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National Highways Authority of India vs Tarsem Singh - Review Petition

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Filed March 25th, 2026
Detected March 26th, 2026
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Summary

The Supreme Court of India heard a review petition filed by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) seeking to recall an earlier order dated February 4, 2025. This order had dismissed NHAI's application for clarification regarding a prior judgment from September 19, 2019.

What changed

The Supreme Court of India is considering a Review Petition (Civil) No. 2528/2025 filed by the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI). The petition seeks to recall the Court's order dated February 4, 2025, which had dismissed NHAI's application for clarification concerning a judgment issued on September 19, 2019, by a Coordinate Bench. The underlying matter appears to relate to Civil Appeal No. 7064/2019 and Miscellaneous Application No. 1773/2021.

This proceeding represents a judicial review of a prior court decision. Legal professionals involved in cases with the NHAI or similar government entities, particularly those concerning appeals or clarifications of previous judgments, should note this case. While this specific filing is a review petition and the immediate outcome is procedural, it indicates ongoing litigation and potential adjustments to prior rulings. No specific compliance actions or deadlines are indicated for external parties at this stage, as it is a matter between the parties to the original appeal and the court.

Source document (simplified)

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National Highways Authority Of India vs Tarsem Singh on 25 March, 2026

Author: Surya Kant

Bench: Surya Kant

REPORTABLE
2026 INSC 291
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA

                                INHERENT/CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION

                                   Review Petition (Civil) No. 2528 / 2025
                                                     in

                                 Miscellaneous Application No. 1773 / 2021
                                                    in

                                         Civil Appeal No. 7064 / 2019

         National Highways Authority of India                                  …Appellant(s)

                                                    versus

        Tarsem Singh and others                                              …Respondent(s)

                                                     with

                                   Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
                  (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. __________ / 2026)
                                (Arising out of Diary No. 67885 / 2025)

                                   Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
                  (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. __________ / 2026)
                                (Arising out of Diary No. 68010 / 2025)

                                      Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
                        (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 2507 / 2026)

                                       Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
                        (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 36306 / 2025)

                                       Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
                        (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 37094 / 2025)

Signature Not Verified

                                      Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026

Digitally signed by
SATISH KUMAR YADAV
Date: 2026.03.25
14:51:52 IST

                        (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 2425 / 2026)

Reason:

                                                                                   Page 1 of 14
                Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
 (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 38641 / 2025)

                Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
   (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 52 / 2026)

                Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
 (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 37666 / 2025)

                Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
 (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 38674 / 2025)

                Civil Appeal No. __________ / 2026
   (Arising out of Special Leave Petition (Civil) No. 41 / 2026)

                             JUDGEMENT SURYA KANT, CJI.
  1. The instant Review Petition has been filed by the National Highways

    Authority of India (NHAI) for recalling our order dated 04.02.2025,

    passed in Miscellaneous Application No. 1773/2021 (Tarsem Singh-

    II).1 Vide that order, this Court had dismissed NHAI’s application

    seeking clarification whether the judgement dated 19.09.2019 passed

    by

    a Coordinate Bench of this Court in [Union of India and another v.

    Tarsem Singh and others](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/28541457/) (Tarsem Singh-I)2 would apply

    prospectively.

  2. Notably, several Special Leave Petitions preferred by the NHAI/its

    Project Director are also tagged with the instant Review Petition,

1 Union of India and another v. Tarsem Singh and others, 2025 SCC OnLine SC 235.

2 (2019) 9 SCC 304.

Page 2 of 14 challenging different orders passed by the High Courts of Bombay and

   Chhattisgarh.
  1. The High Courts, vide those orders, have, inter alia, directed NHAI and

    its officers to pay (i) interest, (ii) solatium, (iii) and interest on the

    solatium, along with the statutory compensation, for acquisition of

    lands under the National Highways Act, 1956 (NH Act) in terms of

    Tarsem Singh-I and Tarsem Singh-II in a time-bound manner. NHAI’s

    grievance in these Special Leave Petitions appears to be that such

    directions ought not to have been issued in view of the pendency of the

    Review Petition against Tarsem Singh-II before this Court.

