  industrial
development, it was sold to  private  developers/real  estate  agencies  for
residential purposes, that too at a much higher rate.

                 As per the appellants, it would amply demonstrate that  the
Government acted more like a property dealer with intention  to  make  money
at the cost of the land owners/agriculturists.

(II)  It was further argued that even when status quo orders were passed  in
many writ petitions, the Government had violated those orders  and  in  this
manner, third party rights were  created,  thereby  committing  contempt  of
court.  When the third party interest were created in the aforesaid  manner,
the High Court should not have influenced itself by the  said  consideration
in denying the relief to the appellants after holding that  acquisition  was
illegal.

(III) It was also argued that in a case like  this,  doctrine  of  severance
should have been applied  by  excluding  only  those  portions  of  land  in
respect of which third party rights were created or  development  had  taken
place inasmuch as large chunk of land in these villages have still not  been
utilised for any purpose as these are thickly inhabited.   By  applying  the
doctrine of severance, Abadi land should have been included for the  purpose
of giving relief, when the acquisition was admittedly bound to  be  illegal.
It was only, in this manner, equities could be balanced.

(IV)  It was sought to be argued that in respect  of  three  villages  where
acquisition is set aside on the ground that no development has  taken  place
and third party rights are not created,  this  very  principle  should  have
been applied in respect of lands  of  those  appellants  in  other  villages
where no third party rights were created or there  was  Abadi  or  where  no
possession was taken by the authorities and no  compensation  taken  by  the
land owners and the land owners who belong to lower strata of society.
                 In nutshell, the submission is that such cases are  exactly
at par with the cases of 3 villages falling in  para  2  of  the  direction,
where the land acquisition has been quashed even when the  compensation  was
taken and same treatment be accorded to at least those appellants  who  fall
in this category.

(V)   It was also argued that after holding  the  acquisition  illegal,  the
Court had three alternatives namely:
(a)   payment of 67.4% compensation plus  restoring  10%  of  the  developed
land to the land owners, which is followed by the High Court.
(b)   directing restoration of possession in all these  cases  with  liberty
to the Government to negotiate with the land owners.
(c)   permitting fresh acquisition.
             Submission  was  that  first  alternative  was  not  the   best
alternative adopted by the High Court and in the interest  of  justice,  the
second or third alternative should have been resorted to, more so,  when  it
was found to be case of malice in law which can  clearly  be  inferred  from
the findings arrived at  by  the  High  Court,  on  the  basis  of  material
established on record.

In  support  of  these  submissions,  learned  counsel  for  the  appellants
referred to the following judgments:
(i)   Anand Singh & Anr. v. State of Uttar Pradesh & Ors.[1]
“50.        Use of  the  power  by  the  government  under  Section  17  for
'planned development of the city' or `the development of  residential  area'
or for `housing' must not be as a rule but by  way  of  an  exception.  Such
exceptional situation may be for the public purpose viz., rehabilitation  of
natural calamity affected persons; rehabilitation of  persons  uprooted  due
to commissioning  of  dam  or  housing  for  lower  strata  of  the  society
urgently; rehabilitation of persons affected by time  bound  projects,  etc.
The list is only illustrative and not exhaustive. In  any  case,  sans  real
urgency and need for immediate possession of the land for carrying  out  the
stated purpose, heavy onus lies on the government  to  justify  exercise  of
such power.

                         xxx         xxx        xxx

55.  In the facts and circumstances of  the  present  case,  therefore,  the
Government has completely failed to justify the dispensation of  an  enquiry
under Section 5A by invoking Section 17(4). For this  reason,  the  impugned
notifications to the extent they state  that  Section  5A  shall  not  apply
suffer from legal infirmity. The question,  then,  arises  whether  at  this
distance of time, the acquisition proceedings must be declared  invalid  and
illegal.

56.  In the written submissions of the GDA, it is stated that subsequent  to
the declaration made under Section 6 of the Act in the  month  of  December,
2004, award has been made and out of the 400 land owners more than 370  have
already received compensation. It is also stated that out of the total  cost
of Rs. 8,85,14,000/- for development of the acquired land, an amount of  Rs.
5,28,00,000/- has already been spent by the GDA and more than  60%  of  work
has been completed. It, thus, seems that  barring  the  appellants  and  few
others all other tenure holders/land owners have accepted the  `takings'  of
their land. It is too late in the day to undo what has  already  been  done.
We  are  of  the  opinion,  therefore,  that  in  the  peculiar  facts   and
circumstances of the case, the appellants are not  entitled  to  any  relief
although dispensation of enquiry under Section 5A was not justified.

57.  On behalf  of  the  appellants,  it  was  vehemently  argued  that  the
government may be directed to release their land from proposed  acquisition.
It was submitted by the  appellants  that  houses/structures  and  buildings
(including educational building) are existing on the  subject  land  and  as
per the policy framed by the State  Government,  the  land  deserves  to  be
exempted from  acquisition.  The  submission  of  the  appellants  has  been
countered by the respondents and in the written  submissions  filed  by  the
GDA, it is  stated  that  the  houses/structures  and  buildings  which  are
claimed to exist, have been raised  by  the  appellants  subsequent  to  the
notification under Section 4(1) of the Act  and,  therefore,  they  are  not
entitled to release of their land from acquisition.

