{"id":207597,"date":"2014-10-30T00:00:00","date_gmt":"2014-10-29T18:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/lokhandwala-infrastructure-pvt-vs-dhobighat-compound-rahiwasi-seva-on-30-october-2014"},"modified":"2019-03-30T21:07:12","modified_gmt":"2019-03-30T15:37:12","slug":"lokhandwala-infrastructure-pvt-vs-dhobighat-compound-rahiwasi-seva-on-30-october-2014","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/lokhandwala-infrastructure-pvt-vs-dhobighat-compound-rahiwasi-seva-on-30-october-2014","title":{"rendered":"Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt. &#8230; vs Dhobighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva &#8230; on 30 October, 2014"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"docsource_main\">Bombay High Court<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_title\">Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt. &#8230; vs Dhobighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva &#8230; on 30 October, 2014<\/div>\n<div class=\"doc_bench\">Bench: S.C. Gupte<\/div>\n<pre>    sat                                                                          1\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc\n\n                                      IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                                                             \n                                            ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                         \n                                            NOTICE OF MOTION NO. 1516 OF 2011\n                                                            IN\n                                                  SUIT NO. 1108 OF 2011\n\n               Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt.Ltd.                                                                        ...Applicant \/ Plaintiff\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                        \n                    vs.\n               Dhobhighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva Sangh &amp; Ors.                                                             ...Defendants\n\n\n               Dr.Veerendra Tulzapurkar, Senior Advocate with Mr.Chirag Balsara, Mr.Farid\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                 \n               Karachiwala, Mr.Sneh Mehta &amp; R. Nichani i\/b. M\/s. Wadia Ghandy &amp; Co. for\n               Plaintiff in Suit 1108\/2011.        \n               Mr.Pravin Samdani, Senior Advocate with Mr.Chirag Balsara, Farid Karachiwala,\n               Mr.Sneh Mehta, R. Nichani and Mr.Amit Rao i\/b. M\/s.Wadia Ghandy &amp; Co. for\n               Plaintiff in Suit No.1163\/2011.\n                                                  \n               Mr.S.U. Kamdar, Senior Advocate with Mr.Zubin Behram-Kamdin for Defendant\n               No.2 in NMS 1516\/2011, Suit 1108-2011 and for Defendant No.2 in NMS\n               1551\/2011 Suit 1163-2011.\n                  \n\n\n               Mr.J.G. Reddy for Defendant No.24 in Suit 1163\/2011.\n               \n\n\n\n               Mr.Vivek Vashi with Mr.Alya Khan i\/b. M\/s.Bharucha &amp; Partners for Defendant\n               No.26 in Suit 1108\/2011 and for Defendant No.23 in Suit 1163\/2011.\n\n\n                                                                                     CORAM : S.C. GUPTE, J.\n\n\n\n\n\n                                                                       RESERVED ON : 09 JULY 2014\n\n                                                                PRONOUNCED ON : 30 OCTOBER 2014\n\n               ORDER :\n<\/pre>\n<p>                                This Notice of Motion is taken out by the Plaintiff for appointment of<br \/>\n               Court receiver and interim injunction against the Defendants restraining them<br \/>\n               from acting upon or giving effect to the development agreement entered into<br \/>\n               between Defendant Nos. 1 and 2 and Defendant No. 26. The Plaintiff, who is a<br \/>\n               developer and who claims to have entered into a development agreement with<br \/>\n               Defendant Nos. 1 and 2 and Defendant Nos. 7 to 25 for development of the suit<br \/>\n               property, has filed the present suit for specific performance of that development<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                         ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                     2\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          agreement. The Defendants objected to the jurisdiction of this Court to hear the<\/p>\n<p>          suit in view of the provisions of Section 42 of the Maharashtra Slum Areas<br \/>\n          (Improvement, Clearance and Redevelopment) Act, 1971. Accordingly, a<\/p>\n<p>          preliminary issue of jurisdiction was framed by this Court. That issue is being<br \/>\n          decided by this order. The short facts of the Plaintiff&#8217;s case, relevant for the<br \/>\n          determination of the present controversy, may be noted as follows:\n<\/p>\n<p>          2                The suit property is a notified slum within the meaning of the<br \/>\n          Maharashtra slum (Improvement, Clearance and Redevelopment) Act, 1971<\/p>\n<p>          (&#8220;Slum Act&#8221;). The slum dwellers were desirous of developing