Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 4880 of 2007
PETITIONER:
Annakili
RESPONDENT:
A. Vedanayagam & Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/10/2007
BENCH:
S.B. Sinha & Harjit Singh Bedi
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
(Arising out of SLP (C) No.6500 of 2006)
S.B. Sinha, J.
1. Leave granted.
2. Plaintiffs-Respondents are owners of the property in question. They
purchased the same from Corporation of Madras by a registered deed of sale
dated 19.4.1944. The owners of the property, namely Krishnadoss Lala and
his brother, however, partitioned their suit properties on or about 5.5.1968
whereupon the suit properties were allotted to the share of Krishnadoss
Lala. After his demise, the same vested in his heirs and legal
representatives. They, along with one Mohamed Idris and one K. Peer
Mohideen entered into an agreement whereby and whereunder, it was agreed
that the property should be released from the notification of the year 1973
issued by the Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board.
3. Plaintiffs-Respondent herein purchased the suit properties not only
from the heirs and legal representatives of the said Krishnadoss Lala but also
from the said Mohamed Idris and K. Peer Mohideen for valuable
consideration by a registered deed of sale dated 30.9.1986.
4. Defendants claimed possession of the suit properties described in
Schedule \021A\022 of the plaint therein since 1957. On or about 1.12.1972, the
Government of Tamil Nadu designated an area including the suit properties
as slum area. It was transferred to Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board.
5. Pursuant to a scheme undertaken by the World Bank in regard to sale
of land situated in Corporation Division No.122, Kamraja Puram, T. Nagar
slum areas to the persons who were in occupation of the portions thereof,
the Department of House and Urban Development, Government of Tamil
Nadu issued two GOMs bearing No.1117 dated 27.6.1979 and GOMs
No.1100 dated 29.8.1980 in that behalf
6. The suit property was allotted to the husband of the appellant as
appears from a letter dated 18.3.1981 which is to the following effect :
\023In pursuance of the orders stated above, action is
being taken to allot land extending 18.5 sq. mtrs.
In Kamaraja Puram Scheme Plot No.17 is allotted
to you. You have to pay the necessary amount in
the following manner. A sum of Rs.89/- should be
paid along with the application. Later on you have
to pay Rs.13/- as monthly installment (including
interest) for period of 10 years. On completion of
10 years and after payment of all the installments
the land will be given to you through a sale deed.
Besides this you have to pay a sum of Rs.8/- per
month towards development charges and Rs.2/-
per month towards water and drainage charges.
You are hereby requested to apply in the pro forma
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annexed herein and to execute a lease cum sale
agreement document in favour of Slum Clearance
Board within 7 days from the date of receipt of this
notice. If you fail to send this application with
advance payment receipt, it is construed that you
are not in need of the land allotted to you and the
same will be allotted to some other person after
evicting you from the premises.\024
7. Plaintiffs-respondents, however, moved the High Court by way of
filing a writ petition in the year 1989 for issuance of a writ of or in the nature
of mandamus directing the State of Tamil Nadu to denotify the land in
question as a slum area and put them back in the possession thereof. By a
judgment and order dated 10.1.1990, the said writ petition was allowed. The
area in question was directed to be denotified and the respondents herein
were found entitled to obtain vacant possession of the said property.
8. Appellant and other persons similarly situated were not parties
therein. They preferred a Writ Appeal before the Division Bench of the High
Court which was numbered as writ appeal No.272 of 1990. The Division
Bench of the High Court by a judgment and order dated 21.3.1990 found the
title of the respondent herein having regard to the admitted facts in the said
proceedings, but upon holding that as the appellants have ventured to put
forth a case that their occupation of the property relate back to 60 years
which conferred the right to them de\022 hors the said proceedings and as
direction to hand over the vacant possession would result in dispossession of
the third parties to which the learned Single Judge had no occasion to advert
to and adjudicate upon the rights of the third parties, because they were not
parties in the said writ petition, directed :
\023Further, there is a grievance, expressed by the
learned counsel for the parties, that without even a
prayer, therefore, the learned Single Judge has
directed respondents 1 and 2 to declare that the
property ceased to be a slum area. This grievance
is a tenable one and requires amelioration. There
was no prayer at all to the above effect. The
enquiry into that question will take us into a
different sphere. Hence, we do not think it will be
in order to make a declaration that the property
ceased to be a slum area.
