Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 30
CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2063 of 1999
PETITIONER:
KONDA LAKSHMANA BAPUJI
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
GOVT. OF ANDHRA PRADESH & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29/01/2002
BENCH:
Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri & S.N. Phukan
JUDGMENT:
SYED SHAH MOHAMMED QUADRI, J.
This appeal, by special leave, is from the judgment of the
Division Bench of the High Court of Judicature, Andhra
Pradesh at Hyderabad dated October 27, 1998 dismissing Writ
Petition No.5332 of 1993, filed by the appellant assailing the
order of the Special Court under A.P.Land Grabbing
(Prohibition) Act, 1982 (for short, ’the Act’) in L.G.C.No.61 of
1990 dated April 16, 1993. The Special Court had upheld the
claim of the first respondent (the State of Andhra Pradesh
represented by its Chief Secretary) that the appellant was a land
grabber of land of an extent of 2 acres 06 guntas, comprised in
Survey Nos.9/15 Paiki, 9/16, and 9/17 of Khairathabad Village,
Golconda Mandal, Hyderabad District (for short, ’the land in
dispute’) and directed the appellant to restore possession of that
land to the first respondent in terms of the decree.
To comprehend the controversy in the appeal it would be
appropriate to set out the relevant facts. The appellant traces
his title to the land in dispute under an unregistered agreement
for perpetual lease executed by one of the successors of the
Inamdar, Mohd. Noorudin Asrari, in respect of the Inam land in
Survey Nos.9/15, 9/16, 9/17 and 9/18, on November 28, 1954
(Ex.B-39). Later the said Asrari executed a registered perpetual
lease deed in favour of the appellant on December 11, 1957 (a
certified copy is marked as Ex.B-40). Soon thereafter one
Rasheed Shahpurji Chenoy had set up a rival claim to the land
in dispute by filing Original Suit No.13 of 1958, in the Court of
the Additional Chief Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad,
against the first respondent, the appellant and others praying for
declaration of title to and recovery of possession of the said
land. In that suit the learned Additional Chief Judge passed an
interim order directing the parties to maintain status quo in
regard to the land in dispute. However, the appellant having
sought permission of the court, constructed a building "Jala
Drushyam" on the land in dispute on his giving an undertaking
that in the event of the plaintiff therein succeeding in the suit,
the building would be vacated by him, leaving the structures
intact, without claiming any compensation. On November 11,
1975 the said suit of Rasheed Shahpurji Chenoy was dismissed
recording the finding that he did not have any title to the suit
land which was the Government land (Ex.A-1).
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 30
It appears that as a follow up action of the minutes of the
committee held in the chamber of the Chief Secretary to the
Government of Andhra Pradesh, the Deputy Secretary, G.A.D.
(O.P.LLL) by his letter dated September 14, 1959 (Ex.B-35)
asked the Collector, inter alia, to declare the land situated
between the Secretariat and the Fisheries Department (which
includes the land in dispute) as the Government land.
Thereafter on October 5, 1959, the Collector passed order
declaring Survey No.9/15 paiki, 9/16, 9/17, 9/18 and 9/19
admeasuring 19 acres 29 guntas as Government Land and
informed the Chief Secretary accordingly on October 20, 1959
(Ex.A-14 and Ex.B-34).
On February 28, 1976, the Tehsildar, Hyderabad, Urban
Taluk, noticing that the appellant was in unauthorised
occupation of Government land, issued eviction notice calling
upon him to vacate the land comprised in Survey No.9/15 paiki,
9/16 & 9/17 admeasuring 2 acres 28 guntas (Ex.B-38).
Pursuant to the said notice, an order of eviction was passed
against the appellant on May 28, 1977 (Ex.B-58). That order
was challenged by the appellant in Writ Petition No.1414 of
1977 in the High Court of Judicature, Andhra Pradesh at
Hyderabad. A learned single Judge of the High Court allowed
the writ petition on January 20, 1978 (Ex.A-3). Questioning
that order the first respondent filed W.A.No.61 of 1978 before
the Division Bench. It would be relevant to note here that the
Act came into force on September 6, 1982 but that fact was not
brought to the notice of the Division Bench at the hearing of the
Writ Appeal. The Division Bench opined that there was bona
fide dispute of title to the land in dispute between the appellant
and the Government which must be adjudicated upon by the
ordinary court of law and that the Government could not decide
unilaterally in its own favour and resort to summary eviction
proceedings under the Andhra Pradesh Land Encroachment
Act, 1905 (for short, ’the Land Encroachment Act’) and
dismissed the Writ Appeal on November 14, 1983 (Ex.A-4).
The appellant again filed Writ Petition 15724 of 1984
apprehending his dispossession from the land in dispute. On
June 16, 1986, a learned Single Judge of the High Court
disposed of the Writ Petition taking note of the observations of
the Division Bench in the said Writ Appeal and the fact that the
first respondent had filed, O.S. No1497 of 1985 in the Court of
the IV Additional Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad for
declaration of title and recovery of possession of land in dispute
on November 25, 1985.
In view of the provisions of sub-section (8) of Section 8
of the Act, the said suit of the first respondent was transferred
to the Special Court from the Court of the IV Additional Judge.
Though the order of the transfer of the suit was challenged by
the appellant in the High Court by filing civil revision petition,
it was later dismissed as not pressed. Be that as it may, the first
respondent filed an application invoking jurisdiction of Special
Court for taking cognizance of the case and prayed that the
plaint in the said suit be read as part of the application.
Thereupon, the Special Court issued notification for
consideration of objections under the first proviso to sub-
section (6) of Section 8 of the Act in the Andhra Pradesh
Gazette on April 1, 1992. The Special Court, after considering
the objections filed by the appellant taking cognizance of the
case, LGC No.61 of 1990 (referred to in this judgment as ’the
case’), tried the case as a civil suit. The parties were given
opportunity to lead evidence both oral and documentary. The
first respondent examined P.W.1 and marked Exs.A-1 to A-48;
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 30
the appellant examined himself as R.W.1 and marked Exs. B-1
to B-65. By consent of the parties Exs.X-1 to X-4 (copies of
various plans) were also marked. After considering the
evidence adduced by both the sides the Special Court decreed
the case of the first respondent on April 16, 1993 which was
upheld by the Division Bench of the High Court in the said
W.P.No.5332 of 1993 (filed by the appellant) by its judgment
and order dated October 27, 1998 which is under challenge in
this appeal.
Three main contentions were elaborated by Mr.K.
Parasaran, the learned senior counsel appearing for the
appellant. His first contention is that the appellant could not be
held to be a land grabber as his possession was alleged to be
permissive by the first respondent and he was found to have
prima facie bona fide claim to the property in dispute by the
High Court in Writ Petition No.1414 of 1977 and Writ Appeal
No.61 of 1978. The second contention is that the Special Court
had no jurisdiction to try the case and the third contention is
that, in any event, the appellant had perfected his title to the
land in dispute by adverse possession.
Mr.Altaf Ahmad, the learned Additional Solicitor
General, appearing for the first respondent, has argued that the
questions whether the appellant is a land grabber and whether
he has title to the land in dispute or it is a government land,
were decided by the Special Court after trial and the appellant
had ample opportunity to establish his case; the appellant
challenged the order of the transfer of the suit from the Civil
Court to the Special Court in the High Court by filing a civil
revision petition; he, however, did not press it. After the said
questions were found against him by the Special Court,
submitted Mr.Ahmad, the appellant could not be permitted to
challenge the jurisdiction of the Special Court and they, being
the findings of fact, are not open to challenge in appeal filed
under Article 136 of the Constitution.
These contentions can conveniently be dealt with
together.
On the contentions, urged before us, we find that the
Special Court framed Issue Nos.3, 5 and 6 which are as follows:
"(3) Whether this Court has jurisdiction to
entertain the suit as it raises bona fide dispute
of title?
(5) Whether the respondent perfected title by
adverse possession?
(6) Whether the respondent is a land grabber
within the meaning of the Act?"
It was held, on those issues, that the Special Court had
jurisdiction to try the case; the appellant did not prescribe title
by adverse possession and that the appellant was a land grabber.
The findings recorded by the Special Court were approved by
the High Court in the writ petition filed by the appellant. The
correctness of those findings are assailed in this appeal.