the suit property<br \/>\n          under a slum rehabilitation scheme (&#8220;SRA Scheme&#8221;). On about 10 August 2003,<\/p>\n<p>          Defendant Nos. 1 and 2, who are respectively the association of eligible slum<br \/>\n          dwellers and registered Society of slum dwellers\/members, occupying the suit<\/p>\n<p>          property, entered into a development agreement, through their representatives<br \/>\n          being Defendant Nos. 7 to 25, with the Plaintiff. Pursuant to the development<br \/>\n          agreement, Defendant Nos. 7 to 25 also executed an irrevocable power of<br \/>\n          attorney dated 10 August 2003 in favour of the Plaintiff authorizing the Plaintiff to<\/p>\n<p>          do all acts necessary for implementation of the SRA Scheme. The Plaintiff claims<\/p>\n<p>          to have received irrevocable written consents of 95% of the members of<br \/>\n          Defendant No. 2 Society residing on the suit property.\n<\/p>\n<p>          3                After execution of the development agreement, by a letter dated 20<\/p>\n<p>          September 2003, the Plaintiff submitted the SRA Scheme to the authorities under<br \/>\n          the Slum Act. It is the Plaintiff&#8217;s case that despite following up the matter with<br \/>\n          Defendant Nos.27 and 28, the issuance of Annexure &#8211; II on the SRA Scheme<br \/>\n          submitted by the Plaintiff was delayed. It is also the Plaintiff&#8217;s case that the<\/p>\n<p>          Plaintiff has duly complied with its part of the obligations under the development<br \/>\n          agreement and has also been ready and willing to comply with all its remaining<br \/>\n          obligations under the agreement.\n<\/p>\n<p>          4                By its letter dated 11 August 2009, Defendant No. 2 terminated the<br \/>\n          development agreement executed with the Plaintiff. On 20 September 2009,<br \/>\n          Defendant No. 2 called a general body meeting for appointment of a new<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                     3\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          developer in substitution of the Plaintiff.\n<\/p>\n<p>          5                The Plaintiff, in the premises, filed an arbitration petition, being<\/p>\n<p>          Arbitration Petition No. 759 of 2009, seeking an injunction against holding of this<br \/>\n          meeting. This Court by its order dated 18 September 2009 did not grant any<br \/>\n          interim relief but observed that the decision, if any, taken in this meeting would be<\/p>\n<p>          subject to the order that may be passed in the petition.\n<\/p>\n<p>          6                Defendant Nos. 1 and 2 proceeded to hold the meeting and<br \/>\n          appointed Defendant No. 26 as the developer for development of the suit<\/p>\n<p>          property under any SRA Scheme. Defendant No. 26 claimed to have obtained<br \/>\n          consent of more than 70% of eligible slum dwellers for its SRA Project. A general<\/p>\n<p>          body meeting of the members of Defendant No. 2 was convened thereupon by<br \/>\n          the Registrar of Co-operative Societies for the purpose of ascertaining whether<\/p>\n<p>          the Plaintiff or Defendant No. 26 enjoyed the support of not less than 70% of the<br \/>\n          slum dwellers.\n<\/p>\n<p>          7                The Plaintiff challenged the decision of the Registrar calling such<\/p>\n<p>          meeting by filing a petition, being Writ Petition No. 679 of 2010. This Court<\/p>\n<p>          dismissed the Writ Petition. Around the same time, the Defendants moved an<br \/>\n          application before the high-powered committee seeking removal of the Plaintiff as<br \/>\n          a developer and appointment of Defendant No. 26 as the new developer. The<\/p>\n<p>          application was dismissed by the high-powered committee as being premature.\n<\/p>\n<p>          8                Defendant No. 27 thereafter accepted the Defendant&#8217;s case that the<br \/>\n          Defendant No. 26 enjoyed the support of more than 70% of the members of<\/p>\n<p>          Defendant No.2 and directed its engineering department to process issuance of a<br \/>\n          letter of intent in favour of Defendant No. 26.\n<\/p>\n<p>          9                Once again this decision was challenged by the Plaintiff by filing<br \/>\n          another writ petition, being Writ Petition No. 95 of 2011. The order of Defendant<br \/>\n          No. 27 was set aside by a Division Bench of this Court. This Court, however,<br \/>\n          directed that Defendant No. 27, after giving an opportunity of being heard both to<br \/>\n          the Plaintiff and Defendant No. 26, shall arrive at a decision as to whether or not<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                        4\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          the Plaintiff continues to have the support of 70% of slum dwellers. The Plaintiff<\/p>\n<p>          challenged this part of the order by filing a review petition. The review petition,<br \/>\n          however, was dismissed by this Court. An SLP was preferred by the Plaintiff<\/p>\n<p>          against the dismissal of the review petition. The Supreme Court refused to set<br \/>\n          aside the order passed by this Court on the review petition and simply directed<br \/>\n          postponement of the meeting fixed for the purpose by 15 days with liberty to the<\/p>\n<p>          parties to make appropriate applications in the pending arbitration petitions.