31-II (a) Departments to whom the
notifications are to be sent – Acquisition of land for State Govt. Department: - Heads of Departments will forward the draft
notifications direct to the Secretary to Government in the Department concerned
primarily with the public purpose for which land is to be acquired and who is
responsible for the provision of funds for the acquisition of land. They should be careful to ensure that
notifications for the acquisition of land are forwarded to the proper
department of Government as for instance the notifications relating to the
works under the management and control of the Public Works Department,
Buildings and Roads Branch, shall be forwarded for disposal to the Secretary to
Government, Punjab, Public Works Department, Buildings and Roads Branch. Similarly, all notifications required for
the purposes of works under the Irrigation Department shall be forwarded to the
Secretary to Government, Punjab, Irrigation and Power Department. But as acquisition of the land for minor
canals is governed by sections 44(3) and 45 of the Punjab Minor Canals Act,
1905, the notifications are issued in the Revenue Department of Government
unless the canal in question is exclusively under the control of the Irrigation
Branch of the Public Works Department.
The
acquiring Department at the time of issue of declaration under section 6 should
take necessary steps to get adequate staff provided to the Land Acquisition
Collector concerned or to entrust the work to some other Land Acquisition
Collector who may be able to complete the work in the prescribed time schedule.
(b) Department
to whom application are to be sent – Acquisition of land for Central Government
departments - For acquisition of land for a department of the Central
Government, or another State Government, all notifications shall be forwarded
to the Department under the Punjab Government corresponding to or doing work
similar to that of the department under the Central Government or another State
Government, as the case may be, which wishes to acquire land (Government
Notification No.F-26(5)/57/J II, dated the 20th February, 1957)
unless the Government of India have undertaken to acquire land themselves. Thus notifications relating to the
Income-tax Department and Central Board of Revenue shall be forwarded for
disposal to the Excise and Taxation Department for Defence Works to the Home
Department for Railways to P.W.D. (B & R) for Food Corporation of India to
Food and Supplies Department, etc.
forwarded to the Public Works
Department, Buildings and Roads Branch.
31-A Procedure in the acquiring Department – I - The acquiring department shall consider the objections, if any, that may have been received under Section 5-A of the Act unless urgency provisions have been invoked and where it finally decides to acquire land, issue declaration under Section 6 of the Act. Before issue of this declaration the acquiring department should satisfy itself that—
(i)
a realistic estimate of the compensation to be
paid for the land proposed to be acquired has been made in consultation with
the Deputy Commissioner concerned. The
market price as indicated by the Deputy Commissioner concerned for this purpose
will need to be enhanced by 12 per cent per annum till the date on which the
award is likely to be made, besides a solatium at the rate of 30 per cent in
order to arrive at a realistic figure about the compensation likely to be
payable; and
(ii)
adequate
provision has been made in the budget for the payment of compensation. Where the decision to acquire land is taken
after the finalization of the budget or the compensation could be paid in
subsequent years, a clearance from the Finance Department may be obtained that
the necessary funds would be provided for payment of compensation during the
year in which compensation would become payable.
II. Since
the Land Acquisition Collector will have to tender 80 per cent of the
compensation for land estimated by him before taking possession under the
urgency provisions, it will be necessary for the acquiring department to make
necessary funds available to the Land Acquisition Collector simultaneously with
the despatch of declaration under Section 6 for publication. Any delay in receipt of funds by the Land
Acquisition Collector will not only delay the taking over of the possession but
may also involve the risk of the declaration being struck down by the courts on
the ground that if Government could delay taking over possession, it could also
provide opportunity to the affected persons to file objections.
31-B. Time
limit for declaration under section 6 - The declaration under Section 6
shall be published in (a) the Official Gazette (b) two daily newspapers
circulating in that locality of which at least one shall be in the regional
language and (c) substance of such notification is to be notified at
conspicuous places in the said locality.
Under the Amendment Act, the declaration under section 6 has now to be
issued within one year from the date of publication of notification under
Section 4 (In case of notifications which were issued before commencement of
the Amendment Act, viz., 24th September 1984, the limit is 3 years
from the date of publication of the notification). The notification under Section 4 will thus lapse if declaration
under Section 6 is not published within one year of the publication of Section
4 notification. In that case, a fresh
notification under section 4 will have to be issued and the market price will
be taken afresh as on the date of the fresh notification. Since this involves higher amount of
compensation, apart from delay in the execution of the schemes, it is essential
that declaration under Section 6 is published before the expiry of this time
limit. It may be noted that the last of
the dates on which a declaration is published in (a) the official gazette, (b)
two daily newspapers and (c) in the locality will be treated as the date of
publication of the declaration. It has,
therefore, to be ensured that the publication of the declaration in all these
forms is completed before the expiry of the one year limit.
