IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE, ANDHRA PRADESH AT HYDERABAD (Special Original Jurisdiction) TUESDAY, THE TWENTY SEVENTH DAY OF OCTOBER TWO THOUSAND AND NINE PRESENT THE HON'BLE MR JUSTICE GHULAM MOHAMMED and THE HON'BLE MR JUSTICE NOOTY RAMAMOHANA RAO A.S.NO.1291 of 1997 Between: The Revenue Divisional Officer, Land Acquisition Officer, Kavali. ..... Appellant AND Cherukuru Venkureddy and others. .....Respondents JUDGMENT: (Per Sri Justice Ghulam Mohammed,J) The Land Acquisition Officer-cum-Revenue Divisional Officer, Kavali, has preferred this appeal under Section 54 of the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (for short ‘the Act’), against the order and decree dated 30.12.1987 in O.P.No.17 of 1986 on the file of the Subordinate Judge, Kovur, Nellore District. 2. The facts, in brief, are as follows; The Land Acquisition Officer issued a notification under Section 4(1) of the Act for acquisition of lands in Yallayapalem Village for the purpose of house sites to the weaker sections. The draft declaration was published on 23.10.1978. As per the said notification, the land of an extent of Acs.2.23 gts in Sy.Nos.176 and 177 situated at Yellayapalem village, Nellore District, belonging to the respondents/claimants, was acquired. The Land Acquisition Officer, after following the procedure prescribed under law, fixed the market value at the rate of Rs.6,000/-per acre for the acquired land under the award No.5/82 dated 19.03.1982. Aggrieved by the same, the respondents/claimants sought for a reference under Section 18 of the Act, claiming higher compensation, and the same has been referred by the Land Acquisition Officer, Kavali, for determination of the market value of the said acquired land and it was taken on file by the learned Subordinate Judge, Kovur, Nellore District, as O.P.No.17 of 1986. 3. In order to establish their claim, the respondents-claimants examined PWs.1 to 4 and got marked Exs.A1 to A5. On behalf of the appellant, RW1 was examined and Ex.B-1 was marked. 4. The learned Subordinate Judge, Kovur, on consideration of the material available on record, enhanced the compensation awarded by the Land Acquisition Officer and fixed the market value of the acquired land at the rate of Rs.25,000/-per acre and the claimants are entitled to solatium at 30% per annum on the enhanced compensation and also entitled to interest at 9% per annum for a period of one year from 19.03.1982 and thereafter at 15% on the enhanced compensation till realisation. They shall also be entitled to interest at 12% per annum from the date of draft notification dated 23.10.1989 till the date of the award i.e.,19.03.1982. Hence the present appeal. 5. Learned Government Pleader for Land Acquisition contended that the reference Court has committed an error in enhancing the compensation since the documents were not proved by adducing oral evidence and that the enhancement is on higher side. 6. Learned counsel appearing for the respondents/claimants contended that the registered sale deeds have to be taken into consideration for determining the market value of the acquired lands irrespective of the fact that the persons connected with the documents are not examined or proved the sale transactions. In support of their claim, the learned counsel has drawn the attention of this Court to the judgment of the Supreme Court reported in Cement Corporation of India Limited v Purya and others[1], wherein the Supreme Court considered the scope of Section 51-A of the Land Acquisition Act. The relevant portions at paragraphs 22,29,30 and 31 read as under: “22.In the ordinary course a deed of sale is the evidence of a transaction by reason whereof for a consideration mentioned therein the title and interest in an immovable property specified therein is transferred by the vendor to the vendee. Genuineness of such transaction may be in question. In a given situation the quantum of consideration or the adequacy thereof may also fall for adjudication. The courts, more often than not, are called upon to consider the nature of the transaction. Whenever a transaction evidenced by a sale deed is required to be brought on record, the execution thereof has to be proved in accordance with law. For proving such transaction, the original sale deed is required to be brought on record by way of primary evidence. Only when primary evidence is not available, a certified copy of the sale deed can be taken on record. Such certified copies evidencing any transaction are admissible in evidence, if the conditions precedent therefor in terms of Section 75 of the Indian Evidence Act are fulfilled. The transaction evidenced by the sale deed must be proved in accordance with law. 29. In V.Narasaiah case this Court correctly understood the said scope and object of insertion of Section 51-A in the LA Act when it held thus:( SCC p.535 para 13) “It was in the wake of the aforesaid practical difficulties that the new Section 51-A was introduced in the L.A. Act. When the Section says that the certified copy of a registered document ‘may be accepted as evidence of the transaction recorded in such document’ it enables the court to treat what is recorded in the document, in respect of the transactions referred to therein, as evidence”. 30. While coming to the above conclusion in Narasaiah case, this Court found support from similar provisions in the other statutes like Section 293 of the Code of Criminal Procedure which enables the court to use report of a government scientific expert as evidence in any enquiry, trial or proceeding under the said Code, even without examining any person as a witness in a court for that purpose. Notice was also taken of Section 13(5) of the Prevention of Food Adulteration Act pertaining to the report of a Public Analyst which says that any document purporting to be a report signed by a Public Analyst may be used as evidence of the fact stated therein in any proceeding under the said Act. In Narasaiah case this Court (at SCC p.536, para 15) also relied on a judgment of the Constitution Bench of this Court in Mangaldas Raghavji Ruparel v State of Maharashtra which held thus: That the sub-section clearly makes the contents of the report of Public Analyst admissible in evidence and the prosecution cannot fail solely on the ground that the Public Analyst had not been examined in the case, but what value is to be attached to such report must necessarily be for the court to consider and decide”. 31. Thus, the reasoning of this Court in Narasaiah case that Section 51-A enables the party producing the certified copy of a sale transaction to rely on the contents of the document without having to examine the vendee or the vendor of that document, is the correct position in law. This finding in Narasaiah case is also supported by the decision of this Court in the case of Mangaldas Raghavji Ruparel.” 7. Heard the learned Government Pleader for Land Acquisition and the learned counsel for the respondents-claimants. 8. We have perused the order under appeal and the judgment relied on by the counsel appearing for the respondents-claimants. In Cement Corporation of India Limited’ case (cited supra), the Supreme Court relied on its earlier judgment in V. Narasaiah’s case (SCC P. 536, P-15) and gave a reasoning that Section 51-A enables the party producing the certified copy of a sale transaction to rely on the contents of the document without having to examine the vendee or the vendor of that document, is the correct position in law. 9. In the circumstances, following the said judgment and for the reasons mentioned therein, we do not find any infirmity in the order passed by the reference Court under Section 18 of the Act and the reference Court has rightly enhanced the compensation. 10. Hence, we see no merits in the appeal and the same is accordingly dismissed. There shall be no order as to costs. _____________________ GHULAM MOHAMMED,J ___________________________ NOOTY RAMAMOHANA RAO, J Date:27.10.2009 sj [1] (2004) 8 SCC 270