Before proceeding further, it is appropriate to determine
the question of jurisdiction of the Special Court. On this
question, it is noted above, Issue No.3 was framed and the
Special Court held that it had jurisdiction. The High Court after
adverting to the relevant provisions of the Act, concluded :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 30
"We find, therefore, in the totality of the situation
and in view of the specific provisions as laid down
by the Act, the Special Court was within its
jurisdiction to deal with the matter and to go into
the case as to whether there is any title involved in
favour of the writ petitioner. Incidentally, be it
noted that the statute itself has equated the Special
Court with that of a Civil Court with all the powers
of the Civil Court. Elaborate and detailed enquiry
has been conducted by way of a regular trial like
any other civil suit, and like any other civil suit,
evidence has been recorded and considered and the
Special Court came to a definite finding. Does it
warrant intervention of the writ court on the basis
of the above? The answer cannot but be in the
negative."
Having regard to the principles laid down by a
Constitution Bench of this Court in Dhulabhai & Ors. Vs. The
State of Madhya Pradesh & Anr. [1968 (3) SCR 662], it will be
apt to advert to the scheme and the provisions of the Act having
a bearing on the question of jurisdiction of the Special Court
and Special Tribunal.
Section 17B of the Act provides that the schedule to the
Act shall constitute the guidelines for the interpretation and
implementation of the Act. We have perused the Schedule to
the Act containing the Statement of Objects and Reasons to the
Andhra Pradesh Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Bill of 1982 as
well as the Bill of 1987. The point that is sought to be made
out in the Schedule is that having regard to the increasing trend
in grabbing the lands of the Government, local authorities,
wakfs, charitable and religious endowments, evacuees and
private persons by unscrupulous and resourceful persons
forming a distinct class of economic offenders backed by
wealth without any semblance of right and having taken note of
the delays in disposal of civil and criminal cases in the regular
courts, the State Legislature felt that unless all such cases of
land grabbing are immediately detected and dealt sternly and
swiftly by specially devised adjudicating forums the evil cannot
subside and social injustice will continue to be perpetrated with
impunity. The Act constituted a Special Court, having both the
civil and criminal jurisdiction, which consists of a serving or
retired Judge of a High Court (Chairman), a serving or retired
District Judge and a serving or retired Civil Servant not below
the rank of a District Collector (as members) to entertain the
cases in which the magnitude of the evil needs immediate
eradication so as to avoid duplication and to further the cause of
justice. The Court of the District Judge having jurisdiction over
the area including Chief Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad, is
constituted as a Special Tribunal to try cases of which
cognizance was not taken by the Special Court in regard to any
alleged act of land grabbing or with respect to ownership and
title to or lawful possession of the land grabbed on or after the
commencement of the Act. Against any judgment or order of
the Special Tribunal (not being interlocutory order) an appeal is
provided to the Special Court on questions of both law and fact.
The Special Tribunal has only civil jurisdiction and the Code of
Civil Procedure is applicable to the proceedings before it
whereas the Special Court has both the civil as well as the
criminal jurisdiction to which the provisions of Codes of Civil
Procedure and Criminal Procedure apply. Both the Special
Court as well as the Special Tribunals have power to reject any
case brought before them if it is prima facie frivolous or
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 30
vexatious. It is provided that any case pending before any court
or other authority immediately before the commencement of the
Act as would have been within the jurisdiction of the Special
Tribunal/Special Court, shall stand transferred to the Special
Tribunal/Special Court, as the case may be, as if the cause of
action on which such suit or proceeding is based, had arisen
after such commencement. If the Special Court is of the opinion
that any case brought before it is not a fit case to be taken
cognizance of, it may return the same for presentation before
the Special Tribunal. There is, however, no provision that the
case should be transferred back to the Civil Court if the final
determination by the Special Tribunal or by the Special Court
results in recording a finding that the occupation of the land by
the respondent does not amount to land grabbing. This is
because statutorily the Special Court is a Civil Court having
both original and appellate jurisdiction as well as a Court of
Session for all practical purposes and the District Judge having
jurisdiction over the area in which land is alleged to be grabbed
is constituted as a Special Tribunal.
It is apt to refer to the relevant provisions of the Act.
Section 2 contains definition of various terms and expressions
used in the Act. Section 3 of the Act which declares that land
grabbing in any form is unlawful and any activity connected
with or arising out of land grabbing shall be an offence
punishable under the Act cannot be lost sight of. Section 4 of
the Act ordains that no person shall commit or cause to be
committed land grabbing. It further declares that any person
who, on or after the commencement of this Act, continues to be
in occupation, otherwise than as a lawful tenant, of a grabbed
land belonging to the Government, local authority, religious or
charitable institution or endowment including a wakf, or other
private person, shall be guilty of an offence under the Act and
on conviction the offence is punishable with imprisonment for a
term which shall not be less than six months but which may
extend to five years, and with fine which may extend to five
thousand rupees. Likewise Section 5 of the Act provides
penalty for other offences in connection with land grabbing.
Offences by companies fall within the ambit of the Act as
provided in Section 6 of the Act.
It will be useful to read Sections 7 to 10 of the Act which
deal with the Special Court insofar as they are relevant for the
present discussion. They are as under :
"7. Constitution of Special Courts : -
(1) The Government may, for the purpose of
providing speedy enquiry into any alleged act
of land grabbing, and trial of cases in respect
of the ownership and title to, or lawful
possession of, the land grabbed, by
notification, constitute a Special Court.
(2) to (5C) *
(5D)(i) Notwithstanding anything in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 (V of 1908) the Special
Court may follow its own procedure which
shall not be inconsistent with the principles of
natural justice and fair play and subject to the
other provisions of this Act and of any rules
made thereunder while deciding the Civil
liability.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 30
(5D)(ii) to (6) *
8. Procedure and powers of the Special Courts :
(1) The Special Court may, either suo motu or on
application made by any person, officer or
authority take cognizance of and try every case
arising out of any alleged act of land grabbing
or with respect to the ownership and title to, or
lawful possession of, the land grabbed, whether
before or after the commencement of this Act,
and pass such orders (including orders by way
of interim directions) as it deems fit;
(1-A) The Special Court shall, for the purpose of
taking cognizance of the case, consider the
location, or extent or value of the land alleged
to have been grabbed or of the substantial
nature of the evil involved or in the interest of
justice required or any other relevant matter :
Provided that the Special Court shall not
take congnizance of any such case without
hearing the petitioner.
(2) Notwithstanding anything in the Code of
Civil Procedure, 1908 the Code of Criminal
Procedure, 1973 or in the Andhra Pradesh Civil
Courts Act, 1972, any case in respect of an
alleged act of land grabbing or the
determination of question of title and
ownership to, or lawful possession of any land
grabbed under this Act, shall be triable only in
a Special Court constituted for the area in
which the land grabbed is situated; and the
decision of the Special Court shall be final.
(2-A) If the Special Court is of the opinion that
any case brought before it, is not a fit case to
be taken congnizance of, it may return the
same for presentation before the Special
Tribunal :
Provided that if, in the opinion of the
Special Court, any application filed before it is
prima facie frivolous or vexatious, it shall
reject the same without any further enquiry :
Provided further that if on an application
from an interested person to withdraw and try
a case pending before any Special Tribunal the
Special Court is of the opinion that it is a fit
case to be withdrawn and tried by it, it may for
reasons to be recorded in writing withdraw any
such case from such Special Tribunal and shall
deal with it as if the case was originally
instituted before the Special Court.
(2-B) Notwithstanding anything in the Code of
Criminal Procedure, 1973, it shall be lawful
for the Special Court to try all offences
punishable under this Act.
(2-C) The Special Court shall determine the order
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 30
in which the civil and criminal liability against
a land grabber be initiated. It shall be within
the discretion of the Special Court whether or
not to deliver its decision or order until both
civil and criminal proceedings are completed.
The evidence admitted during the criminal
proceeding may be made use of while trying
the civil liability. But additional evidence, if
any, adduced in the civil proceedings shall not
be considered by the Special Court while
determining the criminal liability. Any person
accused of land grabbing or the abetment
thereof before the Special Court shall be a
competent witness for the defence and may
give evidence or oath in disproof of the charge
made against him or any person charged
together with his in the criminal proceeding :
Provided that he shall not be called as a
witness except on his own request in writing or
his failure to give evidence shall be made the
subject of any comment by any of the parties
or the Special Court or give rise to any
presumption against himself or any person
charged together with him at the same
proceeding.
