Millennium Post

SC dismisses plea for cancelling lease of Kandla Port land to firm

- OUR CORRESPOND­ENT

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court has refused to interfere with a Delhi High Court order holding as not maintainab­le a PIL seeking cancellati­on of a lease awarding 50 acres of land at the Kandla Port in Gujarat to a private firm, due to lack of territoria­l jurisdicti­on.

A bench headed by Chief Justice Ranjan Gogoi said no prejudice was caused to the petitioner NGO -- Centre for Public Interest Litigation (CPIL) -- by asking it to move the Gujarat High Court.

“We are not inclined to interfere with the order impugned in the special leave petition as, in our considered view, no prejudice has been caused by requiring the petitioner to move the appropriat­e jurisdicti­on i.e the High Court of Gujarat, raising its grievance under the same subject matter before the said High Court. The special leave petition is, accordingl­y, dismissed,” the bench, also comprising Justice S K Kaul, said.

The high court, on October 1 last year, had said no part of the cause of action had arisen within its territoria­l jurisdicti­on and granted liberty to the petitioner NGO to approach the appropriat­e forum in accordance with law.

The bench had passed the order on the maintainab­ility of a plea by the NGO, alleging that the Kandla Port Trust (KPT), now known as the Deendayal Port Trust, had overvalued the structures set up at the site by a firm -- Friends Salt Works and Allied Industries (FSWAI) -- when it had leased the land in the past, to ensure that only the said firm got the contract.

The bench had noted that the tender was issued from Gandhidham and the land was situated at Kutch in Gujarat.

It had said the plea of the NGO’S counsel, Prashant Bhushan, referring to various sections of the Major Port Trusts Act, 1963 to contend that the Centre had a role to play in the working of the KPT, was without any merit.

The petition had claimed that FSWAI did not have to pay an amount of Rs 207 crore if it was successful in the bid and added that under the earlier lease agreement, the KPT did not have any contractua­l obligation to compensate the firm for its assets.

The NGO had sought that if the lease awarded to the firm in April, 2015 was not cancelled, then the amount of Rs 207 crore be recovered from it.

“The introducti­on of the said clause in the tender (to compensate FSWAI) is illegal and arbitrary since it was the responsibi­lity of FSWAI to remove the structures before the expiry of the (earlier) lease. ...,” the NGO had alleged in its plea.

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