  2. Be that as it may, since the survival of the claims raised in the

    adjoining Special Leave Petitions hinges on the outcome of this Review

    Petition, we shall first turn to adjudicate the latter on its merits.

A. BACKGROUND

  1. To that end, given that this Review Petition constitutes the third round

    of litigation on the limited issue of various landowners’ entitlement to

    ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ as part of the compensation for land acquisition

    initiated by the NHAI, we do not deem it appropriate to delve into the

    entire legislative and judicial history of the matter. Suffice it would be to

    notice certain salient events:

5.1. In 1997, a fresh, comprehensive land acquisition framework was

introduced into the NH Act. Included in this Amendment was [Section

3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/), stipulating that the Land Acquisition Act, 1894 (1894 Act) in toto Page 3 of 14 would not apply to acquisitions under the NH Act. A necessary by-
product of this amendment was that the provisions of the 1894 Act

   granting ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ to land-losers would not apply to

   acquisitions initiated under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/).

5.2. Section 3-J held the field until the purported dissonance between the

   land acquisition compensatory schemes contemplated under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/) and the 1894 Act was agitated as being ex-facie illegal and ultra vires

   the Constitution of India before various High Courts.

5.3. A learned Single Judge of the High Court of Karnataka in Lalita v.

Union of India, New Delhi,3 struck down Section 3-J of the NH Act,

   holding it to be unconstitutional for perpetuating an arbitrary

   distinction, in opposition to the strict contours of [Article 14](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/367586/) of the

   Constitution of India. That ruling, however, was stayed by a Division

   Bench of the same High Court on 10.02.2003, while it was seized of the

   intra-court appeal preferred by the Union of India. The stay continued

   to operate till 15.10.2019, when the Writ Appeal was eventually

   dismissed by the High Court in terms of this Court’s judgement in

   Tarsem Singh-I, which is elaborated upon later.

5.4. As stated earlier, similar challenges were made before other High Courts

   as well, resulting in two noteworthy decisions:

3 2002 SCC OnLine Kar 569.

Page 4 of 14

(i) Judgement dated 28.03.2008 passed by a Division Bench of the

High Court of Punjab and Haryana, titled [Golden Iron and Steel

Forging v. Union of India](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/146271936/);4 and

(ii) Order dated 04.03.2011 passed by a learned Single Judge of the

High Court of Judicature at Madras, titled T. Chakrapani v.
Union of India.5

5.5. These decisions assume significance for the reason that, rather than

   striking down [Section 3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/) of the NH Act in its entirety, the High Courts

   adopted     a   calibrated    approach.   While   preserving   the   distinct

   acquisition framework under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/), they held the statutory

   scheme to be unconstitutional to the limited extent that it denied land-

   losers the benefit of ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’. In effect, [Sections 3-G](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/120401589/) and [3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/) of the NH Act were read down to align with the compensatory

   principles embodied in Section 23(1-A) and Section 23(2) of the 1894

   Act. The result was that, notwithstanding the separate statutory

   regime, landowners under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/) were also held entitled to

   ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ on parity with acquisitions under the 1894 Act.

   These decisions, along with similar pronouncements by other High

   Courts, were subsequently carried in appeal before this Court.

5.6. While the aforesaid appeals were pending consideration, the [Right to

   Fair    Compensation         and   Transparency    in   Land    Acquisition,

   Rehabilitation and Resettlement Act, 2013](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/110685803/) (2013 Act) came into force

4 2008 SCC OnLine P&H 498.

5 2011 SCC OnLine Mad 2881 Page 5 of 14 with effect from 01.01.2014, replacing the 1894 Act. Thereafter, by way

   of the Right to Fair Compensation and Transparency in Land

   Acquisition, Rehabilitation and Resettlement (Amendment) Ordinance,

   2014 (2014 Ordinance), the compensation framework under the 2013

   Act was extended to acquisitions under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/), with effect from

   01.01.2015. Although the said Ordinance subsequently lapsed, the

   Union of India, in exercise of its powers under Section 113 read with

   Section 105 of the 2013 Act, issued a notification dated 28.08.2015,

   thereby continuing the applicability of the compensation provisions of

   the 2013 Act to acquisitions under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/).

