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Sunday, September 28, 2014

Sec.138 N.I.Act - Sec.147 of N.I.Act - compromise before Lokadalat - in compromises court has got jurisdiction to relax the guidelines mentioned in Damodar S. Prabhu case in suitable cases - rejected as 15% costs not deposited as per Apex court judgement held in Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H., (2010) 5 SCC 663 - High court confirmed the same - Apex court held that since Section 147 of the Act did not carry any guidance on how to proceed with compounding of the offences under the Act and Section 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 could not be followed in strict sense in respect of offences pertaining to Section 138 of the Act, there was a legislative vacuum which prompted the Court to frame those guidelines to achieve the following objectives: (i) to discourage litigants from unduly delaying the composition of offences in cases involving Section 138 of the Act; (ii) it would result in encouraging compounding at an early stage of litigation saving valuable time of the Court which is spent on the trial of such cases; and (iii) even though imposition of costs by the competent Court is a matter of discretion, the scale of cost had been suggested to attain uniformity. At the same time, the Court also made it abundantly clear that the concerned Court would be at liberty to reduce the costs with regard to specific facts and circumstances of a case, while recording reasons in writing for such variance.What follows from the above is that normally costs as specified in the guidelines laid down in the said judgment has to be imposed on the accused persons while permitting compounding. There can be departure therefrom in a particular case, for good reasons to be recorded in writing by the concerned Court. It is for this reason that the Court mentioned three objectives which were sought to be achieved by framing those guidelines, as taken note of above. It is thus manifestly the framing of “Guidelines” in this judgment was also to achieve a particular public purpose. Here comes the issue for consideration as to whether these guidelines are to be given a go by when a case is decided/settled in the Lok Adalat? Our answer is that it may not be necessarily so and a proper balance can be struck taking care of both the situations. Having regard thereto, we are of the opinion that even when a case is decided in Lok Adalat, the requirement of following the guidelines contained in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) should normally not be dispensed with. However, if there is a special/specific reason to deviate therefrom, the Court is not remediless as Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) itself has given discretion to the concerned Court to reduce the costs with regard to specific facts and circumstances of the case, while recording reasons in writing about such variance. Therefore, in those matters where the case has to be decided/settled in the Lok Adalat, if the Court finds that it is a result of positive attitude of the parties, in such appropriate cases, the Court can always reduce the costs by imposing minimal costs or even waive the same. For that, it would be for the parties, particularly the accused person, to make out a plausible case for the waiver/reduction of costs and to convince the concerned Court about the same. This course ofaction, according to us, would strike a balance between the two competing but equally important interests, namely, achieving the objectives delineated in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) on the one hand and the public interest which is sought to be achieved by encouraging settlements/resolution of case through Lok Adalats. = CIVIL APPEAL NO. 8614 OF 2014 (arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 38519 of 2012) |MADHYA PRADESH STATE LEGAL | | |SERVICES AUTHORITY |.....APPELLANT(S) | |VERSUS | | |PRATEEK JAIN & ANR. |.....RESPONDENT(S) = 2014 - Sept. Month - http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41902

   Sec.138 N.I.Act - Sec.147 of N.I.Act - compromise before Lokadalat - in compromises court has got jurisdiction to relax the guidelines mentioned in Damodar S. Prabhu case in suitable cases -  rejected as 15% costs not deposited as per Apex court judgement held in Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H., (2010) 5 SCC  663 - High court confirmed the same - Apex court held that since Section 147 of the Act  did not carry any guidance on how to proceed with compounding  of  the  offences under the Act and  Section 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973  could not be followed in strict  sense  in  respect  of  offences   pertaining  to Section 138 of the Act, there was a legislative vacuum  which  prompted  the Court to frame those guidelines to achieve the following objectives:
(i)   to discourage  litigants  from  unduly  delaying  the  composition  of
offences in cases involving Section 138 of the Act;
(ii)  it would result in  encouraging  compounding  at  an  early  stage  of
litigation saving valuable time of the Court which is spent on the trial  of
such cases; and
(iii) even though imposition of costs by the competent Court is a matter  of
discretion, the scale of cost had been suggested to attain uniformity.
            At the same time, the Court also made it abundantly  clear  that the concerned Court would be at liberty to reduce the costs with  regard  to specific facts and circumstances of  a  case,  while  recording  reasons  in writing for such variance.What follows from the above is that  normally  costs  as  specified  in  the guidelines laid down in the said judgment has to be imposed on  the  accused persons while permitting compounding.   There can be departure  therefrom  in
a particular case, for good  reasons  to  be  recorded  in  writing  by  the concerned Court.  
It is for this  reason  that  the  Court  mentioned  three objectives which were sought to be achieved by framing those guidelines,  as taken note of above.   It is thus manifestly the framing of  “Guidelines”  in this judgment was also to achieve a particular public purpose.   
Here  comes the issue for consideration as to whether these guidelines are to  be  given
a go by when a case is decided/settled in the  Lok  Adalat?  Our  answer  is that it may not be necessarily so and a proper balance can be struck  taking care of both the situations. Having regard thereto, we are of the  opinion  that  even  when  a  case  is decided  in  Lok  Adalat,  the  requirement  of  following  the   guidelines contained in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  should  normally  not  be  dispensed with.  However, if there is a special/specific reason to deviate  therefrom, the Court is not remediless as Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  itself  has  given discretion to the concerned  Court  to  reduce  the  costs  with  regard  to specific facts and circumstances of the case,  while  recording  reasons  in writing about such variance.   Therefore, in those  matters  where  the  case has to be decided/settled in the Lok Adalat, if the Court finds that  it  is a result of positive attitude of the parties,  in  such  appropriate  cases, the Court can always reduce the costs by  imposing  minimal  costs  or  even waive the same.  For that, it would be for  the  parties,  particularly  the accused person, to make out a plausible case  for  the  waiver/reduction  of
costs and to convince the concerned Court about the same.   This  course  ofaction, according to us, would strike a balance between  the  two  competing but  equally  important  interests,   namely,   achieving   the   objectives delineated in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) on  the  one  hand  and  the  public interest   which   is    sought    to    be    achieved    by    encouraging settlements/resolution of case through Lok Adalats. =

 Essentially the lis  was  between  respondent  Nos.  1  and  2.
Respondent No.1 had filed a complaint under Section 138  of  the  Negotiable
Instruments Act,  1881  (hereinafter  referred  to  as  the  'Act')  against
respondent No.2.  
Matter reached before the Additional Sessions  Judge  in
the form of criminal appeal.  During the pendency of the  said  appeal,  the
matter was settled between the parties.
On their  application,  the  matter was referred to Mega Lok Adalat.
However, the concerned  Presiding  Officer
in the Lok Adalat did not give his imprimatur to the said settlement in  the
absence of deposit made as per the direction given in the  judgment of  this
Court in Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H., (2010) 5 SCC  663.
Against
the order of Additional  Sessions  Judge,  a  writ  petition  was  filed  by
respondent No.2 but the same is also dismissed by the High Court,  accepting
the view taken by the Additional Sessions Judge.=

When the matter was placed before the  Lok  Adalat,  the  Presiding  Officer
refused to act upon the settlement  recorded  between  the  parties  on  the
ground that the accused person had not deposited 15% amount  of  the  cheque
for compounding of matter at  the  appeal  stage  as  per  “The  Guidelines”
contained in the judgment of this Court in the case  of  Damodar  S.  Prabhu
(supra).  
The exact order passed is reproduced below:
“30.07.2011

The matter produced before the bench of Lok Adalat No.1.

Appellant along with Shri N.S. Yadav, Advocate.

Non-Applicant along with Shri Mohan Babu Mangal Advocate.

The instant matter is related to the appeal  filed  against  the  conviction
order passed under Section 138  of  Negotiation  (sic)  of  Instrument  Act,
wherein, both parties, being  appeared  along  with  their  counsels,  while
filing application for compromise, have requested to  mitigate  the  matter.
But, the defendant/accused has not deposited 15  percent  amount  of  cheque
for mitigation of matter at the appeal stage according to  the  guide  lines
of judgment dated 3.5.2010 passed in Criminal Appeal  No.  963/2010  in  the
matter of Damodar M. Prabhu Vs.  Sayyad  Baba  Lal  passed  by  the  Hon'ble
Supreme Court, in  the  District  Legal  Services  Authority,  due  to  said
reason, it is not lawful to grant permission of mitigation of the matter  to
both sides.  Hence, the compromise application is hereby dismissed.

The matter  be  returned  back  to  the  Regular  Court  for  abrogation  in
accordance with law.”
=

    In the opinion of the Court,
since Section 147 of the Act  did
not carry any guidance on how to proceed with compounding  of  the  offences
under the Act and
Section 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973  could
not be followed in strict  sense  in  respect  of  offences   pertaining  to
Section 138 of the Act,
there was a legislative vacuum  which  prompted  the
Court to frame those guidelines to achieve the following objectives:
(i)   to discourage  litigants  from  unduly  delaying  the  composition  of
offences in cases involving Section 138 of the Act;
(ii)  it would result in  encouraging  compounding  at  an  early  stage  of
litigation saving valuable time of the Court which is spent on the trial  of
such cases; and
(iii) even though imposition of costs by the competent Court is a matter  of
discretion, the scale of cost had been suggested to attain uniformity.
         
At the same time, the Court also made it abundantly  clear  that
the concerned Court would be at liberty to reduce the costs with  regard  to
specific facts and circumstances of  a  case,  while  recording  reasons  in
writing for such variance.

What follows from the above is that  normally  costs  as  specified  in  the
guidelines laid down in the said judgment has to be imposed on  the  accused
persons while permitting compounding.
There can be departure  therefrom  in
a particular case, for good  reasons  to  be  recorded  in  writing  by  the
concerned Court.
It is for this  reason  that  the  Court  mentioned  three
objectives which were sought to be achieved by framing those guidelines,  as
taken note of above.
It is thus manifestly the framing of  “Guidelines”  in
this judgment was also to achieve a particular public purpose.  
Here  comes
the issue for consideration as to
whether these guidelines are to  be  given
a go by when a case is decided/settled in the  Lok  Adalat?  
Our  answer  is
that it may not be necessarily so and a proper balance can be struck  taking
care of both the situations.