32-I. Procedure after issue of
notification under section 6 -When the notification under section 6 has been published in the Gazette,
all further proceedings rest with the Collector or other officer specially
empowered by Government to perform the functions of a Collector under section
(3)(c) of the Act.
32-II. When a special officer or additional clerical
staff should be applied for - When the area of land to be thus acquired is so considerable that the
appointment of a special officer or additional staff for the work seems
advisable, the collector of the district or head of the department concerned
will apply to the Commissioner of the Division or Administrative Department in
Acquiring Department, as the case may be who will take such steps for
sanctioning of posts of Special Officer or additional staff. The special rules
applicable to the special officer will be found in part F below.
32-III. Results
of negotiations to be intimated to the collector - With a view to guarding against
claims, there is no objection to the communication by the acquiring department
to the acquisition officer of the results of any negotiations which the
acquiring department may have entered into with the parties to be expropriated
previous to the opening of proceedings under the Act.
E—PROCEDURE OF COLLECTORS AFTER ISSUE OF A NOTIFICATION UNDER SECTION 6
33. Procedure of acquiring officer
empowered under section 7 - When the Collector or other officer invested with the powers of a
collector has received a direction under section 7 of the Act to take order for
the acquisition of the land, he will proceed in accordance with the provisions
of section 8 et. Seq.
34-I. Land to be marked out - Under section 8 of the Act
the acquiring officer will send to the tehsildar (if necessary through the
Collector of the district) a copy of the notification under section 6, and have
the land marked out and measured. At
the time of marking out and measuring the land an officer of the Department for
which the land is to be acquired should, if possible, be present, and see that
the boundaries are correctly aligned.
34-II. Treatment of discrepancies in
measurement - Proceedings
should not be stayed merely, because when action is taken under section 8, it
is found that there is a discrepancy between the land to be acquired and the
description or measurements of the land given in notification, provided the
notification describes the land with approximate correctness and the owners in
this and other areas have had due notice of Government’s intention to acquire
the land, the acquisition should be completed, and no revised notification need
be issued.
35. Form of notice under section 9 - The notice to persons interested in
the land, required to be served under section 9 of the Act, shall be in the
form given below:--
Notice
to persons interested in land to be acquired under Act I of 1894.
Whereas
the under mentioned land is about to be taken up for a public purpose,
namely,_______________________________________under notification of the Punjab
Government No.______________________published in the Punjab Gazette
of__________________________and in two daily newspapers circulating in the
locality, namely________________of___________________ and also published in the
locality. All persons interested in the
said land are hereby called upon to attend personally or by agent at
(place)_________________on the ______________(dated) at _____o’clock to state
the nature of their respective interests in the land and the amount and particulars
of their claims to compensation for such interests.
This
notice is issued under section 9 of Act 1 of 1894.
Boundaries:--
North East Extent
South West
Dated 20 Collector
36-I. Statement of values and owners - In order to facilitate the enquiry
into the value of the land and into the claim of persons interested the
acquiring officer will cause statement in the form given below to be prepared
by the tehsildar or other competent revenue officer, as noted in paragraph 471,
Land Administration Manual.
FORM (i)
|
Sr. No. |
Khasra number whole or part |
Khatauni number |
Total area Of Field (in local measures) |
Owner mortgagee, mafidar, or other person interested |
Area Taken Up (in local measures) |
Revenue or land taken up |
Rent per acre or
local measures Cash Kind Class Of land |
Crops, trees, wells, Or houses on land taken up |
Value of such crops, trees, wells, houses |
Remarks |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FORM (ii)
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
11 |
|
Sr. No. |
Jamabandi and Khatauni number |
Names of owners, etc. |
Names of occupancy tenants |
Khasra number, whole or part |
Total area of land in holding taken up (in acres) |
Classes of land taken up |
Crops, trees, wells or houses on land taken up |
Value of crops, etc. shown in column 3 |
Reve-nue payable on the land taken up |
Remarks |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
36-II. Report giving data for estimate of market value - These statements will give in a tabular form most of the information necessary to come to a decision as to the compensation to be awarded. Statement No.1 will give details for each khasra number while statement No.2 will merely give the totals for each holding.