In the said circumstances, we find a warrant to
vacate and we do vacate the directions of the
learned single Judge to respondents 1 and 2 to
declare that the property ceased to be a slum area
and also to hand over vacant possession of the
property to the petitioners. The prayer in the writ
petition to the extent of the denotification asked for
alone could be and is being sustained. The other
controversies with reference to recovery of
possession from the third parties and the
declaration with reference to the property ceasing
to be a slum area are left open.\024
9. Consequent upon the said decision of the Division Judge, the
Government of Tamil Nadu cancelled the earlier notification dated
1.12.1972 notifying the suit properties as slum area.
10. Respondents filed a suit on 26.9.1995 which was marked as CS
No.1485 of 1995 (re-numbered as 14770 of 1990) praying, inter alia, for the
following reliefs :
\023(a) direct the defendants to quit and deliver
vacant possession of the premises mentioned in
Schedule B, C, D and E and remove all structures
put up by the defendants and in default direct the
plaintiffs to remove the structure and recover the
cost from the defendants.
(b) to award past mesne profits at Rs.3,60,000/-
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jointly and severally towards past mesne profits.
(c) to award future mesne profit at the rate of
Rs.10,000/ per month jointly and severally.
(d) to award future mesne profit at the rate of
Rs.10,000/- per month jointly and severally.\024
10. In their written statement, the appellant, inter alia, contended :
(1) That the Plaintiffs have not filed a suit for
declaration of title but merely a suit for
possession which is not maintainable
inasmuch as the title of the
Plaintiffs/Respondents herein have been
denied in all proceedings.
(2) That the Plaintiffs/Respondents herein are
not the owners of the property and have not
been in possession of the property from
19.4.1944 onwards.
(3) The Defendant/Petitioner herein are in
continuous uninterrupted possession and
have perfected title by adverse possession.
(4) That the allotment of the Slum clearance
Board was only a recognition given to the
Defendants right to continue in possession
forever.\024
11. The learned Trial Judge dismissed the said suit opining that the suit
land had been in occupation of the appellants for a long time and that they
have acquired title by adverse possession. The suit was also held to be
barred by limitation.
12. By reason of the impugned judgment, the High Court allowed the
appeal filed by the respondents herein directing the appellant to deliver
possession of the property to the respondents.
13. Mr. Dayan Krishnan, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
appellants, would submit that the High Court proceeded on an erroneous
basis that the title of the suit property was not in dispute.
It was submitted that the High Court committed a serious error in
opining that the appellant had no animus to possess the suit property adverse
to the interest of the plaintiff-respondent.
14. Evidences on record would clearly show, Mr. Krishnan would
submitted, that the appellant had been in continuous possession for more
than 60 years and, thus, they had perfected their title by adverse possession.
It was urged that the Respondents having not sought for any relief in regard
to declaration of their title, the suit will be governed by Article 64 and the
Schedule appended to Article 65 of the Limitation Act, 1963.
15. Mr. V. Raghavachari, learned counsel appearing on behalf of the
respondents, on the other hand, drew attention of this Court not only to the
findings of the Division Bench of the High Court in Writ Appeal No.272 of
1990 but also to another writ application filed by the appellant herein in the
year 1989 and the judgment passed therein as also in the writ appeal to
contend that in view of the findings of the Division Bench of the High Court
in the aforementioned writ proceedings which was disposed of in the year
1991, limitation, if any, would start running only from the said date and not
prior thereto. It was contended that the petitioner had never asserted any
right in them but had all along being asserting their title under the settlement
made by the Corporation of Madras.
16. The fact that title of the land was with Corporation of Madras is not in
dispute. It is furthermore not in dispute that the Corporation of Madras had
transferred the suit property in favour of Mr. Krishnadoss Lala. Despite the
fact that the Corporation of Madras had divested itself of the said property, it
erroneously transferred the same in favour of Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance
Board on 1.12.1973. Pursuent thereto, certain development activities were
taken by the Board. At that point of time, Shri Krishnadoss Lala submitted a
representation to the Corporation of Madras stating that although the
property belonged to him, the same was illegally transferred to the Tamil
Nadu Slum Clearance Board. The Corporation accepted the said mistake on
its part and informed the Tamil Nadu Slum Clearance Board thereabout. A
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request was made to the Board to exclude the said property from the list of
properties owned by the Slum Clearance Board. The predecessors and
representatives of the respondent thereafter paid the development charges
incurred by the Slum Clearance Board. A request was made by the Board to
denotify the Slum area but the State did not take any action thereupon.
