Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/3356
Title: A Critical Evaluation of the Application of ‘Public Purpose Rule’ in the Compulsory Acquisition of Lands in Sri Lanka
Authors: Palliyaarachchi, R.
Issue Date: 2012
Citation: Annual Research Symposium
Abstract: The compulsory acquisition of privately owned land by the State exercising its right of eminent domain has been identified as a principle which coexists with the well known conception of absolutism of private property. It is a common feature in most of the jurisdictions, particularly in countries like India, United States of America, Australia, South Africa etc. to allow such right of the State to be exercised subject to the pre qualification that such acquisition should be for a “public purpose”. The Land Acquisition Act (as amended) No. 09 of 1950 (LAA) which facilitates the compulsory acquisition of lands in Sri Lanka is no exception to this common practice. The expression “public purpose” has been identified as incapable of a precise and rigid definition. What is meant by the term “public purpose” may vary from one society to another based on the socio, economic and political concepts that prevail in such a society. Even within a society, the term “public purpose” may take different shapes at different times. Therefore, the State or effectively the government of the day has been identified as the appropriate authority to decide whether a particular purpose is a public purpose or not. Though public purpose provides the basic justification for the State interference with private property rights, the vagueness of the definition provided in the LAA and the limitless expansionary capacity of the term “public purpose” have resulted in the arbitrary exercise of power in relation to land acquisition. Ministers and other government officials have sought to make use of the public purpose rule for acquisition of land, driven by personal reasons and ulterior motives. The emerging phase in the Sri Lankan economy with regard to infrastructure developments indubitably necessitates large scale land acquisitions. Thus, the existing position in relation to the public purpose rule would have to be understood in the light of the welfare notion of the state as adopted in Sri Lanka. Furthermore, the power of the executive to deprive people of their land to which they are intimately connected as individuals and as a community, based on the justification of “public purpose” would easily be misinterpreted and may result in the creation of unrest among different communities.
URI: http://archive.cmb.ac.lk:8080/xmlui/handle/70130/3356
Appears in Collections:Law

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