Wednesday 12 October 2016

KULDEEP KOHLI - PETITION ARAVALI (MINES AND GEOLOGY)




KULDEEP KUMAR KOHLI
RZ 200B, STREET NO. 3, RAM CHOWK,
SADH NAGAR PART I, PALAM COLONY, NEW DELHI – 110045
Mobile: 08860332404
                    E MAIL: KULDEEP.KOHLI55@GMAIL.COM

12th October, 2016

Principal Secretary
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
30 Bays Building,
1st Floor, 17 – B, Haryana,
Chandigarh

Director General
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
30 Bays Building,
1st Floor, 17 – B, Haryana,
Chandigarh


SUBJECT: NO PERMISSION IS REQUIRED FOR CONSTRUCTION OF BOUNDARY WALL AND BUILDING TO BE USED FOR THE PURPOSES OF AGRICULTURE AT ANSALS ARAVALI RETREAT, VILLAGE RAISINA, TEHSIL SOHNA, GURGAON HENCE NO VIOLATION OF:

1.   Supreme court order in I.A. no. 12-13 of 2011 in Special leaves petition © No. 19628-19629 of 2009 in the matter of Deepak Kumar etc. Vs. State of Haryana and others.

2.   Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change Notification No. SO 141€ dated 15th January 2016.

3.   Haryana Government, Town & Country Planning Department Notification No. CCP(NCR)/DDP/BERI-2031/2014/10 dated 2nd January 2014
………………………………………………………………………………….

Dear Sir,

The Punjab Scheduled Roads and Controlled Areas Restriction of Unregulated Development Act, 1963 was enacted to prevent haphazard and substandard development along Scheduled Roads and in Controlled Areas in the State of Haryana.

The term agriculture” as per Section 2(1) of the Act ibid is defined as “agriculture includes horticulture, dairy farming, poultry farming and the planting and up keep of an orchard.”
It further reads:

Thus every person desiring to construct a building in the Controlled area has to get permission for change of land use (from agriculture to other purposes) from the Director.  However no such permission is necessary, if such building is used or is to be used for agriculture purposes or purposes subservient to agriculture.

As per provisions of Section 6 of the Act ibid, no personal shall erect or re-erect any building or make or extend any excavation or lay out any means of access to a road in a controlled area save in accordance with the plans and restrictions and conditions referred to in Sector 5 and with the previous permission of the Director.

Provided that no such permission shall be necessary for erection or re-erection of any building if such building is used or is to be used for agricultural purposes or purposes subservient to agriculture.

Notification No M 342/2013/8/1/2014-2TCP dated 14.1.2014 issued by the Principal Secretary to the Government of Haryana, Town & Country Planning, Haryana, Chandigarh also mentions non requirement of any type of NOC from the office of the Town & Country Planning. A copy of the notification is enclosed herewith for your ready reference. (Annexure 1)

Town & Country Planning Department, Haryana Government, Notification No CCP (NCR)/DDP/BERI-2031/2014/10 dated 2nd January 2014 under Annexure B reads at (zd) as under:

“Subservient to Agriculture” means development and activities which are required to assist in carrying out the process of agriculture such as tube wells, pump chambers, wind mills, irrigation drain, pucca platforms, fencing and boundary walls not more than 4 feet high and with maximum 3 feet fencing. A copy of the above mentioned notification is enclosed at (Annexure 2).

Hence this means that if you are desirous to construct a building and a boundary wall of four feet height and three feet fencing, then no permission is required if such building is used or is to be used for agriculture purposes or purposes subservient to agriculture. 

The Honourable Supreme Court in Civil Appeal No. 10717 of 2014 (arising out SLP © No. 33002 of 2010) has ordered no to royalty on excavated earth for laying foundation. The Supreme Court has held that the government is not entitled to any mining royalty if a developer excavates land for laying foundation of a building, thus rejecting the Maharashtra government’s claim that the activity of digging up earth for any such concrete foundation is akin to mining operations.

