RAJKUMARI NARINDERSAIN SINDHWANI vs SPECIAL LAND ACQUISITION OFFICER . — SLP(C) No. 13467/1995
Case under 2301_3Jj-housing and Building-municipal Laws-housing and Building Permits, Slums Rehabilitation, Demolition, Encroachment/ Removal of Encroachment, Sealing and Urban Planning : Three Judge Matter Section IX. Status: PENDING.
CNR: SCIN010070631995
Filing Date
28-Apr-1995
Registration No
SLP(C) No. 13467/1995
Diary Number
7063/1995
Order Date
05-Nov-2024
Document Type
Judgement - of Main Case
Data as of 03-Jun-2026
Acts & Sections
Petitioner(s)
RAJKUMARI NARINDERSAIN SINDHWANI
Adv. P. N. GUPTA
Respondent(s)
SPECIAL LAND ACQUISITION OFFICER .
Adv. MANOJ SWARUP AND CO. CHIRAG M. SHROFF AADITYA ANIRUDDHA PANDE[R-1] AADITYA ANIRUDDHA PANDE[R-2] AADITYA ANIRUDDHA PANDE[R-7]
Hearing History
Judge: HON'BLE THE CHIEF JUSTICE, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE HRISHIKESH ROY, HON'BLE MRS. JUSTICE B.V. NAGARATHNA, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SUDHANSHU DHULIA, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE J.B. PARDIWALA, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE MANOJ MISRA, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE RAJESH BINDAL, HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SATISH CHANDRA SHARMA and HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE AUGUSTINE GEORGE MASIH
Fixed Date by Court
Fixed Date by Court
Fixed Date by Court
Fixed Date by Court
Fixed Date by Court
| Date | Purpose |
|---|---|
| 05-Nov-2024 | Fixed Date by Court |
| 01-May-2024 | Fixed Date by Court |
| 30-Apr-2024 | Fixed Date by Court |
| 25-Apr-2024 | Fixed Date by Court |
| 24-Apr-2024 | Fixed Date by Court |
Orders in this case
Common Record of Proceedings — heard with connected matters
Lead case: C.A. No. 1012/2002
SUMMARY: SLP(C) No. 13467/1995 - Property Owners Association vs. State of Maharashtra CITATION - Case: SLP(C) No. 13467 of 1995 (with CA No. 1012 of 2002 and connected matters) - Petitioner(s): Rajkumari Narindersain Sindhwani / Property Owners' Association - Respondent(s): Special Land Acquisition Officer / State of Maharashtra & Others - Court: Supreme Court of India (9-Judge Constitution Bench) - Date: November 5, 2024 KEY QUESTIONS REFERRED 1. Article 31-C: Whether Article 31-C (as upheld in Kesavananda Bharati) survives after Minerva Mills invalidated the 42nd Amendment to Article 31-C? 2. Article 39(b): Whether "material resources of the community" includes privately owned resources, or only state-owned resources? MAIN HOLDINGS On Article 31-C (UNANIMOUS) - Yes, Article 31-C survives to the extent upheld in Kesavananda Bharati - When the 42nd Amendment's substitution of Article 31-C was struck down in Minerva Mills, the unamended Article 31-C (limiting protection to Articles 39(b) and (c)) was revived - This is because Parliament's intention was composite—to substitute, not to independently repeal On Article 39(b) (MAJORITY vs. DISSENT) Chief Justice Chandrachud's Opinion (Majority: 5 Judges) - "Theoretically yes, but practically limited": Privately owned resources may fall within "material resources of the community," BUT: - NOT all privately owned resources fall within this phrase - Only resources meeting specific qualifications: - Must be "material" (significant, substantive) - Must be "of the community" (have community element) - Must be assessed case-by-case considering: - Nature and inherent characteristics - Impact on community well-being - Scarcity of resource - Consequences of concentration in private hands - Public Trust Doctrine may help identify qualifying resources - Criticized the Krishna Iyer interpretation (adopted in Ranganatha Reddy and Sanjeev Coke) as too expansive and endorsing a particular (socialist) economic ideology Justice Nagarathna's Opinion (Concurring on Part 1, Separate on Part 2) - Concurs with Chief Justice on Article 31-C survival - On Article 39(b): Offers a nuanced middle ground - Distinguishes between resources becoming "material resources of the community" through transformation - Privately owned resources must first be converted/transformed into "material resources of the community" through: - Nationalization - Acquisition - Vesting by operation of law - Purchase - Voluntary donation/endowment - Until transformed, private resources cannot be distributed under Article 39(b) - Excludes "personal effects" from definition Justice Sudhanshu Dhulia's Dissent (Supporting Ranganatha Reddy/Sanjeev Coke) - Strongly disagrees with narrowing of Article 39(b) - Argues privately owned resources ARE part of "material resources of the community" - Bases this on: - Historical necessity and freedom struggle context - Constituent Assembly intent to frame provisions broadly - Consistent interpretation in land reforms, bank nationalization cases - Living Constitution doctrine—meaning evolves with times - Ongoing inequality in India justifies expansive interpretation - Defends Krishna Iyer Doctrine as humanist and fair - Notes judicial discipline was not breached in Sanjeev Coke REASONING Why Article 31-C Survives (All agree) 1. Substitution Doctrine: When Parliament substitutes old text with new text in an amendment, the legislative intent is composite 2. If amendments struck down, pre-amendment text revives (not a two-step process that can be partially undone) 3. No This case analysis is maintained by casestatus.in based on publicly available court records.
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