Having regard thereto, we are of the  opinion  that  even  when  a  case  is
decided  in  Lok  Adalat,  the  requirement  of  following  the   guidelines
contained in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  should  normally  not  be  dispensed
with.  However, if there is a special/specific reason to deviate  therefrom,
the Court is not remediless as Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  itself  has  given
discretion to the concerned  Court  to  reduce  the  costs  with  regard  to
specific facts and circumstances of the case,  while  recording  reasons  in
writing about such variance.
Therefore, in those  matters  where  the  case
has to be decided/settled in the Lok Adalat, if the Court finds that  it  is
a result of positive attitude of the parties,  in  such  appropriate  cases,
the Court can always reduce the costs by  imposing  minimal  costs  or  even
waive the same.  For that, it would be for  the  parties,  particularly  the
accused person, to make out a plausible case  for  the  waiver/reduction  of
costs and to convince the concerned Court about the same.
This  course  of
action, according to us, would strike a balance between  the  two  competing
but  equally  important  interests,   namely,   achieving   the   objectives
delineated in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) on  the  one  hand  and  the  public
interest   which   is    sought    to    be    achieved    by    encouraging
settlements/resolution of case through Lok Adalats.

Having straightened the  position  in  the  manner  above,  insofar  as  the
present case is concerned, as we find that the parties had  already  settled
the matter and the purpose of going to the Lok Adalat was  only  to  have  a
rubber stamp of the Lok Adalat in the form of its imprimatur thereto, we  do
not find any error in the impugned judgment, though we are  giving  our  own
reasons in support of the  conclusion  arrived  at  by  the  High  Court  in
dismissing the writ petition filed by respondent No.2,  while  straightening
the approach that should be  followed  henceforth  in  such  matters  coming
before the Lok Adalats.

2014 - Sept. Month - http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41902
                                                           REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                       CIVIL APPEAL NO.  8614 OF 2014
      (arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 38519 of 2012)


|MADHYA PRADESH STATE LEGAL               |                               |
|SERVICES AUTHORITY                       |.....APPELLANT(S)              |
|VERSUS                                   |                               |
|PRATEEK JAIN & ANR.                      |.....RESPONDENT(S)             |


                               J U D G M E N T


A.K. SIKRI, J.
                 Leave granted.

Madhya Pradesh State Legal Services Authority,  the  appellant  herein,  has
filed the instant appeal challenging the propriety of orders dated  February
27, 2012 passed by the High Court of Madhya Pradesh  in  Writ  Petition  No.
1519 of 2012, which was filed by one  Rakesh  Kumar  Jain  (respondent  No.2
herein) impleading  Prateek  Jain  (respondent  No.1  herein)  as  the  sole
respondent.  Essentially the lis  was  between  respondent  Nos.  1  and  2.
Respondent No.1 had filed a complaint under Section 138  of  the  Negotiable
Instruments Act,  1881  (hereinafter  referred  to  as  the  'Act')  against
respondent No.2.    Matter reached before the Additional Sessions  Judge  in
the form of criminal appeal.  During the pendency of the  said  appeal,  the
matter was settled between the parties.  On their  application,  the  matter
was referred to Mega Lok Adalat.  However, the concerned  Presiding  Officer
in the Lok Adalat did not give his imprimatur to the said settlement in  the
absence of deposit made as per the direction given in the  judgment of  this
Court in Damodar S. Prabhu v. Sayed Babalal H., (2010) 5 SCC  663.   Against
the order of Additional  Sessions  Judge,  a  writ  petition  was  filed  by
respondent No.2 but the same is also dismissed by the High Court,  accepting
the view taken by the Additional Sessions Judge.

From the aforesaid, it would be clear that the matter in issue  was  between
respondent Nos. 1 and 2.  The appellant comes in picture  only  because  the
parties had approached the Mega Lok Adalat organised by the appellant.   The
reason for filing the present appeal is the apprehension  of  the  appellant
that if the settlement arrived at in the Lok Adalats  are  not  accepted  by
the Courts, one of  the  essential  function  and  duty  of  Legal  Services
Authority  cast  upon  by  the  Legal   Services   Authorities   Act,   1987
(hereinafter referred to as the '1987  Act')  would  be  greatly  prejudiced
and, therefore, it is  necessary  to  straighten  the  law  on  the  subject
matter. Acknowledging the significance of  the  issue  involved,  permission
was granted to the appellant to file the special leave petition  and  notice
was issued in the special leave petition on December  06,  2012.   Operation
of the impugned order of the High Court was also  stayed  in  the  following
words:
“In the meantime, having regard  to  the  objects  to  be  achieved  by  the
provisions of the Legal Services Authorities Act,  1987,  the  operation  of
the order passed by the Lok  Adalat-I,  Gwalior,  Madhya  Pradesh,  on  30th
July, 2011, and that of the High Court  impugned  in  this  petition,  shall
remain stayed.”

Notice has been duly served upon both the respondents, but neither  of  them
have put in appearance.  Be that as it may, since we are concerned with  the
larger question raised in this appeal, we hard the learned counsel  for  the
appellant  in  the  absence  of  any  representation  on  the  part  of  the
respondents.

With the aforesaid gist of the controversy involved, we now proceed to  take
note of the relevant facts in some detail.

As pointed out above, there was some dispute between respondent Nos.  1  and
2.  Nature of the dispute is not reflected from  the  papers  filed  by  the
appellant.  However, since it pertains to a complaint  filed  under  Section
138 of the Act, one can safely infer that the complaint  was  filed  because
of dishonour of the cheque.  It also  appears  from  the  record  that  this
complaint was filed by respondent  No.1  against  respondent  No.2  and  had
resulted in some conviction/adverse order against  respondent  No.2,  though
exact nature of the orders passed  by  the  learned  Magistrate  is  not  on
record.  Be that as it may, respondent No.2 had  filed  the  appeal  against
the order of the Magistrate in the Court of Additional Sessions Judge.

During the pendency of this appeal, a joint application was  filed  by  both
the parties stating that a compromise had  taken  place  between  them  with
mutual consent and they have reestablished their relationship and wanted  to
maintain the same cordial relation in future as well.  On that basis it  was
stated in the application that  respondent  No.1  herein  did  not  want  to
proceed against respondent No.2 and wanted the appeal to be disposed  of  on
the basis of compromise by filing a compromise deed  in  the  appeal.   This
application  was  filed  under  Section  147  of  the  Act   which   permits
compounding of such offences.  We would like to  point  out  at  this  stage
that on what terms the parties had settled the matter is not  on  record  as
compromise deed has not been filed.

When this application came up for  hearing  on  July  30,  2011  before  the
learned appellate Court, counsel for both the  parties  requested  that  the
matter be forwarded to the Mega Lok Adalat which was being organized on  the
same date.  On this application, following order was passed by  the  learned
Additional Sessions Judge:
“30.07.2011

            xx         xx         xx

An application under section 147 Negotiation (sic) Instrument Act  filed  on
behalf of both sides for compromise  and  request  is  made  to  direct  the
matter be taken up before the Lok Adalat organized today's date.

In view of the facts mentioned in the application,  for  abrogation  of  the
compromise application, the matter be taken up today  before  the  concerned
bench of Lok-Adalat.”

When the matter was placed before the  Lok  Adalat,  the  Presiding  Officer
refused to act upon the settlement  recorded  between  the  parties  on  the
ground that the accused person had not deposited 15% amount  of  the  cheque
for compounding of matter at  the  appeal  stage  as  per  “The  Guidelines”
contained in the judgment of this Court in the case  of  Damodar  S.  Prabhu
(supra).  The exact order passed is reproduced below:
“30.07.2011

The matter produced before the bench of Lok Adalat No.1.

Appellant along with Shri N.S. Yadav, Advocate.

Non-Applicant along with Shri Mohan Babu Mangal Advocate.

The instant matter is related to the appeal  filed  against  the  conviction
order passed under Section 138  of  Negotiation  (sic)  of  Instrument  Act,
wherein, both parties, being  appeared  along  with  their  counsels,  while
filing application for compromise, have requested to  mitigate  the  matter.
But, the defendant/accused has not deposited 15  percent  amount  of  cheque
for mitigation of matter at the appeal stage according to  the  guide  lines
of judgment dated 3.5.2010 passed in Criminal Appeal  No.  963/2010  in  the
matter of Damodar M. Prabhu Vs.  Sayyad  Baba  Lal  passed  by  the  Hon'ble
Supreme Court, in  the  District  Legal  Services  Authority,  due  to  said
reason, it is not lawful to grant permission of mitigation of the matter  to
both sides.  Hence, the compromise application is hereby dismissed.

The matter  be  returned  back  to  the  Regular  Court  for  abrogation  in
accordance with law.”


It is this order which was challenged by respondent No.2 by  filing  a  writ
petition under Article 227 of the Constitution of  India.   The  High  Court
has dismissed the said writ petition  stating  that  the  judgment  of  this
Court in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) is  binding  on  the  subordinate  Courts
under Article 141 of the Constitution and, therefore, the subordinate  Court
had not committed any legal error.

“The Guidelines” in the form of directions given in the  aforesaid  judgment
read as under:
                               “THE GUIDELINES

(I)  In the circumstances, it is proposed as follows:

(a)  That directions can be given that  the  Writ  of  Summons  be  suitably
modified making it clear to the accused that he could  make  an  application
for compounding of the offences at the first or second hearing of  the  case
and that if such an application is made, compounding may be allowed  by  the
court without imposing any costs on the accused.

(b)  If the  accused  does  not  make  an  application  for  compounding  as
aforesaid, then if  an  application  for  compounding  is  made  before  the
Magistrate at the subsequent stage, compounding can be  allowed  subject  to
the condition that the accused will be required to pay  10%  of  the  cheque
amount to be deposited  as  a  condition  for  compounding  with  the  Legal
Services Authority, or such authority as the Court deems fit.