(3) to (5) *
(6) Every finding of the Special Court with regard
to any alleged act of land grabbing shall be
conclusive proof of the fact of land grabbing
and of the persons who committed such land
grabbing, and every judgment of the Special
Court with regard to the determination of title
and ownership to, or lawful possession of, any
land grabbed shall be binding on all persons
having interest in such land.
Provided that the Special Court shall, by
notification, specify the fact of taking
cognizance of the case under this Act. Such
notification, shall state that any objection
which may be received by the Special Court
from any person including the custodian of
evacuee property within the period specified
therein will be considered by it;
Provided further that where the
custodian of evacuee property objects to the
Special Court taking cognizance of the case,
the Special Court shall not proceed further
with the case in regard to such property;
Provided also that the Special Court
shall cause a notice of taking cognizance of the
case under the Act, served on any person
known or believed to be interested in the land,
after a summary enquiry to satisfy itself about
the persons likely to be interested in the land.
(7) *
(8) Any case, pending before any Court or other
authority immediately before the Constitution
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 30
of a Special Court, as would have been within
the jurisdiction of such Special Court, shall
stand transferred to the Special Court as if the
cause of action on which such suit or
proceeding is based had arisen after the
constitution of the Special Court."
9. Special Court to have the powers of the Civil
Court and the Court of Session :-
Save as expressly provided in this Act, the
provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908,
the Andhra Pradesh Civil Courts Act, 1972 and the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, in so far as
they are not inconsistent with the provisions of this
Act, shall apply to the proceedings before the
Special Court and for the purposes of the
provisions of the said enactments, Special Court
shall be deemed to be a Civil Court, or as the case
may be, a Court of session and shall have all the
powers of a Civil Court and a Court of session and
the person conducting a prosecution before the
Special Court shall be deemed to be a Public
Prosecutor.
"10.Burden of proof -- Where in any proceedings
under this Act, a land is alleged to have been
grabbed, and such land is prima facie proved to be
the land owned by the Government or by a private
person the Special Court or as the case may be, the
Special Tribunal shall presume that the person who
is alleged to have grabbed the land is a land
grabber and the burden of proving that the land has
not been grabbed by him shall be on such person."
Section 7 of the Act envisages constitution of Special
Courts. Sub-section (1) of Section 7 enables the Government to
constitute a Special Court for the purpose of providing speedy
enquiry into any alleged act of land grabbing and trial of cases
in respect of the ownership and title to, or lawful possession of
the land "grabbed" which in the context includes "alleged to
have been grabbed". Clause (i) of sub-section (5D) enables the
Special Court to follow its own procedure which shall not be
inconsistent with the principles of natural justice and fair play
subject, of course, to the other provisions of the Act and the
Rules made thereunder while deciding the civil liability.
Clause (ii) of sub-section (5D) of Section 7 provides that
notwithstanding anything contained in Section 260 or Section
262 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973 every offence,
punishable under this Act, shall be tried in a summary way and
the provisions of Sections 263 to 265 (both inclusive) of the
said Code, shall apply to such trial. Section 8 of the Act
specifies the procedure and powers of the Special Court. Sub-
section (1) of Section 8 authorises a Special Court to take
cognizance of and try every case arising out of any alleged act
of land grabbing either suo motu or on application made by any
person, officer or authority. It has also the power to try every
case with respect to the ownership and title to, or lawful
possession of the land alleged to have been grabbed whether
before or after the commencement of the Act and pass such
orders including interim orders as it deems fit.
It is pertinent to note that mere allegation of an act of
land grabbing is sufficient to invoke the jurisdiction of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 30
Special Court. In both Section 7(1) and Section 8(1) of the Act
the phrase ’any alleged act of land grabbing’ is employed and
not ’act of land grabbing’. It appears to us that it is designedly
done by the legislature to obviate the difficulty of duplication of
trial once in the courts under the Act and over again in the
ordinary Civil Court. The purpose of the Act is to identify
cases involving allegation of land grabbing for speedy enquiry
and trial. The courts under the Act are nonetheless Civil Courts
which follow Code of Civil Procedure and are competent to
grant the same reliefs which can be obtained from ordinary
Civil Courts. For the purpose of taking cognizance of the case
the Special Court is required to consider the location or extent
or value of the land alleged to have been grabbed or of the
substantial nature of the evil involved or in the interest of
justice required and to give an opportunity of being heard to the
petitioner (sub-section (1-A). It is plain that sub-section (2)
opens with a non obstante clause and mandates that
notwithstanding anything in the Code of Civil Procedure, the
Code of Criminal Procedure, or in the Andhra Pradesh Civil
Courts Act, 1972, any case in respect of an alleged act of land
grabbing or the determination of question of title and ownership
to, or lawful possession of any land alleged to have been
grabbed under the Act, shall be triable only in a Special Court
constituted for the area in which the land grabbed is situated
and the decision of the Special Court shall be final. Sub-section
(2B) specifically provides that notwithstanding anything in the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1973, it shall be lawful for the
Special Court to try all offences punishable under this Act. It is
left to the Special Court to determine the order in which the
civil and criminal liability against a land grabber be initiated.
Sub-section (6) provides that every finding of the Special Court
with regard to any alleged act of land grabbing shall be
conclusive proof of the fact of the land grabbing and of the
persons who committed such land grabbing and every judgment
of the Special Court with regard to determination of title and
ownership to, or lawful possession of, any land alleged to have
been grabbed, shall be binding on all persons having interest in
such land. It contains three provisos but they are not relevant
for the present discussion. Sub-section (8) brings about
automatic transfer of any case pending before any court or
authority immediately before the constitution of a Special
Court, as would have been within the jurisdiction of the Special
Court if the cause of action on which such suit or proceeding is
based, has arisen after the constitution of the Special Court.
The provisions of sub-section (2) of Section 8 which
commences with a non obstante clause confer jurisdiction on
the Special Court and Section 15 of the Act directs that the
provisions of the Act shall have effect notwithstanding anything
inconsistent therewith contained in any other law for the time
being in force or custom, usage or agreement or decree or order
of a court or any other tribunal or authority. A combined
reading of these provisions leads to the conclusion that the
jurisdiction of Civil Court under Section 9 of the Code of Civil
Procedure and under the Civil Courts Act is ousted and the Act
which is special law will prevail and as such the Special Court
will have jurisdiction in respect of the matters dealt with
thereunder. [See : Sanwarmal Kejriwal vs. Vishwa Cooperative
Housing Society Ltd. & Ors. [1990 (2) SCC 288].
Section 9 provides, inter alia, that except as expressly
provided in this Act, the provisions of the Code of Criminal
Procedure, insofar as they are not inconsistent with the
provisions of the Act, shall apply to the proceedings before the
Special Court and for purposes of the said Code, the Special
Court shall be deemed to be a Court of Session and shall have
all the powers of Court of Session.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 30
The discussion of the above provisions would be
incomplete without taking note of Section 10 of the Act which
is a procedural provision and deals with burden of proof. A
plain reading of this section would indicate that in any
proceedings under this Act - (i) where a land is alleged to have
been grabbed; and (ii) such land is prima facie proved to be the
land owned by the Government or by a private person, the
Special Court/Special Tribunal shall presume that the person
who is alleged to have grabbed the land is a land grabber.
When the presumption under Section 10 is drawn by the
Special Court/Special Tribunal, the burden of proving that the
land has not been grabbed by him is cast on the alleged land
grabber. In view of the meaning of the words "shall presume"
in Section 4 of the Indian Evidence Act, the effect of raising
presumption under Section 10 of the Act would be that unless
the alleged land grabber disproves that the land has been
grabbed by him, the Special Court/Special Tribunal shall regard
that the land in question has been grabbed by the alleged land
grabber.
