Dispute over a land allotment for a 5-star hotel and car park. The core of the conflict revolves around HUDCO’s forfeiture of Tomorrowland’s payments due to alleged non-performance of contractual obligations. The court ultimately found HUDCO breached its reciprocal obligations by failing to secure necessary approvals and execute a sub-lease agreement, thereby entitling Tomorrowland to a refund of the principal amount paid. However, due to Tomorrowland’s “unclean hands” and attempts at forum shopping, the court denied any entitlement to interest on the refunded amount.
(A) Specific Relief Act, 1963, Section 34 – Specific Performance – Suit for declaration – Allotment of Whether Respondent No. 1/HUDCO was in breach of its reciprocal contractual obligations qua the Appellant? – Held that Respondent No. 1 was in breach of several obligations as contemplated in the Allotment Letter, viz. failure to execute documents for securing approval under the ULCR Act and the IT Act; failure to execute the sub lease agreement in favour of the Appellant and; failure to secure the approval of the revised layout plan for the construction of the hotel.
(Para 29, 42)
(B) Specific Relief Act, 1963, Section 34 – Suit for declaration – Refund of the forfeited amount – Whether the Appellant is entitled to a refund of the forfeited amount under Clause 5(vi) of the Allotment Letter? – Clause 5 (vi) of the Allotment Letter, which deals with the monies paid by the Appellant, provides that Respondent No. 1 will execute all required documents to obtain approval from the Competent Authority under the ULCR Act and also from the Appropriate Authority as envisaged in Chapter XX C of the IT Act, failing which, Respondent No. 1 will refund the amount paid without any interest. That being the case, it is imperative to maintain the sanctity of the terms of the agreement between the parties. It is a settled position of law that a commercial document ought not to be interpreted in a manner that arrives at a complete variance with what may originally have been the intention of the parties. As a result, we hold that Respondent No. 1 is liable to refund the amount of Rs. 28,11,31,939 (First instalment of Rs. 27.04 Crores along with interest for three months amounting to Rs. 1,04,81,939/- and Rs. 2.5 Lakhs towards maintenance corpus) deposited by the Appellant pursuant to the Allotment Letter.
(Para 45 and 47)
(C) Specific Relief Act, 1963, Section 34 – Civil Procedure Code, 1908, Section 34 – Suit for declaration – Refund of the forfeited amount – Interest claim – Whether the Appellant is entitled to interest on refund of the forfeited amount? – Held that Appellant is not entitled to any interest on the amount to be refunded in terms of the Allotment Letter – The Appellant, of course, can seek award of interest under Section 34 of the CPC, which inter alia provides that “the court may, in the decree, order interest at such rate as the Court deems reasonable to be paid on the principal sum adjudged from the date of the suit to the date of the decree” – Appellant wanted to avoid the jurisdiction of the High Court before whom they had failed to prove their bona fides by not depositing the stipulated sum – Such demeanour not only raises grave suspicions on the Appellant’s propriety, but also amounts to sheer abuse of the process of law and a waste of precious judicial time – Even in the Second Suit, upon an objection raised by the Union of India when the High Court directed the Appellant to deposit requisite court fees, the Appellant abandoned the relief of possession of the suit land to avoid payment of ad-valorem court fees – This again casts serious aspersions on the bona fides and financial capabilities of the Appellant – The material on record sufficiently indicates that the Appellant did not approach the Court with clean hands and instead attempted to hoodwink the judicial process by creating a facade to subterfuge their inability to meet their contractual obligations – The intent of the Appellant throughout appears to be that of prolonging the litigation to cloak its impecuniousness – Find the instant case to be fit to justify a deviation from the established standards – Appellant is not entitled to any discretionary relief of interest under Section 34 of CPC.
(Para 48 to 60)
M/S. Tommorrowland Limited V. Housing And Urban Development & Anr.
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 207: (DoJ 13-02-2025)



