M.M Dutt, J.:— In this appeal, the appellant Sm. Srila Moitra has challenged the propriety of the judgment of a learned single Judge of this Court whereby the learned Judge has discharged the Rule Nisi obtained by the appellant on her application under Article 226 of the Constitution of India.
2. The appellant is admittedly the owner of premises No. 6B, Ironside Road, Calcutta which is within the limits of the Corporation of Calcutta. The land comprised in the said premises measures 1542.625 Sq. metres consisting of a building covering 233.500 Sq. metres, a tank measuring 1162124 Sq. metres and 147.0017 Sq. metres of land appertaining to the building. On Sep. 27, 1976, the appellant duly submitted a return under the provisions of the Urban Land (Ceiling and Regulations) Act, 1976, herein after referred to as the Act, before the respondent No. 2, the Competent Authority, Calcutta. On August 19, 1979, the appellant gave a notice to the respondent No. 2 under Section 26 of the Act for transfer of an area of 500 Sq. metres of the said tank, by way of sale in favour of Purbarag Samabaya Abasan Ltd., a Housing Co-operative Society, registered under the Co-operative Societies Act. In reply to the said notice, the respondent No. 2 by his letter dated Oct. 16, 1979 informed the appellant that as she was holding vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit, the notice under S. 26 was not valid and the transfer of the portion of the disputed tank could not be allowed. Being aggrieved by the refusal by the respondent No. 2 to grant to the appellant permission to sell the said portion of the disputed tank on the ground that the tank was vacant land and the appellant was holding vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit as contained in his said letter dated Oct. 16, 1979 (Annexure ‘C’ to the writ petition), the appellant moved this Court under Art. 226 of the Constitution whereupon the Rule Nisi, out of which this appeal arises, was issued.
3. At the hearing of the Rule Nisi, it was contended on behalf of the appellant that the disputed tank was not ‘vacant land’ within the meaning of S. 2(q) of the Act and, as such, the appellant was not in possession of any excess vacant land. The learned Judge, however, came to the finding that the tank should be construed as vacant land within the meaning of S. 2(q) of the Act. In that view of the matter, the learned Judge discharged the Rule Nisi. Hence this appeal.
4. The only question that is involved in this appeal is whether a tank is a vacant land within the meaning of S. 2(q) of the Act Before we come to the question, we may refer to the scheme of the Act. The preamble of the Act shows that it is an Act to provide for the imposition of a ceiling on vacant land in urban agglomerations, for the acquisition of such land in excess of the ceiling limit, to regulate the construction of buildings on such land and for matters connected therewith, with a view to preventing the concentration of urban land in the hands of a few persons and speculation and profiteering therein and with a view to bring about an equitable distribution of land in urban agglomerations to subserve the common good. Section 3 of the Act provides that except as otherwise provided in the Act, on and from the commencement of the Act no person shall be entitled to hold any vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit. Section 4 provides for the ceiling limit Section 10 is a provision for acquisition of vacant land in excess of ceiling limit. Under Sec. 26 notice is required to be given before transfer of vacant land. Sub-section (1) of S. 26 provides that notwithstanding anything contained in any other law for the time being in force, no person holding vacant land within the ceiling limit shall transfer such land by way of sale, mortgage, gift, lease or otherwise except after giving notice in writing of the intended transfer to the Competent Authority. The object of giving a notice is contained in sub-section (2) of S. 26. Under sub-section (2), where the notice is for the transfer of land by way of sale the Competent Authority shall have the first option to purchase such land on behalf of the State Government at a price to be calculated in the manner as provided in that sub-section; such option has to be exercised within the period of sixty days from the receipt of the notice and if no such option is exercised within the said period it shall be lawful for the person giving the notice to transfer the land.
5. The respondent No. 2, the Competent Authority, took the view that as the disputed tank was vacant land and as the appellant held vacant land in excess of the ceiling limit, the provision of S. 26 was not applicable. The consequence of this finding of the Competent Authority is that the State Government will be entitled to acquire the disputed tank which is alleged to be excess vacant land. Mr. Balai Chandra Roy, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the appellant submits that a tank is not vacant land within the meaning of S. 2(q) of the Act Section 2(q) provides as follows:
“(q). “vacant land”, means land, not being land mainly used for the purpose of agriculture, in an urban agglomeration, but does not include—
(i) land on which construction of building is not permissible under the building regulations in force in the area in which such land is situated;
(ii) in an area where there are building regulations, the land occupied by any building which has been constructed before or is being constructed on, the appointed day with the approval of the appropriate authority and the land appurtenant to such building; and
(iii) in an area where there are no building regulations, the land occupied by any building which has been constructed before, or is being constructed on, the appointed day and the land appurtenant to such building:
Provided that where any person ordinarily keeps his cattle, other than for the purpose of dairy farming or for the purpose of breeding of live-stock, on any land situated in a village within an urban agglomeration (described as a village in the revenue records), then, so much extent of the land as has been ordinarily used for the keeping of such cattle immediately before the appointed day shall not be deemed to be vacant land for the purposes of this clause.”