It has been noticed above that O.S.No.1497 of 1985 filed
by the first respondent in the Court of the IV Additional Judge,
City Civil Court, Hyderabad, was transferred to the Special
Court in view of the provisions of sub-section (8) of Section 8
of the Act. The order transferring the case from the Civil Court
to the Special Court was assailed by the appellant in the High
Court in a civil revision petition which was later dismissed as
not pressed. Irrespective of the answer to the question whether
the order of transfer of the said suit from the Civil Court to the
Special Court operates as issue estoppel or not, it is plain that
the validity of the order of transfer of the suit from the Civil
Court to the Special Court was not urged before the High Court
in the writ petition (filed to challenge the judgment of the
Special Court), out of which this appeal arises, so the transfer of
the suit cannot be allowed to be challenged in this appeal. Be
that as it may, the following facts disclose that de hors the
transfer of the suit, the jurisdiction of the Special Court was
invoked by the first respondent under the Act.
The first respondent filed petition under sub-section (1)
of the Section 7 read with sub-section (1) of Section 8 of the
Act before the Special Court on March 20, 1992 complaining of
the alleged act of land grabbing and praying the Court to
declare the appellant as a land grabber and the structures raised
thereon by him as unauthorised and to order his eviction from
the land grabbed and deliver possession of the same. The
Special Court issued notification under Rule 7(1) of the Land
Grabbing Rules, which was published in the A.P.Gazette on
April 1, 1992 which reads as follows :
NOTIFICATION BY HEADS OF DEPARTMENTS ETC.
JUDICIAL NOTIFICATIONS
LAND GRABBING CASES
FORM-II (A)
See Rule 7(1)
NOTICE
In the Special Court under Andhra Pradesh Land
Grabbing (Prohibition) Act, 3, R.K.R.Govt. Offices
Complex; II Floor ’B’ Block Tank Bund Road;
Hyderabad.
L.G.C.No.61/90 -- The Special Court has taken
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 30
cognizance of the case filed by The State of Andhra
Pradesh represented by the Collector, Hyderabad District,
Hyderabad. It is alleged that the land belonging to
Government as specified in the schedule below is
grabbed by Sri Konda Laxman Bapuji, son of Bapuji,
H.No.6-1-2/1, Khairatabad, near Tank Bund, Hyderabad.
The Schedule
Name of the owner of the land - Government
Village in which it is located - Khairatabad village.
Mandal District in which it falls - Golconda taluq,
Hyderabad District.
Sl.No.Sub-Division No. of the alleged land- 9/15 Paiki,
9/16 and 9/17.
Extent of land - 2.06 Ac.Gunts.
Boundaries of the land :
North : Sy.No.9/1, Hussainsagar Tank
South : Sy. No.37, Fisheries Department Building
and Road.
East : Land of smt.Laxmi Gunti.
West : Open Land of Sy.Nos.9/16 part and 9/18
part.
Notice is hereby given to whomsoever it may
concern including the custodian of evacuee property
concerned as required under the first proviso to sub-
section (6) of section 8 of the Andhra Pradesh Land
Grabbing (Prohibition) act, 1982 (A.P.Act 12 of 1982).
If any person intends to object, he may submit his
objections, if any, before the Special Court on or before
the 15th day of April, 1992 for its consideration.
If no objections are received by the Special Court
within the stipulated time it will be presumed that there
are no objections for proceeding further and the case will
be proceeded accordingly.
P.V.Raman Rao,
Registrar
Special Court
A.P.Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Act
Hyderabad."
In response to the said notice the appellant filed his
objections on April 10, 1992. He denied the allegation of land
grabbing but did not object to the jurisdiction of the Special
Court. After considering the objections, filed by the appellant,
to the Special Court taking cognizance of the case numbered as
L.G.C.No.61/90, the case was decided on the evidence adduced
by the parties before the Special Court.
In this context the following submission, pressed by
Mr.Parasaran, may be considered here. He argued that the High
Court in the Writ Petition filed by the appellant challenging the
validity of the notice of eviction under the Land Encroachment
Act, gave liberty to the first respondent to establish its title in
Civil Court, which was also confirmed by the Division Bench
in the writ appeal filed by the first respondent; although before
the date of the disposal of the writ appeal the Act had come into
force on September 6, 1982, the first respondent did not seek
liberty from the court to approach the Special Court, therefore,
on the principle of "might and ought" he was barred from
approaching the Special Court and the proceeding before the
Special Court was barred by the principle of res judicata.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 12 of 30
Section 11 of the Code of Civil Procedure incorporates the
principle of res judicata which, in short, means a matter which
has already been adjudged judicially between the same parties.
In substance, Section 11 bars a court from trying any suit in
which the matter directly and substantially in issue has been
directly and substantially in issue in a former suit between the
same parties in a court and has been heard and finally decided
by such court which is competent to try such subsequent suit or
the suit in which such issue has been subsequently raised.
Eight Explanations are appended to it. We are concerned with
Explanation IV which embodies the principle of constructive
res judicata and says that any matter which "might and ought"
to have been made a ground of defence or attack in such former
suit shall be deemed to have been a matter directly and
substantially in issue in such suit. A conjoint reading of
Section 11 and Explanation IV shows that if a plea which might
and ought to have been taken in the earlier suit, shall be deemed
to have been taken and decided against the person raising the
plea in the subsequent suit.
Mr.Parasaran relied upon the judgment of the Privy
Council in Sha Shivraj Gopalji vs. Edappakath Ayissa Bi &
Ors. [AIR 1949 PC 302]. In that case, the appellant filed
second execution petition and sought to attach the right, title
and interest of the respondent in the properties on the basis of
the Mappilla Marumakkattyam Act, 1938 (Act of 1938). A
Division Bench of the High Court of Madras referred to the
contention urged in subsequent proceedings at the stage of
appeal that the assignee-decree-holder could proceed against
the tavazhi properties under the said Act was not dealt with on
merits in those proceedings and held that that was a point which
the appellant could have raised in his petition in the earlier
proceedings and he failed to do so and therefore the dismissal
of the earlier execution petition filed in 1940 operated as res
judicata in the subsequent case. While approving the said
conclusion of the High Court, the Privy Council observed,
"Apart from the provisions of Section 11, Civil
P.C. it would be contrary to principle (see Ram
Kirpal Shukul vs. Rup Kuari, [11 I.A.37 : (6 ALL.
269 PC)], to allow him in fresh proceedings to
renew the same claim viz., that the properties in
question were properties of the respondents liable
to attachment or, as he would now put it, that the
respondents had severable interests in the
properties which are liable to attachment, merely
because he neglected at the proper stage in
previous proceedings to support that claim by an
argument of which he now wishes to avail
himself."
It may be noticed that in that case there was final determination
of the rights of the parties in the first execution petition in
which the plea of executability of the decree against the right,
title and interest of the respondents by virtue of Act of 1938
was available but was not urged. In the instant case, there has
been no final determination of the rights of the parties in regard
to their title to the land in dispute in the writ proceeding.
The principle that to attract the provisions of Section 11,
C.P.C., there must be a final adjudication of the matter between
the parties in earlier suit or proceeding is too well-settled to
need elaboration. The same principle applies to constructive
res judicata. In Kewal Singh vs. Lajwanti [AIR 1980 SC 161]
this Court held :
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 13 of 30
".........as regards the question of constructive res
judicata it has no application whatsoever in the
instant case. It is well settled that one of the
essential conditions of res judicata is that there
must be a formal adjudication between the parties
after full hearing. In other words, the matter must
be finally decided between the parties. Here also
at a time when the plaintiff relinquished her first
cause of action the defendant was nowhere in the
picture, and there being no adjudication between
the parties the doctrine of res judicata does not
apply."
It may be recalled that in this case the first respondent
issued notice for eviction of the appellant from the land in
dispute (under the Land Encroachment Act) on the ground that
he was unauthorisedly in occupation of the Government land.
As the appellant claimed title to the land in dispute and thus the
title of the first respondent to the land in question was disputed,
the High Court observed that the State could not resolve the
issue of title in its favour and proceed under the Land
Encroachment Act. In view of the rival claims to the land in
dispute the High Court granted liberty to the first respondent to
establish its title in the competent Civil Court. It is true that on
the date of disposal of the Writ Appeal No.61 of 1978
(14.11.1983) the Act had come into force and that fact was not
brought to the notice of the Division Bench of the High Court
but there was no final adjudication on the question of rival
claims of the parties to the title of the land in dispute on merit
in Writ Appeal by the Division Bench of the High Court.
