"People are playing cricket in the stadium. If the said disputed structure of the stadium is brought down, it will serve no one's purpose. It will be a national wastage," a bench headed by Justice J S Khehar observed about the R P Mehra block at the stadium.
"You (DDCA) have not complied with directions of High Court issued in 2013. Now you have complied partially in 2016. You pay Rs 1 crore as cost for non-compliance of the orders and then we will see what needs to be done with your petition," the bench also comprising Justice C Nagappan said.
During the brief hearing, the court also pulled up an intervenor who had sought that a media box constructed at the stadium was not approved as per the sanctioned plan.
"If the building is brought down, will you get a medal? Why do you want the structure to be brought down? What will a citizen benefit when the structure is brought down? It will serve no one's purpose," the bench told the counsel for intervenor N C Bakshi on whose petition the Delhi High Court has earlier ordered a status quo.
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Rao, appearing for DDCA, said the apex court should hear the plea of the cricket body and decide the issue.
The bench, which was earlier not inclined to hear the plea, said the DDCA's appeal against the High Court order calls for "no interference", as it had not complied with the direction issued in 2013.
On March 28, the apex court had asked Delhi and District
Cricket Association (DDCA) to furnish the receipts of payments made to the civic body SDMC to obtain no-objection certificate (NOC) for holding cricket matches in the stadium.
The Delhi High Court on March 3 order had dismissed DDCA's application to restore its 1997 petition seeking NOC from MCD for the stadium.
In its 1997 petition, the DDCA had challenged a June 1992 notification of ASI, as per which construction within 100 metres of 'Kotla Baoli' is prohibited.
As per DDCA's petition, only the outer parapet wall of the monument was at a 100 metre distance from the stadium and not the actual monument. It had also said there was a road between the monument's wall and the stadium.
In its petition, DDCA had also sought a direction to the municipal body to restore the stadium's sanctioned plan.
The cricketing body had submitted that under the Delhi Master Plan, Ferozshah Kotla has been earmarked as a cricket ground. The stadium was built with the requisite permission and the only change made thereafter was adding of one more floor to the R P Mehra block of the stadium.