Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 5188 of 1996
PETITIONER:
STATE OF RAJASTHAN
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
HARPHOOL SINGH (DEAD) THROUGH HIS L.RS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 04/05/2000
BENCH:
S.R.Babu, Doraswami Raju
JUDGMENT:
L.....I.........T.......T.......T.......T.......T.......T..J
Raju, J.
The State of Rajasthan, who lost before the Courts
below, is the appellant before us, challenging the summary
dismissal of a second appeal by a learned Single Judge of
the Rajasthan High Court filed in SB Civil S.A. No.157/94
and thereby affixing seal of approval to the judgment and
decree passed in favour of respondent-plaintiff.
Having regard to the nebulous manner in which relevant
facts are found to have been stated in the judgments of the
trial court as well as the first appellate court, we thought
it fit and necessary to look into the plaint of which an
English translated copy as made for the respondents has been
furnished by the learned counsel, appearing before us. The
suit property is said to be a plot of land measuring
north-south 60 ft. and east-west 40 ft. situated on
Nohar-Bhadra Road at Nohar. As per the version of the claim
in the plaint he was holding possession of the property
since time immemorial by fencing it and in the year 1955 the
plaintiff constructed a house on the disputed plot and
started living therein. The fact that in the year 1955, he
constructed the rooms, kitchen etc., and started living
there, is found asserted more than once, claiming at the
same time that he was in occupation since long before
without specifying anywhere how long before. Further,
assertions made in the plaint are that he got electricity
connection and water connection in 1965 and 1974
respectively, producing photocopies of an electricity bill
of 1965 and water bill of 1981. A grievance has also been
made that at the instance of Area Patwari, Nohar, the
A.D.M/Secretary, Mandi Development Committee, issued a
notice calling upon him to vacate the encroachment, to which
he claims to have submitted his defence. Since, the A.D.M.
without properly appreciating the claims of the plaintiff,
ordered eviction, the plaintiff was forced to file the suit
and as per the case of the plaintiff projected in the
plaint, he by his long possession has become the owner of
the plot of land and not only the order passed by the A.D.M.
is illegal, null and void but his possession has to be
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protected by the issue of appropriate orders of permanent
injunction.
The case of the defendant was that the encroachment
was made for the first time only in the year 1981 and the
plaintiff was not in possession of the plot before and that
no connection of electricity and water was obtained by the
plaintiff as claimed during the years 1965 and 1974
respectively and the order of the A.D.M. directing the
removal of encroachment is absolutely legal, having been
passed in exercise of the powers under Sections 22 and 24 of
the Rajasthan Colonisation Act, 1954. Want of notice under
Section 80 CPC has also been urged as an infirmity to non
suit the plaintiff.
Both parties adduced oral and documentary evidence in
support of their respective claims. It is only for the
first time in evidence the plaintiff as PW-1 introduced the
theory of earlier possession of the land by the father of
the plaintiff and the two witnesses examined also in a most
cavalier and ‘more loyal than the king fashion seem to have
asserted that the property in question was in the occupation
of the plaintiffs family for nearly 55-60 years. A cursory
reference is found made to the evidence produced on the side
of the defendant-State. The trial court, on such
perfunctory materials, is found to have made certain
observations totally lacking in precision and observed, on
the basis of the oral evidence and water and electricity
bills produced by the plaintiff in respect of plot in
question, the possession of the plaintiff over the land in
question has been found continuously and uninterruptedly
since 1955. In yet another place, the trial court
observed, Thus, I hold that on the basis of the evidence
produced by the plaintiff, it is proved that the plot of
land in question has been in possession of the plaintiff for
more than 30 years peacefully, continuously and without any
obstruction, after raising building thereon. The startling
observation is found made in the relief portion and it
reads, on the above discussion, I have decided that the
land in question has been in peaceful and continuous
possession of the plaintiff since 1955, on which he
constructed building and started residing therein in 1955
itself and thus, this period becomes over about 30 years.
Under the circumstances, the adverse possession of the
plaintiff over the land in question has been established on
the basis of which he has acquired ownership thereon.