Pursuant to the liberty granted to the first respondent by the
learned Single Judge which was confirmed by the Division
Bench the aforementioned suit, O.S.No.1497 of 1985, was in
fact filed by the first respondent against the appellant in the
Court of the IV Additional Judge, City Civil Court for
declaration of title to and recovery of possession of the land in
dispute. The first respondent had thus acted in accordance with
the liberty granted to it by the High Court. It is by operation of
law, under sub-section (8) of Section 8 of the Act, the said suit
stood transferred to the Special Court. The first respondent also
invoked the jurisdiction of the Special Court under Sections 7
and 8 of the Act by filing a petition against the appellant. For
the reasons, stated above, the principle of constructive res
judicata, on the ground that the fact of enforcement of the Act
on September 6, 1982 was not brought to the notice of the
Division Bench of the High Court at the time of disposal of the
Writ Appeal, is not available to the appellant. Further, as a
statutory right is created in favour of the State under the Act, to
eradicate a public mischief, it cannot be precluded from having
recourse to the provisions of the Act by operation of the
principle of "might and ought" in Explanation IV of Section 11
C.P.C. when its title or interest had not been finally determined
by the High Court. For these reasons, we cannot accept the
contention of the learned senior counsel.
The upshot of the above discussion is that the Special
Court is a Civil Court having original as well as appellate
jurisdiction having all the trappings of a Civil Court and also a
Criminal Court having powers of the Court of Sessions to
which the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, the A.P.
Civil Courts Act and the Code of Criminal Procedure, apply.
The Special Court can take cognizance of and try every case
arising out of any alleged act of land grabbing or with respect to
the ownership and title to, or lawful possession of, the land
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 14 of 30
grabbed and determine the ownership, title to, or lawful
possession of the land alleged to have been grabbed whose
decision will be binding on all the persons interested. Mere
allegation of land grabbing is sufficient to invoke the
jurisdiction of the Special Court either suo motu or on
application by any person including any officer or authority. In
this view of the matter, we find no illegality in the conclusion
arrived at by the High Court in affirming the finding with
regard to the jurisdiction of the Special Court.
Now, adverting to the remaining two contentions, it is
important to note that under the Act "land grabbing" is not only
an actionable wrong but also an offence and a "land grabber" is
an offender punishable thereunder. The definitions of the
expressions "land grabber" and "land grabbing", in clauses (d)
and (e), respectively, of Section 2 of the Act, apply to both civil
and criminal proceedings. It is, therefore, essential to construe
the definitions of the said expressions strictly. We shall first
examine the relevant provisions of the Act and then the case set
up by the first respondent against the appellant before the
Special Court to describe him as a land grabber.
Clauses (d) and (e) of Section 2 of the Act may be quoted
here :
"2. Definitions : - In this Act, unless the context
otherwise requires, --
(d) "land grabber" means a person or a group of
persons who commits land grabbing and includes
any person who gives financial aid to any person
for taking illegal possession of lands or for
construction of unauthorised structures thereon, or
who collects or attempts to collect from any
occupiers of such lands rent, compensation and
other charges by criminal intimidation, or who
abets the doing of any of the above mentioned
acts; and also includes the successors in interest;
(e) "land grabbing" means every activity of
grabbing of any land (whether belonging to the
Government, a local authority, a religious or
charitable institution or endowment, including a
wakf, or any other private person) by a person or a
group of persons, without any lawful entitlement
and with a view to illegally taking possession of
such lands, or enter into or create illegal tenancies
or lease and licences agreements or any other
illegal agreements in respect of such lands, or to
construct unauthorised structures thereon for sale
or hire, or give such lands to any person on rental
or lease and licence basis for construction, or use
and occupation, of unauthorised structures; and the
terms "to grab land" shall be construed
accordingly;"
A perusal of clause (d) shows that the expression "land
grabber" takes in its fold : (1) a person or a group of persons
who commits land grabbing; (2) a person who gives financial
aid to any person for - (a) taking illegal possession of the lands,
or (b) construction of unauthorised structures thereon; (3) a
person who collects or attempts to collect from any occupiers of
such lands rent, compensation and other charges by criminal
intimidation; (4) a person who abets the doing of any of the
above mentioned acts; and (5) the successors in interest of such
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 15 of 30
a person. Among these five categories, the first category is
relevant for the present discussion -- a person or a group of
persons who commits land grabbing.
Clause (e) of Section 2, quoted above, defines the
expression "land grabbing" to mean : (1) every activity of
grabbing of any land (whether belonging to the Government, a
local authority, a religious or charitable institution or
endowment, including a wakf, or any other private person) by a
person or group of persons; (2) such grabbing must be : (i)
without any lawful entitlement and (ii) with a view to : (a)
illegally taking possession of such lands; or (b) to enter into or
create illegal tenancies, lease and licences agreements or any
other illegal agreements in respect of such lands; or (c) to
construct unauthorised structures thereon for sale or hire; or (d)
to give such lands to any person on (i) rental or (ii) lease and
licence basis for construction, or (iii) use and occupation of
unauthorised structures.
Inasmuch as the afore-mentioned expressions are defined
employing the term "grabbing", it is necessary to ascertain the
import of that term. It is not defined in the Act. It is not a
technical term or a term of art so it has to be understood in its
ordinary common meaning.
The meaning of the term "grab" in the New International
Webster’s Comprehensive Dictionary of the English Language,
is given as follows :
"To grasp or seize forcibly or suddenly; to take
possession of violently or dishonestly; to make a
sudden grasp. See synonyms under grasp - (i) The
act of grabbing, or that which is grabbed. (ii) A
dishonest or unlawful taking possession or
acquisition (iii) An apparatus for grappling."
In Words and Phrases, permanent edition, Vol.18, the meaning
of "grab" is noted as under :
"The word "grab" means an act or practice of
appropriating unscrupulously, as in politics. Smith
v. Pure Oil Co., 128 S.W.2d 931, 933, 278 Ky.430.
The word "grab" means a seizure or
acquisition by violent or unscrupulous means.
Smith v. Pure Oil Co., 128 S.W.2d 931, 933, 278
Ky.430.
The word "grab" means to seize, grasp, or
snatch forcibly or suddenly with the hand, hence to
take possession of suddenly, violently, or
dishonestly. Smith v. Pure Oil Co., 128 S.W.2d
931, 933, 278 Ky.430."
Corpus Juris Secundum, Volume 38, records the meaning of the
term "grab" thus :
"As a verb, to seize, grasp or snatch forcibly or
suddenly with the hand, hence to take possession
of suddenly, violently, or dishonestly."
In Concise Oxford Dictionary, the following meanings of the
word "grab" are noted :
"A seize suddenly; capture, arrest; take greedily or
unfairly; attract the attention of, impress; make a
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 16 of 30
sudden snatch at; intr. (of the brakes of a motor
vehicle) act harshly or jerkily. - n. (i) a sudden
clutch or attempt to seize; (ii)a mechanical device
for clutching."
The various meanings, noted above, disclose that the
term "grab" has a broad meaning - to take unauthorisedly,
greedily or unfairly - and a narrow meaning of snatching
forcibly or violently or by unscrupulous means. Having regard
to the object of the Act and the various provisions employing
that term we are of the view that the term "grab" is used in the
Act in both its narrow as well as broad meanings. Thus
understood the ingredients of the expression "land grabbing"
would comprise of (i) the factum of an activity of taking
possession of any land forcibly, violently, unscrupulously,
unfairly or greedily without any lawful entitlement and (ii) the
mens rea/intention -- "with the intention of/with a view to" (a)
illegally taking possession of such lands or (b) enter into or
create illegal tenancies, lease and licences agreements or any
other illegal agreements in respect of such lands; or (c) to
construct unauthorised structures thereon for sale or hire; or (d)
to give such lands to any person on (i) rental or (ii) lease and
licence basis for construction, or (iii) use and occupation of
unauthorised structures.
