High Court Rajasthan High Court - Jodhpur

M/S.Polymoon Irrigation, … vs D.L.S.C.& Ors on 3 September, 2009

Rajasthan High Court – Jodhpur
M/S.Polymoon Irrigation, … vs D.L.S.C.& Ors on 3 September, 2009
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       IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE FOR RAJASTHAN
                         AT JODHPUR

                       J U D G M E N T


    D.B.CIVIL SPECIAL APPEAL (WRIT) No.37/2002
    M/s. Polymoch Irrigation     V/S D.L.S.C. & Ors.


Date of Judgment          :           3rd September,2009

                       PRESENT
                  HON'BLE SHRI N P GUPTA,J.
                HON'BLE SHRI GOVIND MATHUR,J.


Mr.Dinesh Mehta, for the appellant.
Mr.Rishabh Sancheti, for the respondent.


BY THE COURT : (PER HON'BLE GUPTA,J.)

This appeal has been filed against the judgment

of learned Single Judge dt. 5.12.2001 dismissing the writ

petition.

Petitioner by the writ petition prayed for

quashing the decision dt. 7.4.1999 taken by the District

Level Screening Committee, and for declaring clause 2 of

the Rajasthan Sales Tax Exemption Scheme,1998 to be

ultravires, and for declaring the petitioner to be

entitled for availing the benefit of the scheme.

The necessary factual averments are that the

petitioner’s predecessor in title got converted certain
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agricultural land for commercial purposes under and in

accordance with the Rajasthan Land Revenue (Allotment,

Conversion & Regularisation of Agricultural Land for

Residential and Commercial Purposes in Urban Areas)

Rules, 1981, hereafter referred to as the Rules of 1981,

and obtained Patta Annexure-1, and later on the

petitioner purchased the said land, and decided to

establish an industry of H.B.P.E. and H.D.P.E. Pipes and

sprinkler system, and domestic plastic pipes. It is

claimed that no objection certificates were obtained from

S.D.O., and Municipality, and then application was

submitted for seeking exemption under the Rajasthan Sales

Tax Exemption Scheme, 1998 furnishing requisite

informations, receipt whereof was acknowledged vide

Annexure-4. However, vide Annexure-5 the benefit of

incentive was refused. The copy of the minutes of the

meeting refusing the benefits is produced as Annexure-6.

A look at Annexure-6 shows that reason given by

the D.L.S.C. was that the industry has been commissioned

in banned area as defined in the Scheme.

The learned Single Judge has reproduced the

definition of banned area as given in clause 2(a) of the

Scheme, and found that it is not in dispute that under

master plan of Barmer there is a separate industrial

area, but the petitioner’s industry is not in the said
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area. The learned Single Judge has also relied upon the

provisions of Rajasthan Industrial Areas Allotment Rules,

1959, and the fact that the petitioner did not get any

allotment of land under the said Rules. Interalia on this

basis, learned Single Judge declined to interfere with

the orders Annexure-5 and 6.

We have heard learned counsel for the

petitioner. It was firstly submitted that under 1981

Rules, the land can be converted either for residential

or commercial purposes, and the commercial purposes

include industrial purposes also, and since vide

Annexure-2 and 3, no objection was granted by the S.D.O.,

and Municipality, it cannot be said that the petitioner

was not entitled to the benefit under the Scheme inasmuch

as with the grant of no objection certificate Annexure-2

and 3 the rigor of banned area stood watered down, and

learned Single Judge was in error in dismissing the writ

petition.

The arguments looks to be attractive but on

closure scrutiny we do not find any substance in the

same.

True it is that in 1981 Rules conversion can be

either for residential, or commercial purposes, but that

is not the end of the matter, inasmuch as 1959 Rules do
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separately exist, and Rule 11 thereof takes care of

situation, where industrial area does not exist, and

provides mechanism for handling such an eventuality. A

collective reading of the Rules of 1959 including Rule 11

thereof does make it clear, that the whole idea is that

if any industry is to be commissioned, it is to be

commissioned in the industrial area earmarked, or

established, and where no such industrial area is

earmarked, or established, then recourse can be had to

provisions of Rule 11, but then resort to subterfuge of

1981 Rules, and obtaining no objection certificates like

Annexures-2 and 3 cannot have the effect of liquidating

the rigor of Clause 2(a) of the Scheme.

In that view of the matter, we do not find any

error, to interfere with, in the impugned order.

The appeal thus has no force, and is hereby

dismissed.

  ( GOVIND MATHUR ),J.               ( N P GUPTA ),J.


/Sushil/