Business

'No intention of giving up lease at Singur'

KOLKATA: Tata Motors Ltd today told the Calcutta High Court, which began hearing its case afresh, that it had no intention of giving up the land lease at Singur while claiming that the law by

From our online archive

KOLKATA: Tata Motors Ltd today told the Calcutta High Court, which began hearing its case afresh, that it had no intention of giving up the land lease at Singur while claiming that the law by which West Bengal government had taken back the land was illegal.

"I want to preserve my lease and possession," Tata Motors counsel Samaraditya Pal submitted before Justice Indra Prasanna Mukerji who started hearing the matter afresh after the earlier judge recused himself from the case.

Stating that the question of compensation had not been addressed in the Act as it did not quantify the amount, Pal submitted that the Singur Land and Rehabilitation Act 2011, by which the West Bengal government had taken back the land on June 21, was illegal and that the acquisition was not for public purpose. Pal said the state law clashed with the central law.

As land was on the Concurrent List, the President's assent should have been taken instead of the Governor's for the Singur Act, he contended.

LIVE | Iran war: Two ships hit near Strait of Hormuz as Tehran says new supreme leader 'safe and sound'

In landmark first, SC allows withdrawal of life support for 32-year-old man in coma for over 12 years

SC asks Centre to constitute expert committee to review NCERT textbooks

LPG shortage fears grip major cities

Trump says Reliance may partner in first new US oil refinery project in 50 years

SCROLL FOR NEXT