Naveen Solanki & Anr. v. Rail Land Development Authority & Ors.
Civil Appeal No. 10656 of 2024 | 2026 INSC 270 | Supreme Court of India | Decided: March 20, 2026
Coram: Dipankar Datta & Aug
Parties
Appellants
- Naveen Solanki & Anr. (Public Interest Advocates — not party before NGT)
Respondents
- Rail Land Development Authority (RLDA)
- Ministry of Railways
- Dept. of Forests & Wildlife GNCT Delhi
- Bagmane Developers Pvt. Ltd.
- Original NGT Applicant
Subject Land
~1,24,000 sq. mtrs. (12.40 ha) near New Bijwasan Railway Station, Delhi
Statutes
- Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980
- NGT Act, 2010
- Delhi Preservation of Trees Act, 1994
Leading Cases
- T.N. Godavarman Thirumulkpad v. UOI (1997) 2 SCC 267
- NOIDA Bird Sanctuary (2011) 1 SCC 744
- Chandra Prakash Budakoti (2019) 10 SCC 154
- The Auroville Foundation (2025) 4 SCC 150
Outcome
- Appeal dismissed
- NGT order upheld
- Master Plan prevails over post-Plan vegetation growth
I. Introduction
A silent legal question has lurked beneath many urban-infrastructure disputes in India: at what point in time must a parcel of land possess the character of ‘forest’ or ‘deemed forest’ for the protective rigour of the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 (the ‘1980 Act’)? The Supreme Court of India has now answered this question with precision and finality in Naveen Solanki & Anr. v. Rail Land Development Authority & Ors., decided on 20 March 2026.
The judgment arises from the challenge to a Request for Proposal (RFP) issued by the Rail Land Development Authority (RLDA) for mixed-use development on approximately 12.40 hectares of railway land adjacent to the proposed Bijwasan Integrated Metropolitan Passenger Terminal in South-West Delhi. The National Green Tribunal (NGT) dismissed the Original Application, holding that the subject land was neither declared forest nor deemed forest. Two public-interest advocates — not parties before the NGT — preferred an appeal before the Supreme Court.
The Division Bench, speaking through Justice Augustine George Masih, dismissed the appeal and laid down two important propositions:
- (i) a parcel of land that did not possess forest character at the time a duly approved Master Plan came into force cannot subsequently be declared forest or deemed forest so as to override the Master Plan;
- (ii) the relevant date for determining ‘deemed forest’ status is the date of coming into force of the Master Plan, not the date of commencement of construction.
This commentary analyses the factual matrix, the legal reasoning, the excerpts of judicial language worth preserving, and the practical takeaways for practitioners, developers, and environmental advocates.
II. Factual And Procedural Background
A. The Land And Its History
The subject land formed part of a larger tract acquired by the Delhi Government from village Bhartal, South-West Delhi, vide Award No. 19/86-87 dated 22.09.1986. The acquisition award itself noted the land as agricultural, containing standing crops, and it was handed over to the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) on the same date.
In 2008, out of the larger acquired tract, 110.07 hectares were allotted by the DDA to the Railway Authority on a permanent perpetual leasehold basis for development of an Integrated Metropolitan Passenger Terminal.
Possession was transferred in July 2009, at which time satellite imagery confirms the land was barren/agricultural. Northern Railway constructed a boundary wall around the project land in 2009.
The subject land (Multi-Use parcels MU4+MU5+MU6, ~12.40 ha) was identified and designated for mixed-use development (55% residential, 45% commercial) under the Master Plan for Delhi, 2021, approved pursuant to a Governing Body resolution of DDA’s UTTIPEC dated 19.12.2014.
On 25.05.2023, RLDA leased the subject land to Bagmane Developers Pvt. Ltd. (BDPL) for 99 years after the latter emerged as the successful bidder under the RFP dated 19.12.2022.
B. Challenge Before The NGT And Before The Supreme Court
One Shri R.M. Asif filed Original Application No. 697 of 2023 before the NGT alleging that approximately 1,100 trees stood on the subject land and that the land constituted ‘deemed forest’ under the 1980 Act, rendering the RFP illegal without prior Central Government approval under Section 2.
The NGT dismissed the OA on 13.02.2024. The original applicant did not appeal; instead, the two appellants — advocates claiming to be public-spirited persons — filed the present appeal.