36-III. Copy
of field map to be filed with the proceedings
- Care should be taken that a copy of the portion of the settlement
field map, in which the land taken up is situated with the boundaries of the
land marked on it is filed with the patwari’s papers and with the proceedings
of the case.
37. Report
when to be completed - The statement and the report should be completed and checked before the
date fixed in the notice issued under section 9 for the attendance of parties
and enquiry into claims.
38. Notice
to departmental officer - The acquiring officer must give at least 15 days previous notice of the
date fixed under section 9 to the departmental officer acting on behalf of the
department for the acquisition of the land, in order that he may have an
opportunity of making in person, by agent or by letter, any representation
regarding its value, which he may think necessary. The notice shall be accompanied by a copy of the statements and
report prepared under paragraph 36 supra or in cases in which the file is too
bulky for copies to be conveniently prepared, the notice shall inform the
departmental officer that this is the case and that the file is open to
inspection by him or by any other officer named by him, on a day not later than
two days before the date fixed in the notice issued under section 9. In the latter case, however, a note of the
value of the land, house, etc., arrived at in the report shall invariably be
forwarded along with the notice.
39. Opportunity to be given to the
departmental officer to make representations to acquiring officer - Due consideration shall be given by
the acquiring officer to any representation the department officer may make in
reply to this notice, whether made in person, by agent or by written
statement. It will rest with the
department concerned to decide whether there is ground for making any such
representation. The officer acquiring
the land is only required to see that due opportunity for doing so is afforded, and that the representation, if made,
is duly considered before an award is made under section 11 of the act.
40. Para 40, 40-A, 40-B, 40-C deleted.
41. Authorities competent to approve the award - (1) Section 11 (1) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 inter alia lays down that no award shall be made by the Collector under this sub-section without previous approval of the appropriate Government or of such officer as the appropriate Government may authorize in this behalf. For the purpose of section 11 and 15 (A) of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894, the “appropriate Government” shall mean Government in the Department concerned and “authorised officer” shall imply the Administrative Secretary concerned. The authorities to accord approval to the award have been declared by the Government as under: -
|
Sr. No. |
Name of Authority |
Class of cases for which competent to accord approval |
|
1. |
District Collector |
All cases where the total amount of award is upto Rs. 50 lacs. |
|
2. |
Administrative Secretary |
All cases where total amount of award exceeds Rs. 50 lacs. |
2. In case of building structures, wells, tubewells and other installations falling under the jurisdiction of Punjab Irrigation Department, Executive Engineers of the Irrigation Department will also be competent Technical Officers.
42-A. Acquiring
department to decide whether to acquire the land or abandon acquisition - The Acquiring Department on the
receipt of the reference will have to examine whether in view of the higher
cost of the land they would like to reduce the area of land to be acquired or
abandon acquisition and select an alternative site. They should send directly to the authority competent (i.e.
Administrative Secretary/Collector) to approve the award their decision in this
regard. If the acquiring department
decides to abandon the acquisition, necessary notification for the purpose
should be issued by it and copies sent to the authority competent (i.e.
Administrative Secretary/Collector) to approve the award and the Land
Acquisition Collector. Where it decides
to reduce the area to be acquired, it should indicate the revised area of land
to be acquired along with khasra numbers to the authority competent (i.e.
Administrative Secretary/Collector) to approve the award and the Land
Acquisition Collector so that the award is then announced in respect of the
area proposed to be acquired. The
acquiring department may also supply to the authority competent (i.e.
Administrative Secretary/Collector) to approve the award any information in their
possession which it may consider relevant for the purpose of determining the
compensation.
42 C. Land Acquisition Officer to report to Collector of the District - The Land Acquisition Collector will report every award made by him to the Collector of the district in which the land, the subject of the award, is situated. The report will show the area, kind of soil, rate per acre, and total amount in each case.
The Land Acquisition Collector will
indicate in the award at the time of announcement that it has been made with
the previous approval of the District Collector, or Financial Commissioner,
Revenue, Punjab, as the case may be, in cases where the awards require such
approval.
43. Deleted.
43-A. Points
to be examine by the authorities approving the award -
(a)
Whether
the price of land proposed to be allowed for various categories of land are
reasonable;
(b)
Whether
the compensation on account of structures, wells, tubewells, trees, etc. are in
accordance with the rates recommended by the technical officers concerned or
where these are proposed to be departed from the revised rates, are reasonable;
and
(c)
Whether
the change in classification of land as compared to the entries in the
Jamabandi proposed by the Land Acquisition Collector are reasonable.