Aggrieved, the State pursued the matter on appeal
before the first appellate court but we find on a close
scrutiny of the judgment that there was no due or proper
application of mind or any critical analysis or objective
consideration of the matter made, despite the same being the
first appellate court. On the other hand, by merely
reproducing the findings of the nature adverted to by us, a
mechanical affirmation seems to have been made of them
without any reference to the principles of law or the
criteria to be satisfied before the claim of the plaintiff
of perfection of title by adverse possession could be
sustained, involving correspondingly destruction of title of
the State in respect of a public property. The first
appellate court further chose to reject the appeal on the
ground that the same has not been presented within time even
without properly noticing the details as to when the Court
closed for summer vacation and when the same was reopened,
on some strange method of reasoning.
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The High Court, apparently obsessed by the limitations
drawn on the exercise of Second Appellate Jurisdiction,
unmindful even of the glaring inconsistencies and
contradictions and serious nature of the issues raised
involving public property, has chosen to summarily reject
the appeal solely for the reason that both the courts below
have found the plaintiff to be the owner of the property and
if that be the position, Section 22 of the Rajasthan
Colonisation Act, 1954, which provided for summary eviction
of those in illegal occupation of public property will have
no application and that the declaration granted by the
courts had the effect of setting aside the order by the
A.D.M., impliedly. Hence, this appeal by the State.
Shri Sushil Kumar Jain, learned counsel appearing for
the State of Rajasthan, strenuously contended that the
courts below committed serious errors of law in upholding
the claim of adverse possession projected by the plaintiff
and that such findings were based more on hypothetical
assumption of vital and necessary facts, based on mere
surmises. Reference has been made to the fact that there
was no specific finding about the claim of possession by the
father projected merely at the time of trial and not raised
either when the objections were submitted before the A.D.M.
or even when the suit was filed, in the plaint. Argued the
learned counsel further that the essential ingredients
necessarily to be established to substantiate a claim of
perfection of title by adverse possession are totally
lacking in the present case and, therefore, our interference
is called for to prevent miscarriage of justice. As for the
finding of the first appellate court that the appeal
presented by the State before it was also barred by
limitation, the learned counsel invited our attention to the
details relating to the period of vacation and the date of
reopening of subordinate courts after summer recess and
contended that the said reason also was erroneous both on
law and on facts. A plea on the bar of civil courts
jurisdiction based on Section 25 of the Act was also raised.
Shri Aman Hingorani, learned counsel appearing for the
respondents-legal representatives of the plaintiff, with
equal force and vehemence contended that the findings of the
courts below concurrently recorded are quite in accordance
with law and do not call for interference in this appeal.
The learned counsel, at length, invited our attention to the
findings of the courts below, the copy of the plaint and the
evidence of PWs by furnishing his own translated copies of
the same. Since, the order passed by the A.D.M. was
illegal and a nullity, according to the learned counsel, the
bar of suit engrafted in the Act cannot be a hurdle to
approach the competent civil court to vindicate the property
rights of the plaintiff. Both the learned counsel invited
our attention to some of the relevant case law on the
subject and reference will be made, to the same hereinafter.
Adverting first to the question of limitation, on
which also the first appellate court chose to reject the
appeal before it and pursued before us though not considered
by the High Court, we find from the materials placed on
record that the trial court delivered its judgment on
10.4.89, that on 11.4.89, the State applied for a copy of
the judgment and the summer vacation started on 9.5.89. It
is stated that after the receipt of the copy of the judgment
on 9.5.89, an application for a copy of the decree was made
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only on 12.5.89 and the appeal was filed on 3.7.89, the date
on which the courts were said to have been reopened after
summer recess. If the copy of the judgment dated 10.4.89
was furnished on 9.5.89, the limitation for filing the
appeal would extend upto 8.6.89 and if during such period on
12.5.89 a copy of the decree was applied for it cannot be
said to have been made after the limitation period was over
and having regard to the intervening summer recess, the
filing of the appeal on the reopening day after obtaining
the decree copy also, together with copies of judgment and
decree on the first day of the reopening after vacation
would be well within the period of limitation and there is
no merit in the said ground assigned by the first appellate
court. Our attention has also been drawn to the original
records where we found a specific endorsement made after
processing the appeal papers by the office of the first
appellate court, that the appeal has been filed within time.