58.  In our view, since the existence of houses/structures and buildings  as
on November 22, 2003/February 20, 2004 over the appellants'  land  has  been
seriously disputed, it may not be appropriate to issue any direction to  the
State Government, as prayed for by the  appellants,  for  release  of  their
land from acquisition. However, as the possession has not  been  taken,  the
interest of justice would be subserved if the appellants are  given  liberty
to make representation to the State authorities under Section 48(1)  of  the
Act for release of  their  land.  We,  accordingly,  grant  liberty  to  the
appellants to make appropriate representation to the  State  Government  and
observe that if such representation is made by  the  appellants  within  two
months from today, the State Government shall consider  such  representation
in accordance with law and in conformity with the State policy  for  release
of land under Section 48(1) without any discrimination within  three  months
from receipt of such representation.”


In support of the arguments that the equities were to  be  balanced  on  the
facts of the case which according to the appellant  were  in  their  favour,
following judgments were referred:
(ii)  H.M.T. Housing Building Co-operative Society v. Syed Khader & Ors.[2]

“22.  In the present case there has been contravention of  Section  3(f)(vi)
of the Act inasmuch as there was no prior approval of the  State  Government
as required by the said section before steps for acquisition  of  the  lands
were taken. The report  of  Shri  G.K.V.  Rao  points  out  as  to  how  the
appellant-Society admitted large number of persons as members who cannot  be
held to be genuine members, the sole object  being  to  transfer  the  lands
acquired for “public purpose”, to outsiders as part of  commercial  venture,
undertaken by the office-  bearer  of  the  appellant-Society.   We  are  in
agreement  with  the  finding  of  the  High  Court   that   the   statutory
notifications issued under Sections 4(1) and  6(1)  of  the  Act  have  been
issued due to the role played by M/s S.R. Constructions, Respondent 11.   On
the materials on record, the High Court  was  justified  in  coming  to  the
conclusion that the proceedings for acquisition of the lands  had  not  been
initiated because the State Government was satisfied about the existence  of
the public purpose but at the instance of agent who had collected more  than
a crore of rupees for getting the lands acquired by the State Government.

23.   The appeals are accordingly dismissed. But  in  the  circumstances  of
the case there shall be no orders as to costs.

24.  We direct that  as  a  result  of  quashing  of  the  land  acquisition
proceedings including the notifications as aforesaid, the possession of  the
lands shall be restored to the respective  landowners  irrespective  of  the
fact whether they had challenged the acquisition of their lands or  not.  On
restoration of the possession  to  the  landowners  they  shall  refund  the
amounts received by them as compensation or otherwise in  respect  of  their
lands. The appellant, the respondents and  the  State  Government  including
all authorities/persons concerned shall implement the  aforesaid  directions
at an early date.”


(iii) H.M.T. House Building Cooperative Society v.  M.  Venkataswamappa  and
others[3]

(iv)  Bangalore  City  Cooperative  Housing  Society  Limited  v.  State  of
Karnataka and others[4]


“87.  The three Judge Bench also approved the view taken by the  High  Court
that the acquisition of land was vitiated because the decision of the  State
Government was influenced by the Estate Agent with whom  the  Appellant  had
entered into an agreement.  Paras 21 and 22 of the judgment,  which  contain
discussion  on  this  issue  are  extracted  hereunder:  (1st  H.M.T.  House
Building Coop. Society v. Syed Khader and others, (1995) 2 SCC 677

“21.  Mr. G. Ramaswamy, learned Senior Counsel appearing on  behalf  of  the
appellant, submitted that merely because the appellant Society  had  entered
into an agreement with Respondent 11, M/s S.R. Constructions, in  which  the
latter for the consideration paid to  it  had  assured  that  the  lands  in
question shall be acquired by the State  Government,  no  adverse  inference
should be drawn because that may amount to a tall claim made  on  behalf  of
M/s  S.R.  Constructions  in  the  agreement.  He  pointed  out   that   the
notifications under Sections 4(1) and 6(1) have been issued beyond the  time
stipulated in the agreement and as such, it should be held  that  the  State
Government has exercised its statutory power for acquisition  of  the  lands
in normal course,  only  after  taking  all  facts  and  circumstances  into
consideration. There is no dispute that in terms  of  agreement  dated  1-2-
1985  payments  have  been  made  by  the  appellant  Society  to  M/s  S.R.
Constructions. This circumstance alone  goes  a  long  way  to  support  the
contention of the writ Petitioners that their lands have not  been  acquired
in the normal course or for any public purpose. In  spite  of  the  repeated
query, the learned counsel appearing for the  appellant  Society  could  not
point out or produce  any  order  of  the  State  Government  under  Section
3(f)(vi) of the Act granting prior approval and prescribing  conditions  and
restrictions in respect of the use of the lands which were  to  be  acquired
for a public purpose. There is no restriction or bar  on  the  part  of  the
appellant Society on carving out the size of the  plots  or  the  manner  of
allotment or in respect of construction over  the  same.  That  is  why  the
framers of the Act have required the appropriate Government to  grant  prior
approval of any housing scheme presented by any cooperative  society  before
the lands are acquired treating such requirement and acquisition for  public
purpose.  It is incumbent on the part of the  appropriate  Government  while
granting approval to examine different aspects of the matter so that it  may
serve the public interest and not the  interest  of  few  who  can  as  well
afford to acquire such lands by negotiation in  open  market.  According  to
us, the State Government has not granted the  prior  approval  in  terms  of
Section 3(f)(vi) of the Act to the housing scheme  in  question.  The  power
under Sections 4(1) and 6(1) of the Act has been  exercised  for  extraneous
consideration and at the instance of the persons who  had  no  role  in  the
decision-making process - whether the acquisition of the lands  in  question
shall be for a public purpose. This itself is enough to  vitiate  the  whole
acquisition proceeding and render the same invalid.