\n<\/p>\n<p>          10                  The Plaintiff subsequently withdrew the arbitration petitions and filed<br \/>\n          the present suit. In this suit, the Plaintiff claims a declaration that the development<\/p>\n<p>          agreement between Defendant Nos. 2 and 26 is illegal, null and void. The Plaintiff<\/p>\n<p>          also claims specific performance of the development agreement entered into<br \/>\n          between the Plaintiff and Defendant No. 2.\n<\/p>\n<p>          11                  The jurisdiction of this Court is objected to by Defendant No. 2 on<br \/>\n          the ground of the bar of jurisdiction of Civil Courts under Section 42 of the Slum<br \/>\n          Act. Relying on the various provisions of the Slum Act read with DCR 33(10) of<\/p>\n<p>          the Development Control Regulations for Greater Mumbai, and the evidence of<br \/>\n          the Plaintiff&#8217;s witness, it is submitted by Mr. Kamdar, learned Senior Counsel for<\/p>\n<p>          Defendant No. 2, that the present suit involves matters which the authorities<br \/>\n          under the Slum Act are alone empowered to determine and therefore, the<br \/>\n          jurisdiction of this Court is barred under the provisions of Section 42 of the Slum<\/p>\n<p>          Act. Learned Counsel relies upon the decisions in the cases of Naresh<br \/>\n          Lachmandas Aswani Vs. Haridas alias Haridas Lachmandas 1, Qari<br \/>\n          Mohammed Zakir Hussain &amp; Ors. Vs. Municipal Corporation of Greater<br \/>\n          Mumbai2, Slum Rehabilitation Authority Vs. Kohinoor (SRA) Co-op. Hsg.\n<\/p>\n<p>          Society3, Om Shree Sai Developers Vs. State of Maharashtra 4, Lokhandwala<br \/>\n          Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd. Vs. State of Maharashtra 5 and Pramila Suman Singh<br \/>\n          Vs. State of Maharashtra6.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">          1<\/span><\/p>\n<pre>          2    2002(2) Bom.C.R. 98\n          3    2014(1) Bom.C.R. 449\n          4    2010(6) Bom.C.R.194\n          5    2011(3) Bom.C.R. 240\n          6    2009(2) Bom.C.R. 138\n\n                                                                                                                                                 \n\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                       ::: Downloaded on - 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span>\n     sat                                                                        5\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc\n\n          12                  In reply, Dr. Tulzapurkar, learned Senior Counsel appearing for the\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                                                           \n<\/pre>\n<p>          Plaintiff, refers to the various provisions of the Slum Act and the averments in the<br \/>\n          plaint and documents annexed thereto and submits that the suit as framed does<\/p>\n<p>          not involve determination of matters referred to in Section 42 of the Slum Act.\n<\/p>\n<p>          13                  The Slum Act makes various provisions for improvement, clearance<\/p>\n<p>          and redevelopment of slums. It enacts provisions for Slum Rehabilitation<br \/>\n          Schemes. It creates authorities for implementing these schemes. It provides for<br \/>\n          ouster of jurisdiction of Civil Courts in respect of matters which such authorities<br \/>\n          are empowered to determine under the Slum Act. The relevant provisions in this<\/p>\n<p>          behalf may be noted at the outset. (Since the State Government has appointed a<\/p>\n<p>          Slum Rehabilitation Authority and published a Slum Rehabilitation Scheme for the<br \/>\n          areas which include the suit property herein, respectively, under Section 3A and<br \/>\n          3B of the Slum Act, the provisions of the Slum Act which apply to the facts of this<\/p>\n<p>          case, and which are noted below, are the modified provisions of the Slum Act<br \/>\n          according to Section 3D of the Slum Act.) Section 3A of the Slum Act provides for<br \/>\n          constitution of a Slum Rehabilitation Authority (&#8220;Authority&#8221;) for implementing the<\/p>\n<p>          Slum Rehabilitation Scheme framed and published under Section 3B. Under Sub-\n<\/p>\n<p>          Section (3) of Section 3A, the powers, duties and functions of the Authority are as<br \/>\n          follows :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>                                &#8220;(3) The powers, duties and functions of the Slum<\/p>\n<p>                                Rehabilitation Authority shall be, &#8211;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                                (a) to survey and review existing position regarding<br \/>\n                                slum areas;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                                (b) to formulate schemes for rehabilitation of slum<\/p>\n<p>                                areas;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<pre>                                (c) to get                       the         Slum            Rehabilitation                   Scheme\n                                implemented;\n\n                                (d) to do all such other acts and things as may be\n<\/pre>\n<blockquote><p>                                necessary for achieving the objects of rehabilitation of<br \/>\n                                slums.