A crucial development during the appeal was the filing of an affidavit dated 29.01.2025 by the Deputy Conservator of Forests, which, for the first time, identified specific patches of the subject land as falling within the category of deemed forest:
| Patch | Area | Number of Trees |
|---|---|---|
| Patch 1 | 14.5 ha | 5,494 trees |
| Patch 2 | 16.9 ha | 6,083 trees |
| Patch 3 | 19.39 ha | 7,810 trees |
The affidavit also disclosed that approximately 70% of the trees in these patches comprised invasive species, notably Prosopis juliflora (Vilayati Kikar).
RLDA and the Ministry of Railways filed a counter-undertaking (28.02.2025) committing to obtain all requisite permissions before undertaking any work in the identified deemed-forest patches.
III. Issues Framed By The Court
The Court crystallised two precise issues for determination:
Issues (Para 25 Of The Judgment)
- (i) Whether the land which is not a forest land as per revenue record or a declared forest nor fulfilling the requirement of a deemed forest, when the same is earmarked for execution of a project under a Master Plan, could with the efflux of time be declared as deemed forest, overriding the statutory binding force and sanctity of the said Master Plan.
- (ii) Which would be the relevant date for consideration and determination of the nature of the land as ‘deemed forest’ i.e., the date of coming into force of the Master Plan or the date on which the actual work on the project, as earmarked under the Master Plan, is initiated on the ground.
IV. Legal Analysis: The Court’s Reasoning
A. Section 2 of the Forest (Conservation) Act, 1980 — The Statutory Foundation
Section 2 of the 1980 Act restricts any State Government or authority from directing that any forest land may be used for a non-forest purpose without the prior approval of the Central Government. The Explanation defines ‘non-forest purpose’ to mean breaking up or clearing of forest land for any purpose other than reafforestation. The Court reiterated that this provision reflects legislative intent to check deforestation and ecological imbalance.
The interpretive challenge lay in the fact that the 1980 Act itself does not define ‘forest’. The void was filled by the Supreme Court’s landmark order in T.N. Godavarman Thirumulkpad v. Union of India, (1997) 2 SCC 267, which directed that the word ‘forest’ be understood in its dictionary sense, extending the protective ambit of the Act to all areas recorded as forest in government records, irrespective of ownership or formal notification.
B. The Godavarman Doctrine and ‘Deemed Forest’
The concept of ‘deemed forest’ emerged through subsequent proceedings in the Godavarman writ petition. In W.P. (C) No. 202 of 1995, the Conservator of Forests, GNCT of Delhi filed an affidavit dated 15.09.1997 identifying as deemed forest areas above 2.5 acres having a density of 100 trees per acre, stretches of land along roads or drains of 1.0 km length, and areas shown as forests in revenue records. This administrative benchmark became the operational test for ‘deemed forest’ in Delhi.
Godavarman Principle (Para 27 — Quoting From (1997) 2 SCC 267)
“The word ‘forest’ must be understood according to its dictionary meaning. This description covers all statutorily recognised forests, whether designated as reserved, protected or otherwise for the purpose of Section 2(i) of the Forest Conservation Act.
The term ‘forest land’, occurring in Section 2, will not only include ‘forest’ as understood in the dictionary sense, but also any area recorded as forest in the Government record irrespective of the ownership.”
C. Tempering The Broad Principle: Contextual Application
The Court was careful not to read Godavarman in isolation. It traced the judicial retreat from mechanical application through two critical precedents.
- In Re: Construction of Park at NOIDA near Okhla Bird Sanctuary, (2011) 1 SCC 744, the Court held that lands which were ‘forever agricultural’ in revenue and acquisition records could not be converted into forest land merely on account of subsequent plantation or tree growth. The Court famously observed that trees planted with the intent to set up an urban park would not ‘turn into forest within a span of 10 to 12 years.’
- In Chandra Prakash Budakoti v. Union of India, (2019) 10 SCC 154, the Court reinforced that due weight must be accorded to revenue records contemporaneous with a period when no development project or dispute was contemplated, and that subsequent vegetation by itself cannot alter the legal character of land classified as banjar or barren in official records.
NOIDA Park Case — Relevant Extract (Para 30, Quoting (2011) 1 SCC 744)
“Now, we find it inconceivable that trees planted with the intent to set up an urban park would turn into forest within a span of 10 to 12 years and the land that was forever agricultural, would be converted into forest land. One may feel strongly about cutting trees in such large numbers and question the wisdom behind replacing a patch of trees by large stone columns and statues but that would not change the trees into a forest or the land over which those trees were standing into forest land.”
