Karnataka High Court
Mr. Syed Ismail vs Bangalore Development Authority on 21 July, 2025
Author: M.Nagaprasanna
Bench: M.Nagaprasanna
1 Reserved on : 17.07.2025 Pronounced on : 21.07.2025 R IN THE HIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA AT BENGALURU DATED THIS THE 21ST DAY OF JULY, 2025 BEFORE THE HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE M. NAGAPRASANNA WRIT PETITION No.11630 OF 2021 (LA - BDA) BETWEEN: MR. SYED ISMAIL AGED ABOUT 37 YEARS S/O LATE SYED IBRAHIM RESIDING AT NO.437/B 5TH CROSS, NEAR BDA COMPLEX, HBR LAYOUT 2ND BLOCK BENGALURU - 560 043. ... PETITIONER (BY SRI D.R.RAVISHANAKAR, SR.ADVOCATE A/W SRI SARAVANA S., ADVOCATE) AND: 1. BANGALORE DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY T.CHOWDAIAH ROAD KUMARAPARK WEST BENGALURU - 560 020 REPRESENTED BY ITS COMMISSIONER. 2 2. THE LAND ACQUISITION OFFICER BANGALORE DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY T.CHOWDAIAH ROAD KUMARA PARK WEST BENGALURU - 560 020. 3. C.SHIVARAJU AGED ABOUT 52 YEARS S/O LATE SRI CHIKKA MININAGAPPA RESIDING AT: NO.31, 2ND MAIN ROAD MARENAHALLI, VIJAYANAGAR BENGALURU - 560 050. 4. HANUMANTHAPPA AGED ABOUT 65 YEARS S/O MR.MUNINAGAPPA RESIDING AT: NO.17/8 1ST MAIN ROAD MARENAHALLI, VIJAYANAGAR BENGALURU - 560 050. ... RESPONDENTS (BY SRI B.VACHAN, ADVOCATE FOR R-1 AND R-2; SRI UDAYA HOLLA, SR.ADVOCATE A/W SRI K.S.RAMU, ADVOCATE FOR R-3; SMT.Y.P.VIJAYA VASANTHAKUMARI, ADVOCATE R-4) THIS WRIT PETITION IS FILED UNDER ARTICLES 226 AND 227 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF INDIA PRAYING TO DIRECT THE R-1 AND R-2 TO CONSIDER THE REPRESENTATIONS DTD 05.07.2019, 26.12.2019 AND 18.03.2021 (ANNEXURES M TO O) OF THE PETITIONER IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAW AND DISBURSE THE COMPENSATION FOR THE ACQUISITION OF SUBJECT MATTER 3 LANDS TO THE PETITIONER; OR ALTERNATIVELY, DIRECT THE R-1 AND 2 TO MAKE A REFERENCE TO THE JURISDICTIONAL COURT UNDER SECTION 18 OF THE LAND ACQUISITION ACT, 1894 FOR ADJUDICATION OF THE CLAIM FOR COMPENSATION OF THE PETITIONER. THIS WRIT PETITION HAVING BEEN HEARD AND RESERVED FOR ORDERS ON 17.07.2025, COMING ON FOR PRONOUNCEMENT THIS DAY, THE COURT MADE THE FOLLOWING:- CORAM: THE HON'BLE MR JUSTICE M.NAGAPRASANNA CAV ORDER The petitioner is before this Court seeking a direction by issuance of a writ in the nature of mandamus directing consideration of the representations of the petitioner dated 05-07-2019, 26-12-2019 and 18-03-2021 and disbursement of compensation for the acquisition of subject land to the petitioner. Alternatively, he seeks direction to respondents 1 and 2 to make a reference to the jurisdictional Court under Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act for adjudication of the claim for compensation of the petitioner. 4 2. Heard Sri D.R. Ravishankar, learned senior counsel appearing for the petitioner, Sri B.Vachan, learned counsel for respondents 1 and 2, Sri Udaya Holla, learned counsel appearing for respondent No.3 and Smt. Y.P.Vijaya Vasanthakumari, learned counsel appearing for respondent No.4. 3. Facts, in brief, germane are as follows: - The 3rd respondent purchases the subject property in Sy.No.42/3 of Meda Agrahara Village, Yelahanka Hobli, Bengaluru North Taluk measuring 1 acre and 6 guntas on 17-02-2005. On 22-09-2005, the 3rd respondent further purchases another property bearing Sy.No.42/2 of the same area measuring 20 guntas. After such purchase, both the afore-mentioned lands stood in the name of the 3rd respondent/C.Shivaraju and all revenue and statutory entries were transferred to the name of the 3rd respondent. 3.1. When things stood thus, a preliminary notification is issued by the Bangalore Development Authority ('BDA') on 30-12-2008 for acquiring vast areas of land for formation of Dr. Shivaram Karanth Layout. The properties of the 3rd respondent 5 afore-mentioned also formed part of the preliminary notification. Pursuant to issuance of preliminary notification, several writ petitions were preferred before this Court and during the pendency of the said writ petitions, the present petitioner and another enters into an agreement of sale and transfers an amount of ₹1,40,40,000/- in favour of the 3rd respondent on 05-01-2012. However, on 05-07-2012, the agreement holder gets a part of the agreement cancelled on receiving back ₹12,50,000/- by executing cancellation deed. Therefore, one part of the agreement stood cancelled and the other part i.e., the major part was in subsistence. The agreement depicted that in six months, the sale deed would be executed. The sale deed does not get executed as the purchaser failed to pay the balance consideration. 3.2. The petitioner institutes a suit in O.S.No.1552 of 2012 before the concerned Court initially seeking permanent injunction to restrain the 3rd respondent from interfering with and alienating the properties. Thereafter, seeking an amendment to the plaint he sought specific performance of the agreement of sale dated 05-01-2012. By an order of the concerned Court on 14-07-2023, 6 the plaint was directed to be returned for its presentation before the appropriate Court. The plaint/suit has not been re-presented before the appropriate Court even as on date. In the interregnum, between institution of the suit on 08-11-2012 and order directing return of the plaint, a final notification comes to be issued on 30-10-2018. Pursuant to the final notification, which includes subject lands, representations galore from the hands of the petitioner seeking compensation for the lands so acquired. Three of the representations are noted hereinabove. Non-consideration of the representations has driven the petitioner to this Court in the subject petition. 4. The learned senior counsel Sri D.R. Ravishankar appearing for the petitioner would vehemently contend that the petitioner is an agreement holder. Notwithstanding the fact that he has entered into an agreement after issuance of the preliminary notification, all those notifications stood quashed at the hands of this Court and a Division Bench affirmed the said order. The Apex Court may have upturned it in the year 2018, that would not mean that the petitioner becomes agreement holder pursuant to issuance of the 7 preliminary notification. Therefore, he is entitled to receive entire compensation from the hands of the BDA for acquiring the subject lands which are the subject matter of agreement of sale. He would submit that the petitioner has diligently instituted a suit in O.S.No.1554 of 2012 against the 4th respondent wherein issues are framed long ago on 17-01-2014 and the matter is dismissed for its non-prosecution. That would not mean the rights of the petitioner can be taken away. He would seek to place reliance upon the judgments of the Apex Court in the cases of RAMESH CHAND v. TANMAY DEVELOPERS PRIVATE LIMITED reported in (2017) 13 SCC 715 and SUKHBIR v. AJIT SINGH reported in 2021 SCC OnLine SC 357 to buttress his submissions. 5. Per contra, the learned senior counsel Sri Udaya Holla appearing for respondent No.3 would vehemently refute the submissions in contending that the person who approaches the Court with soiled hands should not be shown any indulgence. The petitioner does not have a valid agreement of sale. The same was cancelled long back in the year 2012. The suit filed by him for specific performance has been returned for presenting it before the 8 appropriate Court and it has not been re-presented for the last 2 years. The agreement of sale between the petitioner and the 3rd respondent is on 05-01-2012, four years after issuance of preliminary notification which included several properties. Therefore, the agreement of sale itself is void even on the said score. The learned senior counsel would submit that no right has flown to the hands of the petitioner to seek any amount of compensation from the hands of the BDA for acquisition of the subject lands. The owner of the lands is still the 3rd respondent having purchased through sale deeds in the year 2005 long before acquisition was even thought of. He would, therefore, contend that the petition be dismissed with exemplary costs, as the proceedings before the civil Court are completely suppressed in the petition. 