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>          Section 3B provides for preparation and publication of a general Slum<br \/>\n          Rehabilitation Scheme for the areas specified under sub-section (1) of Section<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                       ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                      6\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          3A. Under sub-section (4) of Section 3B, the Authority lays down the parameters<\/p>\n<p>          for declaration of any area as a slum rehabilitation area and indicates the manner<br \/>\n          in which rehabilitation of such area shall be carried out. Section 3C empowers the<\/p>\n<p>          Chief Executive Officer of the Authority to declare any area as a slum<br \/>\n          rehabilitation area under the Slum Rehabilitation Scheme. Such declaration,<br \/>\n          which is referred to as &#8220;the slum rehabilitation order&#8221;, can be challenged by any<\/p>\n<p>          aggrieved person under sub-section (2) of Section 3C before a Special Tribunal<br \/>\n          appointed under the Slum Act. Section 3D provides for application of the other<br \/>\n          chapters of the Slum Act to Slum Rehabilitation Area with modifications. Sections<\/p>\n<p>          3Z-1 and 3Z-2 provide for powers of the Competent Authority to demolish<br \/>\n          unauthorized or illegal dwelling structures and penal liabilities. Section 12<\/p>\n<p>          empowers the Chief Executive Officer of the Authority to make a clearance order<br \/>\n          in relation to any slum area, which is declared as a slum rehabilitation area,<\/p>\n<p>          ordering demolition of each of the buildings specified therein. Any aggrieved<br \/>\n          person can prefer an appeal from the clearance order to the Special Tribunal,<br \/>\n          under sub-section (4) of Section 14. Section 13 of the Slum Act is in the following<br \/>\n          terms :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>                            &#8220;13. Power of Slum Rehabilitation Authority to develop<br \/>\n                            Slum Rehabilitation Area.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                            (1)    Notwithstanding anything contained in sub-section<br \/>\n                            (10) of section 12, the slum Rehabilitation Authority may,<\/p>\n<p>                            after any area is declared as the Slum Rehabilitation<br \/>\n                            Area, if the landholders or occupants of such area do not<br \/>\n                            come forward within a reasonable time, with a scheme for<br \/>\n                            re-development of such land, by order, determine to re-<br \/>\n                            develop such land by entrusting it to any agency for the<br \/>\n                            purpose.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                            (2)     Where on declaration of any area as a Slum<br \/>\n                            Rehabilitation Area the Slum Rehabilitation Authority, is<br \/>\n                            satisfied that the land in the Slum Rehabilitation Area has<br \/>\n                            been or is being developed by the owner in contravention<br \/>\n                            of the plans duly approved, or any restriction or conditions<br \/>\n                            imposed under sub-section (10) of section 12, or has not<br \/>\n                            been developed within the time, if any, specified under<br \/>\n                            such conditions it may, by order, determine to develop the<br \/>\n                            land by entrusting it to any agency for the purpose :\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                     ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><\/p>\n<blockquote><p>     sat                                                                     7\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>                                 Provided that, before passing such order, the<\/p>\n<p>                           owner shall be given a reasonable opportunity of showing<br \/>\n                           cause why such order should not be passed.