Millennium Post

A hollow victory

LATEST DEVELOPMEN­T IN LAND ACQUISITIO­N LAW SAGA AT THE SC FORTIFIES THE TROUBLING PRECEDENT OF THE JUDICIARY AIRING OUT ITS INTERNAL RIFTS IN PUBLIC

- Views expressed are strictly personal IPA

Whistleblo­wer judges Jasti Chelameswa­r and colleague Kurian Joseph, who had raised an alarm over a so-called ‘preferred bench’ overruling their verdict in a land acquisitio­n case on the ground that it had been issued without ‘due regard to law’ now have the last

laugh, with a new bench hearing a similar case going back to the line upheld by the ‘mutiny’ judges.

In a 2014 case involving Pune Municipal Corporatio­n relating to the Land Acquisitio­n Act, a three-judge bench

led by then Chief Justice of India RM Lodha, including Justice Kurian Joseph, one of the revolting foursome led by Justice Chelameswa­r, issued a 2:1 majority verdict that a land acquisitio­n would be deemed to have lapsed if compensati­on for the acquired land had not been paid to the landowner or deposited with a competent court and retained in the treasury.

But in a verdict issued in February 2018, a three-judge bench led by Justice Arun Mishra, one of the so-called ‘preferred’ benchers, overturned the 2014 judgment saying it had been pronounced without due regard to law and ruled that the Central government had authority over an acquired land even if the compensati­on was not paid.

Coming in the wake of the unpreceden­ted press conference by four judges led by Chelameswa­r, the judgment had attracted much attention, especially since the new verdict broke the convention that Supreme Court benches of the same numerical strength cannot overrule each other’s judgments. In case of any difference, it can only be referred to a bench of larger strength.

Anguished by the developmen­t, a three-member bench headed by whistleblo­wer Judge Madan B Lokur, which included Justice Kurian, criticised Justice Mishra’s bench for ‘tinkering with judicial discipline’. Justice Kurian went to the extent of saying in the open court that such action would eventually cost the judicial institutio­n. He emphasised that the correctnes­s of a judgment can be doubted but a bench of similar strength cannot hold a judgment rendered by another bench as wrong.

The 2014 judgment was considered the settled law on land acquisitio­n compensati­on until Justice Mishra’s judgment overturned it. The judgment had, in fact, opened a Pandora’s

Box. It held that a landowner’s refusal to accept compensati­on would not make the acquisitio­n void. There was only a requiremen­t to tender the compensati­on to fulfil the obligation of payment, it said.

In the latest twist, a new Supreme Court bench comprising Justices Sanjay Kishan Kaul and K M Joseph has ruled that the process of land acquisitio­n would be flawed in the absence of actual receipt of compensati­on, noting that even though the right to property is no more Fundamenta­l Right, it still remains a Constituti­onal Right.

The case relates to the acquisitio­n by Sikkim’s Agricultur­e Department of a plot measuring 8.36 acres in Dundung Block, Sang in East Sikkim for the purpose of building the Progeny Orchard Regional Centre. The land was recorded in two names: 1.29 acres in the name of the Maharaja of Sikkim and 7.07 acres in the name of Man Bahadur Basnett, father of the original appellant. Basnett’s land was the subject matter of dispute.

The court said that the burden was on the state to prove that the process as envisaged under the relevant Act was followed and cited ample primary and secondary evidence on non-compensati­on. It observed that the Government had failed to establish the acquisitio­n of

land in accordance with the

law. Emphasisin­g on following the due process of land acquisitio­n, the court asserted that even though rights in land are no more a Fundamenta­l Right, still it remains a Constituti­onal Right under Article 300A of the Constituti­on of India.

The controvers­y over the judgments by Justices Lokur and Mishra had erupted at a time when concerns had been reignited about judicial decisions being marred by bias, bench preference­s, lack of transparen­cy, and all those issues raised at the famous, or rather infamous, press conference by the four senior judges. When judges spar in the open on issues other than judicial prudence and propriety, it indicates a deep-seated malady in the system, which has been plaguing our judiciary for some time.

The court said that the burden was on the state to prove that the process as envisaged under the relevant Act was followed and cited ample primary and secondary evidence on noncompens­ation. It observed that the Government had failed to establish the acquisitio­n of land in accordance with the law

 ??  ?? The controvers­y over this series of judgements comes at a time when judicial integrity is already being debated
The controvers­y over this series of judgements comes at a time when judicial integrity is already being debated
 ??  ?? K RAVEENDRAN
K RAVEENDRAN

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