(c)  Similarly, if the  application  for  compounding  is  made  before  the
Sessions Court or a High Court in revision or appeal, such  compounding  may
be allowed on the condition that the accused pays 15% of the  cheque  amount
by way of costs.

(d)  Finally, if the application for compounding is made before the  Supreme
Court, the figure would increase to 20% of the cheque amount."

The question of consideration in the aforesaid backdrop  is  as  to  whether
directions/guidelines given by this Court  in  the  aforesaid  judgment  are
inapplicable in cases which are resolved/settled in Lok Adalats.

What was argued before us by the learned counsel for the appellant was  that
these guidelines containing  the  schedule  of  costs  should  not  be  made
applicable to the settlements which  are  arrived  at  in  the  Lok  Adalats
inasmuch as provision for imposition of such costs  would  run  contrary  to
the very purpose of Lok Adalats constituted under Section  19  of  the  1987
Act.  It was emphasized that Lok Adalats were  constituted  to  promote  the
resolution of disputes pending before Court by amicable  settlement  between
the parties and in order to reduce the pendency of cases before the  Courts,
including appellate Courts.  Learned counsel also referred to  the  judgment
of this Court in K.N. Govindan Kutty Menon v. C.D. Shaji, (2012) 2  SCC  51,
wherein it is held that a compromise or settlement  arrived  at  before  the
Lok Adalat and award passed pursuant thereto is to be treated as  decree  of
civil Court by virtue of deeming  provision  contained  in  Section  21  and
Section 2(aaa) and (c) of  the  1987  Act.   The  Court  held  that  even  a
settlement of a case under Setion 138  of  the  Act  and  Lok  Adalat  award
passed pursuant thereto would be a  decree  executable  under  the  Code  of
Civil Procedure, 1908.  The position in this behalf is summed up in para  26
of the said judgment, which reads as under:
“26.  From the above discussion, the following propositions emerge:

(1)   In view of the unambiguous language of Section 21 of  the  Act,  every
award of the Lok Adalat shall be deemed to be a decree of a civil court  and
as such it is executable by that court.

(2)   The Act does not make out any such distinction between  the  reference
made by a civil court and a criminal court.

(3)   There is no restriction on the power of the  Lok  Adalat  to  pass  an
award based on the compromise arrived at between the parties in  respect  of
cases referred to by various courts (both civil  and  criminal),  tribunals,
Family Court, Rent Control Court, Consumer Redressal Forum, Motor  Accidents
Claims Tribunal and other forums of similar nature.

(4)   Even if a matter is referred by a criminal court under Section 138  of
the  Negotiable  Instruments  Act,  1881  and  by  virtue  of  the   deeming
provisions, the award passed by the Lok Adalat based on a compromise has  to
be treated as a decree capable of execution by a civil court.”

Taking sustenance from  the  aforesaid  dicta,  the  submission  of  learned
counsel for the appellant was that even the proceedings  under  Section  138
of the Act were governed by the Code of Criminal Procedure,  1973,  such  an
award was executable as a decree of the civil Court under the Code of  Civil
Procedure, 1908. The submission, therefore, was that once award of  the  Lok
Adalat is given the effect of the decree and attaches this kind of  sanctity
behind it, it should be carved out  as  an  exception  to  'The  Guidelines'
framed by this Court in Damodar S. Prabhu's case (supra).

We have considered the aforesaid submission  of  the  learned  counsel  with
utmost intensity of thought.  It appears to be of  substance  in  the  first
blush when this submission is  to  be  considered  in  the  context  of  the
purpose and objective with which Lok Adalats  have  been  constituted  under
Section 19 of the 1987 Act.  No doubt, the manifest  objective  is  to  have
speedy resolution of the disputes through  these  Lok  Adalats,  with  added
advantage of cutting the cost of litigation and  avoiding  further  appeals.
The advent of the 1987 Act gave a statutory status to Lok Adalats,  pursuant
to the constitutional mandate in Article 39-A of the Constitution of  India,
contains various provisions of settlement of disputes  through  Lok  Adalat.
It is an Act to constitute legal services authorities to  provide  free  and
competent legal services to the weaker sections of  the  society  to  ensure
that opportunities for securing justice are not denied  to  any  citizen  by
reason of economic or other disabilities, and to  organize  Lok  Adalats  to
secure that the operation of the legal system promotes justice  on  a  basis
of equal opportunity.  In fact, the concept of Lok Adalat is  an  innovative
Indian contribution to the world jurisprudence.  It is a  new  form  of  the
justice dispensation  system  and  has  largely  succeeded  in  providing  a
supplementary forum to the victims for settlement of their  disputes.   This
system is based on Gandhian principles.  It is  one  of  the  components  of
Alternate Dispute Resolution systems specifically provided in Section 89  of
the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 as well.  It  has  proved  to  be  a  very
effective alternative to litigation.   Lok  Adalats  have  been  created  to
restore access to remedies and protections and alleviate  the  institutional
burden of the millions of petty  cases  clogging  the  regular  courts.   It
offers the aggrieved claimant whose case would otherwise sit in the  regular
courts for decades, at least some compensation now.  The Presiding Judge  of
a Lok Adalat is an experienced  adjudicator  with  a  documented  record  of
public service and has legal acumen.  Experience has  shown  that  not  only
huge number of cases are  settled  through  Lok  Adalats,  this  system  has
definite advantages, some of which are listed below:
(a)  speedy justice and saving from the lengthy court procedures;
(b)  justice at no cost;
(c)  solving problems of backlog cases; and
(d) maintenance of cordial relations.
            Thus, it cannot be doubted  that  Lok  Adalats  are  serving  an
important public purpose.

Having said so, it needs to be examined as to whether in the given  case  it
becomes derogatory  to  the  movement  of  the  Lok  Adalats  if  the  costs
amounting to 15% of the cheque amount, as per the  guidelines  contained  in
Damodar S. Prabhu (supra), is  insisted?  However,  before  discussing  this
central issue, we would like to analyse the events of the present  case,  as
that would be of help to answer the pivotal issue raised before us.

As pointed out above while taking note of the factual details of  the  case,
it was not a situation where the Court persuaded  the  parties  to  use  the
medium of Lok Adalat for the settlement of their dispute.  On the  contrary,
the parties had already settled the matter between  themselves  before  hand
and filed the application in  this  behalf  before  the  learned  Additional
Sessions Judge on July 30, 2011 with a request which the matter be taken  up
before the Lok Adalat that was being organized on  the  same  date.   It  is
clear from the order passed by the  learned  Additional  Sessions  Judge  on
July 30, 2011, which is already extracted above.

In the first instance, we do not understand as to why the  matter  was  sent
to Lok Adalat when the parties had settled  the  matter  between  themselves
and application  to  this  effect  was  filed  in  the  Court.   In  such  a
situation, the  Court  could  have  passed  the  order  itself,  instead  of
relegating the matter to the Lok Adalat.  We have ourselves highlighted  the
importance and significance of the Institution of Lok Adalat.  We  would  be
failing in our duty if we do not  mention  that,  of  late,  there  is  some
criticism as well which, inter alia, relates to the manner  in  which  cases
are posted before the Lok Adalats.  We have to devise the methods to  ensure
that faith in the system is maintained as in the holistic  terms  access  to
justice is achieved through this  system.   We,  therefore,  deprecate  this
tendency of referring even those  matters  to  the  Lok  Adalat  which  have
already been settled.  This tendency of sending settled matters to  the  Lok
Adalats just to inflate  the  figures  of  decision/settlement  therein  for
statistical purposes is not a healthy practice.  We are also  not  oblivious
of the criticism from the lawyers,  intelligentsia  and  general  public  in
adopting this kind of methodology for window dressing and showing  lucrative
outcome of particular Lok Adalats.

Be that as it may, reverting to the facts of the present case, we find  that
when the case had been settled between the parties and application  in  this
behalf was made before the Court, it cannot be denied  that  had  the  Court
passed the compouding order on this application under  Section  147  of  the
Act, as per the rigours of Damodar S.  Prabhu  (supra),  15%  f  the  cheque
amount had to be necessarily deposited by  the  accused  person  (respondent
No.2).  If we hold that such a cost is not to be paid  when  the  matter  is
sent to the Lok Adalat, this  route  would  be  generally  resorted  to,  to
bypass the applicability of the directions contained in  Damodar  S.  Prabhu
(supra).  Such a situation cannot be countenanced.

The purpose of laying down the guidelines in Damodar S.  Prabhu  (supra)  is
explained in  the  said  judgment  itself.   The  Court  in  that  case  was
concerned with the stage of the  case  when  compounding  of  offence  under
Section 147 of the Act is  to  be  permitted.   To  put  it  otherwise,  the
question was as to whether such a compounding  can  be  only  at  the  trial
Court stage or it is permissible even at the appellate stage.  It was  noted
that even before the insertion  of  Section  147  of  the  Act,  by  way  of
amendment in the year 2002, some High Courts had permitted  the  compounding
of offence contemplated by Section 138 of the Act during  the  later  stages
of litigation.  This was so done by this Court  also  in  O.P.  Dholakia  v.
State of Haryana, (2000) 1 SCC 672  and  in  some  other  cases  which  were
noticed by the Bench. From these judgments  the  Court  concluded  that  the
compounding of offence at later stages  of  litigation  in  cheque  bounding
cases was held to be permissible.