A combined reading of clauses (d) and (e) would suggest
that to bring a person within the meaning of the expression
"land grabber" it must be shown that : (i) (a) he has taken
unauthorisedly, unfairly, greedily, snatched forcibly, violently
or unscrupulously any land belonging to government or a local
authority, a religious or charitable institution or endowment,
including a wakf, or any other private person; (b) without any
lawful entitlement; and (c) with a view to illegally taking
possession of such lands, or enter or create illegal tenancies or
lease and licences agreements or any other illegal agreements in
respect of such lands or to construct unauthorised structures
thereon for sale or hire, or give such lands to any person on
rental or lease and licence basis for construction, or use and
occupation of unauthorised structures; or (ii) he has given
financial aid to any person for taking illegal possession of
lands or for construction of unauthorised structures thereon; or
(iii) he is collecting or attempting to collect from any occupiers
of such lands rent, compensation and other charges by criminal
intimation; or (iv) he is abetting the doing of any of the above-
mentioned acts; or (v) that he is the successor-in-interest of any
such persons.
It must be borne in mind that for purposes of taking
congnizance of a case under the Act existence of an allegation
of any act of land grabbing is the sine qua non and not the truth
or otherwise of such an allegation. But to hold that a person is
a land grabber it is necessary to find that the allegations
satisfying the requirements of land grabbing are proved.
To make out a case in a civil case that the appellant is a
land grabber the first respondent must aver and prove both the
ingredients -- the factum as well as the intention -- that the
appellant falls in the categories of the persons, mentioned
above (clause (d) of Section 2 of the Act), has occupied the land
in dispute, which belonged to the first respondent, without any
lawful entitlement and with a view to or with the intention of
illegally taking possession of such land or entering into the land
for any of the purposes mentioned in clause (e) of Section 2 of
the Act, summarised above.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 17 of 30
What needs to be looked into in the present controversy
is : whether the appellant has any lawful entitlement
(proprietory or possessory) to the land in dispute and had come
into possession of the land in dispute unauthorisedly. Here, we
may note the contention of Mr.Parasaran that in effect the suit
of the first respondent-plaintiff, being a suit for declaration of
title and ejectment of the appellant from the land in dispute, it
ought to have been dismissed; the first respondent should
succeed on the strength of its own title and it cannot take
advantage of the defects in the title of the appellant to the land
in dispute. We may notice the case set up by the parties in their
pleadings and the documentary and oral evidence adduced by
them.
The case of the first respondent stated in the concise
statement enclosed to the application filed before the Special
Court on March 20, 1992 and as contained in the plaint filed in
the court of the IV Additional Judge, City Civil Court,
Hyderabad (O.S. No.1497 of 1985) is as follows : the first
respondent is the absolute owner of the land of an extent of 2
acres and 6 guntas in Survey Nos.9/15 paiki, 9/16 and 9/17,
forming part of the Hussain Sagar Tank Bund land, situated at
Khairatabad village, Hyderabad Dist., Hyderabad, there were
wrong entries in the record of rights which were corrected by
the Collector on October 5, 1959. It is stated, alternatively, if
the land in dispute formed part of the Inam land the same had
vested in the first respondent with effect from July 20, 1955, the
date of vesting as per Section 3 of the A.P. (Telangana Area)
Abolition of Inams Act, 1955 (Act No.8 of 1955) (for short,
’the Inams Act’). None of the heirs of the alleged Inamdar
appeared before the Collector, Hyderabad Distt., Hyderabad,
for claiming registration as occupants under Section 10 of the
said Act. The land in dispute, it is noted, was shown as Maqta
land belonging to Naimatullah Shah for some time and
thereafter as Inam land and the appellant claimed to be the
lessee of Mohd. Nooruddin Asrari, one of the successors to the
said Maqta; he occupied the said land in the year 1958 or so and
raised a building known as "Jala Drushyam". The claim of the
appellant was not proper, valid and legal because the land never
belonged to the said Maqta; even otherwise it vested in the
Government with effect from the said date and the order of the
Collector, correcting entries in the record of rights, had become
final. The plaint refers also to the facts that the land in dispute
was the subject matter of O.S.No.13 of 1958 on the file of the
Additional Chief Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad, filed by
one Rasheed Shapurji Chenoy, which was dismissed holding
that it was Government land. On giving an undertaking in the
said suit, the appellant with the permission of the Court
constructed the said house "Jala Drushyam" and, therefore, the
possession of the appellant partakes the character of permissive
possession. After the dismissal of the suit the first respondent
issued notice of eviction to the appellant under Section 6 of the
Land Encroachment Act, on the ground that he was in
unauthorised occupation of land in dispute, but the notice was
quashed in the writ petition filed by the appellant and that order
was upheld in writ appeal giving liberty to the first respondent
to establish its title in a Civil Court. The first respondent
sought from the Special Court the following reliefs : to declare
the appellant a land grabber and to restore possession of the
land grabbed by him.
The case of the appellant was that the land in dispute was
part of Sarfekhas land and that after Inam Inquiry, ordered by
H.E.H. the Nizam, Muntakhab was issued in favour of the
Inamdar (Maqtedar) and thereafter succession was granted in
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 18 of 30
favour of his vendor (lessor). It was also stated in the written
statement that the appellant has been in possession of the land
from November 1954 and that before him his predecessors-in-
title were in possession for innumerable years as Inamdars, so
he was entitled to tack their possession for purposes of
perfecting his title by adverse possession; even otherwise from
the date of his own coming into possession in 1954 he perfected
his title by adverse possession as against the first respondent.
The Special Court has determined that the occupation of
the land in dispute by the appellant is without any lawful
entitlement and decided the question of the ownership and title
to and lawful possession of the land in dispute on appreciating
the evidence on record. It held, inter alia, that the land in
dispute was not part of Inam and that even if it was so there was
no valid confirmation of grant of the land in dispute by the civil
administrator under Ex.B-6 and consequently no title had
passed under Ex.B-9 to the vendor of the appellant and hence
no title was obtained by the appellant under Ex.B-40. Though
the findings recorded by the Special Court in regard to absence
of lawful entitlement of the appellant to the land in dispute and
upholding the title of the first respondent that it is a
Government land, are findings of fact which were not interfered
with by the High Court in the Writ Petition filed by the
appellant, yet to satisfy ourselves, we have gone through the
depositions of PW 1 and RW 1 and perused the documentary
evidence in great detail; the original record is in Urdu. We find
no valid reason to take a different view of the matter and
inasmuch as we are sustaining the said findings it is not
necessary to re-do the whole exercise of discussing all the
evidence here. However, we shall refer to a few important
documents and aspects which clinch the issue.
In regard to the ingredients of the expression ’land
grabber’, it is necessary to point out that it is only when a
person has lawful entitlement to the land alleged to be grabbed
that he cannot be brought within the mischief of the said
expression. A mere prima facie bona fide claim to the land
alleged to be grabbed by such a person, cannot avert being
roped in within the ambit of the expression "land grabber".
What is germane is lawful entitlement to and not a mere prima
facie bona fide claim to the land alleged to be grabbed.
Therefore, the observation of the Division Bench of the High
Court in the said Writ Appeal No.61 of 1978 that the appellant
can be taken to have prima facie bona fide claim to the land in
dispute which was relevant for the said Land Encroachment
Act, cannot be called in aid as a substitute for lawful
entitlement to the land alleged to be grabbed, which alone is
relevant under the Act.
A copy of the statement of Maqta Enquiry (Ext.B-15)
which is in Urdu shows that the Maqta was granted by the
Qutub Shahi rulers, which became Sarfekhas property (private
property of the Nizam) subsequently. In the Maqta enquiry the
Talukdar (Sarfekhas) recommended that Maqta be re-granted in
favour of Mohd. Abdul Quadir and others (who were ancestors
of the lessor of the appellant). The location of the Maqta
(which is referred to as, ’Maqta Naimatullah Shah’) was
mentioned as adjacent to Hussain Sagar. Ex.A-20 is a copy of
Munthkhab Statement of Inam Enquiry (Sarfekhas) bearing
execution No.1050 dated 09.01.1327 Fasli. It shows that as per
the letter of Administrative Committee of Sarfekhas (Mubark)
bearing No.1185 dated 19.09.1326 Fasli, H.E.H. the Nizam had
sanctioned confirmation of cash grant and the Maqta excluding
the land covered by graveyard and the King’s bungalow. It is
also clear that the land which was appurtenant to the King’s
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 19 of 30
bungalow was returned to Sarfekhas and it was subsequently
directed to be sold for adequate price by H.E.H. the Nizam on
12.02.1343 Fasli. A perusal of Ex.A-26 lends support to the
fact that the original Muntakhab No.1050 of 1327 Fasli of
Maqta Naimatullah Shah had excluded the King’s bungalow
with the land and the graveyard while sanctioning the
confirmation of Maqta by H.E.H. the Nizam. It appears to us
that a palace was constructed during the lifetime of H.E.H. the
Nizam VI which was referred to as King’s bungalow and which
later came to be known as the Secretariat. The land between
the Secretariat and the Hussain Sagar was part of the excluded
land and was lying vacant. It was the land of the Sarfekhas and
in regard to that land various persons including predecessors-in-
interest of the appellant made their claims but all the claims
were rejected by the then Sadarul Maham (Minister) of
Sarfekhas and it was directed that the land should be under the
control and protection of Babe Hukumat (GAD) and the
Revenue Department was specifically directed to supervise the
same. That order was appealed against before Moaziz
Committee of Sarfekhas (comprising of the Chief Justice and
two Hon’ble Judges of the High Court of the then State of
Hyderabad). The Committee confirmed the said order of the
Minister and dismissed the appeals on Mehr 30, 1357 Fasli.
