Supreme Court Quashes E‑Auction of DDA Land, Directs Bank to Refund Buyer with Interest

DelhiNov 11, 2025

A bench of Justices Sanjay Kumar and Alok Aradhe heard an appeal by the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) challenging an e‑auction sale of leasehold land allotted to a club and sold by the Bank on recovery proceedings. The appeal raised the validity of a mortgage created without statutory consent, the failure to disclose DDA’s pre‑emptive and unearned‑increase claims in recovery proceedings, and the rights of an auction purchaser who bid in good faith.

The Court allowed the appeal, set aside the e‑auction notice, the auction held on 09.11.2012, the confirmation of sale and the sale certificate, and directed the Bank to refund the entire amount lying with it to the auction purchaser with interest at 9% per annum within one month. The Court held that the Recovery Officer and the Bank had failed to comply with statutory provisions governing proclamation of sale and the rules for certificate proceedings, and that the sale could not be afforded sanctity. The Court further observed that the auction purchaser was an innocent transferee entitled to restitution. The Court, in its reasoning, observed: The Court also noted that “The Auction Purchaser entered the auction in good faith, placed its bid and deposited its hard‑earned money in the belief that the law clothed the auction with legitimacy.”

Background

The DDA allotted Plot No.25, Facility Centre‑33, Jasola, New Delhi, on lease to Sarita Vihar Club in 2001. The lease required prior written consent of the Lieutenant Governor for any mortgage and provided DDA with a right of pre‑emption and recovery of unearned increase. The Club mortgaged the leasehold to Corporation Bank and defaulted; the Bank filed proceedings under Section 19 of the Recovery of Debts Due to Banks and Financial Institutions Act, 1993. Recovery proceedings before the DRT culminated in an e‑auction notice dated 27.09.2012 and an auction on 09.11.2012, in which M/s Jay Bharat Commercial Enterprises Pvt. Ltd. was declared highest bidder and deposited sale proceeds.

DDA objected that no LG consent was obtained and that the Bank and Recovery Officer failed to disclose DDA’s encumbrance and quantify the statutory dues, including unearned increase. The Recovery Officer and DRT rejected DDA’s objections and confirmed sale; DDA’s earlier writ petition was withdrawn after the Bank gave an undertaking that auction would be subject to lease terms, and a later writ was dismissed by the Delhi High Court on res judicata grounds. This Court examined statutory provisions — Rule 53 of the Second Schedule to the Income‑tax Act, 1961 and Rule 16 of the Income‑tax (Certificate Proceedings) Rules, 1962 — and held that the proclamation and auction omitted material matters affecting value; therefore the sale was procedurally vitiated. The Court applied restitution principles to protect the innocent auction purchaser, held the Bank responsible for consequences of advancing on an illegal mortgage, quashed the impugned orders and sale documents, and directed refund with interest. The appeal was allowed.

Case Details: Case No.: CIVIL APPEAL NO. 11269 OF 2016 Case Title: Delhi Development Authority v. Corporation Bank & Ors. Appearances: For the Petitioner(s): [Not indicated in judgment] For the Respondent(s): [Not indicated in judgment]