While holding so, the Court also  took  note  of  the  phenomena  which  was
widely prevalent in the manner in which cases under Section 138 of  the  Act
proceed in this country.  It noticed that there was a tendency on  the  part
of  the  accused  persons  to  drag  on  these  proceedings  and  resort  to
settlement process only at a stage when the accused persons were  driven  to
wall.  It is for this reason that most of the  complaints  filed  result  in
compromise or settlement before the final judgment on the one side and  even
in those cases where judgment is  pronounced  and  conviction  is  recorded,
such cases are settled at appellate stage.  This was so noted in para 13  of
the judgment, which reads as under:

“13.  It is quite obvious that with respect to the offence of  dishonour  of
cheques, it is the compensatory aspect of the remedy which should  be  given
priority over the punitive aspect.  There  is  also  some  support  for  the
apprehensions raised by the learned Attorney  General  that  a  majority  of
cheque bounce cases are indeed  being  compromised  or  settled  by  way  of
compounding,  albeit  during  the  later  stages   of   litigation   thereby
contributing to undue delay in  justice-delivery.   The  problem  herein  is
with the tendency of litigants to belatedly choose compounding  as  a  means
to resolve their dispute.  Further more, the  writen  submissions  filed  on
behalf of the learned Attorney  General  have  stressed  on  the  fact  that
unlike Section 320 of the CrPC, Section 147 of  the  Negotiable  Instruments
Act provides no explicit guidance  as  to  what  stage  compounding  can  or
cannot be done and whether compounding can be done at the  instance  of  the
complainant or with the leave of  the  court.   As  mentioned  earlier,  the
learned Attorney General's submission is that in the  absence  of  statutory
guidance, parties are choosing  compounding  as  a  method  of  last  resort
instead of opting for it as soon as the Magistrates take cognizance  of  the
complaints.  One explanation for such behaviour could be  that  the  accused
persons are willing to take the chance of progressing  through  the  various
stages of litigation and then choose the route of settlement  only  when  no
other route remains.  While such behaviour may be viewed  as  rational  from
the viewpoint of litigants, the hard facts  are  that  the  undue  delay  in
opting for compounding contributes to the arrears pending before the  courts
at various levels.  If the accused is willing to  settle  or  compromise  by
way of compounding of the offence at a later  stage  of  litigation,  it  is
generally indicative of some merit  in  the  complainant's  case.   In  such
cases it would  be  desirable  if  parties  choose  compounding  during  the
earlier stages of litigation.  If however, the accused has a  valid  defence
such as a mistake, forgery or coercion among other grounds, then the  matter
can be litigated through the specified forums.”

This particular tendency had prompted the Court to accept the submission  of
the Attorney General to frame guidelines for a  graded  scheme  of  imposing
costs on parties who unduly delay compounding of  the  offence  inasmuch  as
such a requirement of deposit of the costs  will  act  as  a  deterrent  for
delayed composition since free and  easy  compounding  of  offences  at  any
stage, however belated, was given incentive to the drawer of the  cheque  to
delay settling of cases for years.  For this reason, the  Court  framed  the
guidelines permitting compounding  with  the  imposition  of  varying  costs
depending upon the stage at which the settlement took place in a  particular
case.

After formulating “The Guidelines”, which are already extracted  above,  the
Court made very pertinent observations in  para  17  of  the  said  judgment
which would have bearing in the present case.  Thus, we reproduce  the  same
below:
“17.  We are also conscious of the view that  the  judicial  endorsement  of
the above quoted guidelines could be seen as an act of  judicial  law-making
and therefore an intrusion into the legislative domain.  It must be kept  in
mind that Section 147 of the Act does not  carry  any  guidance  on  how  to
proceed with the compounding of offences under the  Act.   We  have  already
explained that the scheme contemplated under Section 320 of the CrPC  cannot
be followed in the strict sense.  In view of the legislative vacuum, we  see
no hurdle to the endorsement of some suggestions which  have  been  designed
to discourage litigants from unduly delaying the composition of the  offence
in cases involving Section 138 of the Act.  The graded scheme  for  imposing
costs is a means to encourage compounding at an early stage  of  litigation.
In the status quo, valuable time of the Court  is  spent  on  the  trial  of
these cases and the parties are not liable to pay any Court  fee  since  the
proceedings are governed by the Code of Criminal Procedure, even though  the
impact of the offence is largely confined  to  the  private  parties.   Even
though the imposition of costs  by  the  competent  court  is  a  matter  of
discretion, the scale of  costs  has  been  suggested  in  the  interest  of
uniformity.  The competent Court can of course reduce the costs with  regard
to the specific facts and circumstances of a case, while  recording  reasons
in writing for such variance.  Bona fide litigants should of course  contest
the proceedings to their logical end.  Even in  the  past,  this  Court  has
used its power to do complete justice under Article 142 of the  Constitution
to frame  guidelines  in  relation  to  subject-matter  where  there  was  a
legislative vacuum.”

It is clear from the reading of the aforesaid para that the  Court  made  it
clear that framing of  the  said  guidelines  did  not  amount  to  judicial
legislation.  In the opinion of the Court, since Section 147 of the Act  did
not carry any guidance on how to proceed with compounding  of  the  offences
under the Act and Section 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973  could
not be followed in strict  sense  in  respect  of  offences   pertaining  to
Section 138 of the Act, there was a legislative vacuum  which  prompted  the
Court to frame those guidelines to achieve the following objectives:
(i)   to discourage  litigants  from  unduly  delaying  the  composition  of
offences in cases involving Section 138 of the Act;
(ii)  it would result in  encouraging  compounding  at  an  early  stage  of
litigation saving valuable time of the Court which is spent on the trial  of
such cases; and
(iii) even though imposition of costs by the competent Court is a matter  of
discretion, the scale of cost had been suggested to attain uniformity.
            At the same time, the Court also made it abundantly  clear  that
the concerned Court would be at liberty to reduce the costs with  regard  to
specific facts and circumstances of  a  case,  while  recording  reasons  in
writing for such variance.

What follows from the above is that  normally  costs  as  specified  in  the
guidelines laid down in the said judgment has to be imposed on  the  accused
persons while permitting compounding.  There can be departure  therefrom  in
a particular case, for good  reasons  to  be  recorded  in  writing  by  the
concerned Court.  It is for this  reason  that  the  Court  mentioned  three
objectives which were sought to be achieved by framing those guidelines,  as
taken note of above.  It is thus manifestly the framing of  “Guidelines”  in
this judgment was also to achieve a particular public purpose.   Here  comes
the issue for consideration as to whether these guidelines are to  be  given
a go by when a case is decided/settled in the  Lok  Adalat?  Our  answer  is
that it may not be necessarily so and a proper balance can be struck  taking
care of both the situations.

Having regard thereto, we are of the  opinion  that  even  when  a  case  is
decided  in  Lok  Adalat,  the  requirement  of  following  the   guidelines
contained in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  should  normally  not  be  dispensed
with.  However, if there is a special/specific reason to deviate  therefrom,
the Court is not remediless as Damodar S. Prabhu (supra)  itself  has  given
discretion to the concerned  Court  to  reduce  the  costs  with  regard  to
specific facts and circumstances of the case,  while  recording  reasons  in
writing about such variance.  Therefore, in those  matters  where  the  case
has to be decided/settled in the Lok Adalat, if the Court finds that  it  is
a result of positive attitude of the parties,  in  such  appropriate  cases,
the Court can always reduce the costs by  imposing  minimal  costs  or  even
waive the same.  For that, it would be for  the  parties,  particularly  the
accused person, to make out a plausible case  for  the  waiver/reduction  of
costs and to convince the concerned Court about the same.   This  course  of
action, according to us, would strike a balance between  the  two  competing
but  equally  important  interests,   namely,   achieving   the   objectives
delineated in Damodar S. Prabhu (supra) on  the  one  hand  and  the  public
interest   which   is    sought    to    be    achieved    by    encouraging
settlements/resolution of case through Lok Adalats.

Having straightened the  position  in  the  manner  above,  insofar  as  the
present case is concerned, as we find that the parties had  already  settled
the matter and the purpose of going to the Lok Adalat was  only  to  have  a
rubber stamp of the Lok Adalat in the form of its imprimatur thereto, we  do
not find any error in the impugned judgment, though we are  giving  our  own
reasons in support of the  conclusion  arrived  at  by  the  High  Court  in
dismissing the writ petition filed by respondent No.2,  while  straightening
the approach that should be  followed  henceforth  in  such  matters  coming
before the Lok Adalats.

The appeal stands disposed of in the aforesaid terms.


                             .............................................J.
                                                            (J. CHELAMESWAR)



                             .............................................J.
                                                                (A.K. SIKRI)

NEW DELHI;
SEPTEMBER 10, 2014.

Murder - Circumstantial Evidence - mere Recovery of M.O. with out connection - confession before police not admissible - admissible portion cycle two knives - Apex court held that With regard to Section 27 of the Act, what is important is discovery of the material object at the disclosure of the accused but such disclosure alone would not automatically lead to the conclusion that the offence was also committed by the accused. In fact, thereafter, burden lies on the prosecution to establish a close link between discovery of the material object and its use in the commission of the offence and further held that It is settled position of law that suspicion however strong cannot be a substitute for proof. In a case resting completely on the circumstantial evidence the chain of circumstances must be so complete that they lead only to one conclusion, that is, the guilt of the accused. In our opinion, it is not safe to record a finding of guilt of the appellant and the appellant is entitled to get the benefit of doubt. We, therefore, allow the appeal and set-aside the conviction and sentence of the appellant. = CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 639 OF 2011 Sangili @ Sanganathan …Appellant Versus State of Tamil Nadu …Respondent = 2014 - Sept. Month - http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41901

Murder - Circumstantial Evidence - mere Recovery of M.O. with out connection - confession before police not admissible - admissible portion cycle two knives - Apex court held that With regard to Section 27 of the Act, what is  important  is  discovery of the material object at the disclosure of the accused but such  disclosure alone would not automatically lead to the conclusion that  the  offence  was also committed by the accused.  In fact,  thereafter,  burden  lies  on  the prosecution to establish a close link  between  discovery  of  the  material object and its use in the commission of the  offence and further held that  It is settled position of law that suspicion however strong cannot  be a substitute for proof.  In a case resting completely on the  circumstantial evidence the chain of circumstances must be so complete that they lead  only to one conclusion, that is, the guilt of the accused.  In  our  opinion,  it is not safe to record a finding of guilt of the appellant and the  appellant is entitled to get the benefit of doubt.  We, therefore,  allow  the  appeal and set-aside the conviction and sentence of the appellant. =

on 12.6.2002 at  about  5.15
p.m., there was a phone call from  the  appellant  herein  to  the  deceased
which was initially  picked  up  by  PW-1.  According  to  PW-1  the  caller
identified himself  by  his  name  (same  as  the  appellant).   After  some
conversation with the caller the deceased went out by bicycle informing  his
parents that he would return soon.  Unfortunately, he  never  returned.=