6. The learned counsel appearing for the BDA would also toe the lines of the learned senior counsel for the 3rd respondent. 7. I have given my anxious consideration to the submissions made by the respective learned senior counsel and have perused the material on record. 9 8. The afore-narrated facts, dates and link in the chain of events, though narrated supra, would require to be reiterated in certain details. The 3rd respondent pursuant to two sale deeds dated 17-02-2005 and 22-09-2005 purchases the subject properties. Pursuant to the said purchase, the name of the 3rd respondent is mutated as the owner of the properties in revenue records. The RTC is vindicative of the said fact. 9. When things stood thus, the BDA issues a preliminary notification seeking to acquire certain lands including the land of the 3rd respondent for the purpose of Dr. Shivaram Karanth Layout on 30-12-2008. The preliminary notification comes to be challenged before a learned single Judge of this Court in Writ Petition Nos. 55863-55865 of 2014. The petitions come to be allowed by the following order: ".... .... .... 4. The respondents have filed the objection statement. In the objection statement it is contended that since there were large extents of lands which had been notified, the respondents require sometime to go through the process and thereafter complete the acquisition proceedings. 10 5. In that background, I do not propose to refer to the contentions in detail for the reason that in respect of the very same notification, this Court had made a detailed consideration in W.P.No.9640 of 2014 and connected petitions on 26-11-2014. During the said consideration, this Court had taken note of contention put forth on behalf of the respondents with regard to the delay that has occasioned in the process as there were certain deletions at the initial stages and when subsequent deletions were made by the Land Acquisition Officer, the Government has initiated enquiries in that regard and therefore there was delay. This Court having not accepted such contention and further relying on a decision of this Court had arrived at the conclusion that the delay as explained by the respondents is not acceptable and therefore, the notification insofar as the lands of the petitioners therein was held as lapsed. Since in the instant case also the position is not different from the said cases, a similar consideration requires to be made. 6. Accordingly, the notification dated 30-12-2008 assailed in these petitions is held as having lapsed as against the lands of the petitioners referred to in these petitions which were included in the said notification. In terms of the above, these petitions are allowed to that extent. In view of the disposal of the main petition, I.A.No.2/ 2014 for dispensation also stands disposed of." A Writ Appeal comes to be preferred by the BDA assailing the order passed by the learned single Judge supra. The Writ Appeal comes to be dismissed by the following order: "2. As prayed for by Mr. G.S. Kannur, learned Advocate appearing for the appellants, the appeal is taken up for preliminary hearing. 11 3. The writ petitioner assailed a notification dated December 30, 2008, proposing to acquire the land for formation of a layout. The preliminary notification was issue on December 30, 2008. Thereafter, neither the final notification was issued nor possession was taken. Consequently, the Hon'ble single Judge held that as within the reasonable time, no further action was taken, the proposal for acquisition got lapsed. 4. We do not find any merit in the appeal 5. The application for condonation of delay in filing the appeal is dismissed. Consequently, the appeal is, also dismissed." BDA challenges both the orders in several cases before the Apex Court. The Apex Court in the case of BANGALORE DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY V. STATE OF KARNATAKA1 (Civil Appeal No.7661- 63 of 2018 and connected cases decided on 03-08-2018), sets aside both the orders of this Court and issues several directions holding: ".... .... .... 15. First, we take up the question as to whether the High Court was legally justified on merits in quashing the preliminary notification issued under Section 17. The Constitution Bench of this Court in Offshore Holdings (P) Ltd. [Offshore Holdings (P) Ltd. v. BDA, (2011) 3 SCC 139: (2011) 1 SCC (Civ) 662] has decided the question affirmatively. The BDA has issued preliminary notification for acquisition of the lands. Non- finalisation of the acquisition proceedings resulted in the filing of 1 (2018) 9 SCC 122 12 the writ petitions before the High Court of Karnataka by the owners in the year 1987. Certain lands were de-notified and the permission which was granted earlier was withdrawn. The denotification of the land was also withdrawn. It was urged that the time-frame which was prescribed under Sections 6 and 11-A of the LA Act would form an integral part of the BDA Act. This Court considered the scheme under the BDA Act and has observed thus: (SCC pp. 158-59, 162, 164-66 & 192, paras 33, 35, 50, 55, 123, 124 & 125) "33. The provisions of the Land Acquisition Act, which provide for time-frame for compliance and the consequences of default thereof, are not applicable to acquisition under the BDA Act. They are Sections 6 and 11- A of the Land Acquisition Act. As per Section 11-A, if the award is not made within a period of two years from the date of declaration under Section 6, the acquisition proceedings will lapse. Similarly, where declaration under Section 6 of this Act is not issued within three years from the date of publication of notification under Section 4 of the Land Acquisition Act [such notification being issued after the commencement of the Land Acquisition (Amendment and Validation) Ordinance, 1967 but before the commencement of Central Act 68 of 1984] or within one year where Section 4 notification was published subsequent to the passing of Central Act 68 of 1984, no such declaration under Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act can be issued in any of these cases. *** 35. Be that as it may, it is clear that the BDA Act is a self-contained code which provides for all the situations that may arise in planned development of an area including acquisition of land for that purpose. The scheme of the Act does not admit any necessity for reading the provisions of Sections 6 and 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act, as part and parcel of the BDA Act for attainment of its object. The primary object of the State Act is to carry out planned development and acquisition is a mere incident of such planned development. The provisions of the Land Acquisition Act, where the land is to be acquired for a specific public purpose and acquisition is the sum and substance of that Act, all matters in relation to the acquisition of land will be regulated by the provisions of that Act. The State Act has provided its own scheme and provisions for acquisition of land. 13 *** 50. Applying the above principle to the facts of the case in hand, it will be clear that the provisions relating to acquisition like passing of an award, payment of compensation and the legal remedies available under the Central Act would have to be applied to the acquisitions under the State Act but the bar contained in Sections 6 and 11-A of the Central Act cannot be made an integral part of the State Act as the State Act itself has provided specific time-frames under its various provisions as well as consequences of default thereto. The scheme, thus, does not admit such incorporation. *** 55. The principle stated in Munithimmaiah case [Munithimmaiah v. State of Karnataka, (2002) 4 SCC 326] that the BDA Act is a self-contained code, was referred with approval by a three-Judge Bench of this Court in Bondu Ramaswamy [Bondu Ramaswamy v. BDA, (2010) 7 SCC 129: (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 1]. The Court, inter alia, specifically discussed and answered the questions whether the provisions of Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act will apply to the acquisition under the BDA Act and if the final declaration under Section 19(1) is not issued within one year of the publication of the notification under Section 17(1) of the BDA Act, whether such final declaration will be invalid and held as under: (Bondu Ramaswamy case [BonduRamaswamy v. BDA, (2010) 7 SCC 129 : (2010) 3 SCC (Civ) 1] , SCC p. 170, paras 79-81) '79. This question arises from the contention raised by one of the appellants that the provisions of Section 6 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 ("the LA Act", for short) will apply to the acquisitions under the BDA Act and consequently if the final declaration under Section 19(1) is not issued within one year from the date of publication of the notification under Sections 17(1) and (3) of the BDA Act, such final declaration will be invalid. The appellants' submissions are as under: the notification under Sections 17(1) and (3) of the Act was issued and gazetted on 3-2- 2003 and the declaration under Section 19(1) was issued and published on 23-2-2004. Section 36 of the Act provides that the acquisition of land under the BDA Act within or outside the Bangalore Metropolitan Area, shall be regulated by the provisions of the LA Act, so far as they are applicable. Section 6 of the LA Act requires that no declaration shall be made, in respect of any land covered by a notification under Section 4 of the LA Act, after the expiry 14 of one year from the date of the publication of such notification under Section 4 of the LA Act. As the provisions of the LA Act have been made applicable to acquisitions under the BDA Act, it is necessary that the declaration under Section 19(1) of the BDA Act (which is equivalent to the final declaration under Section 6 of the LA Act) should also be made before the expiry of one year from the date of publication of notification under Sections 17(1) and (3) of the BDA Act [which is equivalent to Section 4(1) of the LA Act]. 80. The BDA Act contains provisions relating to acquisition of properties, up to the stage of publication of final declaration. The BDA Act does not contain the subsequent provisions relating to completion of the acquisition, that is, issue of notices, enquiry and award, vesting of land, payment of compensation, principles relating to determination of compensation, etc. Section 36 of the BDA Act does not make the LA Act applicable in its entirety, but states that the acquisition under the BDA Act, shall be regulated by the provisions, so far as they are applicable, of the LA Act. Therefore, it follows that where there are already provisions in the BDA Act regulating certain aspects or stages of acquisition or the proceedings relating thereto, the corresponding provisions of the LA Act will not apply to the acquisitions under the BDA Act. Only those provisions of the LA Act, relating to the stages of acquisition, for which there is no provision in the BDA Act, are applied to the acquisitions under the BDA Act. 81. The BDA Act contains specific provisions relating to preliminary notification and final declaration. In fact the procedure up to final declaration under the BDA Act is different from the procedure under the LA Act relating to acquisition proceedings up to the stage of final notification. Therefore, having regard to the scheme for acquisition under Sections 15 to 19 of the BDA Act and the limited application of the LA Act in terms of Section 36 of the BDA Act, the provisions of Sections 4 to 6 of the LA Act will not apply to the acquisitions under the BDA Act. If Section 6 of the LA Act is not made applicable, the question of amendment to Section 6 of the LA Act providing a time-limit for issue of final declaration, will also not apply.' We may notice that, in the above case, the Court declined to examine whether the provisions of Section 11-A of the Central Act would apply to the acquisition under the BDA 15 Act but categorically stated that Sections 4 and 6 of the Central Act were inapplicable to the acquisition under the BDA Act. *** 123. Accepting the argument of the appellant would certainly frustrate the very object of the State law, particularly when both the enactments can peacefully operate together. To us, there appears to be no direct conflict between the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act and the BDA Act. The BDA Act does not admit reading of provisions of Section 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act into its scheme as it is bound to debilitate the very object of the State law. Parliament has not enacted any law with regard to development the competence of which, in fact, exclusively falls in the domain of the State Legislature with reference to Schedule VII List II Entries 5 and 18. 124. Both these laws cover different fields of legislation and do not relate to the same List, leave apart the question of relating to the same entry. Acquisition being merely an incident of planned development, the Court will have to ignore it even if there was some encroachment or overlapping. The BDA Act does not provide any provision in regard to compensation and manner of acquisition for which it refers to the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act. There are no provisions in the BDA Act which lay down detailed mechanism for the acquisition of property, i.e. they are not covering the same field and, thus, there is no apparent irreconcilable conflict. The BDA Act provides a specific period during which the development under a scheme has to be implemented and if it is not so done, the consequences thereof would follow in terms of Section 27 of the BDA Act. None of the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act deals with implementation of schemes. We have already answered that the acquisition under the Land Acquisition Act cannot, in law, lapse if vesting has taken place. Therefore, the question of applying the provisions of Section 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act to the BDA Act does not arise. Section 27 of the BDA Act takes care of even the consequences of default, including the fate of acquisition, where vesting has not taken place under Section 27(3). Thus, there are no provisions under the two Acts which operate in the same field and have a direct irreconcilable conflict. 16 125. Having said so, now we proceed to record our answer to the question referred to the larger Bench as follows: For the reasons stated in this judgment, we hold that the BDA Act is a self-contained code. Further, we hold that provisions introduced in the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 by Central Act 68 of 1984, limited to the extent of acquisition of land, payment of compensation and recourse to legal remedies provided under the said Act, can be read into an acquisition controlled by the provisions of the BDA Act but with a specific exception that the provisions of the Land Acquisition Act insofar as they provide different time-frames and consequences of default thereof, including lapsing of acquisition proceedings, cannot be read into the BDA Act. Section 11-A of the Land Acquisition Act being one of such provisions cannot be applied to the acquisitions under the provisions of the BDA Act." (emphasis supplied) 16. This Court has emphasised that the primary object of the BDA Act is to carry out planned development. The State Act has provided its own scheme. The time constraints of the land acquisition are not applicable to the BDA Act. Making applicable the time-frame of Section 11-A of the LA Act would debilitate the very object of the BDA Act. It is apparent that the decision of the Single Judge as well as the Division Bench is directly juxtaposed to the decision of the five-Judge Bench of this Court in Offshore Holdings [Offshore Holdings (P) Ltd. v. BDA, (2011) 3 SCC 139: (2011) 1 SCC (Civ) 662] in which precisely the question involved in the instant cases had been dealt with. By indirect method by making applicable the time period of two years of Section 11-A of the LA Act mandate of BDA Act has been violated. However, it