The Land Acquisition Collector and
the District Collector while forwarding the draft awards for approval will
therefore, indicate clearly the reasons for the proposals in regard to the
above-mentioned points in the award.
Where the rates for land in the awards are based on the Collector’s
rates, which were not approved by the authority approving the draft award, the
basis on which Collector’s rates were approved may also be indicated.
44. Collector’s powers in cases to be
referred to him before awards - The Collector of the District shall have the power of requisitioning
all cases to be referred to him before an award is given whether it is proposed
to exceed the original estimate or not.
Government of India, Circular No.10,
dated the 12th June, 1913 - While it is open to the State Government to
cause, the proceedings of the officer framing the award under Section 11 of the
Land Acquisition Act to be laid before a superior authority before the award is
actually made, and while it is open to that superior authority to give the Land
Acquisition Officer any information which it may have as to the proper
valuation of the land, or instructions as to the information which the Land
Acquisition Officer is to take into account in framing his award, the superior authority
is not competent to direct the Land Acquisition Officer to award any particular
amount as compensation. Such action
would virtually result in the award being made by some authority other than the
officer holding the inquiry under section 11 of the Act. But when the Land Acquisition Officer, after considering all the
information placed at his disposal, either in the course of the proceedings
under section 11, or extra judicially
by Government or other authority superior to him has finally decided the
amount of the award to be made, the
only alternative open to Government is :
(i)
either
to withdraw from the acquisition proceedings, or
(ii)
to
allow them to proceed on the basis of the Land Acquisition Officer’s award.
45. Rules
for the payment of compensation - The rules for the payment of compensation by special officer are given
in part L.
46. Acquiring Officer an agent of
Government and not a judicial officer. – Government of India Circular No.9-292,
dated the 28th June, 1906 - In framing his award, the first essential point
for an acquiring officer to remember is that he is acting as an agent of
Government and not as a judicial officer.
He need not therefore, be reluctant to receive any evidence not brought
before him judicially. It has been held
that the enquiry and valuation made by the Collector are departmental in their
character for the purpose of enabling Government to make a tender through him
to the persons interested, and that it is open to him, in making his award as to
the compensation to be offered, to consider all available information on the
question.
47. Opportunity of withdrawal to be
given to acquiring department - A second and equally important point is that in certain cases the
department for which the land is being acquired be allowed an opportunity of
withdrawing from the transaction. It is imperative that such opportunity should
be given before possession has actually been taken, as indicated in section
48(1) of the Act, and it is to be
observed that this permits withdrawal even after the award has been
announced and compensation paid provided only that possession has not
passed. Once the possession has passed,
the Collector’s award becomes binding on Government. It follows that Government’s power of withdrawal must be
exercised at some previous stage of the proceedings. Such stages would be:-
(1)
When
the draft award is referred to the acquiring department for comments, --vide para 42 above; and
(2)
before
the possession is taken and if the award of the Land Acquisition Collector
appears to the acquiring department to be excessive or a reference has been
made to the court under Section 18 of the Act and there is strong possibility
of higher amount of compensation being allowed by the court.
Consequently
possession should not ordinarily be taken by the Collector until the time
within which an application for a reference to the court must be made under
Section 18 of the Act has elapsed without an application being made except
where the acquiring department has ordered the possession to be taken
forthwith.
In
the interest of Government departments acquiring land, the Collector is further
required to inform the departmental officer of the facts, before announcing the
award, if his award as finally settled after objection petitions have been
heard and draft award approved by competent authority where necessary exceeds
by more than 20 per cent of the preliminary estimate of the cost of acquisition
prepared before the issue of notification under section 6 of the Act or if the
evidence is so conflicting such as to indicate the possibility that a civil
court may award a sum of similarly exceeding that estimate. Further action for payment of compensation
and taking of possession must then be postponed until the proper authority in
the acquiring department has decided whether the acquisition should be
proceeded with or not.
A
new provision has been added by the Land Acquisition (Amendment) Act, 1984 by which
a land owner who has not made an application for reference of the Collector’s
award to the civil court may make an application to the Collector for
re-determination of amount of compensation payable to him, if the civil court
allows to any other landowner whose land had been acquired under the same
notification and who may have applied for such reference compensation at a
higher rate, within 3 months of the judgement of the civil court. The acquiring department will, therefore,
have to consider the possibility of the price for the entire land getting
increased as a result of the award of the court even if the landowners owning
only a part of the land to be acquired may have filed an application for
reference.