5.7. The net effect of this entire rigamarole was that a distinct class of land-

losers came to be excluded from the benefit of ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’.

   To be specific, the acquisitions undertaken under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/) during

   the interregnum, namely, after the insertion of [Section 3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/) in 1997 and

   till the beneficial compensation regime of the 2013 Act was made

   applicable to the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/) w.e.f. 01.01.2015, remained outside the fold of

   entitlement to ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’. This resulted in an anomalous

   situation, where similarly situated landowners, differing only in the

   timing or statutory route of acquisition, were subjected to materially

   unequal compensatory frameworks.

5.8. As a consequence of the statutory rights accorded through the 2014

   Ordinance and the notification dated 28.08.2015, the appeal arising

   from T. Chakrapani (supra) was disposed of by this Court with the

   statement of the then Solicitor General of India being recorded that Page 6 of 14 solatium in terms of the order of the Madras High Court would be

   granted in that case.6

5.9. Similarly, in Sunita Mehra v. Union of India,7 a two-Judge Bench of

   this Court, disposed of the NHAI’s appeals against other comparable

   judgements of the High Court of Punjab and Haryana, with the

   directions that the benefit of ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ shall be available

   to land-losers in all such cases where the proceedings for computation

   of compensation were pending as on 28.03.2008. In doing so, this

   Court clarified that while future acquisitions would be covered by the

   2013 Act and its benefits, those cases which had been decided prior to

   the said date and, thus, stood concluded ought not to be reopened. Here, it may be noted for clarity that this cut-off date was derived from

   the date on which the judgement in [Golden Iron and Steel](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/146271936/) (supra) was

   pronounced by the High Court of Punjab and Haryana.

5.10. Following the aforesaid developments, the NHAI chose to withdraw its

   appeals pending before this Court in which the judgement of the High

   Court of Punjab and Haryana in [Golden Iron and Steel](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/146271936/) (supra) was

   under challenge.8

5.11. It is in this backdrop that a two-Judge Bench of this Court, including

   one of us (Surya Kant, J., as he then was), in Tarsem Singh-I held that

   the benefit of ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ must be extended to landowners 6 Civil Appeal Nos. 129-159/2014. 7 (2019) 17 SCC 672.

8 Civil Appeal No. 10695/2011. Page 7 of 14 even in respect of acquisitions made during the period between 1997,

  when [Section 3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/) was introduced into the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/), and 2015, when the

  compensation scheme of the 2013 Act was made applicable to the

  acquisitions under the [NH Act](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/1222415/). With this in mind, [Section 3-J](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/118663988/) was

  declared unconstitutional to the extent that it denied solatium and

  interest, and landowners were held entitled to such benefits in terms of

  Section 23(1-A) and Section 23(2), along with interest under the proviso

  to Section 28 of the 1894 Act.

5.12. Aggrieved thereby, the NHAI moved Miscellaneous Application

  No. 1773/2021, seeking a clarification that the directions in Tarsem

  Singh-I would operate only prospectively. That prayer was declined by

  this Court in Tarsem Singh-II, wherein it was held that the entitlement

  to ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’ inheres in the right to just compensation,

  and that the grant of such benefits does not amount to reopening of

  cases that have attained finality.

5.13. It must be mentioned that in those proceedings, this Court also rejected

  a specific argument of the NHAI apropos the financial burden that

  would have to be borne by the public exchequer for payment of such

  solatium and interest to the landowners. The relevant para is

  reproduced below:

“23. In all fairness, the only defense that may perhaps
seem appealing is the claim of a financial burden
amounting to Rupees 100 crores. However, this argument
does not persuade us for several reasons: First, if this
burden has been borne by the NHAI in the case of thousands of
other landowners, it stands to reason that it should also be
shared by the NHAI in this instance, in order to eliminate Page 8 of 14 discrimination. Second, the financial burden of acquiring land
cannot be justified in the light of the Constitutional mandate of Article 300A. Third, since most National Highways are being
developed under the Public Private Partnership model, the
financial burden will ultimately be passed on to the relevant
Project Proponent. Fourth, even the Project Proponent would not
have to bear the compensation costs out of pocket, as it is the
commuters who will bear the actual brunt of this cost.
Ultimately, the burden is likely to be saddled onto the middle or
upper-middle-class segment of society, particularly those who
can afford private vehicles or operate commercial ventures. We
are thus not inclined to entertain the plea for prospectivity on
this limited tenet.”
[Emphasis supplied]

5.14. While dismissing the Miscellaneous Application, this Court also alluded

to the decision in Sunita Mehra (supra) and underlined that it stood

appropriately addressed and clarified in Tarsem Singh-I.

B. SCOPE OF THE REVIEW

  1. The NHAI has filed the present Review Petition inter alia contending

that the financial burden projected to this Court in the course of

arguments in Tarsem Singh-II was based on a clerical error. It is

submitted that the actual liability towards payment of solatium and

interest to all landowners is not Rs. 100 crores, as is recorded in the

extract reproduced hereinabove, but is in fact amounting to

approximately Rs. 29,000 crores. On this basis, it is urged that an error

apparent on the face of the record has crept into the order, warranting

reconsideration thereof.

  1. At the outset, it must be clarified that while the corrected estimate of

the monetary costs is taken on record, the same does not persuade us

to revisit the merits of the earlier adjudication. This Court had Page 9 of 14 unequivocally held that the fiscal implications of granting solatium and

interest cannot override the substantive entitlement of land-losers.
There is no gainsaying that the constitutional guarantee of just

  compensation cannot be rendered contingent upon the magnitude of

  the financial burden. Consequently, a mere escalation in the projected

  liability, howsoever significant, does not constitute, per se, a valid

  ground for review or modification of the judgement.
  1. There is, consequentially, no occasion for us to reconsider our decision

    in Tarsem Singh-II on the above-noted ground.

  2. Regardless thereto and upon a careful consideration of the submissions

    advanced on behalf of the NHAI, it appears that certain aspects of the

    judgements rendered in Tarsem Singh-I and Tarsem Singh-II warrant

    limited clarification. The necessity for such clarification arises not from

    any error in principle, but to ensure a consistent and equitable

    understanding of the scope and effect of those decisions. The instant

    proceedings, therefore, are confined strictly to that limited exercise.

C. CLARIFICATION RE: DELAYED AND BARRED CLAIMS

  1. The undisputed position of law, settled by successive judgements of the

    High Courts and this Court, is that the landowners who suffer

    acquisition of their land under the NH Act are entitled to interest,

    solatium, and interest on solatium as part of their compensation. In

    Tarsem Singh-I, this Court recognised “that the Government itself is

    of the view that solatium and interest should be granted even in Page 10 of 14 cases that arise between 1997 and 2015.” It is also not in question

    that such benefits shall be payable in line with those granted in the

    1894 Act or the 2013 Act, as the case may be.

  2. However, as a matter of caution, we deem it appropriate to clarify that

    each claim for this entitlement cannot be treated in the same way. We

    say so for the reason that, in many cases, the landowners have chosen

    to approach the different authorities, like the Competent Authority, the

    Arbitrators, or the Courts, for the grant of ‘solatium’ and ‘interest’

    decades after the cases regarding the quantum of the land acquisition

    compensation for their lands stood closed.

  3. This Court is conscious of the legal necessity of giving quietus to

    decided matters. Once a judgement or an order passed by a court in a

    particular case has attained finality and is not the subject matter of

    further challenge before a prescribed forum, a subsequent change in

    the judicial interpretation would not entail a reversal of such decision

    inter-se the parties to that case. In fact, a three-Judge Bench of this

    Court, including both of us, in [State (NCT of Delhi) v. K.L. Rathi

    Steels Ltd.9](https://indiankanoon.org/doc/150657218/) has observed that such overturning of the principle of law

    cannot sustain even a formal review of the original decision once the

    same has attained finality. As such, we find that while, as a matter of

    legal principle, the landowners may be entitled to solatium and interest,

    they cannot be permitted to reopen old, stale claims which have been

    decided conclusively by a court of law.