On  the  same  day,  the  appellant  was  arrested  at  about  8  p.m.
According to the prosecution, the appellant made  a  confessional  statement
which led to certain recoveries.
The admissible portion  of  the  statement
made by the appellant is Ex.P5.  On the basis of  such  a  statement,  PW-15
altered the First Information Report (FIR) and  registered  the  case  under
Section 302 IPC and dispatched the FIR to the Court.  
Thereafter,  he  went
led by the accused to the spot from where the dead body of the deceased  was
recovered around 9.45 p.m.
Thereafter, he got  the  inquest  conducted  and
prepared a report Ex.P18 around  2.30  a.m.  i.e.  in  the  early  hours  of
15.06.2002.
The dead  body  was  sent  to  the  hospital  for  post  mortem
examination.  PW-15 thereafter proceeded to the house of the  appellant  and
seized MOs 7 and 8 (two knives) from  the  backyard  of  the  house  of  the
appellant.
They proceeded further to the house of PW-9 at around 3.30  a.m.
at the instance  of  the  appellant  and  recovered  the  bicycle,  M.O.  1.
Subsequently, Nagarajan (A2 who  was  acquitted  by  the  trial  court)  was
arrested. After completion of the investigation, PW-16 Inspector  of  Police
who succeeded PW-15 (in office) filed the charge sheet.=


  Mustkeem alias Sirajudeen v. State of  Rajasthan,  (2011)
11 SCC 724, this Court observed as under:

“24.  In a most celebrated case of this Court, Sharad Birdhichand  Sarda  v.
State of  Maharashtra,  (1984)  4  SCC  116,  in  para  153,  some  cardinal
principles regarding the appreciation of circumstantial evidence  have  been
postulated.
Whenever the case  is  based  on  circumstantial  evidence  the
following  features  are  required  to  be  complied  with.  
It  would   be
beneficial to repeat the same salient  features  once  again  which  are  as
under: (SCC p.185)

“(i)  The circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is  to  be  drawn
must or should be and not merely 'may be' fully established;

(ii)   The  facts  so  established  should  be  consistent  only  with   the
hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, that is to say, they should  not  be
explainable on any other hypothesis except that the accused is guilty;

(iii)        The  circumstances  should  be  of  a  conclusive  nature   and
tendency;

(iv)  They should exclude every possible hypothesis except  the  one  to  be
proved; and

(v)   There must be a chain of evidence so complete  as  not  to  leave  any
reasonable ground for the conclusion consistent with the  innocence  of  the
accused and must show that in all human probability the act must  have  been
done by the accused.”

25.  With regard to Section 27 of the Act,
what is  important  is  discovery
of the material object at the disclosure of the accused but such  disclosure
alone would not automatically lead to the conclusion that  the  offence  was
also committed by the accused.
In fact,  thereafter,  burden  lies  on  the
prosecution to establish a close link  between  discovery  of  the  material
object and its use in the commission of the  offence.  
What  is  admissible
under Section 27 of the Act is the information leading to discovery and  not
any opinion formed on it by the prosecution.”
                                                         (emphasis supplied)
26.   It is settled position of law that suspicion however strong cannot  be
a substitute for proof.  In a case resting completely on the  circumstantial
evidence the chain of circumstances must be so complete that they lead  only
to one conclusion, that is, the guilt of the accused.  In  our  opinion,  it
is not safe to record a finding of guilt of the appellant and the  appellant
is entitled to get the benefit of doubt.  We, therefore,  allow  the  appeal
and set-aside the conviction and sentence of the appellant.   The  appellant
be set at liberty unless required in any other case.

2014 - Sept. Month - http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41901
                                                                Reportable
                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
                       CRIMINAL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                       CRIMINAL APPEAL NO. 639 OF 2011

Sangili @ Sanganathan                        …Appellant

            Versus

State of Tamil Nadu                                …Respondent





                               J U D G M E N T


Chelameswar, J.

1.    This appeal arises out of the judgment dated 6th January 2010  of  the
Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court in Criminal Appeal No.506 of 2004.

2.    By the impugned judgment, the High  Court  confirmed  the  appellant’s
conviction and sentence of imprisonment for life and a  fine  of  Rs.10000/-
under Section 302 of the Indian Penal Code, 1860 (for short  “IPC”)  awarded
by the Sessions Court, Madurai in Sessions Case No.490 of 2003.

3.    The deceased Muthuramaligam was a high  school  going  child  studying
Plus-Two.  PWs 1 and 2 are his  parents.   PW-5  Ramathilaga  another  young
girl was also a student of the same school where the deceased was  studying.
 The appellant herein was working for the father of PW-5.

4.    According to the case of the prosecution, on 12.6.2002 at  about  5.15
p.m., there was a phone call from  the  appellant  herein  to  the  deceased
which was initially  picked  up  by  PW-1.  According  to  PW-1  the  caller
identified himself  by  his  name  (same  as  the  appellant).   After  some
conversation with the caller the deceased went out by bicycle informing  his
parents that he would return soon.  Unfortunately, he  never  returned.   On
14.06.2002 at about 10 a.m., PW-1 went to the  Oomachikulam  Police  Station
and lodged a complaint Ex.P1 to the effect that Muthuramaligam was missing.

5.    PW-12 Head Constable received the complaint  and  registered  a  Crime
No.204 of 2003.  PW-15 Tr. Ponnuchamy is the  Inspector  of  Police  of  the
abovementioned police station.

6.    On  the  same  day,  the  appellant  was  arrested  at  about  8  p.m.
According to the prosecution, the appellant made  a  confessional  statement
which led to certain recoveries.  The admissible portion  of  the  statement
made by the appellant is Ex.P5.  On the basis of  such  a  statement,  PW-15
altered the First Information Report (FIR) and  registered  the  case  under
Section 302 IPC and dispatched the FIR to the Court.   Thereafter,  he  went
led by the accused to the spot from where the dead body of the deceased  was
recovered around 9.45 p.m.  Thereafter, he got  the  inquest  conducted  and
prepared a report Ex.P18 around  2.30  a.m.  i.e.  in  the  early  hours  of
15.06.2002.  The dead  body  was  sent  to  the  hospital  for  post  mortem
examination.  PW-15 thereafter proceeded to the house of the  appellant  and
seized MOs 7 and 8 (two knives) from  the  backyard  of  the  house  of  the
appellant.  They proceeded further to the house of PW-9 at around 3.30  a.m.
at the instance  of  the  appellant  and  recovered  the  bicycle,  M.O.  1.
Subsequently, Nagarajan (A2 who  was  acquitted  by  the  trial  court)  was
arrested. After completion of the investigation, PW-16 Inspector  of  Police
who succeeded PW-15 (in office) filed the charge sheet.

7.    In all  prosecution  examined  16  witnesses  apart  from  marking  18
documents and producing 8 material objects to establish  the  guilt  of  the
appellant  herein.   The  prosecution  case  rests  on  the   circumstantial
evidence. The circumstances are:
(i)   That the deceased was trying to woo PW-5 which was objected to by  the
appellant herein and in that  context  there  was  an  earlier  incident  of
beating up of the deceased by the appellant;

(ii)  That the deceased left the house on the fateful day on receiving  call
from the appellant and never returned thereafter;

(iii) That the appellant knew as to where the dead body of the deceased  was
lying and also the place where the bicycle of the deceased was available;

(iv)  The appellant also knew where MOs 7 and 8 (two knifes) which are  said
to have been used for killing the deceased were hidden.

8.    The trial Court on  the  basis  of  the  abovementioned  circumstances
recorded  a  conclusion  that  the  appellant   is   guilty   of   murdering
Muthuramaligam which finding is confirmed by the High Court.

9.    Shri R. Balasubramanian, the learned senior counsel for the  appellant
argued that the evidence on  record  is  wholly  inadequate  to  record  the
finding of guilt against the appellant.  (a)  It is submitted that PWs 3  to
5 who were examined to establish the  motive  and  the  background  for  the
offence turned hostile.  Therefore,  there  is  no  evidence  on  record  to
establish the motive.  (b)  With regard to the fact that the  deceased  left
his residence on the fateful day  on  receipt  of  a  phone  call  from  the
appellant herein is not clearly established  as  there  is  nothing  in  the
evidence of PW-1 to indicate  that  he  knew  the  appellant  prior  to  the
telephonic conversation and he could identify the voice  of  the  appellant.
Assuming for the sake of argument that the caller identified himself by  the
name “Sangili”, it is not conclusive  that  the  caller  was  the  appellant
herein.   There is no evidence on record that anybody saw both the  deceased
and accused  together  on  the  evening  of  the  fateful  day.    (c)   The
recoveries made pursuant to Ex.P5 are highly doubtful as the evidence of PW-
7 who happens to be  the  Panch  witness  both  before  the  arrest  of  the
appellant and  also various recoveries made pursuant to  Ex.P5  is  full  of
contradictions and does not inspire any confidence in  the  truthfulness  of
the witness.

10.   On the other hand, Mr. M. Yogesh Kanna, learned counsel appearing  for
the State argued that the concurrent findings of fact recorded by  both  the
courts below ought not to be interfered with and this Court  would  not  re-
appreciate evidence in exercising its jurisdiction under Article 136.

11.   There cannot be any second opinion that this Court in exercise of  its
jurisdiction under Article 136 does not re-appreciate evidence.    But  when
the submission is that it is a case of no evidence at all, we are  bound  to
examine the matter.

12.   We have gone through the judgments of the trial  court  and  the  High
Court.  We are sorry to place on record that both the judgments  leave  much
to be desired.

13.   There is no discussion as to the  basis  on  which  the  courts  below
reached the conclusion that there was a motive for  the  appellant  to  kill
Muthuramaligam. PWs 3 to 5 who are examined  to  prove  the  motive,  turned
hostile.  PW-1 is the only other witness who spoke about the motive  but  he
does not claim any personal knowledge of the motive.  At best  the  evidence
of PW-1 with respect to motive is only hearsay evidence.