is shocking that various decisions have been taken into consideration particularly by the Single Judge, however, whereas the decision that has set the controversy at rest, has not even been noticed even by the Single Judge or by the Division Bench. If this is the fate of the law of the land laid down by this Court that too the decision by the Constitution Bench, so much can be said but to exercise restraint is the best use of the power. Least said is better, the way in which the justice has been dealt with and the planned development of Bangalore City has been left at the mercy of unscrupulous persons of the Government and the BDA. 17 17. It is apparent from the fact that the Single Judge has relied upon the decision in H.N. Shivanna [H.N. Shivanna v. State of Karnataka, 2012 SCC OnLine Kar 8956: (2013) 4 KCCR 2793] in which it was observed by the Division Bench that scheme was to be completed in 2 years otherwise it would lapse. It was precisely the question of time period which was dwelt upon and what was ultimately decided by this Court in Offshore Holdings [Offshore Holdings (P) Ltd. v. BDA, (2011) 3 SCC 139: (2011) 1 SCC (Civ) 662] has been blatantly violated by the Single Judge and that too in flagrant violation of the provisions and intendment of the Act. 18. It is also apparent from the facts and circumstances of the case that there were a large number of irregularities in the course of an inquiry under Section 18(1) of the BDA Act. The Government had nothing to do with respect to the release of the land at this stage, as the stage of final notification had not reached but still the landowners in connivance with the influential persons, political or otherwise, managed the directions in respect of 251 acres of the land and the Special Land Acquisition Collector also considered exclusion of 498 acres of the land against which the question was raised in the Assembly and eyebrows were raised in public domain. Two inquiries were ordered on 24-11-2012 and 19-1-2013 by the State Government and based upon that inquiry, it was ordered and a public notice was issued on 3-5-2014 that the BDA will consider the entire matter afresh. 19. In the aforesaid backdrop of the facts, the writ petitions came to be filed, it would not be termed to be the bona fide litigation, but was initiated having failed in attempt to get the land illegally excluded at the hands of the Special Land Acquisition Collector and the State Government and after the inquiries held in the matter and the notice was issued to start the proceedings afresh. At this stage, the writ petitions were filed. In the aforesaid circumstances, it was not at all open to the High Court to quash the preliminary notification issued under Section 17, as the landowners, the State Government and BDA were responsible to create a mess in the way of planned development of Bangalore City. 18 20. The scheme which was framed was so much benevolent scheme that 40% of the 55% of the land reserved for the residential purpose was to be given to the landowners at their choice and they were also given the choice to obtain the compensation, if they so desired, under the provisions of the LA Act. Thus, it was such a scheme that there was no scope for any exclusion of the land in the ultimate final notification. 21. It is apparent from the circumstances that the matter cannot be left at the mercy of unscrupulous authority of the BDA, the State Government or in the political hands. Considering the proper development and planned development of Bangalore City, let the Government issue a final notification with respect to the land which has been notified in the initial notification and there is no question of leaving out of the land in the instant case as option has been given to landowners to claim the land or to claim the compensation under the relevant LA Act which may be applicable in the case. 22. It was contended on behalf of the landowners that certain developments have taken place after the orders were passed regarding exclusion of the land and when Section 27 provides a limitation of five years after final notification, in case development was not undertaken within five years, even the final scheme would lapse. Thus, the principle enunciated in Section 27 should be followed by this Court with respect to the lapse of preliminary notification as well. We find that there is a vast difference in the provisions and action to be taken pursuant to the preliminary notification and the final notification under Section 19. In the instant case, the facts indicated that it was in the interest of the public, landowners, BDA and the State Government. The scheme had prior approval of the State Government however at the cost of public interest yet another scheme was sought to be frustrated by powerful unforeseen hands and the issuance of final notification had been delayed. Three inquiries were ordered, two by the State Government and one by the BDA as the release of the land was being proposed in an illegal manner. Hue and cry has been raised about their illegalities in the Assembly as well as in the public. Thus, for the delay, owners cannot escape the liability, they cannot take the advantage of their own wrong having acted in collusion with the authorities. Thus, we are of the considered opinion that in the 19 facts of the case the time consumed would not adversely affect the ultimate development of Bangalore City. 23. The authorities are supposed to carry out the statutory mandate and cannot be permitted to act against the public interest and planned development of Bangalore City which was envisaged as a statutory mandate under the BDA Act. The State Government, as well as the authorities under the BDA Act, are supposed to cater to the need of the planned development which is a mandate enjoined upon them and also binding on them. They have to necessarily carry it forward and no dereliction of duty can be an escape route so as to avoid fulfilment of the obligation enjoined upon them. The courts are not powerless to frown upon such an action and proper development cannot be deterred by continuing inaction. As the proper development of such metropolitan is of immense importance, the public purpose for which the primary notification was issued was in order to provide civic amenities like laying down roads, etc. which cannot be left at the whim or mercy of the authorities concerned. They were bound to act in furtherance thereof. There was a clear embargo placed while issuing the notification not to create any charge, mortgage, assign, issue or revise any improvement and after inquiry, it was clear that the notice had been issued in May 2014, thus, no development could have been made legally. Notification dated 3-5-2014 was issued that re-inquiry was necessary in the matter. The development made, if any, would be at the peril of the owners and it has to give way to larger welfare schemes and the individual interest and cannot come in the way of the larger public interest. The acquisition was for the proper and planned development that was an absolute necessity for the city of Bangalore. 24. In the circumstances, we have no hesitation in condoning the delay. Though, it is apparent that the authorities had come with certain delay, in certain matters and the writ appeals were also filed belatedly with the delay in the High Court, however, considering the provisions of the scheme and the method and manner, wrong has been committed, it has compelled us not only to condone the delay but also to act in the matter so as to preserve the sanctity of the legal process and decision of this Court in Offshore Holdings [Offshore 20 Holdings (P) Ltd. v. BDA, (2011) 3 SCC 139: (2011) 1 SCC (Civ) 662]. 25. We, therefore, direct the State Government as well as the BDA to proceed further to issue final notification without any further delay in the light of the observations made in the order. The impugned orders passed by the Single Judge and the Division Bench are hereby quashed and set aside. The scheme and notification under Section 17 of the BDA Act are hereby upheld with the aforesaid directions. 