22.  In the present case there has been contravention  of  Section  3(f)(vi)
of the Act inasmuch as there was no prior approval of the  State  Government
as required by the said section before steps for acquisition  of  the  lands
were taken. The report  of  Shri  G.K.V.  Rao  points  out  as  to  how  the
appellant-Society admitted large number of persons as members who cannot  be
held to be genuine members, the sole object  being  to  transfer  the  lands
acquired for “public purpose”, to outsiders as part of  commercial  venture,
undertaken by the office-  bearer  of  the  appellant-Society.   We  are  in
agreement  with  the  finding  of  the  High  Court   that   the   statutory
notifications issued under Sections 4(1) and  6(1)  of  the  Act  have  been
issued due to the role played by M/s S.R. Constructions, Respondent  11.  On
the materials on record, the High Court  was  justified  in  coming  to  the
conclusion that the proceedings for acquisition of the lands  had  not  been
initiated because the State Government was satisfied about the existence  of
the public purpose but at the instance of agent who had collected more  than
a crore of rupees for getting the lands acquired by the State Government.

                          xx          xx         xx

95.  The Division Bench of the High   Court  in  Subramani,  ILR  1995  Kant
3139, noted that the  terms  of  the  agreement  entered  into  between  the
Society and M/s. Devatha Builders was not for the acquisition  of  land  but
only for development of the acquired land. The  Division  Bench  also  noted
that the agreement was entered into between the Society and  the  owners  in
1985, whereas the Government gave approval for acquisition in 1985  and  the
agreement with the developer was of 1986.  The  Division  Bench  also  noted
that no stranger had been inducted as a member of the society. However,  the
acquisition which was under challenge in Writ Petition  No.  28707  of  1995
was  declared  illegal  because  the  House  Building  Cooperative   Society
concerned has not framed any housing scheme and  obtained  approval  thereof
from the State Government. The Division Bench also expressed the  view  that
remedy under Article 226 was  discretionary  and  it  was  not  inclined  to
nullify the acquisition made for the society  because  the  petitioners  had
approached the Court after long lapse of time and there was  no  explanation
for the delay.

                          xx          xx         xx

132.  Before concluding we consider it necessary to observe that in view  of
the law laid down in the 1st H.M.T. case (paragraphs 19, 21 and  22),  which
was followed in 2nd H.M.T. case and Vyalikawal  House  Building  Cooperative
Society's case, the view taken by the Division Bench of the  High  Court  in
Narayana Raju's case that the framing of scheme and approval thereof can  be
presumed from the direction given by the State  Government  to  the  Special
Deputy Commissioner to take steps for issue of  notification  under  Section
4(1) cannot be treated as good law and the mere fact  that  this  Court  had
revoked the certificate granted by the High Court cannot be  interpreted  as
this Court's approval of the  view  expressed  by  the  High  Court  on  the
validity of the acquisition.

133. In the result, the appeals are dismissed. However, keeping in view  the
fact that some of the members of the appellant may have built  their  houses
on the sites  allotted  to  them,  we  give  liberty  to  the  appellant  to
negotiate with the respondents for purchase of their land at the  prevailing
market  price  and  hope  that  the  landowners  will,  notwithstanding  the
judgments of the High Court and this  Court,  agree  to  accept  the  market
price so that those who have built the houses may not suffer.

134.  At the same time, we make it clear that the appellant must return  the
vacant land to the respondents irrespective of the fact  that  it  may  have
carved out the sites and allotted the same to  its  members.  This  must  be
done within a period of three months from today and during that  period  the
appellant shall not change the present status of the vacant area/sites.  The
members of the appellant who may have been allotted  the  sites  shall  also
not change the present status/character of the land. The  parties  are  left
to bear their own costs.”



In support of the  proposition  that  it  was  a  case  of  malice  in  law,
reference was made to the judgment in the case of S. Partap Singh  v.  State
of Punjab[5].

