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    <title>2015 (5) TMI 1220 - Supreme Court</title>
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    <description>Land acquisition reference limitation runs from the award or constructive notice, so a party that participated in the proceedings cannot rely on a later Section 12(2) notice to revive time under Section 18. A transfer prohibited by Section 42 of the Rajasthan Tenancy Act is void from inception, and a transferee acquires no enforceable right, title, or compensable interest in the acquired land. A direction to consider allotment of 25% of developed land is unsustainable where it lacks statutory basis and arises from a void transaction. Compensation valuation must rest on reliable evidence and reasonable deductions for development, and a High Court assessment based on documentary material was upheld.</description>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 01 May 2015 00:00:00 +0530</pubDate>
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      <title>2015 (5) TMI 1220 - Supreme Court</title>
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      <description>Land acquisition reference limitation runs from the award or constructive notice, so a party that participated in the proceedings cannot rely on a later Section 12(2) notice to revive time under Section 18. A transfer prohibited by Section 42 of the Rajasthan Tenancy Act is void from inception, and a transferee acquires no enforceable right, title, or compensable interest in the acquired land. A direction to consider allotment of 25% of developed land is unsustainable where it lacks statutory basis and arises from a void transaction. Compensation valuation must rest on reliable evidence and reasonable deductions for development, and a High Court assessment based on documentary material was upheld.</description>
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