Secretary—Eliots Beach Flat Owners Co-operative Society Ltd v. The Chairman, Tamil Nadu Housing Board
1991-12-06
KANAKARAJ
body1991
DigiLaw.ai
Judgment :- 1. The petitioner in both the cases is the same being a registered Society to look after the interests of the flat owners under the Tamil Nadu Housing Board Schemes in Besant Nagar, Madras-90. The South Madras Neighbourhood Scheme was approved by the Director of Town Planning, vide plan No. LP.H./D.T.P. 32/71. According to the petitioner, the total area of the Scheme is about 26,000 sq. metres. It is not disputed that under the scheme, five places were set apart for the construction of garages. Applicatio ns were called for allotment of flats both in the Middle Income and Lower income Groups. There is an allegation in the affidavit of the petitioner that an extent of 1,195 sq. metres was prudently left open by the Housing Board by way of “lung space” for the colony. This allegation is denied in the counter affidavit of the Housing Board. The Middle income and Lower Income blocks were completed and on the basis of applications, they were allotted to various persons. 2. It is the case of the petitioner that only the two places earmarked for construction of garages were utilised for the said purpose, whereas three other places set apart for the construction of garages were not utilised. According to the petitioner, the plan on the basis of which applications were called for did show the places set apart for garages. It is stated that the allottees made applications for the flats only on the basis of the said plan and in the hope of getting allotment of garages. To be more specific, the construction of garages at the places earmarked for the same, was part of the offer and the allottees paid the price for flats on the said promise to construct garages. To substantiate the contention that there was demand for garages, the petitioner relied on the letter dt. 18-1-1971 written by the Executive Engineer of the Housing Board, asking the society to inform the Board as to how many members were willing to take a garage on Hire Purchase System. In response to this letter, the society wrote on 10-2-1971 enclosing the request letters of 9 members with 9 cheques for the sum of Rs. 1,000 each. Three more applications were also forwarded on 22-11-1975. It is not disputed that some of the applicants did get allotment of garages.
In response to this letter, the society wrote on 10-2-1971 enclosing the request letters of 9 members with 9 cheques for the sum of Rs. 1,000 each. Three more applications were also forwarded on 22-11-1975. It is not disputed that some of the applicants did get allotment of garages. It is stated that some other allottees who had also applied for garages were denied the allotment of garages. The names of the persons who sought for allotment of garages have not been disclosed in the affidavit filed in support of the writ petition — It i s stated that one member of society sent a petition on 16-11-1983 that a small piece of land earmarked to her for construction of a house. The Government in its letter dated 5-11-1984 had stated that the site had been reserved for the construction of garages and rejected the request of the member. The grievance of the petitioner is that the Housing Board has now changed its earlier decision and has proposed to allot the space earmarked for garages to certain persons for construction of residential house. 3. The second part of the grievance of the petitioner is that an extent of 1,195 sq. metres was left as a vacant space in the lay-out and the same was being used as a playground by the children. This vacant space lies in the lower income group blocks. The Housing Board is now planning to construct a multi-storeyed building in the said open space. Thereupon, the petitioner sent a complaint on 3-3- 84 setting out the reasons for retaining the said 1195 sq. metres as open space. It was pointed out that without such an open space, the Housing Board will be violating the Development Control Rules. Thereafter, the petitioner had been making several representations and none of them proving effective or fruitful. Writ Petition. W.P. No. 1424 of 1987 has been filed seeking a writ of mandamus to forbear the respondents from changing the purpose of the area set apart for garages and the area kept as open space and allotting them, as house sites or by building blocks for allotment as flats. 4. The petitioner subsequently came to know that in and by Government Order, G.O.Ms.