Countering the arguments of delay and laches  putforth  by  the  respondents
even in appellants cases, the reference was made  to  the  judgment  in  the
case of S.P. Chengalvaraya Naidu v. Jagannath and others[6],  in support  of
the plea that fraud vitiates all action and it was a  case  of  fraud  where
land was acquired for one purpose but thereafter the  Government  sought  to
utilise it for some other  purpose.   In  this  behalf,  reliance  was  also
placed  in  the  case  of  Vyalikaval  Housebuilding  Coop.  Society  v.  V.
Chandrappa and others[7]:
“3. This writ petition  was  contested  by  the  appellant  society  as  the
respondent and it was alleged that it was hopelessly barred  by  time  being
delayed by 14 years and it was also submitted that the writ petitioners  had
participated in the inquiry  under  Section 5A of  the  Act  and  have  also
received substantial amount from  the  appellant  society  pursuant  to  the
agreement executed in their favour. Learned Single Judge dismissed the  writ
petition on the ground of being hopelessly  barred  by  time  and  the  writ
petitioners participated in the proceedings therefore they  have  acquiesced
in the matter.  Aggrieved  against  this  order  passed  by  learned  Single
Judge, a writ appeal was filed by the respondents which came to  be  allowed
by the Division Bench for the  reasons  mentioned  in  another  writ  appeal
decided by the same Division Bench headed by the Chief Justice of  the  High
Court on 17.1.2000. In that writ appeal the Division  Bench  held  that  the
entire acquisition on behalf of the  appellant  society  was  actuated  with
fraud as held in Narayana Reddy v. State of Karnataka ILR  1991  Kar.  2248.
In that case it was held as follows:

“As seen from the findings of G.V.K. Rao Inquiry Report, in respect of  five
respondent societies and the report of the Joint  Registrar  in  respect  of
Vyalikaval  House  Building  Co-operative  Society,  these   societies   had
indulged in  enrolling  large  number  of  members  illegally  inclusive  of
ineligible members and had also indulged in enrolling large number of  bogus
members. The only inference that is possible from this is that  the  office-
bearers  of  the  societies  had  entered  into  unholy  alliance  with  the
respective agents for the purpose of making  money,  as  submitted  for  the
petitioners otherwise, there is no  reason  as  to  why  such  an  agreement
should have been brought about by the office-bearers of the society and  the
agents. Unless these persons had the intention of  making  huge  profits  as
alleged by the petitioners, they would not have  indulged  in  enrolment  of
ineligible and bogus members. The circumstance that without considering  all
these relevant materials  the  Government  had  accorded  its  approval,  is
sufficient to hold that the agents had  prevailed  upon  the  Government  to
take a decision to acquire the lands without going into all  those  relevant
facts. The irresistible inference flowing from the facts  and  circumstances
of these cases is, whereas the power conferred under  the  Land  Acquisition
Act is for acquiring lands for carrying out  housing  scheme  by  a  housing
society, in each of the cases the acquisition of lands is  not  for  a  bona
fide housing scheme but is substantially for the  purpose  of  enabling  the
concerned  office-bearers  of  respondent-societies  and  their  agents   to
indulge in sale of sites in the guise of allotment of sites to the  members/
associate  members  of  the  society  to  make  money  as  alleged  by   the
petitioners and therefore it is a  clear  case  of  colourable  exercise  of
power. Thus the  decision  of  the   Government   to   acquire   the   lands
suffers from

legal mala fides and therefore the impugned notifications are liable  to  be
struck down.”


Judgment in the case of Royal Orchid Hotels Limited and Anr. v. G.  Jayarama
Reddy and Ors.[8] also relied upon to counter the plea of delay and  laches,
wherein this Court held:
“24.  The first question which  needs  consideration  is  whether  the  High
Court committed an error by granting relief  to  Respondent  1  despite  the
fact that he filed the writ petition after a long  lapse  of  time  and  the
explanation given by him was found  unsatisfactory  by  the  learned  Single
Judge, who decided the writ petition after remand by the Division Bench.

25. Although the Framers of the Constitution have not prescribed any  period
of limitation for filing a petition under  Article 226 of  the  Constitution
of India and the power conferred upon the High Court to issue to any  person
or  authority  including  any  Government,  directions,  orders   or   writs
including writs in the nature of habeas corpus, mandamus,  prohibition,  quo
warranto and certiorari is not hedged with any condition or  constraint,  in
the last 61 years the superior courts have evolved several  rules  of  self-
imposed restraint including the one that the  High  Court  may  not  enquire
into belated or stale claim and deny relief  to  the  petitioner  if  he  is
found guilty of laches. The principle underlying this rule is that  the  one
who is not vigilant and does not  seek  intervention  of  the  Court  within
reasonable time from the date of accrual  of  cause  of  action  or  alleged
violation of constitutional, legal or other right is not entitled to  relief
under Article 226 of the Constitution. Another reason for the  High  Court's
refusal to entertain belated claim is that  during  the  intervening  period
rights of third parties may have crystallized and it will be inequitable  to
disturb those rights at the instance of a  person  who  has  approached  the
Court after long lapse of time and there is no cogent  explanation  for  the
delay.  We may hasten to add that no hard-and-fast rule  can  be  laid  down
and no straightjacket formula can be evolved for deciding  the  question  of
delay/laches and each case has to be decided on its own facts.
                          xx          xx         xx

