The case of M/S Piaggio Vehicles Pvt. Ltd. v. State of U.P. & Ors. (2026 INSC 321) concerns a legal challenge against the cancellation and forfeiture of a lease for a 33-acre industrial plot in Greater Noida.
Factual Background
- The Allotment: The plot (No. A-1, Site-B, Surajpur Industrial Area) was originally allotted in 1985 and eventually transferred to the appellant’s predecessor in 2001. A formal lease deed was executed in March 2002.
- The Breach: Under the lease terms, the appellant was required to complete construction and commence production within a stipulated period (six months from possession). UPSIDA (the state development authority) issued a notice in September 2007, noting that no significant construction had commenced and no production had started in the preceding six years.
- Failed Negotiations: UPSIDA offered a final opportunity for an extension in 2008, provided the appellant paid a fee and submitted an affidavit in a prescribed format that would legally bind them to specific production timelines. The appellant failed to provide the affidavit in the correct format and did not deposit the required fee within the allotted time.
- Cancellation: Consequently, UPSIDA forfeited the lease on August 25, 2008. The High Court of Allahabad dismissed the appellant’s challenge to this forfeiture in 2009.
Arguments of the Parties
- The Appellant: The company argued that the execution of a fresh lease deed in 2007 impliedly waived previous delays. They claimed they had invested heavily in a testing facility on the site and that their failure to scale up was due to prioritizing a different facility in Baramati, Maharashtra. During the Supreme Court proceedings, they even offered to start manufacturing e-vehicles at the site if the lease was restored.
- The Respondents (UPSIDA/State): They contended that the 2007 lease was merely a formal name change following a company amalgamation and did not alter the original binding obligations. They highlighted that only 7.68% of the sanctioned building plan area had been utilized—all of which was constructed by the previous allottee—meaning the appellant had not “put up a single brick” in six years.
Supreme Court’s Findings
The Court dismissed the appeal, characterizing the appellant’s conduct as “lackadaisical” and “callous”. Key findings included:
- Inviolable Conditions: The requirement to raise construction and put the land to use is a fundamental condition of industrial allotment intended to generate employment and foster economic development.
- No Bona Fide Intent: The Court found the appellant failed to demonstrate any convincing effort or bona fide intent to establish a full-scale manufacturing unit. The omission of mandatory clauses in their 2008 affidavit was seen as an intentional act to avoid being legally bound to a production schedule.
- Equitable Relief Denied: The Court ruled that “equities cannot work in favour of the litigants whose conduct is… in clear violation of the applicable rules”. It refused to substitute its own discretion for that of the State Government in commercial decisions regarding industrial plots.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court found no reason to interfere with the High Court’s judgment. The appeal was rejected, and the appellant was ordered to hand over peaceful possession of the vacant plot to UPSIDA within 30 days. The Court ordered that the roughly ₹10.95 crore deposited by the appellant during the litigation be refunded with accrued interest.
2026 INSC 321
M/S. Piaggio Vehicles Pvt. Ltd. V. State of U.P. & Ors. (D.O.J. 06.04.2026)