26. As noticed above, the Land Acquisition Officer proposed exclusion of 251 acres of land from acquisition on being asked by the Government after the preliminary notification was issued. The Land Acquisition Officer, has considered another 498 acres of land to be excluded from being acquired. In connection to this, several questions were raised in the Karnataka Legislative Assembly, as a result of which two inquiries were ordered by the State Government i.e. on 24-11- 2012 and 19-1-2013. However, result of the inquiry is not forthcoming. Further, it appears that the exclusion of the lands from acquisition was proposed in connivance with influential persons; political or otherwise. We are of the view that the BDA and the State Government have to proceed with the acquisition of these lands. We are also of the view that it is just and proper to hold an inquiry for fixing the responsibility on the officials of the BDA and the State Government for trying to exclude these lands from acquisition. 27. Therefore, we appoint Hon'ble Mr Justice K.N. Keshavanarayana, former Judge of the Karnataka High Court as the inquiry officer for fixing the responsibility on the officials of the BDA and the State Government who were responsible for the aforesaid. The Commissioner, BDA is hereby directed to consult the inquiry officer and pay his remuneration. Further, we direct BDA to provide appropriate secretarial assistance and logistical support to the inquiry officer for holding the inquiry. In addition, we authorise the inquiry officer to appoint requisite staff on temporary basis to assist him in the inquiry and to fix their salaries. Further, the BDA is directed to pay their salaries. The State Government and the BDA are directed to produce the files/documents in relation to the aforesaid lands before the inquiry officer within a period of four weeks from today. We 21 request the inquiry officer to submit his report to this Court as expeditiously as possible. 28. The State Government and the BDA are further directed to proceed with the acquisition of the aforementioned lands without excluding land from acquisition and submit a report to this Court the steps taken by them in this regard within a period of three months from today." The Apex Court, on the reasons so rendered, directs the State Government and the BDA to proceed with the acquisition for formation of layout without excluding any land from acquisition and submit a report to the Apex Court the steps taken towards the said acquisition. It directed completion within 3 months. 10. The entire fulcrum of the present lis revolves round on the aforesaid two dates - one the date of issuance of the preliminary notification on 30-12-2008 and the date of issuance of final notification on 30-10-2018. Instances that had happened during the 10 years period is what is required to be noticed and considered. 11. As earlier delineated, the preliminary notification comes to be issued on 30-12-2008. The subject land did form part of the 22 lands notified for acquisition, is an admitted fact. Notwithstanding the same, the petitioner fully cognizant of acquisition process, nevertheless, enters into two agreements of sale with the 3rd and 4th respondents, the owner of the respective properties. The agreements of sale encompassed two parcels of land, for a total consideration of ₹1,18,80,000/- and towards which an advance of ₹40,00,000/- was paid. The agreement of sale reads as follows: "AGREEMENT TO SELL This agreement to sell is made and executed on this the FIFTH day of JANUARY, TWO THOUSAND AND TWELVE (05.01.2012) at BANGALORE, By: Sri C.Shivaraju, Aged 41 years, S/o late Sri ChikkaMininagappa, residing at No.31, 2nd Main Road, Marenahalli, Vijayanagar, Bangalore-560050. (Hereinafter referred to as the SELLER which expression shall unless repugnant to the context or is specifically excluded by, mean & include his legal heirs, successors in interest, nominees, executors and assigns) ON THE ONE PART TO AND IN FAVOUR OF: 1. Sri Syed Ismail, Aged 29 years, S/o Sri Syed Ibrahim. 2. Sri Syed Sajid Ahmed, Aged 37 years, S/o Sri Syed Abdul Sattar. Both carrying on business at Door No.437/B, Flat-E, 23 opp: HBR Lay-out BDA Complex, 5th Cross, 2nd Block, HBR Lay-out, Bangalore - 560 043. (Hereinafter referred to collectively as the PURCHASERS which expression shall unless repugnant to the context or is specifically excluded by, mean & include their legal Heirs, successors in interest, nominees, executors and assigns) ON THE OTHER PART, WITNESSETH AS FOLLOWS: WHEREAS: The Seller is the sole and absolute owner of agricultural dry lands measuring in all 1(one) acre and 6 (six) guntas of agricultural dry land bearing Sy.No.42/3, situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk (Hereinafter referred to as the SCHEDULE A PROPERTY and described in greater detail in the schedule appended hereunder). The seller had purchased the schedule property from its previous owner under a Deed of sale dated 17-02-2005, registered as Document No.YAN-1-23751/2004-05 in the office of the Sub- Registrar, Yelahanka, Bangalore. AND, the seller is also the sole and absolute owner of agricultural dry lands measuring in all 20 (twenty) guntas of agricultural dry lands bearing Sy.No.42/2, situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk (Hereinafter referred to as the SCHEDULE B PROPERTY and described in greater detail in the schedule appended hereunder). The seller had purchased the schedule property from its previous owner under a Deed of sale dated 22-09-2005 registered as Document No.YAN-1-06564/05-06, in the office of the Sub-Registrar, Yelahanka, Bangalore. AND WHEREAS, the seller now with an intent to acquire other agricultural lands has offered the schedule A & B property for sale and the purchasers after negotiations has accepted the offer of the seller and has agreed to purchase the schedule A & B property on the following terms and conditions: NOW THIS AGREEMENT WITNESSETH AS FOLLOWS: 24 1. The sale consideration fixed for the schedule A & B property is at the rate of ₹1.80,000/- (Rs. One lakh eighty thousands only) per gunta. The schedule A & B property measure in all 1 (one) acre and twenty-six (twenty-six) guntas i.e., 66 (sixty-six) guntas in all. Thus, the total agreed sale consideration is ₹1,18,80,000/- (₹one crore eighteen lakhs eighty thousand only). 2. Upon execution of this agreement, the purchaser has paid the seller an advance amount of ₹40,00,000/- (₹Forty lakhs only) in the following manner: (i) ₹10,00,000/- (Rs.ten lakhs only) by way of cheque No.024978 dated 15-01-2012, ₹7,50,000/- (₹ seven lakhs fifty thousand only) by cheque No.024941 dated 31-01-2012, ₹7,50,000/- (₹seven lakhs fifty thousand only) by cheque No.024942 dated 31-01-2012, all cheques drawn on Axis Bank Limited, Bangalore. (ii) ₹15,00,000/- (₹ Fifteen lakhs only) in cash. RECEIPT of which sums, the seller acknowledges. 3. The Purchaser covenants to pay the seller the balance of the agreed sale consideration of ₹ 78,80,000/- (₹ Seventy- eight lakhs eighty thousand only) on or before 180 (one hundred and eighty) days from the date of this agreement. And upon receipt of the aforesaid sum, the seller covenant to come forward in person and without protest, demur or demand, cause execution of an absolute Deed of Sale of the Schedule A & B property, in favour of the purchaser and/or in favour of the nominee/s of the purchaser. 4. The seller assures the purchaser that the schedule A & B property is free of all charges, liens or mortgages. The Schedule A & B property is not the subject matter of any agreement to sell. The schedule A and B property is self- acquired and the seller alone has the absolute right, to sell the schedule A and B property to any person of his choice. 5. The seller covenants to pay all charges, demands, taxes, levies, penalties and fines concerning the Schedule A & B 25 property, until registration of the A & B schedule property in favour of the purchaser. 