31. In the light of the above, it is  to  be  seen  whether  the  discretion
exercised by the Division Bench of the High Court to  ignore  the  delay  in
filing of writ petition is vitiated by  any  patent  error  or  the  reasons
assigned for rejecting the appellants' objection  of  delay  are  irrelevant
and extraneous.  Though it may sound repetitive, we may mention that in  the
writ petition filed by him, Respondent 1 had not only  prayed  for  quashing
of the acquisition proceedings, but  also  prayed  for  restoration  of  the
acquired land on the ground that instead of using the same  for  the  public
purpose specified in the notifications  issued  under  Sections  4(1) and 6,
the Corporation had transferred the same to private  persons.  Respondent  1
and the other landowners may not be having  any  serious  objection  to  the
acquisition of their land for a public purpose and, therefore, some of  them
not only accepted  the  compensation,  but  also  filed  applications  under
Section 18 of the Act for  determination  of  market  value  by  the  court.
However, when it was discovered that the acquired land has been  transferred
to private persons, they sought intervention of the Court and in  the  three
cases, the Division Bench of the High Court  nullified  the  acquisition  on
the ground of fraud and misuse of the provisions of the Act.”


      The Arguments : Respondents

Mr.  L.N.  Rao,  learned  senior  counsel   appearing   for   the   official
respondents, emphatically countered the aforesaid  submissions.   He  argued
that in most of these appeals, writ petitions were filed in the  High  Court
challenging  the  acquisition  after  passing  of  the  award   and   taking
possession of the land and in most of the cases, the land  owners  had  even
received  the  compensation.  Therefore,  these  writ  petitions  were   not
maintainable and should have been dismissed on  the  ground  of  laches  and
delay inasmuch as acquisition  cannot  be  challenged  after  the  award  is
passed  and  compensation  is  received.    He  sought  to  distinguish  the
judgments cited by the appellants' counsel.   He  submitted  that  the  High
Court has wrongly fixed the cut-off date as 06.07.2011.  He  also  submitted
that the High Court was in error in rejecting the arguments of  acquiescence
as acceptance of compensation clearly  meant  that  these  land  owners  had
acquiesced into the action of the authorities in acquiring  the  land.   His
submission was that case should have  been  examined  keeping  in  view  the
aforesaid factors and the plea taken by the writ petitioners that they  felt
aggrieved only when they came to know  land  was  allotted/sold  to  private
builders, was totally irrelevant and could  not  have  been  the  ground  to
entertain the writ petitions on merits.

It was also argued by Mr. Rao that the High Court could  not  have  enhanced
the compensation by 64.7% in writ petition filed under  Article  226  as  it
was not a public law  remedy.   His  plea  in  this  behalf  was  that  Land
Acquisition Act provided for complete machinery  for  determination  of  the
compensation and reference by the land owners under Section 18  of  the  Act
had already been sought and present way to matters are  pending  before  the
Reference Court to determine the market value of the land.  He  argued  that
merely because in the case of Patwari village, the  Government  had  entered
into an agreement with some of the villagers for payment of compensation  by
increasing it by 64.70%, would not mean that High Court  could  extend  that
to all villages in the absence of any agreement with those parties.  In  the
same wave length, he challenged the direction  for  allotment  of  developed
Abadi plot to the extent of 10% of the acquired land subject to  maximum  of
2500 square metres by pointing out that the aforesaid  allotment  was  under
the scheme of the Government which provided for allotment  of  5%  developed
Abadi plot in respect of Noida land and 6% of  developed  Abadi  plot  where
the land acquired was  situated  in  Greater  Noida.   Here  again,  it  was
pleaded, the High Court could not tinker with the said policy  by  enhancing
the entitlement for allotment to 10%.  It was also argued that in  any  case
once the compensation was enhanced, there was no reason  to  give  allotment
of larger area of land and it amounted to giving double benefit to the  land
owners.

Without prejudice to the aforesaid contentions, Mr. Rao  submitted  that  in
spite of these serious infirmities  in  the  judgment  of  the  High  Court,
insofar as Government authorities are concerned, they were ready to pay  the
higher compensation and even allot land to the extent of 10% subject to  the
condition that  quietus  is  given  to  all  these  cases  with  no  further
benefits.  He pointed out that 64.7%  additional  compensation  had  already
been given to about ninety percent land owners.  Further, 6%  of  land/flats
had already been allotted to ninety  percent  farmers.   He  further  argued
that care was taken at the time of  acquisition  itself  not  to  touch  the
Abadi land.

Mr. Rakesh Dwivedi and Mr. Pramod Swarup,  senior  advocates,  who  appeared
for private respondents/builders to whom the land  was  allotted,  supported
the aforesaid submissions of Mr. Rao and submitted that substantial  justice
had been done by the High Court in these cases and, therefore,  in  exercise
of its power under Article 136 of  the  Constitution  of  India,  the  Court
should not interfere with the exercise done by the High Court.


