A bench, comprising then Chief Justice J S Khehar and Justice D Y Chandrachud, had upheld the Madhya Pradesh High Court order cancelling the allotment of leasehold rights by UDA.
In the order, pronounced on August 24 but uploaded recently, the bench said no court could be a "hapless spectator" when a public authority forsakes the trust.
"Land is a scarce public resource. When public bodies are vested with control over land - in this case over land which was acquired for facilitating planned development, no authority can claim an immunity from its accountability to matters of public interest," the bench said.
"Public interest postulates both protecting the interests of the authority and ensuring fairness to the leaseholder who may have constructed on the land in pursuance of the leasehold," the apex court said.
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UDA had initially granted leasehold rights for 30 years to IISCO Ltd, a subsidiary of Steel Authority of India Ltd.
IISCO Ltd went into liquidation before the Calcutta High Court and its rights and assets were auctioned by the Official Liquidator.
After its expiry in 2012, the UDA renewed the lease agreement for another period of 30 years. The leasehold right was converted into freehold right by UDA after the renewal.
The PIL filed before the Madhya Pradesh High Court alleged that the rights were parted away at a throwaway price.
Allowing the petition, the high court had quashed the renewal and conversion of leasehold as freehold.
It also said that in case of third parties, other than 67 registered sale deeds, with whom there are no registered sale deeds, Ajar shall refund the consideration paid by the respective purchasers within a period of three months.