14.   Coming to the circumstance that the deceased  left  his  residence  on
the fateful day after receiving the call allegedly  made  by  the  appellant
herein, the prosecution sought to establish the said fact on  the  basis  of
the evidence of PW-1 and PW-8, of whom PW-8 turned hostile. PW-1 the  father
of the deceased stated in his evidence that on the fateful day the  deceased
received a phone call from the appellant herein at  about  5.15  p.m.  which
call was  initially  picked  up  by  him  and  on  his  enquiry  the  caller
identified himself by his  name  “Sangili”.   In  his  cross-examination  he
clearly admitted that he neither saw  nor  knew  the  appellant  before  his
arrest by the police.  He did not know anything about the appellant’s  place
of residence, father’s name etc.  The only other witness  who  was  examined
in this context was PW-8 who allegedly  stated  before  PW-15  Inspector  of
Police that on the fateful day the appellant accompanied by  another  person
went to the telephone booth where PW-8 was said to be  working  and  made  a
phone  call  to  the  deceased.   As  noticed,  PW-8  did  not  support  the
prosecution case.  That being the  case,  there  is  no  legally  admissible
evidence on record to come to the conclusion  that  the  deceased  left  the
house only after being called up by the appellant herein.

15.   The other circumstance relied upon  by  the  prosecution  accepted  by
both the Courts is the recovery of MOs 1 (bicycle) and 7 &  8  (two  knives)
at the instance of the  appellant  pursuant  to  the  statement  before  the
police, the admissible portion which is Ex.P5.

16.   PW-7 Mathivanan is the Panch witness along with  Shenbagamoorthy  (who
was not examined), for  the  arrest  of  the  appellant  and  also  for  the
recovery of abovementioned material objects.

17.   PW-9 Chinnathambi  is  the  person  according  to  whose  evidence  on
12.6.2002 at about 7 p.m. the appellant herein  left  MO-1  bicycle  at  his
residence.  However, the appellant never went back to take the bicycle.   On
the other hand, in the early hours of 15.6.2002 at around  3.30  a.m.  PW-15
and others came to his residence and seized the bicycle MO-1.

18.    The  learned  counsel  for  the  appellant  argued  that  there   are
discrepancies in the evidence of PW-7 and, therefore,  his  evidence  cannot
be relied upon and his evidence should be discarded.  There is nothing  else
on record to establish the trustworthiness of the  recovery  of  the  MOs  1
(bicycle) and 7 & 8 (two knives) at the instance of the appellant.

19.   The learned counsel also argued that PW-9 never stated that  when  the
police party led by PW-15 came to seize MO-1 from his residence, the  police
party was accompanied by the appellant and, therefore, the recovery  of  the
bicycle is also unreliable piece of evidence.

20.   We have carefully scrutinized the evidence of PWs 7 and  9.   We  find
one aspect, which  is  material,  and  is  quite  intriguing.   As  per  the
prosecution, the appellant had  made  confessional  statement;  there  is  a
recovery of blood; recovery of knife;  and  recovery  of  bicycle.   In  the
panchnama drawn for these recoveries, there  is  only  one  person  who  has
allegedly  witnessed  these  recoveries,  namely  PW-7  Mathivanan,  son  of
Thangamani.  Though this by itself may  not  be  very  suspicious,  when  we
examine this aspect in conjunction with other evidence emerging  on  record,
such recoveries become little doubtful.  The Investigating Officer  himself,
who appeared as PW-15, has stated in his deposition  that  the  witness  who
signed the confessional statement of the appellant is  not  Mathivanan,  son
of Thangamani, thereby doubting the identity of PW-7.  The manner  in  which
PW-7 reached the spot and  was  allegedly  requested  by  the  Investigating
Officer to accompany him to witness  the  recoveries  is  also  shrouded  in
mystery.  Further, in his chief-examination he stated that on that day  from
8.00 p.m. to the next morning 3.30 a.m.  he  was  with  the  Police  on  the
request of PW-15.  In his cross-examination he stated that he was  taken  to
the police station at about 6.00 p.m. for a short while and let off  by  the
Police  thereafter.   All  these  facts  taken  together,  which   are   not
considered by the Courts below, make the recoveries little doubtful.

21.   It is to be  emphasized  at  this  stage  that  except  the  so-called
recoveries, there is no other circumstances worth the name  which  has  been
proved against the appellant.


22.   To sum up what is discussed above, it  is  a  case  of  blind  murder.
There are no  eyewitnesses.   Conviction  is  based  on  the  circumstantial
evidence.  In such a case, complete chain of events has  to  be  established
pointing out the culpability of the accused person.   The  chain  should  be
such that no other conclusion, except the guilt of the  accused  person,  is
discernible without any doubt.  In the present case, we find, in  the  first
instance, that the appellant was roped in with suspicion that it was a  case
of triangular love and since he also loved PW-3, he eliminated the  deceased
when he found that the deceased and  PW-3  are  in  love  with  each  other.
However, we are of the view that this  motive  has  not  been  proved.   The
evidence of last seen is also not established.  Father of the deceased  only
said that the deceased had received a call and after receiving that call  he
left the house.  In his deposition, he admitted that he  had  not  seen  the
appellant before and he did not recognize his voice either.   Therefore,  he
was unable to say as to whether the phone call  received  was  that  of  the
appellant.  Proceeding further, we find that the deceased was  not  seen  by
anybody after he left the house.  When we  look  into  all  these  facts  in
entirety in the aforesaid context, we  find  that  not  only  the  chain  of
events  is  incomplete,  it  becomes  somewhat  difficult  to  convict   the
appellant only on the basis of the aforesaid recoveries.

23.   In Mani v. State of Tamil Nadu, (2009) 17 SCC  273,  this  Court  made
following pertinent observation on this very aspect:
“26.  The discovery is a weak kind of evidence and cannot be  wholly  relied
upon and conviction in such a  serious  matter  cannot  be  based  upon  the
discovery.  Once the discovery  fails,  there  would  be  literally  nothing
which would support the prosecution case....”

24.   There is a  reiteration  of  the  same  sentiment  in  Manthuri  Laxmi
Narsaiah v. State of Andhra Pradesh, (2011) 14  SCC  117  in  the  following
manner:
“6.  It is by now well settled that in a  case  relating  to  circumstantial
evidence the chain of circumstances has to be spelt out by  the  prosecution
and if even one link in the  chain  is  broken  the  accused  must  get  the
benefit thereof.  We are of the opinion that the present is in fact  a  case
of no evidence.”

25.   Likewise, in Mustkeem alias Sirajudeen v. State of  Rajasthan,  (2011)
11 SCC 724, this Court observed as under:

“24.  In a most celebrated case of this Court, Sharad Birdhichand  Sarda  v.
State of  Maharashtra,  (1984)  4  SCC  116,  in  para  153,  some  cardinal
principles regarding the appreciation of circumstantial evidence  have  been
postulated.  Whenever the case  is  based  on  circumstantial  evidence  the
following  features  are  required  to  be  complied  with.   It  would   be
beneficial to repeat the same salient  features  once  again  which  are  as
under: (SCC p.185)

“(i)  The circumstances from which the conclusion of guilt is  to  be  drawn
must or should be and not merely 'may be' fully established;

(ii)   The  facts  so  established  should  be  consistent  only  with   the
hypothesis of the guilt of the accused, that is to say, they should  not  be
explainable on any other hypothesis except that the accused is guilty;

(iii)        The  circumstances  should  be  of  a  conclusive  nature   and
tendency;

(iv)  They should exclude every possible hypothesis except  the  one  to  be
proved; and

(v)   There must be a chain of evidence so complete  as  not  to  leave  any
reasonable ground for the conclusion consistent with the  innocence  of  the
accused and must show that in all human probability the act must  have  been
done by the accused.”

25.  With regard to Section 27 of the Act, what is  important  is  discovery
of the material object at the disclosure of the accused but such  disclosure
alone would not automatically lead to the conclusion that  the  offence  was
also committed by the accused.  In fact,  thereafter,  burden  lies  on  the
prosecution to establish a close link  between  discovery  of  the  material
object and its use in the commission of the  offence.   What  is  admissible
under Section 27 of the Act is the information leading to discovery and  not
any opinion formed on it by the prosecution.”
                                                         (emphasis supplied)
26.   It is settled position of law that suspicion however strong cannot  be
a substitute for proof.  In a case resting completely on the  circumstantial
evidence the chain of circumstances must be so complete that they lead  only
to one conclusion, that is, the guilt of the accused.  In  our  opinion,  it
is not safe to record a finding of guilt of the appellant and the  appellant
is entitled to get the benefit of doubt.  We, therefore,  allow  the  appeal
and set-aside the conviction and sentence of the appellant.   The  appellant
be set at liberty unless required in any other case.