      Our Analysis of the subject matter:
We have bestowed our  serious  consideration  to  the  submissions  made  by
learned counsel for parties on both sides.  No doubt,  the  High  Court  has
held that it was wrong exercise in law on the  part  of  the  Government  to
invoke the provisions of Sections  17(1)  and  17(4)  of  the  Act,  thereby
dispensing with the enquiry under Section 5A of the Act  which  amounted  to
taking away the valuable right of the land owners.  That  is  a  finding  on
merit.  However, it is subject to the caveat that the writ  petitions  filed
by the appellants herein could be considered on merits and were  not  to  be
dismissed on the grounds of laches and delay.  Such a contention was  indeed
taken by the respondents/ authorities before the High Court.   However,  the
same has been repelled.  Primary reason given by  the  High  Court  in  this
behalf is that the delay was explained satisfactorily inasmuch as  the  land
acquired for the purposes of industrial development was, at a  later  period
of time, allotted to private builders for development of  residential  units
and when this  was  done  it  came  to  the  knowledge  of  the  appellants.
Aggrieved by this step taken by the Noida authorities, the appellants  filed
the writ petitions.  Thus, in nutshell, allotment of the land by  the  Noida
authorities at a subsequent point of time has weighed with the  High  Court.
In other words, it is clear  that  the  appellants  did  not  challenge  the
acquisition per se inasmuch  as  when  the  land  was  acquired  even  after
invoking  urgency  provisions  contained  in  Section  17  of  the  Act  and
dispensing with the requirement of Section 5A of the Act, this position  was
accepted by the land owners.  They even allowed the authorities  to  proceed
further in passing the award and taking possession from many of  these  land
owners and even paying compensation to them.  It is a matter of record  that
before coming to the Court and filing the  writ  petitions,  most  of  these
appellants had received the compensation.  They also sought reference  under
Section 18 of the Act for higher compensation.  Physical possession of  land
of many of these appellants have also been  taken.   In  many  other  cases,
paper possession had been taken before  filing  of  the  writ  petition.   A
great  deal  of  argument   was   made   as   to   whether   such   physical
possession/paper possession should be treated as taking  possession  in  the
eyes of  law,  it  would  be  a  debatable  point  inasmuch  as  in  various
judgments, this Court has  held  that  whenever  there  is  large  scale  of
acquisition and possession of large chunk of land  belonging  to  number  of
persons is to be taken,  paper  possession  would  be  a  permissible  mode,
particularly when it is Abadi land.  We are not going into this  controversy
since the ultimate outcome is not influenced by  the  aforesaid  factor,  as
would be noticed  in  the  later  part  of  judgment.     However,  what  we
highlight and reiterate is that these appellants were not aggrieved  by  the
acquisition per se in the manner it was done by  the  respondents.   As  per
their own case, they became aggrieved only when they  found  that  land  was
not utilised for the purpose for which it  was  acquired  namely  industrial
development but a large portion thereof was sought to be given away  to  the
builders for development of the land as residential.  The High Court,  while
accepting such a plea of the land owners on the ground of laches and  delay,
has referred to certain judgments which were relied upon before us  as  well
and taken note of above.

This leads to an incidental issue as to  whether  development  of  land  for
residential purposes is impermissible and could have given a fresh cause  of
action to the land owners to approach the Court.  Here,  we  would  like  to
refer to the judgment of this Court in Nand Kishore Gupta and Ors. v.  State
of U.P. and Ors.[9] which concerns the same Act viz.  U.P.  Industrial  Area
Development Act, 1976.  In that case, for Yamuna Express Project,  the  land
was acquired setting it to be 'public purpose'. The land  was  utilised  for
construction of Yamuna Expressway and along  therewith  development  of  the
part of the land  was  undertaken  for  commercial,  amusement,  industrial,
institutional and residential  purposes  as  well.   It  was  accepted  that
construction of Yamuna Expressway was work of public  importance.   However,
the  utilisation  of  land  for  development  of  other  purposes,   namely,
commercial, amusement, industrial, institutional and  residential  etc.  was
challenged, as not amounting to acquisition  for  'public  purpose'.   There
was another feature namely for the development of the land in the  aforesaid
manner Public Private Partnership (PPP) was formed and private parties  were
asked to undertake the development on  BOT  (Built,  Operate  and  Transfer)
basis.  Such PPP on BOT basis was also challenged as colourable exercise  of
power in which private parties were involved.  The  challenge  was  repelled
by this Court holding that acquisition of  land  along  Yamuna  Express  for
development   of   the   same   for   commercial,   amusement,   industrial,
institutional and residential purposes  was  complimentary  to  creation  of
Expressway.   Such  complimentary  purpose  was  also  treated  as   'public
purpose'.  It was also contended by the land  owners  that  the  acquisition
was not for “public purpose” because: (a) its  object  was  not  covered  by
Section 3(f) of the Act, (b) it really fell not under Part  II  of  the  Act
but under Part VII thereof as it virtually amounted to acquisition  of  land
for the contractor Company J, (c) the compensation was coming wholly from  J
and not from the Government or YEIDA,  (d)  the  acquisition  for  so-called
interchange was not at all  necessary  and  was  a  colourable  exercise  of
power.  They further contended that the application of  Sections  17(1)  and
17(4) of the Act was wholly unnecessary and  therefore,  the  enquiry  under
Section  5-A  could  not  have  been  dispensed  with.   All  the  aforesaid
contentions were rejected.  Going by the dicta in  the  aforesaid  judgment,
it is contended by the authorities that merely because the part of the  land
is utilised for residential purpose, it cannot be said that the respondents-
authorities have not adhered to the purpose for which the land is  acquired.
 As per them, this would be complimentary purpose to the main purpose.