17. It was in the aforementioned factual scenario, the writ petition was
filed. Appellant herein indisputably had been claiming title only on the basis
of purported settlement made in their favour by the Tamil Nadu Slum
Clearance Board. It was not their case that even prior to 1.12.1972 when the
area was declared as slum area, they have acquired title by adverse
possession. Indisputably, therefore, the Corporation of Madras or Tamil
Nadu Slum Clearance Board did not have any title in the suit property. They
could not have transferred any right, title and interest in the said land to the
appellants and others similarly situated.
18. We may notice that the appellant, in him writ application filed before
the High Court of Judicature at Madras being writ petition No.7785 of 1987,
stated :
\023In accordance with the scheme the slum dwellers
of Kamarajapuram were provided with the bank
loan for constructing their houses or putting up
construction. We understand that financial
assistance was availed from World Bank for
construction drainage, toilet and bathroom
facilities and as well as for making water supply to
the slum dwellers of Kamarajapuram. We
obtained the Loan form bank as already submitted
through the Slum Clearance Board and put up new
constructions after obtaining sanction from the
Corporation, and are in possession and enjoyment
of our respective land and superstructure. We
were paying the installments towards sale
consideration and towards bank loan and also
development charges etc., since 1981.\024
19. It was under the said title, therefore, the appellant and others had been
claiming the land. They had been paying installments to the Slum Clearance
Board. In the writ petition filed by the appellants and others, a prayer was
made for issuance of direction to the Slum Clearance Board to accept
instalments from them. The said writ petition was dismissed. A writ appeal
preferred thereagainst, inter alia, by the appellant herein, was dismissed by a
Division Bench of the High Court, holding :
\023We have heard learned counsel for the parties at
length and perused the materials on record. It is
seen from the facts narrated above, that after
19.4.1944 sale, the property in question does not
belong to the Corporation of Chennai. The
transfer of the property thereafter to the Slum
Clearance Board on 17.12.1973 is only a mistake.
That apart, the owners of the property have said
the amounts spent by the Slum Clearance Board
for the development of the property and had also
paid compensation to most of the slum dwellers for
their resettlement. They have also agreed to pay
compensation to the remaining slum dwellers for
their resettlement. The order directing
denotification has been upheld by the Division
Bench in W.A. No.272 of 1990 and the appellants
had not agitated this issue at the appropriate time,
when they had the knowledge of the decision dated
21.3.1990 and also when G.O. was issued on
16.5.1991 pursuant thereto. Civil Suit is pending
only for possession. Under the circumstances, the
arguments advanced by the appellants now are not
sustainable, as the same had not been agitated at
the appropriate time. As such, the order of the
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learned single Judge cannot be said to be unjust.
In any view of the matter, in the facts of the given
case, we do not find any error or illegality in the
order of the learned single Judge so as to call for
interference. The writ appeal is, therefore,
dismissed.\024
20. Even in the said writ petition, the appellant did not claim any
independent right on the basis of adverse possession or otherwise. We have
noticed hereinbefore that the writ application filed by the respondents herein
directing the Government of Tamil Nadu to issue a notification denotifying
the area as Slum area was allowed by the learned Single Judge. The said
finding of the learned Singel Judge was not overturned. The Division
Bench, while upholding the title of the respondents in relation to the said
land, was of the opinion that the learned Single Judge was not correct in
directing handing over of possession of the suit properties in favour of the
respondents, although the appellant and persons similarly situated were in
possession thereof. In the aforementioned premise, it was not necessary for
the respondents to file a suit for a declaration of their title. Appellant had
preferred the said appeal. The decision of the Division Bench was rendered
in presence of the appellant. The judgment of the Division Bench of the
High Court operates as res judicata. The finding in regard to the title of the
respondents had attained finality.
21. We cannot accept the submission of Mr. Dayan Krishnan that it was
obligatory on the part of the respondent to file a suit for declaration of their
title also. As the title of the respondents in the suit property had already
been adjudicated upon, a suit for recovery of possession on the basis of the
said title attracted Article 65 of the Schedule appended to the Limitation Act
1963. In terms of the said provision, it was for the appellant to show that
she and her predecessor had been in possession of the suit property on the
basis of the hostile title and as a result whereof the title of the plaintiff-
respondent extinguished.
