In the judgment of Land Acquisition Collector v. Registrar (Judicial) Administrator-General High Court of H.P. & Others, the High Court of Himachal Pradesh dismissed an appeal filed by a Land Acquisition Collector, ruling that an adjudicating authority has no locus standi to challenge the reversal or enhancement of its own award by a higher court.
Case Background: Enhancement of Compensation
The dispute arose from the acquisition of land in Station Ward Boileauganj, Shimla, in 1986 for the construction of an NCC Complex and Bhawan. The Land Acquisition Collector originally awarded compensation totaling approximately ₹4,07,726 for the land, trees, and structures.
The claimant, Lt. Col. LHM Gregory, sought a reference under the Land Acquisition Act, arguing the market value was significantly higher. The Reference Court (District Judge, Forest) subsequently enhanced the compensation to ₹411 per square yard plus statutory benefits. The Land Acquisition Collector then appealed this enhancement to the High Court under Section 54 of the Act.
Key Legal Principle: Locus Standi of Adjudicating Authorities
The High Court’s decision centered on a preliminary objection regarding the maintainability of the appeal. Justice Sushil Kukreja established the following principles:
- Quasi-Judicial Role: A Land Acquisition Collector functions as an adjudicating authority exercising quasi-judicial powers.
- Lack of Litigative Interest: As an impartial tribunal, a Collector cannot claim a “litigative interest” in the subject matter they have adjudicated. They are not an “aggrieved party” simply because a higher court disagrees with their findings.
- “Judge in Own Cause”: The Court held that allowing a Collector to challenge an order that set aside their own award would effectively allow them to become a “judge in their own cause”.
- Authority to Appeal: Relying on the Supreme Court precedent MohteshamMohd. Ismail v. Special Director, Enforcement Directorate, the Court clarified that for an officer to act on behalf of the Central or State Government in an appeal, they must be specifically authorized to do so. Merely being the officer who passed the initial order does not confer an inherent right to defend that order in higher courts.
Final Ruling
The High Court concluded that the appeal was per se not maintainable. It affirmed that only the State or the requisitioning authority (the entity for whom the land was acquired) possesses the standing to challenge a Reference Court’s award. Consequently, the appeal was dismissed without the Court having to delve into the factual merits of the compensation enhancement.
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 147
Land Acquisition Collector V.Registrar (Judicial) Administrator-General High Court of H.P. & Others (D.O.J. 02-04-2026)
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