It is submitted on behalf of the appellant that a tank comes under the exception as provided in Cl. (i) of S. 2(q). The real question, therefore, is whether the construction of a building is permissible on a tank under the building regulations in force in the area in which the tank is situated. It is not disputed that in the instant case, the building regulations as contained in the Calcutta Municipal Act, 1951 will apply for the purposes of Cl. (i). Section 376 of the Calcutta Municipal Act provides as follows:
“376. No piece of land shall be used as a site for the erection of a new building, and no new building shall be erected, otherwise than in accordance with—
(a) the provisions of this Chapter and of Sch. XVI, and
(b) any orders, rules or by-laws - made under this Act
relating to the use of building sites or the erection of new buildings, as the case may be.”
Rule 1 of Part I of Sch. XVI is as follows:
“1. No piece of land shall be used as a site for the errection of a building—
(1) If the building is to abut on a street, unless the site is of such a shape that the face of the building can be made parallel to the line of the street, or as nearly parallel to the said line as the Commissioner may consider practicable; and
(2) if the site is within ten metres of a tank, unless the owner takes, or satisfies the Commissioner that he will take, such action as will prevent any risk of the drainage of the building passing into the tank; and
(3) if the site is a filled-up tank, or has been filled up with or used for depositing rubbish, offensive matter or sewage; unless the Commissioner has caused the site to be examined and granted a certificate to the effect that it is, from sanitary and engineering points of view, fit to be built upon; and
(4) if the building to be erected is a public building, a dwelling house or a hut intended for human habitation, unless the site is certified by the Commissioner to be dry and well-drained, or unless the Commissioner is satisfied that it is capable of being well-drained and that the owner will take the necessary steps to drain it;
(5) if the frontage of the site is less than five metres, unless it is certified by the Commissioner that the site can be used for the construction of a building and while granting the certificate the Commissioner may fix the height of the building to be erected.”
Rule 1 starts with a prohibition against the erection of a building on five classes of building sites unless certain conditions are fulfilled. Apart from the building sites mentioned in Cls. (1) to (5) of R. 1 there is no other building site under the other provisions of Sch. XVI except the site on which a building has been previously existing as provided in R. 2 of Part I. Neither under R. 1 nor under R. 2, a tank is considered to be a building site. It is apparent from Rr. 1 and 2 that the said Rules postulate a piece of land as building site which is not put to any use, A tank is constructed for the purpose of storage of water by excavating earth from solid land. A tank contains an embankment, the underground land and the bed of the tank. A tank is no doubt land, but it is not solid land. A building, either under R. 1 or under R. 2, is permissible to be constructed on solid land Which is vacant, that is, not put to any use. Apart from the fact that tank-land is not solid land, it cannot also be considered as vacant land for the purpose of construction of a building. Indeed, Cl. (3) of Rule 1 provides for the erection of a building on the site of a filled-up tank. A filled-up tank is not a tank, but it is solid land and a vacant land too in the sense that after the tank is filled-up the land is no longer used for storage of water. Under Cl. (2) of R. 1, a building is not permissible to be erected within 10 metres of a tank unless certain conditions are fulfilled.
6. It is contended by the learned Additional Advocate-General, appearing for the respondents, that Cl. (i) of S. 2(q) of the Act postulates an absolute prohibition against the construction of a building under the building regulations. He submits that Rule 1 of Part 1 of Sen. XVI to the Calcutta Municipal Act does not provide for an absolute prohibition against erection of buildings on the sites referred to in Cls. (1) to (5) of Rule 1, for, on the fulfilment of certain conditions, the initial bar against construction on the sites will be removed. He frankly concedes that no permission can be granted for construction on a tank and indeed, the building rules under the Calcutta Municipal Act do not provide for the grunt of any such permission. But he submits that if a tank is filled up in the manner laid down in Cl. (3) of Rule 1, such permission can be granted. It is submitted by him that considered from that point of view, it should be held that as construction of a building is permissible on a tank after it is filled up, tank does not come within the exception of the definition of ‘vacant land’ under Cl. (i) of S. 2(q).
