India's Supreme Court bars National Highways Authority of India from denying interest on land compensation

Change
India's Supreme Court held that land owners with compensation proceedings pending as of March 28, 2008 are entitled to solatium and interest and rejected the National Highways Authority of India's plea to limit those remedies on fiscal-burden grounds.
India's Supreme Court bars National Highways Authority of India from denying interest on land compensation
Why it matters
Public authorities and acquiring agencies must accept and adjudicate solatium and interest claims for cases pending on March 28, 2008 instead of declining them for budgetary reasons. Interest on solatium or related enhanced components will run only from the date a claimant raises that specific demand; cases finally concluded before March 28, 2008 will not be reopened.
Implications
  • National Highways Authority of India legal and compensation teams must review all land acquisition files pending as on March 28, 2008 and pay or adjudicate outstanding solatium and interest claims — failure will leave the authority subject to enforcement of the Supreme Court order.
  • Competent authorities and court registries handling land acquisition matters must accept and decide solatium and interest claims for cases pending as on March 28, 2008 — failure to process claims will keep awards unresolved and liable to judicial compulsion.

Unlock the decision layer.

Go beyond headlines — see impact, exposure, and timing.

  • Implications: What actually changes downstream.
  • Who is affected: Which teams or operators are exposed.
  • What to watch: Deadlines, triggers, and next moves.
  • Real-time alerts: Know the moment a change is published.
  • Ask AI: Clarify any brief instantly, in context.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.

Start free trial
Source

The Hindu

Topics

Governance Policy & Regulation Court Rulings Regulatory Actions

Stay updated

Don’t check for changes.
Get them as they happen.

Get real-time alerts for executed changes, a daily briefing of what matters, and a weekly summary to stay on top — without having to check constantly.

14-day free trial. Full access. No credit card required.