22. Claim by adverse possession has two elements : (1) the possession of
the defendant should become adverse to the plaintiff; and (2) the defendant
must continue to remain in possession for a period of 12 years thereafter.
Animus possidendi as is well known is a requisite ingredient of adverse
possession. It is now a well settled principle of law that mere possession of
the land would not ripen into possessory title for the said purpose. Possessor
must have animus possidendi and hold the land adverse to the title of the
true owner. For the said purpose, not only animus possidendi must be
shown to exist, but the same must be shown to exist at the commencement of
the possession. He must continue in said capacity for the period prescribed
under the Limitation Act. Mere long possession, it is trite, for a period of
more than 12 years without anything more do not ripen into a title.
23. In Saroop Singh v. Banto & Ors. [(2005) 8 SCC 330], in which one of
us was a member, this Court held :
\02329. In terms of Article 65 the starting point of
limitation does not commence from the date when
the right of ownership arises to the plaintiff but
commences from the date the defendant\022s
possession becomes adverse. (See Vasantiben
Prahladji Nayak v. Somnath Muljibhai Nayak).
30. \023Animus possidendi\024 is one of the ingredients
of adverse possession. Unless the person
possessing the land has a requisite animus the
period for prescription does not commence. As in
the instant case, the appellant categorically states
that his possession is not adverse as that of true
owner, the logical corollary is that he did not have
the requisite animus. (See Mohd. Mohd. Ali v.
Jagadish Kalita Para 21.)\024
24. The said statement of law was reiterated in T. Anjanappa & Ors. v.
Somalingappa & Anr. [2006) (8) SCALE 624 = (2006) 7 SCC 570], stating :
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\023It is well-recognised proposition in law that mere
possession however long does not necessarily
mean that it is adverse to the true owner. Adverse
possession really means the hostile possession
which is expressly or impliedly in denial of title of
the true owner and in order to constitute adverse
possession the possession proved must be adequate
in continuity, in publicity and in extent so as to
show that it is adverse to the true owner. The
classical requirements of acquisition of title by
adverse possession are that such possession in
denial of the true owner\022s title must be peaceful,
open and continuous. The possession must be open
and hostile enough to be capable of being known
by the parties interested in the property, though it
is not necessary that there should be evidence of
the adverse possessor actually informing the real
owner of the former\022s hostile action.\024
25. Yet recently, in P.T. Munichikkanna Reddy & Ors. v. Revamma &
Ors. [(2007) 6 SCC 59], this Court noticed the recent development of law in
other jurisdiction in the context of property as a human right to opine :
\023Therefore, it will have to be kept in mind the
courts around the world are taking an unkind view
towards statutes of limitation overriding property
rights.\024
26. We may also notice that this Court in M. Durai v. Muthu & Ors.
[(2007) 3 SCC 114], noticed the changes brought about by Limitation Act,
1963, vis-‘-vis, old Limitation Act, holding :
\023The change in the position in law as regards the
burden of proof as was obtaining in the Limitation
Act, 1908 vis-a-vis the Limitation Act, 1963 is
evident. Whereas in terms of Articles 142 and 144
of the old Limitation Act, the plaintiff was bound
to prove his title as also possession within twelve
years preceding the date of institution of the suit
under the Limitation Act, 1963, once the plaintiff
proves his title, the burden shifts to the defendant
to establish that he has perfected his title by
adverse possession.\024
27. Appellant herein, it will bear repetition to state, did not raise any
claim on adverse possession prior to the filing of the aforementioned writ
appeal. She and her husband has been claiming title only through or under
the Board. No independent title was claimed. Respondents, on the one hand
and the Corporation of Madras, Slum Board and the Government of Tamil
Nadu on the other were litigating since 1973. They accepted the title of the
respondents. Respondents also reimbursed the Board in regard to the
expenditure incurred by them. In the aforementioned fact situation, it is not
possible to hold as has been contended by Mr. Dayan Krishnanan, that the
Division Bench posed unto itself a wrong question leading to a wrong
answer or the appellant had acquired title by adverse possession or
otherwise.
28. For the views we have taken, there is no infirmity in the judgment of
the High Court. The appeal is dismissed. No costs.