4. The petitioner subsequently came to know that in and by Government Order, G.O.Ms. No. 1830, Housing and Urban Development Department, dated 12-12-1986, the area earmarked for construction of garages was converted into four house sites and the Government was allotting them to four different persons subject to the approval of the Madras Metropolitan Development Authority for conversion and reclassification. Thereafter, the petitioner has impleaded the said four allottees in and by an order dated 18-12-1987 in W.M.P. No. 13154 of 1987. The petitioner has also filed Writ Petition, W.P. No. 7908 of 1988 for the issue of a writ of certiorari to quash the said Government Order, G.O.Ms. No. 1830, Housing and Urban Development Department, dated 12-12-1986. By an order dated 17-2-1989, the petitioner came forward with a plea that the petitioner-society were not pressing the writ petitions against the 7th respondent. (Since deleted). (Accordingly, by an order dated 17-2-1989, Venkataswami, J. dismissed the writ petitions as against the 7th respondent. (Since deleted.) 5. On behalf of the Tamil Nadu Housing Board (respondents 1 and 3), a counter affidavit has been filed stating that the South Madras Neighbourhood Scheme was approved by the Director of Town Planning in L.P.H./D.T.P. 32/71. It is admitted that at the time of the preparation of the scheme, the Housing Board has proposed to construct 50 garages at 15 places. After the construction of garages at two places, it was found that there was no adequate demand for the allotment of garages. It is stated that the garages were being kept idle and it is under these circumstances that the Housing Board recommended to the Government to convert the vacant space set apart for garages as house sites. It is on the basis of this recommendation that Government Order, G.O.Ms. No. 1830, dated 12-12-1986 was issued. It is also stated that the sub-division was approved by the Madras Metropolitan Development Authority by an order dated 25-3-1987. It is categorically stated that the Housing Board did not recover any amount from th e allottees from the land lying in between the blocks and the lands adjacent to the blocks. The allegation that an extent of 1,195 sq. metres was kept vacant as “lung-space” in the Lower Income Group blocks is denied. It is stated that the vacant space was meant for the construction of blocks L-11, L-12, L-21 and L-22.
The allegation that an extent of 1,195 sq. metres was kept vacant as “lung-space” in the Lower Income Group blocks is denied. It is stated that the vacant space was meant for the construction of blocks L-11, L-12, L-21 and L-22. Since the said space was in the centre of the scheme, the construction of that block was taken up last and till then it was being used for storing building materials. Even in the original lay-out, this space had been set apart for the construction of a block consisting of flats. The fact that so long as the land was kept vacant, children were using it as a playground, will not give any right to the allottees or to the petitioner-society. The Corporation of Madras has also given a “No Objection Certificate” for the construction of the blocks as originally planned. The M.M.D.A. has also approved the construction by letter dated 4-11-1986. It is also stated that in the South Madras Neighbo urhood Scheme, more than 10% of the lands have been left out as open space in accordance with the Town and Country Planning Rules and the lay out was approved by the Director of Town Planning only after being satisfied about the compliance of the rules. 6. Among the allottees under G.O.Ms. No. 1830, Housing and Urban Development, Department dated 12-12-1986, the 5th respondent has filed a detailed counter affidavit. It is stated that the 5th respondent has almost completed the construction of a residential building in the plot allotted to her. It is also pointed out that one T. Prabakar filed a writ petition W.P. No. 13530 of 1988 7A Prabakar v. The Chairman Tamil Nadu Housing Board, Nandanam Madras-35, and 3 others W.P. No. 13530 of 1988, dated 20-12-88 questioning the very allotment in favour of the fifth respondent and Bakthavatsalam, J. by order dated 20-12-1988 dismissed the writ petition. In other respects, the 5th respondent had adopted the stand of the Housing Board and submitted that the petitioner-society has not made out a case for the reliefs sought for in the writ petitions. 7. Dr. K.P. Krishna Shetty, learned counsel for the petitioner, has urged before me the following contentions:— (1) Respondents 1 to 3 are estopped from converting the space earmarked for garages and the open space by the principle of promissory estoppel.