The first appellate court, therefore, was in error in
holding to the contra.
Apart from the serious error committed by the first
appellate court on the question of limitation, which the
second appellate was obliged but yet failed to consider and
correct, the learned Single Judge in the High Court, in our
view, committed a grave error in dismissing summarily the
appeal when it involved substantial and arguable questions
of law of some importance. Since, these issues have been
raised and argued before us, we consider it appropriate to
deal with them ourselves, instead of remitting the matter
back to the High Court for disposal on merits after hearing
both parties, at this belated stage.
The learned counsel for the appellant strongly relied
upon Sections 22 and Section 25 of the Act to contend that
the order passed by the A.D.M. in exercise of his powers
under Section 22 of the Act has become final and the
jurisdiction of the Civil Court stand ousted in respect of
such matters by virtue of Section 25 and therefore the suit
could not have been entertained at all by the Civil Court.
Section 25 of the Act stipulates that a Civil Court shall
not have jurisdiction in any matter which the Collector is
empowered by that Act to dispose of and shall not take
cognisance of the manner in which the State Government or
Collector or any officer exercises any power vested in it or
in him by or under the said Act. Section 22, provides for a
summary eviction of any person who occupies or continues to
occupy any land in a colony to which he has no right or
title or without lawful authority by treating such person as
a trespasser in the manner and after following the procedure
prescribed therefor. Reliance has been placed by the
respondents on the decisions reported in Abdul Waheed Khan
vs Bhawani & Others [1966 (3) SCR 617]; and Firm and Illuri
Subbayya Chetty & Sons vs The State of Andhra Pradesh [1964
(1) SCR 752], to substantiate his claim that the bar of suit
will not be attracted to a case of this nature. In our
view, the principles laid down in Abdul Waheed Khans case
(supra) while considering a provision like the one before
us, that the bar is with reference to any matter which a
Revenue Officer is empowered by the Act to determine and the
question of title is foreign to the scope of proceedings
under the Act, would apply to this case also with all force,
that is on the provisions of Section 25 of the Act, as it
stands. Even that apart in State of Tamil Nadu vs Ramalinga
Samigal Madam [AIR 1986 SC 794] this Court, after adverting
to Dhulabhaiss case reported in AIR 1969 SC 78, held that
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questions relating to disputed claims of parties for title
to an immovable property could be decided only by the
competent Civil Court and that in the absence of a machinery
in the special enactment to determine disputes relating to
title between two rival claimants, the jurisdiction of the
Civil Court cannot be said to have been ousted. In the case
on hand, a citizen is asserting a claim of acquisition of
title by adverse possession in derogation of the rights and
interests of the State in the property in question. In our
view, determination of such claims are not only outside the
purview of Section 22 which only provide for a summary mode
of eviction but in respect of such disputes relating to
title to immovable property the jurisdiction of ordinary
civil courts to adjudicate them cannot be said to have been
ousted. The powers and procedure under Section 22 of the
Act, in our view, is no substitute for the civil courts
jurisdiction and powers to try and adjudicate disputes of
title relating to immovable property.
So far as the question of perfection of title by
adverse possession and that too in respect of public
property is concerned, the question requires to be
considered more seriously and effectively for the reason
that it ultimately involve destruction of right/title of the
State to immovable property and conferring upon a third
party encroacher title where, he had none. The decision in
P. Lakshmi Reddy vs L. Lakshmi Reddy [AIR 1957 SC 314],
adverted to the ordinary classical requirement - that it
should be nec vi nec clam nec precario - that is the
possession required must be adequate in continuity, in
publicity and in extent to show that it is possession
adverse to the competitor. It was also observed therein
that whatever may be the animus or intention of a person
wanting to acquire title by adverse possession, his adverse
possession cannot commence until he obtains actual
possession with the required animus. In the decision
reported in Secretary of State for India in Council vs
Debendra Lal Khan (1933) LR (LXI) I.A. 78 (PC), strongly
relied for the respondents, the Court laid down further that
it is sufficient that the possession be overt and without
any attempt at concealment so that the person against whom
time is running, ought if he exercises due vigilance, to be
aware of what is happening and if the rights of the crown
have been openly usurped it cannot be heard to plead that
the fact was not brought to its notice. In Annasaheb
Bapusaheb Patil & Others vs Balwant alias Balasaheb
Babusaheb Patil (dead) by Lrs etc. [AIR 1995 SC 895], it
was observed that a claim of adverse possession being a
hostile assertion involving expressly or impliedly in denial
of title of the true owner, the burden is always on the
person who asserts such a claim to prove by clear and
unequivocal evidence that his possession was hostile to the
real owner and in deciding such claim, the Courts must have
regard to the animus of the person doing those acts.