6. Both parties herein shall be entitled to seek specific performance of this agreement. SCHEDULE A PROPERTY All that piece and parcel of the agricultural dry lands bearing Sy. No.42/3, measuring 1 (one) acre and 6(six) guntas and situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk. The property is bounded as follows: East by: Lands belonging to Sri Siddappa West by: Lands bearing Sy.No.42/2 North by: Lands belonging to Sri Venkatesh South by: Guni Agrahara Gadi. SCHEDULE 'B' PROPERTY All that piece and parcel of the agricultural dry lands bearing Sy. No.42/2, measuring 20 (twenty) guntas and situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk. The property is bounded as follows: East by: Lands belonging to seller herein West by: Lands belonging to Sri Hanumanthappa North by: Lands belonging to Sriyuths Venkatesh & Narayanaswamy South by: Guni Agrahara Gadi. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties herein have set their hands to this agreement, on this the day, month and year hereinabove written, in the presence of the following witnesses:" In terms of the clauses in the agreement, the petitioner who is the agreement holder had to pay balance sale consideration of 26 ₹78,80,000/- within six months. Since the agreement holder failed to pay the balance amount within the stipulated period, the 3rd respondent is said to have caused legal notices seeking cancellation of the agreement dated 05-01-2012 and forfeiture of the advance amount. Two legal notices were caused identically worded. A few paragraphs of the legal notice caused on the petitioner become necessary to be noticed. It reads as follows: ".... .... .... 3. But, inspite of repeated requests and demands made by my client both of you have not come forward to finalize the sale transaction within the stipulated time and even thereafter and thus both of you have totally failed and neglected to perform your part of contract under the sale agreement and rendered yourself liable for cancellation of the sale agreement and forfeiting the advance amount. My client could not purchase the properties he desired and thus he suffered heavy financial loss and because of your non-performance of contract within time and the prices of the properties are increasing day by day in the vicinity. Hence, this notice. Both of you are jointly and severally called upon to take notice that the sale agreement dated 5-01-2012 in respect of the schedule properties entered into between both of you and my client is stands cancelled due to your non-performance of the contract within the stipulated time as also thereafter in spite of several opportunities provided to you both and thus the advance amount has been forfeited. Both of you shall cease to have no manner of right, interest or claim whatsoever as against my client as also the schedule properties from hereafter. My client will be at full liberty to transact with the schedule properties in any manner he likes. 27 Charges of this notice ₹5,000/- payable to my client. SCHEDULE 'A' PROPERTY All that piece and parcel of the agricultural dry land bearing Sy. No.42/3, measuring 1 acre and 6 guntas situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk, bounded on: East by: Lands belonging to Sri Siddappa West by: Lands bearing Sy.No.42/2 North by: Lands belonging to Sri Venkatesh South by: Guni Agrahara Gadi. SCHEDULE 'B' PROPERTY All that piece and parcel of the agricultural dry land bearing Sy. No.42/2, measuring 20 guntas, situated in Meda Agrahara, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk, bounded on: East by: Lands belonging to my client West by: Lands belonging to Sri Hanumanthappa North by: Lands belonging to Sri Venkatesh & Narayanaswamy South by: Guni Agrahara Gadi." (Emphasis added) The legal notice mentions both 3rd and 4th respondents, this is said to have received by the petitioner as evidenced by the acknowledgment of registered post, which is appended to the objections. The agreement is said to have been cancelled later and the petitioner takes back the advance amount so paid. The 28 cancellation agreement insofar as the 4th respondent is concerned, is drawn on 05-07-2012. It reads as follows: "CANCELLATION AGREEMENT THIS CANCELLATION AGREEMENT is made and executed on this the Fifth day of July, Two Thousand Twelve (5-07-2012) at Bengaluru by and between: Sri Syed Sajid Ahmed, S/o Mr.Syed Abdul Sattar, Aged about 37 years, No.437/B, Flat 'E' Opp: BDA Complex, 5th Cross, 2nd Block, HBR Lay-out, Bengaluru-560 043. Hereinafter referred to as the PURCHASER on the one part AND: Sri Hanumanthappa S/o late Muni Nagappa, aged about 57 years, No.17/8, 1st Main Marenahalli, Vijayanagar, Bengaluru - 560 040. Hereinafter referred to as the VENDOR on the other Part WITNESSETH AS FOLLOWS: WHEREAS, by virtue of an agreement dated 2-01-2012 and 5-01-2012 the Purchaser along with one Mr. Syed Ismail had entered into a contract of sale with the Vendor agreeing to purchase the land measuring 1 acre 7 guntas in Sy.No.42/4 and land measuring 31 guntas in Sy.No.42/2 of Meda Agrahara Village, Yelahanka Hobli, Bengaluru North Taluk, which is more fully described in the schedule hereunder and hereinafter referred to as the Schedule property in this cancellation agreement, whereupon the purchaser had agreed to purchase 29 the schedule property for the total sale consideration and price of ₹1,43,75,000/- in furtherance of which the sum of ₹25,00,000/- had been paid by the purchaser to the vendor. WHEREAS, due to certain unavoidable circumstances, differences crept between the purchaser and Mr. Syed Ismail whereupon they could not arrange the balance sale consideration amount and agreed to cancel the sale agreement for the latches on their part and whereas, the Purchaser has put forth his proposal with the vendor regarding his intention of cancellation of the agreement for which the vendor had also agreed in furtherance of which this agreement of cancellation is executed on the following TREMS AND CONDITIONS: 1. The agreement dated 2-01-2012 and 5-01-2012 entered into between the vendor and the purchaser in respect of the schedule property stand cancelled, revoked and rescinded with immediate effect. 2. The contract to purchase the schedule property jointly by the purchaser and Mr. Syed Ismail shall get terminated and rescinded automatically in view of their failure to pay the balance sale consideration amount to the vendor who was ready and willing to execute the sale deed against the receipt of the balance sale consideration amount from them. 3. The purchaser has received 50% of the consideration amount paid to the vendor under the contract of sale dated 5-1-2012 and the purchaser hereby acknowledges the receipt of ₹12,50,000/- from the vendor by cash on this day. 4. The purchaser shall not have any claim whatsoever against the vendor or against the schedule property henceforth under any circumstances. 5. It is specifically agreed between the parties that the balance sum of ₹12,50,000/- shall be refunded by the purchaser to Mr. Syed Ismail against handing over of the original agreement of sale dated 5-1-2012 and 5-01- 2012. 30 SCHEDULE All that piece and parcel of the land measuring 1 acre 07 guntas in Sy.No.42/4 and land measuring 31 guntas in Sy.No.42/2 of Meda Agrahara Village, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk, Bengaluru. IN WITNESS WHEREOF, both the parties have signed this cancellation agreement on the day month and year first above mentioned in the presence of the undersigned attesting witnesses. WITNESSES: Sd/- PURCHASER 1. Sd/- Sd/- VENDOR 2. Sd/-" The receipt evidencing taking back of the advance amount reads as follows: "RECEIPT Received the sum of ₹20,00,000/- (Rupees twenty lakhs only) from C.Shivaraju, S/o late Chikka Muninagappa, No.31, 2nd main, Marenahalli, Vijayanagar, Bangalore-40 on this the Fifth Day of July Two Thousand Twelve (5-07-2012) at Bangalore through cash of ₹3.5 lakhs and the remaining sum of ₹16.5 lakhs through cheques in lieu of the cancellation of the agreement of sale dated 5-01-2012 entered into between us along with Mr. Syed Ismail as the first purchaser in respect of lands measuring 1 acre 26 guntas in Survey No.42/3 and 42/2 of Meda Agrahara Village, Yelahanka Hobli, Bangalore North Taluk as refund of the full consideration amount paid by me to him under the same Witnesses: Sd/- Syed Sajid Ahmed, Executant 1.Sd/- S/o Syed Abdul Sattar, 2.Sd/- Aged 37 years, #408, 14th Cross, Fathima Lay-out, 31 Gavindapura, Bangalore-45" (Emphasis added) This is sometime after causing of the legal notice. 