7. It is not necessary for us to decide finally whether or not the provision of Cl. (i) of S. 2(q) provides for an absolute prohibition, but assuming that it does, let us consider whether a tank is a vacant land or not. The underground of the tank is undoubtedly land. The municipal authorities will not surely permit anybody to construct on the underground land of a tank, nor will anybody wish to construct on tank-land. There can be no doubt that if the water of the tank is drained out and the excavation is filled up in the manner provided in Cl. (3) of Rule 1, the permission to construct will be granted. As soon as, however, the tank is filled up, there will be no existence of the tank, and the site will be a different site. The filled-up tank is solid land like any other building site. We are however, not concerned with filled-up tank, but with the land of the tank with water on it. In our opinion, Cl. (i) of S. 2(q) of the Act postulates the existing state of the land and not its altered state or improved state. Any land, which comes within the prohibitions under Cls. (1) to (5) of R. 1 of Part 1 of Sch. XVI to the Calcutta Municipal Act, can be converted into a building site by altering its condition. A piece of land with a building thereon is not a building site, but it will become so if the building is demolished and removed. Clauses (ii) and (iii) of S. 2(q) of the Act have excluded lands with buildings from the category of vacant land. This also indicates that the existing condition of the land should be taken into consideration for the purpose of the definition of vacant land. In this connection, we may refer to the provision of S. 11(3)(b) of the Act under which the State Government has to fix the rate per square metre of vacant land in each zone acquired under Section 10(3) of the Act for calculation of payment to the persons interested. The rate that may be fixed will be applicable to all vacant land in the zone. In our opinion, if the Legislature had intended to include tank as vacant land, it would not have surely prescribed one uniform rate for solid land and for tank which is undoubtedly of lesser value than solid land. Section 11(3)(b) also indicates that tank is not included within the definition of vacant land.
8. The learned Additional Advocate-General has placed reliance on a certain observation of the Supreme Court in Anant Mills v. State of Gujarat, AIR 1975 SC 1234. In that case, it has been observed by the Supreme Court that the word ‘land’ includes not only the face of the earth, but everything under or over it, and has in its legal signification an indefinite extent upward and downward. He has also relied on a statement in Halsbury's Laws of England, 3rd Edn., Vol. 32, Art. 340, p. 248, inter alia, that land includes buildings, tanks etc. There can be no doubt that tank includes land and, in ordinary sense, tank is land. We are, however, concerned with the question whether ‘tank’ is a vacant land within the meaning of S. 2(q) of the Act. So the observation of the Supreme Court and the statement in Halsbury's Laws of England referred to above, do not help in solving the question.
9. It is, however, contended by the learned Additional Advocate-General that the object of the Act being to subserve the common good, which is expressly stated in the preamble referred to above, the provision of S. 2(q) of me Act and, for the matter of that, the building regulations tod should be construed in a manner consistent with the object of the Act. It is true that a beneficial statute should be construed with an eye to the object sought to be achieved by it. At the same time, if is a well established principle of law that an expropriatory legislation should be strictly construed. The Act with which we are concerned-is admittedly an expropriatory statute, for, it has been earlier noticed, the Government will acquire the vacant lands in excess of the ceiling limit. Generally, all such legislations are enacted for public good. No doubt, the Court should see that the object that is sought to be achieved is hot frustrated. At the same time, the Court should not lose sight of the citizens who are being divested of their properties. In other words, the rule of strict construction is not to be given a go-by in the ground that the statute, though it is expropriatory, yet it is for public good.
10. For the, reasons stated above, we regret, we are unable to accept the view of the learned Judge that Cl. (i) of S. 2(q) of foe Act is applicable only in respect of land whereupon construction of a building is expressly prohibited by the building regulations in force in the area in which such land is situated, and that as the building rules of the Calcutta Municipal Act do not expressly bar construction of a building on a land which is a tank, the appellant cannot avail himself of the exclusive Cl. (i) of S. 2(q) of the Act.
11. In the circumstances, the judgment appealed from is set aside and the Rule is made absolute. The impugned order dated Oct 16, 1979 (Annexuie ‘C’ to the writ petition) is quashed and the respondents are directed not to-give any effect to the same. Let appropriate writ or writs issue in that regard.
12. The appeal is allowed to the extent indicated above. There will, however, be no order for costs.
13. As prayed for by the learned Additional Advocate-General, there will be a stay of the operation of the judgment till three weeks after the Christmas Holidays.
A.K Sarkar, J.:— I agree.
Appeal allowed.
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