Key Factors For Determining ‘Forest’ Or ‘Deemed Forest’
| Factor | Description |
|---|---|
| Historical Character | The past nature and usage of the land |
| Revenue & Planning Records | Official classification in government records |
| Utilisation Context | Circumstances in which the land came to be used |
The cumulative position extracted by the Court in Para 32 is worth noting: the determination of whether any land answers the description of ‘forest’ or ‘deemed forest’ must take into account (a) the historical character of the land, (b) the classification reflected in revenue and planning records, and (c) the circumstances in which the land came to be utilised.
D. The Statutory Force Of Master Plans
This is the most jurisprudentially significant section of the judgment. The Court undertook a structured analysis of the legal nature of a Master Plan, drawing upon The Auroville Foundation v. Navroz Kersasp Mody, (2025) 4 SCC 150.
- A Master Plan is not a mere policy document of tentative character.
- It is a statutory planning instrument.
- It is conceived as a long-term, optimum land-utilisation document.
- Once approved and notified, it becomes binding on all stakeholders.
Master Plan — Statutory Binding Force (Paras 42–44)
“Developmental projects, particularly those involving public infrastructure and long-term urban planning, are premised on planning instruments i.e. Master Plan etc., which cannot be rendered perpetually uncertain by subsequent changes on the ground. If subsequent changes were to be treated as sufficient to unsettle the operation of a Master Plan, it would introduce an element of perpetual instability, rendering statutory planning susceptible to continual disruption.”
“If subsequent changes such as natural growth of vegetation or increase in tree cover over time were treated as sufficient to alter the legal character of land for the purposes of the 1980 Act, it would introduce an element of perpetual uncertainty into statutory planning. Development projects envisaged under a Master Plan would remain indefinitely vulnerable to disruption at the stage of execution, notwithstanding the fact that the land in question was not treated as forest when the planning framework itself was conceived.”
E. The Critical Distinction: Master Plan Recording Forest vs. Not Recording Forest
The Court introduced an important qualification in Para 46 that saves the principle from becoming an absolute shield for all development projects. The position is different where the Master Plan itself, at the time of its formation, records the existence of forest land or identifies land with a substantial number of trees. In such a case, the land may well fall within the understanding of deemed forest even in the context of a Master Plan project.
The Critical Qualification (Para 46)
“The position would naturally be different when the Master Plan itself records the existence of forest land or specifically identifies land containing a substantial number of trees. Where the Master Plan, at the time of its formation, records that a particular parcel of land contains tree cover or indicates the existence of a significant number of trees, such land may well fall within the understanding of deemed forest. However, where the Master Plan does not record the existence of trees or describe the land as containing forest cover, the subsequent emergence or proliferation of vegetation over a period of time cannot, by itself, bring the land within the ambit of deemed forest so as to unsettle the planning framework already put in place.”
F. The Invasive Species Dimension
The Court ventured into ecological territory by holding that the mere presence of vegetation or tree cover cannot be equated with the existence of a natural forest ecosystem, particularly when such vegetation consists of invasive alien species. Prosopis juliflora (Vilayati Kikar), native to Mexico and the Caribbean, was introduced during colonial afforestation activities in Delhi. The Court noted that its proliferation reduces biodiversity, alters soil conditions, and disrupts the natural hydrological balance.
- Invasive species reduce biodiversity
- They alter soil conditions
- They disrupt natural hydrological balance
This reasoning reinforced the conclusion that 70% of the trees on the subject land (being invasive species) could not serve as the basis for a ‘deemed forest’ classification, and simultaneously directed all authorities to prioritise transplantation of native/indigenous species and compensatory afforestation using native species.
V. The Ratio Decidendi — Answers To The Framed Issues
Operative Findings (Para 65)
- (i) The land, earmarked for execution of a project under an approved Master Plan, which is not a forest land as per revenue record or a declared forest nor fulfilling the requirement of a deemed forest at the time of coming into force of the said Master Plan, cannot be subsequently declared a forest or a deemed forest overriding the statutory binding force and sanctity of the said Master Plan.
- (ii) The relevant date for consideration and determination of the nature of the land as ‘deemed forest’ would be the date of coming into force of the Master Plan.
The Court further directed:
- (a) all work in patches identified as deemed forest by the Deputy Conservator of Forests shall be undertaken only after obtaining all necessary permissions under the 1980 Act;
- (b) transplantation of native/indigenous trees to the maximum extent possible;
- (c) preservation and protection of existing native species in and around the project area;
- (d) compensatory afforestation strictly in accordance with applicable statutory provisions prior to commencement of any work.