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>          Section 22 provides for a prohibition from taking proceedings for eviction of<br \/>\n          occupiers or execution of eviction decrees or for issue of distress warrants<br \/>\n          without the previous permission of the Authority. Section 23 provides for an<\/p>\n<p>          appeal from such order. Section 24 provides for allotment of tenements to<br \/>\n          occupants who have vacated, or have been evicted from, the premises in their<br \/>\n          occupation in a slum rehabilitation area, after completion of the development of<br \/>\n          the area and reconstruction of the building\/s therein under the Scheme. Section<\/p>\n<p>          27 to 40 provide for various miscellaneous matters such as entry and inspection<\/p>\n<p>          powers of the Authority, allotment of tenements to slum dwellers not willing to join<br \/>\n          the scheme, removal of offensive or dangerous trades from slum areas,<br \/>\n          demolition of buildings in certain cases, jurisdiction of courts, etc. Sections 41 and<\/p>\n<p>          42, which bar suits and prosecutions, and jurisdiction of civil courts, are in the<br \/>\n          following terms :\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>                           &#8220;41.         Protection of action taken in good faith.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                                  No suit, prosecution, or other legal proceedings<br \/>\n                           shall lie against the Competent Authority, Slum<br \/>\n                           Rehabilitation Authority or against any person acting<br \/>\n                           under its authority for anything which is in good faith done<br \/>\n                           or intended to be done under this Act or the rules made<\/p>\n<p>                           thereunder.\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                           42.          Bar of jurisdiction<\/p>\n<p>                                  Save as otherwise expressly provided in this Act,<br \/>\n                           no civil court shall have jurisdiction in respect of any<\/p>\n<p>                           matter which the Slum Rehabilitation Authority, the<br \/>\n                           Appellate Authority, Competent Authority, Grievance<br \/>\n                           Redressal Committee or Special Tribunal is empowered<br \/>\n                           by or under this Act, to determine; and no injunction shall<br \/>\n                           be granted by any court or other authority in respect of<br \/>\n                           any action taken or to be taken in pursuance of any<br \/>\n                           power conferred by or under this Act.&#8221;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>          14               As the provisions of the Slum Act quoted above indicate, the<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                     8\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          matters which the Administrator, Authority and Tribunal are empowered to decide<\/p>\n<p>          are the specific matters noted above. These matters are out of bounds for the<br \/>\n          civil court to exercise jurisdiction over, under Section 42 of the Slum Act. So also<\/p>\n<p>          no injunction can be granted by any court or authority in respect of any action<br \/>\n          taken or to be taken in pursuance of any power conferred by or under the Slum<br \/>\n          Act. (The powers are noted above.)<\/p>\n<p>          15               The Plaintiff has sought the following reliefs in the suit:\n<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>                           (a)          Declaration of nullity in respect of the termination of the suit<\/p>\n<p>                           development agreement by Defendant No.2 and the corresponding<br \/>\n                           declaration of subsistence and validity of the suit development<\/p>\n<p>                           agreement and power of attorney executed by Defendant No. 2 in<br \/>\n                           favour of the Plaintiff;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                           (b)          Specific performance of the suit development agreement by<br \/>\n                           Defendant Nos. 1 to 25 and members of Defendant No.1 \/<br \/>\n                           Defendant No.2 and consequential reliefs;\n<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                           (c)          Cancellation of the rival development agreement between<br \/>\n                           Defendant Nos. 1 to 25 on the one hand and Defendant No. 26 on<br \/>\n                           the other and consequential reliefs; and<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<blockquote><p>                           (d)          Damages against Defendant Nos. 1 to 25 in the alternative.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>                                In other words, the suit is basically for specific performance of a<br \/>\n          development agreement (which is coupled with an agreement to sell immovable<\/p>\n<p>          property) or damages in lieu thereof. The cause of action is : (i) execution of a<br \/>\n          development agreement between the Plaintiff and Defendant Nos. 1 to 25, and\n<\/p>\n<p>          (ii) non performance of that development agreement by Defendant Nos. 1 to 25<br \/>\n          inter alia by executing a development agreement with a rival developer,<br \/>\n          Defendant No. 26. Now the question is, does this cause of action and reliefs<br \/>\n          claimed in connection therewith involve matters which the administrator or the<br \/>\n          Authority or the Tribunal is empowered by or under the Slum Act to determine.