7. Dr. K.P. Krishna Shetty, learned counsel for the petitioner, has urged before me the following contentions:— (1) Respondents 1 to 3 are estopped from converting the space earmarked for garages and the open space by the principle of promissory estoppel. It is stated that respondents 1 to 3 are bound to make good the promise of construction of garages and to keep the open space “lung-space” for the area. (2) The conversion of the space kept for garages and the open space into house sites and blocks for provision of flats is arbitrary and illegal. (3) The conversion of the open space will offend R. 19(a)(iii) and 19(b)(iv) of the Development Control Rules. (4) The conversion as alleged will also cause pollution to the acquifier region of the entire colony and deprive the flat owners of wholesome drinking water. It is also contended that the ecological balance will be upset if the open spaces are converted into buildings. 8. The first two contentions can be taken together because they are interdependent. I asked the learned counsel for the petitioner as to when and where respondents 1 to 3 had held out a promise that all the allottees will be provided garages, and alternatively, was there any promise that the allotment was on the basis of the construction of garages at all the five places earmarked for such construction. I therefore called for the original advertisement calling for applications. I find that the advertisement was made on 14-10-1969. The main advertisement calling for applications does not speak about the garages. It only invites applications for allotment of two bed room flat and one bed room fiats to eligible applicants. There is also a prospectus and application form prescribed by the Housing Board in respect of the Middle Income Group Housing Scheme. Cl. 12(c) of the prospectus is as follows: “12(c). It is also proposed to construct a few garages at a provisional cost of Rs. each. Applicants who are desirous of owning a garage must specify their in the prescribed application form for the allotment of a flat and should also deposit the full cost of the garage in one-lump-sum within fifteen days from the date of receipt of the demand.
each. Applicants who are desirous of owning a garage must specify their in the prescribed application form for the allotment of a flat and should also deposit the full cost of the garage in one-lump-sum within fifteen days from the date of receipt of the demand. The Board does not guarantee the allotment of a garage to every applicant, The Chairman, Tamil Nadu Housing Board reserves the right to reject any application for a garage without assigning any reason. N.B. The deposit towards the garage is exclusive of the deposits payable under R. 12(a) above, and will not carry any interest. The portion paid towards interest charges shall not be refundable to the allottee under any circumstances, nor shall such amount the credited towards be costs of the flat or any other amount payable under the conditions of allotment.” Apart from this advertisment and the prospectus, the only document that is relied on by the petitioner, is the plan wherein certain areas are earmarked for construction of garages. There is a significant difference between the plan approved by the Director of Town Planning and the plan that is relied on by the petitioner. The plan that is relied on by the petitioner is apparently the plan of the Housing Board relating to the Scheme, which the Housing Board can, at any time, modify according to the needs of the people. It is not the case of the petitioner that the plan as approved by the Director of Town Planning in L.P.H./D.T.P. 32/71 shows that certain places had been earmarked for the construction of garages. Therefore, it cannot be argued by the learned counsel for the petitioner that there is anything illegal about the Housing Board changing its own scheme plan by altering its originnl proposal to build up garages and instead allot the same as house-sites. When there is also a reason given in the Government Order that the expected demand was not forthcoming for the allotment of garages, I cannot reject this ground as without substance. Turning now to the question of promissory estoppel, I am of the opinion that the petitioner-society has not made out the relevant basis for building up a case of promissory estoppel.