9 (2024) 7 SCC 315.

Page 11 of 14

  1. However, where final remedy has not been exhausted and statutory

    appeals or applications have been filed after inordinate delay, claiming

    the benefit of ‘interest’, ‘solatium’, or ‘interest on solatium’, a balance

    must be struck between the entitlement of the landowners and the

    equities operating against their delay. A similar balancing exercise is

    usually undertaken by this Court while considering cases for

    enhancement of land acquisition compensation in a belated appeal. The

    notable method used in such cases is the denial of ‘interest’ payable on

    the enhanced amount of compensation for the period of delay. A similar

    exercise must be undertaken for the land acquisition cases arising from

    the NH Act in the matter of grant of ‘solatium’, ‘interest’, and ‘interest

    on solatium’.

D. CONCLUSION AND DIRECTIONS

  1. Considering the facts and circumstances explained in the instant

    proceedings along with the various submissions placed on record and

    with a view to balancing the equities regarding delay and the

    entitlements of the landowners, we issue the following directions:

(i) All landowners whose claims re: the quantum and/or

components of compensation for their lands acquired under the NH Act were alive on or after 28.03.2008, i.e., they were pending

before one of the prescribed fora, shall be entitled to seek

addition of ‘interest’, ‘solatium’, and ‘interest on the solatium’ to

their compensation claim;

Page 12 of 14

(ii) In the cases where compensation claims are alive on the

aforesaid date, but the landowner has claimed ‘interest’,

‘solatium’, and ‘interest on solatium’ after 28.03.2008, no

interest on both components shall be payable for the period of

delay. Such landowner shall be entitled to ‘interest’ and ‘interest

on solatium’ only from the date on which such claims were

raised; and

(iii) If the claims of the landowners stood concluded prior to

28.03.2008, with no further appeal, Writ Petition, Special Leave

Petition, etc., then such landowners are not entitled to seek

reopening, review, or modification of the said decision for the

purpose of claiming ‘solatium’ or ‘interest’.
15. The instant Review Petition, along with all pending applications, stand

  disposed of accordingly.
  1. Delay is condoned and leave is granted in the tagged Special Leave

    Petitions, and while setting aside the impugned judgements of the High

    Courts, the matters are remanded to the concerned High Courts with a

    request to recalculate the ‘interest’, ‘solatium’, and ‘interest on solatium’

    payable to the landowners. Such computation shall be strictly in

    accordance with the directions issued hereinabove. If the landowners

    are held to fall within the category of Paragraph 14(ii) then the payment

    has to be made accordingly. Similarly, in the cases of landowners who

    are covered by Paragraph 14(iii), no such benefit shall be granted. Page 13 of 14

  2. As a matter of abundant caution, however, it is clarified that these

    directions do not entitle the NHAI or the Union of India to seek refund

    or recovery of the solatium or interest already paid to the landowners.

  3. Ordered accordingly.

…….......…….........CJI
(SURYA KANT)

                                                    …….........…….........J.
                                                       (UJJAL BHUYAN)

NEW DELHI;

MARCH 25, 2026 Page 14 of 14

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
SC India
Filed
March 25th, 2026
Instrument
Enforcement
Legal weight
Binding
Stage
Final
Change scope
Minor
Document ID
2026 INSC 291
Docket
Review Petition (Civil) No. 2528 / 2025 Miscellaneous Application No. 1773 / 2021 Civil Appeal No. 7064 / 2019
Supersedes
Order dated 04.02.2025 passed in Miscellaneous Application No. 1773/2021 (Tarsem Singh-II)

Who this affects

Industry sector
9211 Government & Public Administration
Activity scope
Appeals and Judicial Review
Geographic scope
IN IN

Taxonomy

Primary area
Judicial Administration
Operational domain
Legal
Topics
Transportation Law Contract Law

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