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><\/p>\n<pre>     sat                                                                     9\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc\n\n          16               Having regard to the powers, duties and functions of the Authority, it\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                                                        \n<\/pre>\n<p>          is clear that the Authority is not empowered to determine the private rights or<br \/>\n          liabilities as between the Slum dwellers and the developer vis-a-vis any<\/p>\n<p>          development agreement entered into between them for redevelopment of any<br \/>\n          slum. Whether or not such development agreement is binding on the parties<br \/>\n          thereto, whether or not either of the parties has breached such development<\/p>\n<p>          agreement, and whether or not the party complaining of a breach is entitled to<br \/>\n          specific performance of the development agreement, all of which are matters<br \/>\n          arising for the determination of this Court in the present suit, are not matters<\/p>\n<p>          which the Authority is empowered to decide under the Slum Act. (None of these<br \/>\n          matters fall for the determination of any of the other entities including the Special<\/p>\n<p>          Tribunal named in Section 42.)<\/p>\n<p>          17               But Defendant No.2 contends that a party cannot seek to do<br \/>\n          indirectly what he cannot do directly. It is submitted that granting of reliefs in the<br \/>\n          present suit would involve impugning the exercise of the Authority of its powers<br \/>\n          under Section 3A read with Section 13(2) of the Slum Act to appoint Defendant<\/p>\n<p>          No.26 as the developer \/ builder for the Slum Rehabilitation Scheme in question.\n<\/p>\n<p>          It is submitted that the bar under Section 42 of the Slum Act does not<br \/>\n          countenance this.\n<\/p>\n<p>          18               Section 13(2) empowers the Authority to determine to develop the<br \/>\n          land by any agency recognized by it for the purpose, on being satisfied that the<br \/>\n          land has been or is being developed by the owner &#8220;in contravention of the plans<br \/>\n          duly approved, or any restriction or conditions imposed under Sub-section (10) of<\/p>\n<p>          Section 12, or has not been developed within the time, if any, specified under<br \/>\n          such conditions.&#8221; It is not anyone&#8217;s case that this power has been exercised by<br \/>\n          the Authority or that Defendant No.26 is entrusted with the development of the<br \/>\n          suit property through the exercise of this power. The termination of the suit<br \/>\n          development agreement and execution of the rival development agreement with<br \/>\n          Defendant No.26 by Defendant No.2, are matters involving their private inter se<br \/>\n          disputes and do not in any way concern the Authority or exercise of any power by<br \/>\n          it under the Slum Act.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><\/p>\n<pre>     sat                                                                    10\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                                                        \n          19               As for the particular relief, namely, the permanent or temporary\n<\/pre>\n<p>          injunction restraining Defendant No.26 from carrying on any development or<\/p>\n<p>          directly or indirectly preventing it from acting as a developer of the particular Slum<br \/>\n          Rehabilitation Scheme, which the Authority has authorized it to do, whether or not<br \/>\n          such relief can be granted would be considered on merits at the hearing of the<\/p>\n<p>          suit or the Notice of Motion, as the case may be. Such a consideration does not<br \/>\n          reflect on the jurisdiction of this Court to entertain the suit as a whole. The Court<br \/>\n          may entertain the suit and yet not grant the particular relief, if it considers the<\/p>\n<p>          same to be barred under Section 42 of the Slum Act.\n<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">          20<\/span><\/p>\n<p>                           Learned Counsel for Defendant No.2 relied on the judgment of this<br \/>\n          Court in Lokhandwala Infrastructure (supra) to submit that the dispute between<\/p>\n<p>          a society of slum dwellers and the developer does not lie purely in the realm of a<br \/>\n          private contractual dispute in the context of the role of the Authority with respect<br \/>\n          to the scrutiny and approval of a slum rehabilitation scheme. It is submitted that<br \/>\n          such a dispute has an important bearing on the proper implementation of the<\/p>\n<p>          slum rehabilitation scheme and goes beyond the interests of the society and the<\/p>\n<p>          developer. In Lokhandwala Infrastructure (supra), the petitioner developer had<br \/>\n          challenged an order of the CEO of the Authority directing processing of a letter of<br \/>\n          intent in favour