Thus, it is abundantly clear that Survey Nos.9/15 paiki, 9/16,
9/17, 9/18, 9/19 were not part of Maqta which was reconfirmed
in favour of the predecessors-in-interest of the appellant. They
remained land of Sarfekhas (private estate of the Nizam) which
merged in Diwani, that is State Government, on 5.2.1949
(Ex.A-30). It is noted in Ex.B-20, letter from Tehsil Taluk,
Hyderabad West, addressed to the Collector, Hyderabad, dated
27.07.1954 that Survey Nos.9/15, 9/16, 9/17, 9/18 and 9/19 of
Maqta Naimatullah Shah are situate in between the Secretariat
and Hussain Sagar Tank. That was also stated to by the
appellant in his deposition. Inasmuch as the Maqta remained
under attachment and in the possession of the Sarfekhas during
the period of Inam Enquiry an attempt was made to show that
under Ex.B-11, a letter dated 12.10.1356 Fasli (English
translation Ex.B-12), the Maqta was directed to be released in
favour of the Maqtadar. Ex.B-13 a certified copy of the
panchnama dated 02.11.1356 Fasli is filed to show that the land
bearing Survey Nos.9/2, 9/10, 9/12, 9/15 and 9/16 to 9/20
measuring 54 acres, was inspected and while Survey No.9/17
and 9/18 measuring 7 acres and 7 guntas alone were retained in
the Government possession the rest of the Survey numbers were
put in possession of the Inamdar. English translation of
Ex.B-13 is marked as Ex.B-14. Ex.B-15 English translation is
a certified copy of receipt dated 02.11.1356 Fasli which was
filed to show that possession was taken by the Maqtadar. These
documents were, however, treated by the Special Court as
spurious. The said documents are certified copies and they are
in Urdu. A careful reading of Exs.B-11 in Urdu and B-12
(English translation) discloses that the recitals:
"Hence the Makhtha may be restored in favour of
Syed Shah Mohd. Wajihullah Hussain Asrari,
Makhthedar of the Makhtha Niamathullah Shah
and after release and handing over a detailed
compliance report, should be sent along with the
receipt"
are out of context with the other recitals therein. Such an
important order directing delivery of possession of land,
bearing S.Nos. noted above, which was excluded from regrant
of Maqta under Muntakhab, could not have been directed to be
delivered under Ex.B-11. In the ordinary course of event a
decision ought to be taken first and then only it would be
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 20 of 30
communicated. Such a decision should be in the file. No order
was filed in support of Ex.B-11. Further, the subject-matter of
the letter dated 12.10.1356 Fasli (Exs.B-11 and B-12) from the
First Talukdar, District Atraf-e-Balda, Sarfekhas addressed to
the Tehsildar, Taluk West shows that the proceeding
commenced on the application for waiving the land revenue on
the ground that the land was under attachment and in the
possession of the Government. It is strange to note that in reply
to an application to waive the land revenue the possession of
the land was directed to be delivered by the first Taluqdar in his
letter Ex.B-11 dated 12.10.1356 Fasli (English translation
Ex.B-12) and purported to have been delivered under Exs.B-13
and B-14 dated 2nd Mehr 1356 (2.11.1356 Fasli) (wrongly noted
in the English translation as 2.11.1355 Fasli), while the appeal
in regard to the land of which the said S.Nos. are a part, was
still pending before the Moaziz Committee. From Ex.A-27 it is
seen that the Moaziz Committee decided the appeal on Mehr
30, 1357 (30.11.1357 Fasli) after sending the said letter (Ex.B-
11). These documents are not originals. They are certified
copies and, therefore, it is not possible to make out whether the
portion noted above as out of context, really formed part of the
letter as in the absence of the order including the said S.Nos. in
the regrant directing delivery of possession, gives rise to lot of
suspicion. We say no more. For the aforementioned reasons,
they do not inspire any confidence to be accepted as correct. In
view of these strong reasons we are not persuaded to disagree
with the view of the Special Court that they are spurious
documents. Thus, it is clear that the land in dispute was not
part of Maqta land. That land remained as Sarfekhas land and
on merger of Sarfekhas in Diwani on February 5, 1949, it
became Government land. Even assuming that it was part of
regranted Inam land, on coming into force of the Inams Act, it
vested in the Government. Admittedly, neither the Inamdar nor
the appellant obtained occupancy certificate in respect of the
land in dispute under Inams Abolition Act. In support of the
allegations in the petition and the plaint PW 1 has categorically
stated that the appellant is a land grabber and he was not cross-
examined on that aspect. We have, therefore, no hesitation in
endorsing the finding that the said Mohd. Nooruddin Asrari had
no title to the land in dispute and consequently the appellant
acquired no title to it.
Having regard to the absence of any material on record,
all the circumstances and the probabilities of the case, it is hard
to believe that at any time before or on the date of execution of
Ex.B-39 the lessor of the appellant who had no title to or
interest in the land which was directed to be under the
supervision of the GAD, was in possession of the land in
dispute which was lying vacant.
It is relevant to note that as the decision of the Special
Court on the question of title to the land in dispute was not
based on the order of the Collector contained in the letter dated
October 5,1959 (Ex.A-14), the validity of that order is
inconsequential. We, therefore, do not propose to examine that
aspect. We may note here that the Special Court did not invoke
the presumption under Section 10 of the Act against the
appellant. It is also evident that the title of the first respondent
to the land in dispute was upheld de hors the weakness in the
title of the appellant.
On a careful perusal of the judgment of the Special Court
on the question of title of the first respondent and that of the
appellant and his lessor-Inamdar we are satisfied that neither
any relevant material was excluded from consideration nor any
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 21 of 30
irrelevant material was relied upon by the Special Court in
recording its finding. There was, therefore, no scope for the
High Court to interfere with those findings. In our view, the
High Court committed no error of law in not interfering with
the findings of the Special Court in regard to the title of the first
respondent and absence of title in the appellant to the land in
dispute [See : Omar Salay Mohamed Sait vs. Commissioner of
Income-tax, Madras [AIR 1959 SC 1238]. On the conclusions
arrived at by us no interference is warranted by this Court in
this appeal filed under Article 136 of the Constitution of India.
[See : Mehar Singh & Ors. vs. Shiromani Gurudwara
Prabandhak Committee [2000 (2) SCC 97].
To complete the discussion on the lawful entitlement, the
appellant’s claim of title to the land in dispute by prescription
remains to be examined. The contention of Mr.Parasaran is that
the appellant, who has been in possession of the land since
1954 on the basis of Ext.B-39 (an unregistered agreement for
perpetual lease), perfected his title by adverse possession as on
the date of the suit on November 25, 1985.
Mr.Altaf Ahmad, on the other hand, relied on the conduct
of the appellant to show that he had no requisite animus to
possess the land in dispute adverse to the title and interest of the
first respondent and that the essential requirements of adverse
possession were not satisfied as neither the appellant had the
requisite animus nor he fulfilled the requirement of possession
of the land in dispute for the statutory period of 30 years; both
the Special Court as well as the High Court concurrently held
that the appellant did not perfect his title to the land in dispute
by adverse possession and that finding would not be open to
challenge in this appeal.