                                                               ………………………….J.
                                                          (J. Chelameswar)



                                                              ……………………..….J.
                                                   (A.K. Sikri)
New Delhi;
September 10, 2014


-----------------------
15


Land acquisition Act - Award passed -Award stands cancelled as possession not taken - stay not bars - New Act applies - Apex court held that there is no dispute that physical possession of the lands belonging to the appellants under consideration in these appeals has not been taken by the State or any other authority on its behalf and more than five years have elapsed since the making of the award dated 30.11.2006 and 01.01.2014 when the 2013 Act came into force. Therefore, the conditions mentioned in Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act are satisfied for allowing the plea of the appellants that the land acquisition proceedings must be deemed to have lapsed in terms of Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act. The appeals are disposed of accordingly. It goes without saying that the Government of Tamil Nadu shall be free, if it so chooses to initiate proceedings of such land acquisition afresh in accordance with the provisions of 2013 Act. In the facts and circumstances of the case there shall be no order as to costs.= CIVIL APPEAL NO.8700 OF 2013 Sree Balaji Nagar Residential Association …..Appellant Versus State of Tamil Nadu & Ors. …..Respondents = 2014 -Sept. Month - http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41900

     Land acquisition Act - Award passed -Award stands cancelled as possession not taken - stay not bars - New Act applies -  Apex court held that there  is  no  dispute that physical possession of the lands  belonging  to  the  appellants  under consideration in these appeals has not been taken by the State or any  other authority on its behalf and more than five  years  have  elapsed  since  the making of the award dated 30.11.2006 and 01.01.2014 when the 2013  Act  came into force.  Therefore, the conditions mentioned in  Section  24(2)  of  the 2013 Act are satisfied for allowing the plea  of  the  appellants  that  the land acquisition proceedings must be deemed  to  have  lapsed  in  terms  of Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act.  The appeals  are  disposed  of  accordingly. It goes without saying that the Government of Tamil Nadu shall be  free,  if it so chooses to initiate proceedings of such  land  acquisition  afresh  in accordance with the provisions of 2013 Act.  In the facts and  circumstances of the case there shall be no order as to costs.=

  Whereas in Civil  Appeal  No.8700  of  2013,  filed  by  an  Association  of
Residents of a particular  locality,  the  challenge  is  to  the  order  of
Government of Tamil Nadu bearing G.O. No.122 dated 14.07.1998  containing  a
scheme for development of a proposed canal by  name  Madhavaram  Left  Flank
Water Surplus Course, on the ground that  the  scheme  is  misconceived  and
technically flawed which shall lead to unnecessary acquisition of  land  and
building belonging to the residents of the affected area,  the  other  Civil
Appeals contain specific challenge to proceedings initiated under  the  Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (hereinafter referred to as, ‘the Act’) undertaken  by
the Tamil Nadu State Government for the purpose  of  implementation  of  the
said  scheme  covered  by  G.O.  No.122  relating  to  the  proposed   canal
improvement works. 
The actual land acquisition proceedings  commenced  with
issuance of Notification under  Section  4(1)  of  the  Act  on  02.02.2005,
insofar as the lands under dispute are concerned.  
The  Award  was  made  on
30.11.2006 but in the meantime as appears from  the  facts  stated  in  C.A.
No.8700 of 2013, upon a challenge made to  the  Notification  under  Section
4(1) of the Act, the High Court stayed dispossession of the  concerned  land
holders by order dated 17.2.2005  
but  ultimately  the  writ  petitions  and other tagged matters were dismissed on 27.4.2007.  =

The parties have been heard only on this narrow legal  aspect  to  find  out
whether the appellants’ prayer noted above deserves to be  allowed  in  view
of Section 24(2) of 2013 Act or not.  
In view  of  the  order  proposed,  we
find it futile to refer to and  discuss  the  facts  involved  in  different
civil appeals.  
Section 24 of 2013 Act is as follows :
“24. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this  Act,  in  any  case  of
land acquisition proceedings  initiated  under  the  Land  Acquisition  Act,
1894, -

      (a) where no award under section 11 of the said Land  Acquisition  Act
has  been  made,  then,  all  provisions  of  this  Act  relating   to   the
determination of compensation shall apply; or

      (b)  where an award under said section 11 has  been  made,  then  such
proceedings  shall  continue  under  the  provisions  of   the   said   Land
Acquisition Act, as if the said Act has not been repealed.

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), in case  of  land
acquisition proceedings initiated under  the  Land  Acquisition  Act,  1894,
where an award under the said section 11 has been made five  years  or  more
prior to the commencement of this Act but the  physical  possession  of  the
land has not  been taken or the compensation has  not  been  paid  the  said
proceedings shall be deemed to have lapsed and the  appropriate  Government,
if it so chooses, shall initiate the proceedings of  such  land  acquisition
afresh in accordance with the provisions of this Act:

Provided that where an award has been made and compensation in respect of  a
majority of land holdings has not been  deposited  in  the  account  of  the
beneficiaries, then, all beneficiaries specified  in  the  notification  for
acquisition under section 4 of the  said  Land  Acquisition  Act,  shall  be
entitled to compensation in accordance with the provisions of this Act.” =

whether  compensation  has  been  paid  for
majority of land holdings under acquisition or  not,  there  is  no  dispute
that physical possession of the lands  belonging  to  the  appellants  under
consideration in these appeals has not been taken by the State or any  other
authority on its behalf and more than five  years  have  elapsed  since  the
making of the award dated 30.11.2006 and 01.01.2014 when the 2013  Act  came
into force.  Therefore, the conditions mentioned in  Section  24(2)  of  the
2013 Act are satisfied for allowing the plea  of  the  appellants  that  the
land acquisition proceedings must be deemed  to  have  lapsed  in  terms  of
Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act.  The appeals  are  disposed  of  accordingly.
It goes without saying that the Government of Tamil Nadu shall be  free,  if
it so chooses to initiate proceedings of such  land  acquisition  afresh  in
accordance with the provisions of 2013 Act.  In the facts and  circumstances
of the case there shall be no order as to costs.

  2014 -Sept. Month -  http://judis.nic.in/supremecourt/filename=41900

                                                        REPORTABLE

                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                        CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                        CIVIL APPEAL NO.8700 OF 2013

Sree Balaji Nagar Residential Association                …..Appellant

      Versus

State of Tamil Nadu & Ors.                         …..Respondents

                                   W I T H

                CIVIL APPEAL NOS.8701 OF 2013; 8702 OF 2013;
                       8703 OF 2013;  AND 8704 OF 2013


                               J U D G M E N T



SHIVA KIRTI SINGH, J.

These civil appeals have been heard together  because  they  involve  common
questions of law and fact and, therefore, they  are  being  disposed  of  by
this common judgment and order.
Whereas in Civil  Appeal  No.8700  of  2013,  filed  by  an  Association  of
Residents of a particular  locality,  the  challenge  is  to  the  order  of
Government of Tamil Nadu bearing G.O. No.122 dated 14.07.1998  containing  a
scheme for development of a proposed canal by  name  Madhavaram  Left  Flank
Water Surplus Course, on the ground that  the  scheme  is  misconceived  and
technically flawed which shall lead to unnecessary acquisition of  land  and
building belonging to the residents of the affected area,  the  other  Civil
Appeals contain specific challenge to proceedings initiated under  the  Land
Acquisition Act, 1894 (hereinafter referred to as, ‘the Act’) undertaken  by
the Tamil Nadu State Government for the purpose  of  implementation  of  the
said  scheme  covered  by  G.O.  No.122  relating  to  the  proposed   canal
improvement works.  The actual land acquisition proceedings  commenced  with
issuance of Notification under  Section  4(1)  of  the  Act  on  02.02.2005,
insofar as the lands under dispute are concerned.  The  Award  was  made  on
30.11.2006 but in the meantime as appears from  the  facts  stated  in  C.A.
No.8700 of 2013, upon a challenge made to  the  Notification  under  Section
4(1) of the Act, the High Court stayed dispossession of the  concerned  land
holders by order dated 17.2.2005  but  ultimately  the  writ  petitions  and
other tagged matters were dismissed on 27.4.2007.  The matter  reached  this
Court and as  a  result  of  an  interim  order  passed  by  this  Court  on
18.05.2007 in C.A.No.8701 of 2013 [arising out of S.L.P.(C)No.9492 of  2007]
the land holders have remained protected from being dispossessed from  their
lands in question.
The various orders passed by this Court  in  these  cases  reveal  that  the
matter was taken up in a much wider  perspective  in  the  light  of  larger
issues raised in public interest that alternative  scheme  be  also  devised
and taken into account to prevent unnecessary displacement of  large  number
of residents and with a view to protect likely pollution of  some  lakes  on
account of flood waters entering into such lakes and thereby  affecting  the
cleanliness of possible sources for supply of drinking water.   This  Court,
long  back  on  10.02.2010  felt  the  need  for  and  hence  directed   the
respondents to submit a revised  comprehensive  plan  of  the  area  showing
location of various water  bodies,  the  construction  of  canal  which  had
already taken place and the natural flow of  water  from  Ambattur  tank  to
Korattur tank and from Korattur tank to Capt. Cotton Canal.  On  31.03.2010,
learned senior  counsel  for  the  State  of  Tamil  Nadu  referred  to  and
submitted a final report by Mott  MacDonald,  an  expert  appointed  by  the
Government of Tamil Nadu to study the entire scheme and prepare Storm  Water
Drainage Master Plan for Madras City and Pre-feasibility  Study  for  Madras
Metropolitan Area.  On going through the relevant portions of  that  Report,
this Court decided to appoint an expert  body  to  study  the  environmental
aspect of the scheme under challenge because the  expert  appointed  by  the
State Government had suggested  further  study/monitoring  of  ground  water
outside the Chennai Metropolitan area.   By  order  dated  09.04.2010,  this
Court appointed a Committee of several experts  under  the  Chairmanship  of
Hon’ble Mr. Justice Doraiswamy Raju, a former  Judge  of  this  Court.   The
terms of reference included eight points and the Committee was requested  to
submit its report within three months.   The  Committee’s  report  was  made
available to this Court,  belatedly and for one reason  or  the  other,  the
matter could not be heard finally for  a  long  period.   At  the  stage  of
hearing, on 10.07.2014, the State of Tamil Nadu  expressed  its  willingness
to explore the possibility of arriving at some consensus.  This  course  was
adopted in view of relevant map and materials which showed that  as  a  part
of  Chennai  City  Waterways  Alignment  of  Surplus  Course   Package   IV,
considerable part of the proposed canal had  already  been  constructed  but
the balance part remained incomplete only on account of present  proceedings
against acquisition of lands for  the  purpose.   However,  the  High  Level
Committee meeting under Chairmanship of the Chief  Secretary  of  the  State
involving  the  petitioners  in  public  interest  litigation  as  well   as
representatives of the land owners’ Association could not prove fruitful.
In the meanwhile, on account of a subsequent  legislation  –  The  Right  to
Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition,  Rehabilitation  and
Resettlement Act, 2013 (for brevity, ‘2013 Act’)  coming  into  effect  from
01.01.2014, through I.A. No.3 filed in Civil Appeal No.8701 of 2013, a  plea
was raised on behalf of the appellants that the appeals be allowed in  terms
of Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act by holding that the acquisition  proceeding
initiated under the Act has lapsed.
The parties have been heard only on this narrow legal  aspect  to  find  out
whether the appellants’ prayer noted above deserves to be  allowed  in  view
of Section 24(2) of 2013 Act or not.  In view  of  the  order  proposed,  we
find it futile to refer to and  discuss  the  facts  involved  in  different
civil appeals.  Section 24 of 2013 Act is as follows :
“24. (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in this  Act,  in  any  case  of
land acquisition proceedings  initiated  under  the  Land  Acquisition  Act,
1894, -

      (a) where no award under section 11 of the said Land  Acquisition  Act
has  been  made,  then,  all  provisions  of  this  Act  relating   to   the
determination of compensation shall apply; or

      (b)  where an award under said section 11 has  been  made,  then  such
proceedings  shall  continue  under  the  provisions  of   the   said   Land
Acquisition Act, as if the said Act has not been repealed.