48. Land acquired for a local body or company
- Under Section 25
of the Act as substituted by the Land Acquisition (Amendment) Act, 1984 the
amount of compensation to be awarded by the Civil Court shall not be less than
the amount awarded by the Land Acquisition Collector. The provision in the Act
enabling a reference to be made by the State Government against the award has
thus now become infructuous. When a local body or company utilizes under
Section 50 of the Act the Services of Government agency, similar considerations
apply.
49. Procedure
of acquiring officer on hearing claims for compensation -(I)- The award must in all cases be made
by the acquiring officer himself and recorded with his own hand. On the date fixed in the notice issued under
section 9 he will cause those persons who are interested in the land to be
acquired to appear before him. He will
then prepare two lists, the one showing the names of persons present, the other
the names of the absentees. Unless it
appears to him that there is sufficient reason for adjourning proceedings to
later date, the case will be conducted exparte
so far as absentees are concerned.
49-(II) Matters to be considered by the
acquiring officer in compensation - The statements of the persons interested shall
then be recorded as to whether they accept the measurements given in the report
furnished under paragraph 37 supra and agree to the rates of compensation
proposed for the various qualities of land, for trees, houses, standing crops,
etc., and to the apportionment thereof. If a holding or field is jointly owned
or is mortgaged, the officer acquiring the land will also enquire as to the
shares of the compensation to be paid to the several owners and to mortgager
respectively. These points are
important and the officer should in no case fail to take them into
consideration. Where compensation is
payable on account of standing crops, the amount of compensation awarded should
be at the market value of the crops less the amount of land revenue and cesses
payable on the land, since under paragraph 82 infra the land revenue will be
reduced from the harvest during which the land has been taken up.
50. Price – how to be fixed- (I)-The Collector will pay special
attention to the directions given in sections 23 and 24 of the Land Acquisition
Act. The chief matter for determination
is the market value of the land at the date of the publication of the
notification under section 4, sub-section (1).
The officer acquiring land may consider the prices paid for the land
recently acquired under the Act in the
same neighbourhood, if any, or prices paid in private transactions and recorded
in registered deeds or judicial proceedings or the letting value of the Land,
and the amount of the Government revenue, if any. His main data, however, will be, of course, the original estimate
framed by the Collector of the district in accordance with paragraph 12 supra.
He is not bound to follow this estimate closely but the reasons which
lead him to make any important departure from it must be carefully weighed.
50-II. In
all cases, however, when the point arises he will do well to take into view the
third head in section 23(I) of the Act.
Compensation for damage in consequence of severance is a matter of
importance and difficulty. In the case
of Railways or canals with crossings at considerable distances, the
compensation may often be unavoidable high.
If land upon acquisition will be severed from its source of irrigation,
and the department acquiring the land does not undertake to grant irrigation
facilities equal to those previously enjoyed, the difference between the market
value of irrigated and non-irrigated land must be taken into consideration for
estimating the value of the land so severed. The provisions of sub-section (2)
of section 9 of the Act should, however, be borne in mind in cases in which
exorbitant claims are made on account of severance (see also paragraph 478 of
the Land Administration Manual).
51. Persons
who may claim compensation on the ground that his land is injuriously affected
- It should be
noted, however, that under the present Act no person can claim compensation
unless some land has been taken in which he claims an interest, or over which
he has an easement. He cannot claim
compensation on general grounds that his land is injuriously affected by the
acquisition if no part of it is taken under the Act.
52. Treatment of revenue assignments - (I)-In cases where the Government revenue has been alienated in favour of any one, the value of the loss of revenue to the assignee must be estimated as noticed in paragraph 489, Land Administration Manual.
52-(II) Reduction
in Revenue to be made from rent roll - In shared villages reduction in
revenue due to the acquisition of land for the State should be made from the
Khalsa rent roll unless this course is impossible owing to the method of the
division of the shares, or for other sufficient reasons.
52-(III) Treatment when assignment is petty or where
considerable - Where
jagir or muafi land taken up is insignificant in amount and reduction cannot be
made from the Khalsa rent roll, compensation must be awarded in cash, in
accordance with the directions given below.