Deciding a batch of appeals led by the Promoters and Builders Association of Pune, a bench headed by Justice Ranjan Gogoi partly set aside the Bombay High Court order which held that even ordinary earth was to be treated as a (minor) mineral and the state government had the right to all minerals on public or private land.

While it held that the ordinary earth used for filling or levelling purposes in construction of embankments, roads, railways, buildings is deemed to be a minor mineral, the excavation of ordinary earth by the developers for laying foundation of buildings or for the purpose of widening of the channel to bring adequate quantity of sea water for the purpose of cooling the nuclear plant would not amount to a mining activity so as to attract any levy of royalty or penalty.

“A blanket determination of liability merely because ordinary earth was dug up, therefore, would not be justified; what would be required is a more precise determination of the end use of the excavated earth; a finding on the correctness of the stand of the builders that the extracted earth was not used commercially but was redeployed in the building operations,” Justice Gogoi said.

The Mines and Minerals (Development and Regulation) Act, 1957 defines mining operation under Chapter 3 as under: Annexure 3.
(d) “Mining operations" means any operations undertaken for the purpose of winning any mineral;

Mines and Geology Department Notification on the 20th June, 2012 No G.S.R.No /C.A.67/57/S.15/2012 by the Government of Haryana defines Mining Operation under Chapter 2 as under:   (Copy Enclosed as Annexure 4)

(xxviii) ‗” Mining operations” means any operation carried out for the purpose of winning any mineral except mineral oils;

6. Exemptions in certain cases (Copy enclosed as Annexure 5)

(2) In other cases:

(i) Construction of any building by the public or private sector, or road or any other development project under the authority of any government department or its agencies involving any digging or excavation for a purpose other than winning a mineral:

Provided that where any minor mineral comprising construction sand and stone is excavated and extracted in the process of execution of such projects, the same shall be disposed off or consumed only after obtaining a permit from the Mines and Geology Department and payment of the applicable royalty and other fees as prescribed under rule 32.

"Winning" does not imply a hazardous or perilous activity. The word simply means "extracting a mineral" and is used generally to indicate any activity by which a mineral is secured. "Extracting", in turn, means drawing out or obtaining. A tooth is 'extracted' as much as it fruit juice and as much as a mineral. Only, that the effort varies from tooth to tooth, from fruit to fruit and from mineral to mineral.

Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate change notification dated New Delhi, the 15th January, 2016 under appendix – ix , [see paragraph 7(i) (b)] provides the details on exemption of certain cases from requirement of environmental clearance under item no. 9 and reads as under: ( Copy enclosed as Annexure 6) Digging of foundation for buildings not requiring prior environmental clearance

This means that those buildings which do not require prior environmental clearance are exempted from the provisions of the above notifications.

we wish to inform you that we are aware of the fact that mining of stone in Haryana without the necessary permission from the concerned Departments of the Central and the State Government is illegal and so is buying of the illegal mined stone illegal. Hence we advise all our members to buy the stone from the queries in Rajasthan and obtain a receipt at the Octroi Post for such stone being used in their farm houses when the stone is entering the borders of Haryana.

We would now like to seek your views on our understanding being correct on the issues and the notifications mentioned above. 

An early communication would relieve the farm owners of unwanted anxiety and stress being caused because of so many notifications and different interpretations being conveyed by the officers.

Thanking you,

Yours faithfully,

  
Kuldeep Kumar Kohli


Copy to:

State Mining Officer
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
30 Bays Building,
1st Floor, 17 – B, Haryana,
Chandigarh

State Geologist
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
30 Bays Building,
1st Floor, 17 – B, Haryana,
Chandigarh

Mining Engineer
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
30 Bays Building,
1st Floor, 17 – B, Haryana,
Chandigarh

Assistant Mining Engineer
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
IDC, Plot no. 2, Mehrauli Road,
Gurgaon,
Haryana

Mining Inspector
Mines and Geology Department,
Government of Haryana,
IDC, Plot no. 2, Mehrauli Road,
Gurgaon,
Haryana


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