VI. Key Takeaways For Practitioners And Stakeholders
Key Takeaways
- ✔ The date of coming into force of a statutory Master Plan is the relevant cut-off date for determining whether land qualifies as ‘deemed forest’ — post-Plan vegetation growth is irrelevant.
- ✔ A duly approved and notified Master Plan possesses statutory force; subsequent changes in vegetation, whether natural or through human intervention, cannot override or unsettle the Plan.
- ✔ If the Master Plan itself records forest or significant tree cover on a parcel at the time of its formation, that parcel may still qualify as deemed forest even within a planned project.
- ✔ The T.N. Godavarman principle (broad/dictionary definition of ‘forest’) survives — but must be applied contextually, not mechanically, with regard to historical land use and official records.
- ✔ Invasive alien species (e.g., Vilayati Kikar) are not indicative of a ‘natural forest ecosystem’; their presence significantly weakens a deemed-forest claim.
- ✔ Developers must obtain all statutory permissions under the 1980 Act and the Delhi Preservation of Trees Act, 1994 for patches specifically identified as deemed forest by competent authorities, even if the broader project enjoys Master Plan sanction.
- ✔ Courts and Tribunals cannot mandate preparation of fresh plans or modifications under the guise of environmental principles once a statutory Master Plan has attained finality — The Auroville Foundation principle affirmed.
- ✔ Environmental safeguards (20% green cover, compensatory afforestation, transplantation plans, permissions from Forest Department) integrated into project RFPs carry significant legal weight in judicial review.
- ✔ For practitioners in UP and other states: the same principle — relevant date for deemed-forest is the date of Master Plan / statutory plan notification — will apply by parity of reasoning to Municipal Master Plans, Development Plans under the U.P. Urban Planning and Development Act, 1973, and similar instruments.
VII. Critical Appraisal
Strength Of The Ruling
The judgment fills a genuine lacuna. Prior to this decision, developers, planners, and even Forest Departments operated without clarity on which date governed deemed-forest determinations. Fixing the Master Plan notification date provides a workable, objective anchor that promotes certainty without sacrificing environmental accountability.
The distinction drawn in Para 46 — between a Master Plan that is silent on forest cover (where the post-Plan growth does not count) and one that records forest/tree cover (where deemed-forest status may still attach) — is a nuanced and balanced formulation. It ensures that the ruling cannot be exploited to bulldoze land that was already recognised as forested at the time of planning.
Potential Concerns
Critics may argue that the judgment reduces the ecological protection available to naturally regenerating land. Where barren land is deliberately enclosed (as railway boundary walls do) and nature takes its course over 15-20 years, the ecological value may be substantial even if the origin was agricultural. The Court’s answer — that invasive-species-dominated vegetation is not a ‘natural forest ecosystem’ — partially addresses this, but leaves open the case of genuinely biodiverse post-Plan regeneration.
The ruling’s practical impact on the RLDA project will depend on how expeditiously the forest-clearance proceedings in the three identified patches (totalling ~50 ha with nearly 19,000 trees) proceed. The undertaking given by RLDA and the Ministry of Railways will need to be monitored, perhaps through a fresh contempt mechanism or interlocutory compliance reporting.
From a procedural perspective, the Court’s acceptance of locus standi of advocate-appellants who were not parties before the NGT — even while dismissing the appeal on merits — signals continued judicial openness to public-interest environmental litigation, provided the challenge is grounded in cogent legal and factual arguments.
VIII. Conclusion
Naveen Solanki v. RLDA is a landmark contribution to India’s environmental jurisprudence at the intersection of urban planning law and forest conservation law. By anchoring the ‘deemed forest’ inquiry to the date of the Master Plan rather than the date of project execution, the Supreme Court has resolved a long-standing ambiguity that had made infrastructure development hostage to the vicissitudes of post-Plan vegetation growth.
At the same time, the judgment is not a carte blanche for developers. The requirement that all statutory permissions be obtained for patches formally identified as deemed forest, the insistence on compensatory afforestation with indigenous species, and the ecological direction to restore native biodiversity over invasive monocultures — these directives ensure that the ruling is environmentally responsible even as it is development-friendly.
For advocates, the ruling provides a powerful weapon when defending infrastructure projects against deemed-forest challenges — and a clear roadmap for what must be demonstrated when such challenges are advanced. Historical land records, Master Plan documentation, satellite imagery from the period of plan formulation, and forest-department certifications will henceforth be the central exhibits in every deemed-forest dispute involving Master Plan land.