Turning now to the question of promissory estoppel, I am of the opinion that the petitioner-society has not made out the relevant basis for building up a case of promissory estoppel. As I have already pointed out, there is absolutely no promise on the part of respondents 1 to 3 and the allottees that they will be provided with the garages or that the space set apart for garages will be constructed and a chance given to the allottees to compete for the same. The scheme of the Housing Board is a compendious scheme based on several constructions including the needs of the public, If therefore, the Housing Board and the Government thought that it would be in the interests of the public to convert the space earmarked for garages as house sites, it cannot be characterised as illegal and arbitrary. Therefore, the first two contentions fail. The learned counsel for the petitioner has relied on the following Judgments for the proposition that when the Government or a Statutory Body sets up the standard, they are bound to follow the standards and any failure to keep up to the said standards should be declared illegal: R. Manjunath v. The Indian Institute of Technology, Madras and others A.I.R. 1987 Mad. 22=1985 Writ L.R. 757 Surya Narain Yadav and others v. Bihar State Electricity Board and others AIR 1985 S.C. 941 and Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. The International Airport Authority of India AIR 1979 S.C. 1628 and others . In this case. I have already pointed out that there was no promise as alleged by the petitioner nor did respondents 1 to 3 set up their standards on the basis of which the allotments were made. There being no factual basis, the application of law as enunciated in the said authorities does not arise. 9. Learned counsel for the petitioner-Society then argues that the Development Control Rules 19(a) (iii) and 19(b)(iv) demand the authority laying out an area for construction of houses to reserve 10 per cent of the land for communal and recreational purposes. What is more, in the entire layout, 10 per cent of the lands should be left out for communal and recreational purposes.
What is more, in the entire layout, 10 per cent of the lands should be left out for communal and recreational purposes. The petitioner-society has not been able to show that in the South Madras Neighbourhood Scheme as approved by the Director of Town Planning in L.P.H./D.T.P. 32/71, respondents 1 to 3 had not left 10 per cent of the total lands for communal and recreational purposes. On the other hand, the Tamil Nadu Housing Board in their counter affidavit have clearly stated that more than 10 per cent of the lands was left out in this scheme as open space in accordance with the said rules. The petitioner cannot seek to apply the said rules on the basis of each block of buildings and contend that 10 per cent of the lands should be left as open space. The Development Control Rules applied to a lay-out as such. There fore, in the layout plan, if the authorities are satisfied that 10 per cent has been left out for communal and recreational purposes, there can be no complaint against the construction of buildings within such limits. 10. The last contention is that the construction of more and more houses and flats will reduce the ground water available in the area. In this connection, it is stated that the entire Besant Nagar depend upon ground water for the purpose of drinking. Therefore, it is submitted that the construction of more flats will exhaust the ground water and permit the adjacent sea water to seep through and pollute the wells in the houses and the bore-wells from which drinking water is supplied to the entire area. In this connection, learned counsel for the petitioner relies on the judgment of Baktha vatsalam, J in W.P. No. 5678 of 1989 dated 20-4-1990. In that case, a large area in Besant Nagar was transferred to the Central Public Works Department, where the latter was proposing to build up big office complex. Almost identical grounds were raised before the learned Judge with regard to the ecological imbalance caused by the construction of such an office complex. Though: the learned Judge allowed the writ petition and stopped the construction of the office complex, the learned Judge had permitted a fresh notification after a fresh looking into the matter.
Almost identical grounds were raised before the learned Judge with regard to the ecological imbalance caused by the construction of such an office complex. Though: the learned Judge allowed the writ petition and stopped the construction of the office complex, the learned Judge had permitted a fresh notification after a fresh looking into the matter. However, on appeal, a Division Bench of this Court has permitted the construction to go on even though the writ appeal is kept pending. It is common knowledge that the said office complex is fast coming up in Besant Nagar. In the case before me, it cannot be said that there is such a huge construction as in the case of the Central Public Works Department Office Complex with a floor space of 1,50,000 sq. feet. Therefore, the construction of four Lower Income Group blocks and four residential houses cannot be said to cause pollution or exhaustion of the ground water in the area. Above all, these are all matters which have to be considered by the appropriate authorities like the Pollution Control Board, the Madras Metropolitan Development Authority, the Corporation of Madras and the Public Health Authorities. One has to always maintain a balance between the plea to maintain ecology on the one hand and on the other hand the plea to improve residential accommodation in the City. I am not inclined to accept this contention of the petitioner as well. 11. For all the above reasons, the writ petitions fail and they are dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.