The High Court without even a cursory scrutiny of the
legality and propriety of the findings in order to ascertain
at least as to whether they are based upon any legally
acceptable evidence and the necessary legal ingredients of
‘adverse possession stood substantiated, mechanically seem
to have accorded its approval to the claim of title made by
the plaintiff merely on the basis that both the courts below
have found the plaintiff to be the owner of the property.
Indisputably the State was the owner and the question is as
to whether its title has been extinguished and the plaintiff
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had acquired and perfected title to the same by adverse
possession. In order to substantiate such a claim of
adverse possession the ingredients of open, hostile and
continuous possession with the required animus, as laid down
by Courts should be proved for a continuous period of 30
years. Admittedly, the plaintiff claims to have put up the
construction in 1955 and absolutely there is no concrete and
independent material to prove the same, except an oral
assertion. The story of his father having been there even
earlier to 1955 was not projected either before the A.D.M.
when the plaintiff submitted his defence, or in the plaint
when the suit was filed but for the first time introduced
only at the stage of trial when examined as PW1. When the
property was a vacant land before the alleged construction
was put up, to show open and hostile possession which could
alone in law constitute adverse to the State, in this case,
some concrete details of the nature of occupation with
proper proof thereof would be absolutely necessary and mere
vague assertions cannot by themselves be a substitute for
such concrete proof required of open and hostile possession.
Even if the plaintiffs allegations and claims, as projected
in the plaint, are accepted in toto, the period of so-called
adverse possession would fall short by 5 years of the
required period. There is no scrap of paper or concrete
material to prove any such possession of the plaintiffs
father nor was there any specific finding supported by any
evidence, in this regard. The father of the plaintiff was
also an employee of the Telephone Department. It is not as
though, if their story of such long possession is true,
there would be no correspondence or record to show that his
father or the plaintiff were there before 1981. The
relevance of the electricity bill to the property in
question itself has been questioned and no effort has been
taken by the plaintiff to correlate the electricity and
water bill to the property claimed by examining any official
witnesses connected with those records. While that be the
factual position, it is beyond comprehension as to how
anyone expected to reasonably and judiciously adjudicate a
claim of title by objective process of reasoning could have
come to the conclusion that the legal requirement of 30
years of continuous, hostile and open possession with the
required animus stood satisfied and proved on such
perfunctory and slender material on record in the case. The
first appellate court as well as the High Court ought to
have seen that perverse findings not based upon legally
acceptable evidence and which are patently contrary to law
declared by this Court cannot have any immunity from
interference in the hands of the appellate authority. The
trial court has jumped to certain conclusions virtually on
no evidence whatsoever in this connection. Such
lackadaisical findings based upon mere surmises and
conjectures, if allowed to be mechanically approved by the
first appellate court and the second appellate court also
withdraws itself into recluse apparently taking umbrage
under Section 100, Cr.P.C., the inevitable casualty is
justice and approval of such rank injustice would only
result in gross miscarriage of justice.
We are of the view, on the materials on record that
the plaintiff could not beheld to have substantiated his
claim of perfection of title by adverse possession to the
public property. The courts below could not have
legitimately come to any such conclusion in this case. The
judgment and decree of the courts below are set aside and
the plaintiffs suit shall stand dismissed. No costs.
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Before parting with this case, we may observe that our
decision need not stand in the way of the legal heirs of the
plaintiff, if they so desire to approach the concerned
authorities to seek for assignment of the land in their
favour, for value.