of another developer (who was one of the respondents in the<\/p>\n<p>          petition) on the ground that 70% members of the co-operative society had<br \/>\n          supported the respondent developer at a general body meeting. The petitioner<br \/>\n          developer was seeking a writ of mandamus directing the Authority to process his<br \/>\n          proposal for redevelopment and consider issuance of a letter of intent in his<\/p>\n<p>          favour. One of the submissions before the Court was that a dispute between the<br \/>\n          co-operative society and its developer is a private dispute and a recourse to<br \/>\n          private law remedies was the only form of redress. Whilst considering this<br \/>\n          argument, this Court held that the execution of Slum Rehabilitation Scheme was<br \/>\n          impressed with a public character; that lands on which such scheme was sought<br \/>\n          to be sanctioned and implemented might be lands belonging to the Municipal<br \/>\n          Corporation or the State or its instrumentabilities such as MHADA, etc.; that the<br \/>\n          co-operative societies of slum dwellers and developers through whom the<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                    11\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          scheme was sought to be implemented facilitated the implementation of the<\/p>\n<p>          scheme; but that the State as the owner had a vital public interest in ensuring that<br \/>\n          the object for which the land was utilized subserved the purpose of rehabilitation<\/p>\n<p>          of the slum dwellers. This Court, therefore, held that though a dispute between<br \/>\n          the co-operative society and its developer had a private element, a recourse to<br \/>\n          private law remedies was not the only available form of redress; that the Authority<\/p>\n<p>          and the owners of the land such as the Municipal Corporation or the State were<br \/>\n          vital components of the rehabilitation scheme; and that their statutory powers<br \/>\n          were not trammelled by private contractual arrangements.\n<\/p>\n<p>          21               This entire discussion as to whether or not public law remedies can<\/p>\n<p>          be availed of in cases of rehabilitation schemes where there may be private<br \/>\n          disputes between the society and the developer, but equally the actions of the<\/p>\n<p>          Authority based on such disputes are under scrutiny, is quite besides the point in<br \/>\n          our case. Here, a developer has come before the Court essentially with a private<br \/>\n          dispute and has not challenged any action of the Authority or sought<br \/>\n          determination of any matter, which exclusively rests with the Administrator,<\/p>\n<p>          Authority or Tribunal. What we are considering here is whether the jurisdiction of<\/p>\n<p>          the civil court is barred and not whether the recourse to that jurisdiction is the only<br \/>\n          form of redress. The ratio of Lokhandwala Infrastructure (supra) has no<br \/>\n          application to the facts of our case.\n<\/p>\n<p>          22               The other cases relied upon by Defendant No.2 also lend no<br \/>\n          assistance to its case. In Naresh Lachmandas Aswani (supra), the plaintiff<br \/>\n          claimed as successor-in-interest of the lessee of the suit property, a slum which<\/p>\n<p>          was being developed under a letter of intent issued by the Authority. Prayers (d)<br \/>\n          and (i) of that suit sought an order and decree to hand over possession of the suit<br \/>\n          property to the plaintiff. Such possession was sought from the third defendant,<br \/>\n          who was the owner \/ developer of the suit property and in whose favour a letter of<br \/>\n          intent was granted by the Authority. This Court held that in view of the admitted<br \/>\n          fact that the scheme was being implemented under a letter of intent granted by<br \/>\n          the Authority, the prayer for possession cannot be granted by a civil court in the<br \/>\n          face of the bar under Section 42. The Court at the same time considered prayers<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                    12\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          (a) to (c) and (e) to (h) in that suit, which were seeking a declaration and<\/p>\n<p>          corresponding reliefs concerning the plaintiff&#8217;s entitlement to a share in the suit<br \/>\n          property and challenge to the deeds executed by the first defendant in favour of<\/p>\n<p>          other defendants, to be within its jurisdiction. The ratio of this decision has no<br \/>\n          bearing on the maintenability of the present suit which challenges the society&#8217;s<br \/>\n          action in terminating the suit development agreement and entering into a rival<\/p>\n<p>          development agreement with another developer. In Qari Mohammed&#8217;s case<br \/>\n          (supra), a section of hutment dwellers had challenged the action of the Authority<br \/>\n          in allotting the suit land, which was owned by the Municipal Corporation, to the<\/p>\n<p>          respondent developers. The action was