12. Shortly thereafter, the petitioner institutes a suit in O.S.No.1552 of 2012 before the concerned Court initially seeking the relief of injunction, and subsequently amending the plaint prayer by seeking the relief of specific performance. Some clauses in the amended plaint read as follows: ".... .... .... 9. That the cause of action for the suit arose on when the plaintiff and defendant have entered into agreement of sale dated 5-01-2012 and on 30-10-2012 when the defendant along with third parties had come near the suit schedule properties and was negotiating to alienate the suit schedule properties and when the plaintiff requested the defendant not to do so as he has already entered agreement with him and go on with transaction with plaintiff and when the defendant refused to do so and subsequently, within the jurisdiction of this Hon'ble Court. 10. That the Plaintiffs have not filed any other suit against the Defendants on the same cause of action nor has any such suit been turned down by any Court, and the said suit is filed within time. 11. That the fixed court fee as contemplated under the Karnataka Court Fee and Suits Valuation Act is paid hereon. Separate Valuation slip is annexed. 32 12. No legal proceedings/court litigation past/present is pending with regard to any part of the subject matter of this suit. WHEREFORE, the plaintiff respectfully prays that this Hon'ble Court be pleased to pass a judgment and decree against the defendant: (a)(i) That the defendant transfer the suit schedule properties to the plaintiff by duly executing and registering a sale deed in terms of the Agreement to Sell dated 05.01.2015 by receiving the balance sale consideration or in the alternative direct the defendant to pay to the plaintiff a sum of ₹45,00,000/- together with interest at the rate of 18% per cent per annum calculated from 06-01-2015. ... ... ..." Issues were framed in the said suit on 17-01-2014. The petitioner is said to have filed an application under Order 6 Rule 17 CPC in O.S.No.1552 of 2012 which comes to be dismissed on 28-06-2017. After all this, comes the final notification in terms of the directions of the Apex Court on 30-10-2018. The petitioner wakes up and takes two steps - one submitting plethora of representations to the BDA seeking compensation and the other challenging the order dated 28-06-2017 passed by the civil Court rejecting the application for amendment of plaint under Order 6 Rule 17 CPC. On the strength of the agreement the petitioner is now wanting to take the 33 compensation that the land owner is at all times entitled. Whether this would be permissible in law is what is required to be noticed. 13. The agreement of sale that underpins the petitioner claim is, notably unregistered. The unregistered agreement is said to have been cancelled by another unregistered document. Therefore, cancellation, too, is cloaked in the same infirmity. Therefore, if the agreement gives the petitioner some right, its cancellation has taken away the said right. Both are unregistered documents. What is the purport of unregistered agreement of sale need not detain this Court for long or delve deep into the matter. The Apex Court in the case of MAHNOOR FATIMA IMRAN v. VISWESWARA INFRASTRUCTURE PRIVATE LIMITED2, has held as follows: ".... .... .... 15. The respondents herein who were the writ petitioners have emphasised their claims on the basis of the decision in Suraj Lamp & Industries Pvt. Ltd. v. State of Haryana. The said decision has been cited to argue that the title deeds; registered instruments of conveyance, are to be deemed valid unless set aside or declared void by a Civil Court of competent jurisdiction. There is no such dictum in the said decision wherein a Division Bench of 2 2025 SCC OnLine SC 1062 34 this Court was concerned with conveyances made on the strength of agreements of sale, General Power of Attorney and Wills. The issue addressed was avoidance of execution and registration of deed of conveyances as a mode of transfer of a free hold immovable property, especially in the teeth of Section 17 and Section 49 of the Registration Act. The tendency to adopt Power of Attorney sales along with execution of sale agreements and a bequeath by way of will, instead of execution and registration of proper deeds of conveyance on receipt of full consideration was deprecated. We extract paragraphs 15 to 17 of an earlier order dated 15.05.2009 in the said case, extracted as such in para 15 of the aforesaid decision: "15. The Registration Act, 1908 was enacted with the intention of providing orderliness, discipline and public notice in regard to transactions relating to immovable property and protection from fraud and forgery of documents of transfer. This is achieved by requiring compulsory registration of certain types of documents and providing for consequences of non-registration. 16. Section 17 of the Registration Act clearly provides that any document (other than testamentary instruments) which purports or operates to create, declare, assign, limit or extinguish whether in present or in future 'any right, title or interest' whether vested or contingent of the value of Rs. 100 and upward to or in immovable property. 17. Section 49 of the said Act provides that no document required by Section 17 to be registered shall, affect any immovable property comprised therein or received as evidence of any transaction affecting such property, unless it has been registered. Registration of a document gives notice to the world that such a document has been executed." 16. The observation that registration of a document gives notice to the world that such a document has been executed is not to confer an unimpeachable validity on all such registered documents. Even the respondents/writ petitioners accept that the presumption coming forth from a registered deed of conveyance is rebuttable. While reserving the right of persons who had obtained sale agreement/general power of attorney/will 35 executed, to complete confirmation of title on them by getting registered deeds of conveyance, the conclusion of the cited decision, which acts as a binding precedent, is available in para 24, which we extract hereunder:-- "24. We therefore reiterate that immovable property can be legally and lawfully transferred/conveyed only by a registered deed of conveyance. Transactions of the nature of "GPA sales" or "SA/GPA/will transfers" do not convey title and do not amount to transfer, nor can they be recognised or valid mode of transfer of immovable property. The courts will not treat such transactions as completed or concluded transfers or as conveyances as they neither convey title nor create any interest in an immovable property. They cannot be recognised as deeds of title, except to the limited extent of Section 53-A of the TP Act. Such transactions cannot be relied upon or made the basis for mutations in municipal or revenue records. What is stated above will apply not only to deeds of conveyance in regard to freehold property but also to transfer of leasehold property. A lease can be validly transferred only under a registered assignment of lease. It is time that an end is put to the pernicious practice of SA/GPA/will transactions known as GPA sales." 17. It is in this context that we must examine the document of 19.03.1982, an agreement which is said to have been validated in the year 2006. We immediately notice that the very contention of the writ petitioners is only that they have obtained proper conveyances by registered sale deeds from Bhavana society, whose claim is under the agreement of 1982, which has not till date been registered and hence cannot be recognized as a valid mode or instrument of transfer of immovable property, going by the above decision. ... ... ... 