(2) Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section (1), in case  of  land
acquisition proceedings initiated under  the  Land  Acquisition  Act,  1894,
where an award under the said section 11 has been made five  years  or  more
prior to the commencement of this Act but the  physical  possession  of  the
land has not  been taken or the compensation has  not  been  paid  the  said
proceedings shall be deemed to have lapsed and the  appropriate  Government,
if it so chooses, shall initiate the proceedings of  such  land  acquisition
afresh in accordance with the provisions of this Act:

Provided that where an award has been made and compensation in respect of  a
majority of land holdings has not been  deposited  in  the  account  of  the
beneficiaries, then, all beneficiaries specified  in  the  notification  for
acquisition under section 4 of the  said  Land  Acquisition  Act,  shall  be
entitled to compensation in accordance with the provisions of this Act.”

It  has  been  contended  by  learned  senior  counsel  appearing  for   the
appellants that in view of the non obstante clause  in  sub-section  (2)  of
Section 24, notwithstanding an award passed under Section 11 of the  Act  in
respect of acquisition proceedings under challenge, such proceedings  cannot
continue under the provisions of the Act  because  the  award  was  made  on
30.11.2006, i.e., more than five years  earlier  and  undisputedly  physical
possession of the land of the concerned appellants has  not  been  taken  as
yet. It has further been contended that proceedings have lapsed  because  in
several cases the alleged payment is only by way of deposit in  treasury  on
30.03.2007 and not by deposit in Court, as required by  law.   Reliance  has
been placed upon a judgment of this Court in  the  case  of  Pune  Municipal
Corporation & Anr. v. Harakchand Misirimal Solanki & Ors. (2014) 3  SCC  183
in support of the contention that compensation cannot be said to  have  been
paid  only  by  its  deposit  with  the  Revenue  authorities  such  as  the
Government treasury, it can be accepted to have been  paid  only  if  it  is
actually paid to the land  owner  or  is  deposited  in  the  Court  as  per
requirement of Section 31 of the Act.  For showing  that  at  least  in  the
case of some land holders, the compensation  was  simply  deposited  in  the
Revenue Deposit Account in the sub-treasury and not in the concerned  Court,
a letter of Spl. Thasildar  (LA),  Chennai  Corporation  Waterways  Project,
Ambattur, Chennai, dated 30.03.2007 has been annexed with I.A. No.3 of  2014
in C.A.No.8701 of 2013.
 In reply Mr. Subramonium Prasad, AAG  for  the  State  of  Tamil  Nadu  has
produced some charts and documents to  submit  that  compensation  has  been
deposited in several cases with the concerned Civil Court also and  in  some
cases the payments have been accepted by the land owners.  However, even  as
per the chart containing details of award and payments for 3.31 hectares  of
land involved in the case of Vishwanathan & Ors. in  C.A.  No.8701  of  2013
[arising out of S.L.P.(C) No.9492 of 2007] an amount of   Rs.26,73,851/-  is
shown to be lying in Revenue deposit whereas only for  a  small  portion  of
land an amount of Rs.5,50,056/- is in Civil Court  deposit.   However,  this
issue  need  not  be  pursued  any  further  because   admittedly   physical
possession of the land involved in these appeals has not been taken over  by
the State and on that account alone, the land acquisition  proceeding  under
challenge will have to be treated or  declared  as  lapsed  unless  we  find
merit in the contention raised on behalf of State that this plea  cannot  be
used against the  State  because  it  was  prevented  from  taking  physical
possession of the lands on account of interim  orders  passed  by  the  High
Court and this Court.
There is no dispute that writ petitions were filed even  before  the  making
of award and interim orders have operated against the State  of  Tamil  Nadu
and,  therefore,  the  State  was  not  at  fault  in  not  taking  physical
possession of the concerned lands under acquisition.  But the  intention  of
the Legislature in enacting Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act will  have  to  be
culled out from its wordings and on the basis of other  relevant  provisions
of this Act and the relevant case law for deciding  whether  the  period  of
stay/injunction is required to be excluded  in  computing  the  five  years’
period or not.
  From a plain reading of Section 24 of  the  2013  Act  it  is  clear  that
Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act does not exclude any period during  which  the
land acquisition proceeding might have remained stayed on  account  of  stay
or injunction granted by any court.  In the same  Act,  proviso  to  Section
19(7) in the context of limitation  for  publication  of  declaration  under
Section 19(1) and the Explanation to  Section  69(2)  for  working  out  the
market value of the  land  in  the  context  of  delay  between  preliminary
notification under Section 11  and  the  date  of  the  award,  specifically
provide that the period or periods during which the acquisition  proceedings
were held up on account of any stay or injunction by the order of any  court
be excluded in computing the relevant period.  In that view  of  the  matter
it can be safely concluded that the Legislature has consciously  omitted  to
extend the period of five years indicated  in  Section  24(2)  even  if  the
proceedings had been delayed on account of an order of  stay  or  injunction
granted by a court of law or for any reason.  Such casus omissus  cannot  be
supplied by the court in view of law on the  subject  elaborately  discussed
by this Court in the case of Padma Sundara Rao (Dead) &  Ors.  v.  State  of
T.N. & Ors. (2002) 3 SCC 533.
Even in the Land Acquisition Act of 1894, the Legislature had brought  about
amendment in Section 6 through an Amendment Act of 1984 to  add  Explanation
1 for the purpose of excluding the period when the proceeding suffered  stay
by an order of  the  court,  in  the  context  of  limitation  provided  for
publishing the declaration under Section 6(1) of  the  Act.   To  a  similar
effect was Explanation to Section 11A which was added by  Amendment  Act  68
of 1984.  Clearly the Legislature has, in its wisdom,  made  the  period  of
five years under Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act absolute  and  unaffected  by
any delay in the proceedings on account of any order of  stay  by  a  court.
The plain wordings used by the Legislature are clear and do not  create  any
ambiguity or conflict.  In such a situation, the court is  not  required  to
depart from the literal rule of interpretation.
It was faintly suggested by Mr. Subramonium  Prasad,  learned  AAG  for  the
State of Tamil Nadu that the proviso may come to the  rescue  of  the  State
and save the proceedings from suffering lapse  if  it  is  held  that  since
there was an award leading to payment of compensation in respect of some  of
the land holdings only, therefore all the beneficiaries may now be  entitled
to compensation in accordance with the provisions of  the  2013  Act.   This
contention  could  have  been  considered  with  some  more  seriousness  if
physical possession of the land had been taken but since that has  not  been
done, the proviso dealing only with compensation cannot be of  any  help  to
the State.  Therefore, we are not required to go deeper into the effect  and
implications of the proviso which prima facie appears to be for the  benefit
of all the land holders in a case where the award is subsisting because  the
proceedings have not lapsed and compensation in respect of majority of  land
holdings has not been deposited in the account of the beneficiaries.   There
is nothing in the language of the proviso to restrict  the  meaning  of  the
words used in Section 24(2) mandating that the proceedings shall  be  deemed
to have lapsed if the award is five years or more than five years’  old  but
the physical possession  of  the  land  has  not  been  taken  over  or  the
compensation has not been paid.   The  law  is  trite  that  when  the  main
enactment is clear and unambiguous, a proviso can have no effect  so  as  to
exclude from the main enactment by implication  what  clearly  falls  within
its express terms, as held by Privy  Council  in  the  case  of  Madras  and
Southern Mahratta Railway Co. Ltd. v. Bezwada Municipality  AIR 1944  PC  71
and by this Court in the case of C.I.T. v. Indo Mercantile  Bank  Ltd.   AIR
1959 SC 713.
The judgment of three Judges’ Bench in  the  case  of  Harakchand  Misirimal
(supra) has been followed by another Bench of three Judges in  the  case  of
Union of India & Ors. etc. v. Shivraj & Ors. etc.  (2014)  6  SCC  564.   In
paragraphs 25 and  26  of  that  judgment,  this  Court  took  notice  of  a
clarification  issued  by  the  Government  of  India,  Ministry  of   Urban
Development,  Delhi  Division  dated  14.03.2014.   Part  of  the   circular
extracted in that case clearly shows that the period of five years  or  more
in Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act has been prescribed with a view to  benefit
the land-losers and the period spent in litigation due to challenge  to  the
award or the land acquisition proceedings cannot be excluded.
From the discussions made above, it is amply  clear  that  though  there  is
lack of clarity  on  the  issue  whether  compensation  has  been  paid  for
majority of land holdings under acquisition or  not,  there  is  no  dispute
that physical possession of the lands  belonging  to  the  appellants  under
consideration in these appeals has not been taken by the State or any  other
authority on its behalf and more than five  years  have  elapsed  since  the
making of the award dated 30.11.2006 and 01.01.2014 when the 2013  Act  came
into force.  Therefore, the conditions mentioned in  Section  24(2)  of  the
2013 Act are satisfied for allowing the plea  of  the  appellants  that  the
land acquisition proceedings must be deemed  to  have  lapsed  in  terms  of
Section 24(2) of the 2013 Act.  The appeals  are  disposed  of  accordingly.
It goes without saying that the Government of Tamil Nadu shall be  free,  if
it so chooses to initiate proceedings of such  land  acquisition  afresh  in
accordance with the provisions of 2013 Act.  In the facts and  circumstances
of the case there shall be no order as to costs.


      ..…………………………………………………….J.
      [FAKKIR MOHAMED IBRAHIM KALIFULLA]



       ……………………………………………………..J.
                 [SHIVA KIRTI SINGH]

New Delhi.
September 10, 2014.

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