[ecis2016.org] The Supreme Court has set aside two orders of the Haryana government, regarding the acquisition of 912 acres from three villages of Gurugram district, for setting up the Chaudhari Devi Lal Industrial Township
The Supreme Court, on March 12, 2018, set aside two orders of the erstwhile Bhupinder Singh Hooda government in connection with land acquisitions in adjoining areas of Gurugram in Haryana, terming the decisions as ‘nothing but fraud on power’. The apex court verdict came on a plea, which related to the land acquisition done by the Haryana government by its August 27, 2004 notification, for acquiring lands measuring about 912 acres from three villages, namely, Manesar, Lakhnoula and Naurangpur of Gurugram district, for setting up the Chaudhari Devi Lal Industrial Township.
You are reading: Land acquisition: SC sets aside two decisions of Haryana government
On February 26, 2005, 224 acres of land was released from acquisition by the government but builders approached the farmers for purchase of their land at throwaway prices. Just two days before the pronouncement of award for the land acquired by the government, on August 26, 2007, an order was passed on August 24, 2007, dropping the acquisition. The builders who had purchased the land from the farmers, later approached the government for licence to build housing societies and they were subsequently, granted the approvals.
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A bench of justices Adarsh Kumar Goel and UU Lalit, said two decisions taken on August 24, 2007 and January 29, 2010, with regard to dropping of acquisition and closing of proceedings, respectively, were taken to ‘confer advantages and benefits upon the builders/private entities rather than to carry out or effectuate public purpose’. “The record indicates that various entities including certain ‘middlemen’ cornered unnatural gains and walked away with huge profits, taking the entire process of acquisition for a ride. Substantial sums have exchanged hands in the form of settlement money,” justice Lalit, who penned down a 97-page verdict for the bench, said.
The bench said all the steps and stages show that builders and private entities were well aware that acquisition would not go through but the landholders were confronted with a ‘smoke screen’ of acquisition and were cornered and persuaded in entering into transactions with the builders and private entities. “The transactions so entered into between the landholders and the concerned builders/ private entities, could not be said to be voluntary and free from any influence. The unnatural and unreasonable bargain was forced upon the landholders, by creating façade of impending acquisition,” it said.
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The top court said that the public interest was not the underlying concern or objective behind those decisions dated August 24, 2007 and January 29, 2010 but the motive was to confer undue advantage on the builders/private entities. “It is clear that considerations other than those which were required to be bestowed, guided the exercise of power in arriving at decisions dated August 24, 2007 and January 29, 2010. The inescapable conclusion, therefore, is that there was an unholy nexus between the government machinery and the builders/private entities in devising a modality to deprive the innocent and gullible landholders of their holdings and jeopardise public interest, which the acquisition was intended to achieve,” it said.
The court said that the decisions dated August 24, 2007 and January 29, 2010, as well as entertaining of applications for grant of licence for building housing societies from those who had bought the lands after the acquisition was initiated, were not bonafide exercise of power by the state machinery. “The exercise of power under the Act was guided by considerations extraneous to the provisions of the Act and as a matter of fact, was designed to enrich the builders/private entities. These decisions were nothing but fraud on power,” it said.
The bench said wherever there has been fraud on power, the duty of the court was not only to set aside such exercise of power but to see that there was no unjust enrichment directly or indirectly, as a result thereof and there was full and substantial restoration. The apex court passed a slew of directions, granting relief to the farmers whose land were acquired and later taken by the builders.
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