We have to keep in mind  that  in  all  these  cases,  after  the  land  was
acquired, which was of very large quantity and in big chunks, further  steps
were taken by passing the award, taking possession and paying  compensation.
 In many cases, actual possession was taken and in rest of the cases,  paper
possession  was  taken  where  because  of  the  land  under  Abadi,  actual
possession could not be taken on spot immediately.   Fact  remains  that  in
many such cases where possession was  taken,  these  land  owners/appellants
even received compensation.   All  these  petitions  have  been  filed  only
thereafter which may not be maintainable stricto sensu having regard to  the
law laid down by the Constitution Bench of this Court in Aflatoon  and  Ors.
v. Lt. Governor of Delhi and Ors.[10] and the dictum  of  this  judgment  is
followed consistently by this Court in various cases [See  Murari  and  Ors.
v. Union of India and Ors.[11], Ravi Khullar and Anr. v. Union of India  and
Ors.[12], Anand Singh and Anr. v. State of U.P. and Ors.[13]]

Once we look into the matter from the aforesaid  prospective,  the  argument
of the appellants that giving away of the land by allotment to  the  private
developers for construction of residential units gave them the  fresh  cause
of action, gets dented to a great extent.  No doubt, following Royal  Orchid
Hotels Limited case  and  other  similar  cases,  the  High  Court  has  not
dismissed the writ petitions filed by the appellants on the ground of  delay
and laches accepting the plea of the appellants that they felt aggrieved  on
coming to know that the land was sought to be given to the  private  persons
for development.  In this way, discretion is exercised by the High Court  in
entertaining the writ petitions on  merits.   Since  such  a  discretion  is
exercised, we would not like to interfere with  that  discretion,  more  so,
when a very  fair  stand  is  taken  by  Mr.  Rao,  learned  senior  counsel
appearing for  the  Noida  authority,  as  mentioned  above.   However,  the
aforesaid position in law  is  stated  to  highlight  that  it  was  equally
possible to dismiss these writ petitions as the same  were  filed  belatedly
after passing of the award and when in most of  the  cases,  possession  was
taken and compensation paid.  When we examine the matter from the  aforesaid
angle, we reach an irresistible conclusion that the High Court has  gone  an
extra mile in  finding  the  solution  to  the  problem  and  balancing  the
equities in a manner which is favourable to the land owners.

We have also to keep in mind another important feature.  Many  residents  of
Patwari village had entered into agreement with the authorities agreeing  to
accept  enhanced  compensation  at  the  rate  of  64.7%.   This  additional
compensation was, however, agreed to be paid  by  the  authorities  only  in
respect of land owners of Patwari village.  The High  Court  has  bound  the
authorities with the said agreement by applying the same  to  all  the  land
owners thereby benefiting them with  64.7%  additional  compensation.  There
could have been argument that the authorities cannot be fastened  with  this
additional   compensation,    more   particularly,   when   machinery    for
determination for just and fair compensation  is  provided  under  the  Land
Acquisition Act  and  the  land  owners  had,  in  fact,  invoked  the  said
machinery by seeking reference under  Section  18  thereof.   Likewise,  the
scheme for allotment of land to the land  owners  provides  for  5%  and  6%
developed land in Noida and Greater Noida respectively.   As  against  that,
the High Court has enhanced the said entitlement to  10%.   Again,  we  find
that it could be an arguable case as  to  whether  High  Court  could  grant
additional land contrary to  the  policy.   Notwithstanding  the  same,  the
Noida authority have now accepted this  part  of  the  High  Court  judgment
after the dismissal of the appeals filed  by  the  Noida  authority,  and  a
statement to that effect was made by Mr. Rao.  We may point out  that  while
dismissing the appeals of Noida authority, following remarks were made:
“9.  Insofar as allotment of 10 per cent of  the  plots  is  concerned,  the
High Court, in exercise of its discretionary  power,  has  thought  it  fit,
while sustaining the notification issued by  the  authority  for  protecting
them for allotting 10 per cent of the  developed  plots;  and,  there  again
they have put a cap of 2,500 sq.mtrs.  In fact, in the course of the  order,
the High Court has taken into consideration the agreement that  was  entered
into by the authority with the villagers of Patwari and, in some cases,  the
authority itself has agreed to raise 6 to 8 per cent of the developed  plots
to the agriculturists.  The High Court has  also  taken  into  consideration
the observations made by this Court in  the  case  of  Bondu  Ramaswamy  Vs.
Bangalore Development Authority, 2010 (7) SCC  129,  where  this  Court  has
gone to the extent of directing the authorities to allot 15 per cent of  the
developed plots.  In our view and in the peculiar facts and circumtances  of
these   cases,    since    the    relief    that    is    given    to    the
respondents/agriculturists is purely discretionary relief by  the  Court  in
order to sustain the notification issued by the authorities, we do not  find
any good ground to interfere with  the  impugned  judgment(s)  and  order(s)
passed by the High Court, at the  instance  of  the  petitioners/appellants/
authorities, namely, NOIDA and Greater NOIDA.