But when the amount of jagir or muafi on the land taken up is more than
Rs.100 per annum or when such amount is more than one fifth of the total land
revenue enjoyed by the assignee, and the reduction cannot be charged to the
Khalsa rent roll, the State Government is willing to receive proposals through
the Financial Commissioner for the grant of a pension or of a new assignment in
lieu of the cash compensation otherwise payable for the assignee’s interest in
the land. Such proposals should not be
made as a matter of course, but only when clearly indicated by the
circumstances of the case. When such
proposals are not made the matter will be dealt with according to the rules for
cash compensation. Where jagir or muafi
land is taken up for union purposes, compensation in lieu thereof must be paid
in cash, in accordance with the directions given below.
53. Cash
Compensation how to be calculated - In cases where cash compensation is awarded the
following rules shall be observed. If
the assignment is for more than one life, or in perpetuity, the compensation is
to be calculated at 20 years purchase of the Government revenue assessable on
the land. If the assignment be only for
life, the value is to be calculated (excluding months and days) according to
the scale laid down by Government for buying out pensions by which a fixed
graduated value is given with reference to ages. The amount thus calculated is to be paid to the encumbrancer and
his right is thus extinguished. Where
nazrana is paid annually by the jagirdar, this is really a deduction from the
revenue of jagir. In such a case a
proportionate amount of the nazrana should be remitted and the amount of the
compensation must be calculated after deducting the nazrana proportionate to
the amount of the assignment extinguished.
If the assignment be for the terms of settlement; compensation must be
calculated with reference to the number of years the settlement has yet to run;
provided that in no case more than twenty years purchase the limit for
perpetual grants be allowed.
54. How
the award is to be drawn up- When all statements have been recorded, the acquiring officer shall draw
up his award, which will indicate the total area of the various qualities of
land taken up, the rate and the amount of compensation to be paid on account of
land of each quality, the total amount of compensation to be paid on account of
crops, trees, houses, etc. the proportion of the compensation to be awarded to
mortgagees, and decision on the objections that may have been raised by
interested persons. The extra 12 per
cent per annum awarded under Section 23(1.A) and solatium at the rate of 30 per
cent under section 23(2) of the Act for compulsory acquisition should not be
included in the rates awarded per acre but should be added to the total
compensation and shown separately. It
should be noted that Section 23(I) (A) and Section 23(2) of the Act provide for
the grant of extra compensation on the market value of the land acquired and
not on the total award. Land as defined
in Section 3(a) of the Act would include land, trees and buildings. But the extra 30 per cent or the extra 12
per cent per annum is not to be added to compensation awarded in consideration
of the matter specified in clauses (2) and (6) of Section 23(1). Nor is it to be added to the capitalized
value of jagir revenue granted under paragraph 52 and 53 supra.
55. Statement showing compensation for each holding - Below the general award he shall have drawn up a statement showing the compensation awarded on account of each holding. This will be in the form given in illustration below: -
|
1 |
2 |
3 |
4 |
5 |
6 |
|
SN |
Jama-bandi and khatauni Nos |
Names of owners, tenants etc. with shares |
Khasra Nos. out of which land has been taken up |
Area in acres of land taken up |
Quality of land |
|
|
2/7 |
Khuda Bakhash, son of Gulam Muhammad, and Izimo, son of Piru, equal share owners Partap Singh 2/5 and Harnam Singh 3/5 occupancy tenants Section 5. --Hussaina, son of Sadiq |
17 25 min. 1092 |
10.5 |
2 acres sotar barani 7 acres nahri 1.5 acres banjar qadim 1 Acre sotar barani |
|
7 |
8 |
9 |
10 |
10-A |
11 |
12 |
13 |
|
Compensation for land |
Number of trees, houses etc. on the land or area of standing crops |
Compensation for trees, houses etc. |
Total of columns 7 and 9 |
Amount under section 23(1.A) of the Act |
Compensation under section 23(2) of the Act |
Total compensation (Column 9, 10-A & 11) |
Remarks |
|
Rs. 160.00 700.00 301.00 800.00 |
1 Kikkar Nil 1 hut Nil |
Rs. 4.00 Nil 6.00 Nil |
Rs. 900.00 80.00 |
|
Rs. 135.00 12.00 |
Rs. 1,035 of which owners Rs.646.25 np. tenants Rs.388.12 np. 92.00 |
|
Value
of life annuity
of one rupee per annum
|
Years Under 10 10 to 19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35 to 39 40 to 44 |
Rs. nP. 13.00 12.50 12.00 11.50 11.00 10.50 10.00 |
Years 45 to 49 50-54 55-59 60 to 64 65 to 69 70 or above |
Rs. nP. 9.00 9.00 8.00 7.00 6.00 5.00 |