22. Further, an instrument of conveyance is compulsorily registrable as required under the Registration Act. Section 23 prescribes four-months' time for presenting a document for registration from the date of its execution. Section 24 provides that if there are several persons executing a document at different times, such document may be presented for registration or re- registration within four months from the date of such 36 execution. In the instant case, all the executants, parties to the agreement, have signed on the day shown in the agreement. The proviso to Section 34 also enables the Registrar to condone the delay, if the document is presented within a further period of four months, on payment of a fine. The validation of the sale agreement, which clearly is shown to be not one executed by the declarants, by reason of it materially differing from that produced as Annexure P-33, on the strength of which a suit for specific performance was filed by the vendor, the Bhavana Society, which is also the intended purchaser in the sale agreement of 1982, it smacks of fraud. The agreement of 1982, the original one and the revalidated one, cannot result in a valid title, merely for reason that the subsequent instrument had been registered. As we noticed at the outset, the learned Single Judge did not decide the title but only raised valid suspicion insofar as the title of the vendor in the deed of conveyance. Even according to the writ petitioners, their claim stems from a sale agreement, which is not a proper deed of conveyance, especially since it is not a registered document. 23. The Division Bench has found possession on the appellants and the writ petitioners by virtue of two interim orders passed by Co-ordinate Benches of the High Court. The first one is in W.P. No. 29547 of 2011, wherein the Lok Ayukta was directed not to pass any further orders but the State Government and the APIIC Ltd. were not restrained from taking any action in accordance with law. The interim order in W.P. No. 4466 of 2012 also does not establish possession on the writ petitioners. Undoubtedly, the 53 acres would be comprised in the 99.07 acres alleged to have been resumed to the possession of the original declarants through their GPA, but there is nothing on record indicating the possession, either of the respondents/writ petitioners or the appellants/respondents in the writ petition." (Emphasis supplied) 37 Therefore, nothing flows to the hands of the petitioner unless there is a determination by any Court of law, with regard to his rights qua the agreement of sale. 14. What happens in the civil suits so instituted later, also requires to be noticed. As observed hereinabove, the petitioner had preferred Writ Petitions challenging the order rejecting the application for amendment under Order VI Rule 17 of the CPC. Those were allowed and the amendment was permitted. Pursuant thereto, the amendment was carried out on 12-04-2023. In the light of the amendment, the pecuniary jurisdiction of the concerned Court was lost. Therefore, the concerned Court directed return of the plaint for representing it before the Court having jurisdiction. The said order reads as follows: "This order is arises out of the memo for transfer filed by the counsel for the plaintiff on 01.07.2023 as this court having no pecuniary jurisdiction to try this suit. 2.Heard. 3. Originally the Plaintiff has filed the present suit for permanent injunction with respect of suit schedule property. In view of the amendment order 12.04.2023 passed by the Hon'ble High Court of Karnataka in W.P. No.50995/2019, the nature of the suit was changed and prayer of specific performance of 38 contract was inserted. After filing of amended plaint the plaintiff has filed the fresh valuation slip of the suit schedule property on 01.07.2023 and stated that for the purpose of pecuniary jurisdiction suit schedule property is valued at Rs.1,18,80,000/. 4. The Plaintiff has valued the suit schedule property for the purpose of pecuniary jurisdiction at Rs.1,18,80,000/ As per Section 17 of the Karnataka Civil Code Act, the jurisdiction of a court of a Civil Judge, shall extend to all original suits and proceedings of a Civil nature not otherwise excluded from the Civil Judge, Jurisdiction of which the amount or value of the subject matter does not exceed five lakhs rupees. The suit of the plaintiff is valued more than pecuniary jurisdiction of this court. The Plaintiff has filed this suit before this court, but the jurisdiction of this court is taken away for trying the present suit by the said provisions. The only recourse is to return the plaint under order VII Rule 10 of the Code of Civil Procedure, directing the plaintiff to present the plaint before the Senior Civil Judge, Court, Bengaluru Rural District. 5. Hence, the plaint shall be returned to the plaintiff by directing him to present before the Senior Civil Judge Court, Bengaluru Rural District, Bengaluru. Hence, the following; ORDER
Acting under order VII Rule 10 of Code of Civil
Procedure plaint presented by the plaintiff is hereby
returned for presentation before the Hon’ble Senior Civil
Judge Court, Bengaluru Rural Distinct, Bengaluru.
The plaintiff shall present the plaint before the
Hon’ble Senior Civil Judge Court, Bengaluru Rural
Distinct, Bengaluru on or before 14.08.2023.
Office is directed to close the case in the concerned
register.
Office is directed to return the plaint by taking
acknowledgement receipt of return of plaint in the
concerned register immediately.
Sd/-I Addl. Civil Judge,
39
Bengaluru Rural District,
Bengaluru.”
(Emphasis added)
The order is dated 14-07-2023. The concerned Court directed that
the plaintiff should present the plaint before the appropriate Court
on or before 14-08-2023. We are now close to 14-08-2025. Even
as on date, the plaint is not represented. Therefore, as on date,
there is no imaginary right even to the petitioner to claim
compensation, or part of compensation or even reference under
Section 18 of the Land Acquisition Act for determination of
compensation, as the right of the petitioner is inchoate and
presently is still born.
15. Reliance placed by the learned senior counsel for the
petitioner on the afore-quoted judgments is of no avail, as they are
distinguishable with the facts obtained in the case at hand without
much ado. The facts obtaining in the cases before the Apex Court
were that a suit for specific performance was pending on an
agreement of sale that was subsisting. In the case at hand, the
agreement of sale is long cancelled and the petitioner has taken
40
back the amount as well. As observed, the agreement of sale is an
unregistered document; so is the cancellation agreement. All these
factors which are noticed hereinabove are not divulged in the
petition. They are borne out in the statement of objections. The
petition stops at the institution of the suit and nothing beyond it.
Therefore, the petitioner is also guilty of suppression of material
facts and seeking a writ from the hands of this Court in a petition
presented by him with soiled hands.
16. In the crucible of the aforesaid facts and settled
principles, the petitioner does not become entitled to any relief at
the hands of this Court. No right is accrued in favour of the
petitioner to now contend that he is entitled to the compensation
for acquisition of the land belonging to the private respondents. His
reliance placed on precedents where subsisting agreements were
backed by pending civil proceedings, is wholly misplaced, for in the
present case, the agreement stands annulled qua 4th respondent,
consideration refunded qua 3rd respondent and civil litigation
abandoned mid-course.
41
17. Therefore, finding no merit in the petition, the petition
stands rejected. Interim order if any, subsisting, shall stand
dissolved.
It is made clear that the observations made in the course of
the order is only to consider the case of the petitioner qua the
prayer projected before this Court. It cannot influence or bind any
pending civil litigation between the parties.
Consequently, I.A.No.2 of 2025 also stands disposed.
Sd/-
(M.NAGAPRASANNA)
JUDGE
bkp
CT:MJ