10.  This order shall not be treated as a precedent in any other case.”


Thus, we have a scenario where, on  the  one  hand,  invocation  of  urgency
provisions under Section 17 of the Act and  dispensing  with  the  right  to
file objection under Section 5A of the Act, is found to be illegal.  On  the
other hand, we have a situation where because of delay in challenging  these
acquisitions by the land owners, developments have taken in  these  villages
and in most of the cases, third party rights have been created.  Faced  with
this situation, the High Court going by the spirit behind  the  judgment  of
this Court in Bondu Ramaswamy and Others (supra) came out with the  solution
which is equitable to both sides.  We are, thus, of the view that  the  High
Court considered the ground realities of the matter and arrived  at  a  more
practical and workable solution by adequately compensating the  land  owners
in the form of compensation as well as allotment of developed Abadi land  at
a higher rate i.e. 10% of the land acquired  of  each  of  the  land  owners
against the eligibility and to the policy to the extent  of  5%  and  6%  of
Noida and Greater Noida land respectively.

Insofar as allegation of some of the appellants that their  abadi  land  was
acquired, we find that this allegation is specifically denied disputing  its
correctness. There is specific averment made by the NOIDA  Authority  at  so
many places that village abadi land was not acquired. It is  mentioned  that
abadi area is what was found in the survey  conducted  prior  to  Section  4
Notification and not what is alleged or that which  is  far  away  from  the
dense village abadi.  It is also mentioned that  as  a  consequence  of  the
acquisition, the Authority spends crores and crores of rupees in  developing
the infrastructure such as road, drainage, sewer, electric and  water  lines
etc. in the unacquired portion of the village abadi. During  the  course  of
hearing, Chart No. 2 in respect of each village of Greater Noida was  handed
over for the consideration of this Court, wherein  the amount spent  by  the
Authority on the development, including village development  (which  is  the
unacquired village abadi), has been given in Column No. 4 thereof.   It  has
been the consistent stand of the NOIDA Authority that prior to the  issuance
of Section 4 Notification under the Land Acquisition Act, 1894,  survey  was
conducted and the abadi found in that survey  was  not  acquired.  In  fact,
affidavits in this respect have also been filed not only in this  Court  but
also in the High Court. We have mentioned that there has  been  a  long  gap
between acquisition of the land and filing of  the  writ  petitions  in  the
High Court by these appellants challenging the  acquisition.  If  they  have
undertaken some construction during this period they cannot  be  allowed  to
take advantage thereof. Therefore, it is difficult to  accept  the  argument
of the appellants based on parity with three villages in  respect  of  which
the High Court has given relief by quashing the acquisition.

To sum up, following benefits are accorded to the land owners:
(a)   increasing the compensation by 64.7%;
(b)   directing allotment of developed abadi land to the extent  of  10%  of
the land acquired of each of the land owners;
(c)   compensation which is increased  at  the  rate  of  64.7%  is  payable
immediately without taking away the rights  of  the  land  owners  to  claim
higher compensation under the machinery provided  in  the  Land  Acquisition
Act wherein the matter would be  examined  on  the  basis  of  the  evidence
produced to arrive at just and fair market value;
                 This, according to us, provides substantial justice to  the
appellants.

      Conclusion

Keeping in view all these peculiar circumstances,  we  are  of  the  opinion
that these are not  the  cases  where  this  Court  should  interfere  under
Article 136 of the Constitution.  However, we make it clear that  directions
of the High Court are given in the aforesaid  unique  and  peculiar/specific
background and, therefore, it would not form precedent for future cases.

We may record that some of the appellants had tried  to  point  out  certain
clerical mistakes pertaining to their specific cases.  For example,  it  was
argued by one appellant that his land  falls  in  a  village  in  Noida  but
wrongly included in Greater  Noida.   These  appellants,  for  getting  such
clerical mistakes rectified, can always approach the High Court.

The Full Bench judgment of the High Court is, accordingly, affirmed and  all
these appeals are disposed of in terms of the  said  judgment  of  the  Full
Bench.

In view of the aforesaid, the contempt petitions also stand disposed of.


                            .............................................CJI
                                                                (H.L. DATTU)


                             .............................................J.
                                                                (A.K. SIKRI)


                             .............................................J.
                                                               (ARUN MISHRA)
NEW DELHI;
MAY 14, 2015.
-----------------------
[1]   (2010) 11 SCC 242
[2]   (1995) 2 SCC 677
[3]   (1995) 3 SCC 128
[4]   (2012) 3 SCC 727
[5]   AIR 1964 SC 72
[6]   (1994) 1 SCC 1
[7]   (2007) 9 SCC 304
[8]   (2011) 10 SCC 608
[9]   (2010) 10 SCC 282
[10]  AIR 1974 SC 2077
[11]  (1997) 1 SCC 15
[12]  (2007) 5 SCC 231
[13]  (2010) 11 SCC 242

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