impugned as a collusive and mala fide<br \/>\n          action. This Court in fact held that if the act is mala fide or fraudulent or collusive,<\/p>\n<p>          the civil court retained its jurisdiction to even question an act of the Authority. It is<br \/>\n          difficult to see how this judgment may even remotely help Defendant No.2. In<\/p>\n<p>          Kohinoor (SRA) Co-operative Society&#8217;s case (supra), the developer plaintiff<br \/>\n          had sought a direction against the Authority to accept the plaintiff&#8217;s proposed<br \/>\n          rehabilitation scheme. This Court held that the civil court had no jurisdiction in the<br \/>\n          matter in view of the bar under Section 42. The relief sought there was in the<\/p>\n<p>          teeth of the bar. As explained above, such is not the case in the present suit. In<\/p>\n<p>          Om Shree Sai Developer&#8217;s case (supra), the same principle, as in Kohinoor<br \/>\n          (SRA) Co-operative Society, is affirmed. In Pramila Suman Singh (supra), the<br \/>\n          Court was not concerned with the bar under Section 42 or any of the issues<\/p>\n<p>          relevant in the context of our case.\n<\/p>\n<p>          23               Mr.Kamdar referred to the various orders passed by the Authority in<br \/>\n          the present case and the orders passed in the various challenges to the same<\/p>\n<p>          before this Court and the Supreme Court. He submitted that having regard to<br \/>\n          these orders, it is clear that the Plaintiff no longer enjoys the support of the<br \/>\n          statutory number of eligible slum dwellers and it has been confirmed that<br \/>\n          Defendant No.26 enjoys such support. These facts, any way, reflect on the<br \/>\n          Plaintiff&#8217;s entitlement to get the relief in the suit, namely, specific performance of<br \/>\n          his development agreement or the interim relief in the Notice of Motion, namely,<br \/>\n          the interim injunction sought. But it is difficult to see how they non-suit the Plaintiff<br \/>\n          on a ground of want of jurisdiction. If the Court accepts the Defendant&#8217;s plea of<\/p>\n<p><span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on &#8211; 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span><br \/>\n     sat                                                                    13\/13                                               nms 1516-2011.doc<\/p>\n<p>          the various orders disentitling the Plaintiff to specific performance of its contract,<\/p>\n<p>          the Court can very well consider granting the Plaintiff damages in lieu of specific<br \/>\n          performance, which, in any case, is an alternative prayer of the Plaintiff.\n<\/p>\n<p>          24               In that view of the matter, there is no substance in the plea of bar of<br \/>\n          jurisdiction under Section 42 of the Slum Act. The preliminary issue is decided in<\/p>\n<p>          favour of the Plaintiff and against the Defendants. This Court has jurisdiction to<br \/>\n          entertain and try the present suit. The Notice of Motion may now be taken up for<br \/>\n          hearing. S.O. to 27 November 2014.\n<\/p>\n<pre>                                               ig                                                       (S.C. Gupte, J.)\n                                             \n            \n         \n\n\n\n\n\n\n                                                                                                                                              \n\n<span class=\"hidden_text\">                                                                                                    ::: Downloaded on - 30\/10\/2014 23:48:09 :::<\/span>\n <\/pre>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Bombay High Court Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt. &#8230; vs Dhobighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva &#8230; on 30 October, 2014 Bench: S.C. Gupte sat 1\/13 nms 1516-2011.doc IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE AT BOMBAY ORDINARY ORIGINAL CIVIL JURISDICTION NOTICE OF MOTION NO. 1516 OF 2011 IN SUIT NO. 1108 OF 2011 Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt.Ltd. &#8230;Applicant \/ Plaintiff [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_lmt_disableupdate":"","_lmt_disable":"","_jetpack_memberships_contains_paid_content":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[11,8],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-207597","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-bombay-high-court","category-high-court"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.3 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt. ... vs Dhobighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva ... on 30 October, 2014 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; High Court | Legal India<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.legalindia.com\/judgments\/lokhandwala-infrastructure-pvt-vs-dhobighat-compound-rahiwasi-seva-on-30-october-2014\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Lokhandwala Infrastructure Pvt. ... vs Dhobighat Compound Rahiwasi Seva ... on 30 October, 2014 - Free Judgements of Supreme Court &amp; 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