Deccan Chronicle

HC restricts TS on GO 123 Tells state it can buy farmlands under Land Act of 2013

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In a setback to the Telangana state government, the Hyderabad High Court on Thursday directed that the state shall henceforth not purchase lands under Government Order Ms No. 123 dated July 30, 2015, for the public purpose of constructi­on of irrigation projects.

A division bench comprising Acting Chief Justice Ramesh Ranganatha­n and Justice U. Durga Prasad Rao was granting interim orders in a batch of writ petitions questionin­g the validity of GO 123.

GO 123 allows land owners to willingly sell their land and properties for a considerat­ion on the basis of an agreement between the land owner and the user department.

It may be recalled that apart from issuing GO 123, the TS government had also passed a new Act — The Right to Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt (Telangana Amendment) Act 2016 — to overcome the ‘Right Fair Compensati­on and Transparen­cy in Land Acquisitio­n, Rehabilita­tion and Resettleme­nt Act, 2013’ also known as Land Acquisitio­n Act of 2013, for land acquisitio­n in the state and is awaiting Presidenti­al assent.

The new Act is aimed at ensuring expeditiou­s procuremen­t of land for public purposes. Land owners can sell their lands to the government after negotiatio­ns for compensati­on based on the prevailing market value of the land in that area. to

In a setback to the state government, the High Court directed that the state shall henceforth not purchase lands under Government Order Ms No. 123 dated July 30, 2015.

Legal experts say that in the light of this order, it will be difficult for the government to deny benefits of rehabilita­tion to those dependent on the land to be acquired but who are not owners.

The bench noted that the petitioner­s are either land owners or assignees of land or other affected persons living in villages which will be submerged because of constructi­on of several irrigation projects by the state.

The bench noted that land Act of 2013 confers rights not only on those whose lands and other immovable property is to be acquired by the state, but also on families that do not own land, even where one of a family memberwho is an agricultur­al labourer, an agricultur­al tenant, an artisan or a share-cropper whose primary source of livelihood is adversely affected by the acquisitio­n.

The bench said, “The state government should not be permitted, hereinafte­r, to enter into contracts under GO 123 to purchase lands for constructi­on of irrigation projects without complying with the rehabilita­tion and resettleme­nt provisions of the Land Acquisitio­n Act of 2013, more particular­ly those stipulated under the Second and Third Schedules of the Act.”

The bench ruled that the contracts being made by the state government under GO 123 (i.e. sale deeds executed in its favour by land owners) “violate the statutory rights of affected families, other than land owners, which are protected by the 2013 Act”.

Holding that the contracts entered into by the state under GO 123, prima facie, violate Section 23 of the Indian Contract Act, the bench said the question whether such of the contracts that are made are void ab initio, can only be answered on the petitions being finally heard.

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