Sunday 4 January 2015

Arun Jaitley slams opposition parties for opposing amendments to the Land Act; says the amendments balance the developmental needs of rural India while still providing enhanced compensation to the land owners



In a post put up on his facebook page today, Union Finance Minister, Mr. Arun Jaitley, launching a staunch defence of his Government’s recent promulgation of an ordinance to effect amendments to the Land Act, has explained the necessity of amending the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land Acquisition, Resettlement and Rehabilitation (Amendment) Act, 2013 through the ordinance route, instead of routing it through Parliament. 

Acknowledging the reality that the 1894 Act had become obsolete and needed amendments, and stating that the 2013 Act provided for higher compensation coupled with a rehabilitation and resettlement package, Mr. Jaitley said that he supported the 2013 Act on that ground. 

File Picture: Arun Jaitley
Explaining the reason for promulgating the ordinance, he said that Section 105 of the 2013 Act empowered the Government to issue a notification directing ‘any’ provision of the Act relating to compensation or R&R to be made applicable to the exempted acts (13 in number) which were put in the Fourth Schedule of the Act, but that the “Proposed” notification had to be placed before Parliament for a period of 30 days and Parliament was expected to approve, disapprove or modify the said proposed notification .  He said that the necessity for an ordinance arose “because such a notification would have to be put before Parliament in the Budget session itself in July-August, 2014 and the approval or disapproval taken accordingly. 31st December, 2014 being the last day for such a notification, the Government decided to amend the Section 105 and apply all the compensation and R&R provisions of the 2013 Act to the thirteen exempted laws.” He said that if the Government had not issued such an ordinance, it “would have been in default of the complicated approval provisions outlined in the 2013 Act.

Mr. Jaitley held out a word of assurance to the farmers of the country by stating that as a result of the amendments brought about, the present ordinance would ensure that they would get higher compensation if land is acquired under any of the exempted laws. “It goes a step further than the 2013 Act itself. he said.

Defending the amendments, Mr. Jaitley said, “When the 1894 law is amended in the 21st century, it must provide for a 21st century compensation and cater to the developmental needs of the 21st century. It cannot completely ignore the developmental needs of the society and mandate that India does not grow.”

He said that the amendment which carves out five exceptions for which the complicated process of acquisition would not apply, namely defence and security of India, rural infrastructure, affordable housing and housing for poor, Industrial corridors and infrastructure and social infrastructure projects,would benefit rural India. “They would enhance the value of land, create employment and provide rural areas with better infrastructure and social infrastructure. This is in addition to the enhanced compensation and R&R provisions being expanded to the thirteen exempted acts”, claimed Mr. Jaitley. 

He said that the amendment balances the developmental needs of India, particularly rural India, while still providing enhanced compensation to the land owners.

Mr. Jaitley also stated that the 2013 Act had over 50 drafting errors, which would be cured thanks to the provision with regard to the rectification of the said errors in the amendment brought about as a result of the ordinance.  “Some are being cured through this ordinance which alters the earlier mandate of the 2013 law that unused land has to be returned five years after the acquisition. The earlier provision was clearly defective. Creation of smart cities, townships, industrial corridors, business centers, defence projects, cantonments, ports, nuclear installations, building of highways, irrigation projects, dams have a long gestations period. They cannot be completed in five years. If the earlier provision is to be effected, we would be a nation of incomplete projects on account of defective legislative drafting", said Mr. Jaitley, elucidating his point about the 2013 Act having errors, with a specific example. 

Pointing out another instance of an error that had crept into the 2013 Act, Mr. Jaitley said: “The draft provisions of the 2013 Act enthusiastically provide that no part of an acquired land could be used for a private educational institution or a hospital. How will new smart cities and townships come up? Will they only have a civil hospital and a Government school/ college and no other healthcare and educational institutions will be allowed to be established there? The ordinance permits hospitals and educational institutions to be established on an acquired land. That is the purpose of acquisition for townships. A township without a social infrastructure would be inherently incomplete.”

Slamming the opposition parties for criticizing the Govt move to introduce the ordinance, Mr. Jaitley throwing down the gauntlet to them, asked,  “Will the State Governments ruled by political parties, which are opposed to this ordinance, publically declare that they will not use the law which provides for enhanced compensation in the case of exempted acts and acquisition process which balances the developmental needs of society, particularly those of poor, weaker sections, rural India alongwith defence requirements of the country?”

He said that the amendment ordinance is based on extensive consultations where State Government of most political parties supported these changes.  “Those who are opposed to it can certainly mandate their party’s State Governments not to use the provisions of the ordinance. History will judge how these States will lose out in the era of competitive federalism”, added Mr. Jaitley, while concluding his facebook post.  

Cognizance of alleged offence of bigamy cannot be taken on a complaint at the instance of the second wife if she knew about her husband's first wife at the time of marriage, holds the Bombay High Court



In a significant ruling, the Bombay High Court has held that cognizance of offence of bigamy cannot be taken on a complaint at the instance of the second wife if she knew about her husband's first wife at the time of marriage.

The case involved one Kishor Rambhau Mandalik, 45, alias Dada Maharaj whose second wife had lodged a complaint with the police in November 2012 under the Indian Penal Code for the offences of cheating and bigamy. She had alleged that Mandalik had lured her into marriage on the promise that he was in the process of getting a divorce. However, within a week of the wedding, he allegedly abandoned her, claiming he dreamt of his father warning him that if they remained in wedlock, it would bring them both misfortune. After investigation, the police had laid a charge sheet before the jurisdictional magistrate’s Court against him.

The Magistrate, an an application filed by Mandalik, granted him an order of discharge on the ground of bigamy, retaining only the charge of cheating against him.  
Bombay High Court

Aggrieved by the order of discharge passed by the Magistrate’s Court, the state government then challenged the magistrate's order before the Sessions Court. The Sessions Court set aside the order of discharge passed by the Magistrate, following which Mandalik then challenged the order of the Sessions Court before the Bombay High Court. 

The Bombay High Court, considering Mandalik’s appeal from the order of the Sessions Court, found that the second wife, in her FIR, said she was aware of Mandalik's first marriage when she married him. It noted: "The learned magistrate rightly took a view that she could not be treated as an 'aggrieved person', and therefore, in view of the provisions of section 198 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the cognizance of the alleged offence could not be taken at her instance."

Terming the order of the sessions judge as "patently incorrect", the Bombay High Court set aside the order, observing that the order of the magistrate was "well reasoned".

"When cognizance of the offence punishable under section 494 of the IPC could not have been taken at all on the complaint of the second wife, who was aware of the first marriage, the question of taking such cognizance on the basis of a police report, on the ground that the case was a police case, was not proper," held the Bombay High Court, while allowing the appeal filed by Mandalik.