The Special Court, on the pleadings of the parties, framed
issue No.5, noted above. The onus of proving that issue is on
the appellant who claims title by adverse possession.
The question of a person perfecting title by adverse
possession is a mixed question of law and fact. The principle of
law in regard to adverse possession is firmly established. It is a
well-settled proposition that mere possession of the land,
however long it may be, would not ripe into possessory title
unless the possessor has ’animus possidendi’ to hold the land
adverse to the title of the true owner. It is true that assertion of
title to the land in dispute by the possessor would, in an
appropriate case, be sufficient indication of the animus
possidendi to hold adverse to the title of the true owner. But
such an assertion of title must be clear and unequivocal though
it need not be addressed to the real owner. For reckoning the
statutory period to perfect title by prescription both the
possession as well as the animus possidendi must be shown to
exist. Where, however, at the commencement of the possession
there is no animus possidendi, the period for the purpose of
reckoning adverse possession will commence from the date
when both the actual possession and assertion of title by the
possessor are shown to exist. The length of possession to
perfect title by adverse possession as against the Government is
30 years.
The appellant (defendant) in his written statement
averred that he was claiming title under Mohd. Nooruddin
Asrari who was successor of the original Inamdar Sheik
Naimatullah Shah. The land in dispute is a part of the maqta
land which was in his possession from November 28, 1954
under an agreement for perpetual lease which was confirmed
under the registered lease deed executed on December 11/12,
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 22 of 30
1957. He alleged that he constructed a small structure in 1955
and thereafter, having taken due permission, constructed a
pucca building. He denied that the said land came in his
possession in 1958 as alleged in the plaint. He stated that he
had been in possession adverse to the plaintiff-the first
respondent since November 28, 1954 for more than 30 years
prior to the filing of the suit on November 25, 1985. It is
further averred that his predecessor-in-title being in possession
of the said land for innumerable years prior to 1954 in their
own right as Inamdar, he is entitled to tack on their possession
to perfect his title by adverse possession.
The first respondent-plaintiff, perhaps with a view to
foreclose the plea of adverse possession, stated in the plaint
itself that the possession of the appellant-defendant could not
amount to adverse possession for many reasons; the appellant
raised the building with the permission of the court while
O.S.No.13 of 1958 filed by Rasheed Shahpurji Chenoy was
pending before the Additional Chief Judge, City Civil Court,
Hyderabad, after giving an undertaking and in view of the
undertaking his possession partakes the character of permissive
possession; he paid Siwaijama and applied for occupancy
certificate. The first respondent had instituted eviction
proceeding by issuing notice against the defendant under
Section 6 of the Land Encroachment Act.
To appreciate the plea of the first respondent that the
appellant’s possession of the land in dispute has the character of
permissive possession so he cannot acquire title by adverse
possession, it will be appropriate to refer to the averments in the
plaint to understand their true import, which are as follows :
"The suit lands in the beginning were open and
vacant tank bed lands and the defendant raised the
building "Jala Drushyam" with the permission of
the Court while O.S.No.13 of 1958 was pending
before the Court of the Additional Chief Judge,
City Civil Court, Hyderabad, and the undertaking
of the defendant given in the shape of a bond,
while seeking permission to construct the said
building, was to the effect that he would not claim
any compensation from the plaintiff for the
building raised on the suit-lands in case the same
are ultimately declared and held to be the
Government lands............The possession of the
defendant in view of his undertaking in the above
suit partakes the character of permissive
possession and in that view of the matter also the
defendant cannot claim adverse possession against
the plaintiff. (emphasis supplied)"
In the concise statement filed along with the application dated
March 22, 1992 before the Special Court the first respondent
stated :
"Pending O.S.No.13 of 1958 the respondent herein
(the appellant) constructed a building Jala
Drushyam. After the dismissal of the suit. The
Government of A.P. initiated eviction proceedings.
The possession of the respondent (the appellant) in
view of his undertaking given in the Trial Court
amounts to permissive possession."
From the above averments, it is evident that permission was
granted by the court to the appellant to construct the building
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 23 of 30
’Jala Drushyam’. Therefore, the said building could be said to
be a construction with permission of the Court and not
unauthorised. But certainly the appellant’s possession of the
land in dispute, if otherwise adverse to the title of the first
respondent, does not acquire the character of permissive
possession on the ground the appellant sought permission of the
Court to erect a building thereon. We are, therefore, of the
view that the said averments cannot come in the way of the
appellant in acquiring title by adverse possession if other
requirements of adverse possession are satisfied.
As to the period of the appellant’s possession,
Mr.Parasaran contended, that though Ex.B-40 perpetual lease
agreement was registered on December 12, 1957 yet it would
relate back to the date of Ex.B-39 (28.11.1954) which would be
the date of commencement of possession. He sought to derive
support from Thakur Kishan Singh (Dead) vs. Arvind Kumar
[1994 (6) SCC 591]. We cannot accept the submission as a
correct proposition of law. In that case the lease deed was
executed on 5.12.1949 but it was registered on 30.3.1950. On
that factual background this Court held :
"Section 47 of the Registration Act provides that a
registered document shall operate from the time it
would have commenced to operate if no
registration thereof had been required or made and
not from the time of its registration. It is well
established that a document so long it is not
registered is not valid yet once it is registered it
takes effect from the date of its execution. (See :
Ram Saran Lall vs. Mst.Domini Kuer [1962 (2)
SCR 474 and Nanda Ballabh Gururani vs.
Smt.Maqbol Begum [1980 (3) SCC 346]. Since,
admittedly, the lease deed was executed on
5.12.1949, the plaintiff after registration of it on
3.4.1950 became owner by operation of law on the
date when the deed was executed."
In the instant case Ex.B-39 (unregistered perpetual lease
agreement dated November 28, 1954) was not registered
subsequently. Ex.B-40 the perpetual lease deed dated
11.12.1957 is a different document which was registered on
12.12.1957. Therefore, Ex.B-40 would relate back to the date
of its execution i.e. 11.12.1957 on its subsequent registration on
12.12.1957 but not on the date of execution of Ex.B-39 i.e.
28.11.1954. The Principle laid down in the above case is,
therefore, of no benefit to the appellant.
The Special Court found that the appellant’s possession
could not be ascribed to the date of the agreement for lease deed
dated 28.11.1954 (Ex.B-39) or registered lease deed dated
11.12.1957 (Ex.B-40) which were excluded from consideration.
In regard to Ex.B-39 the Special Court held that it was a
tampered document; the survey numbers of the land leased
were given in it as Survey Nos.9/15 and 9/17 which were
altered to appear as Survey Nos.9/15 to 9/18 and the extent of
the land was not mentioned therein. The Special Court noted
that in the absence of original of Ext.B-40, it was not possible
to say whether Ex.B-40 also suffered from the same vice of
subsequent alteration in the survey numbers, therefore, it
declined to rely on Ex.B-40 also. In view of the criticism of the
Special Court we perused the Urdu documents Ex.B-39 and
Ex.B-40. Survey Nos."9/15 and 9/17" (Ex.B-39) were altered
to appear as "9/15 to 9/18". This is visible to the naked eye.
The alteration was not authenticated so the criticism of the
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 30
Special Court is well-founded. It is also noticed that the
original of Ex.B-40 was not filed in the court and no case is
made out to lead secondary evidence. Further in Exs.B-13 and
B-14 (which are discussed above) it is specifically mentioned
that S.Nos.9/17 and 9/18 which were selected for the offices of
the Secretariat were retained with the Government. If that be
so, it remained unexplained as to how the appellant obtained the
said S.Nos. on lease from the said Nooruddin. This clearly
shows the contradiction in the claim of the appellant which
makes it unacceptable. After excluding the said documents
from consideration the Special Court held that the solitary
statement of the appellant that his adverse possession
commenced from November 28, 1954, could not be accepted to
hold that he has been in continuous possession for a period of
30 years as no receipt of payment of rent (nuzul) under the
perpetual lease agreement Ex.B-39 was filed to prove that the
appellant has been in possession of the said land from
November 28, 1954. The Special Court counted the period of
possession of the land in dispute from the date the appellant
obtained permission for construction of the house under Ex.B-
42 dated 09.08.1958 and the preceding correspondence under
Exs.B-60 to B-62 between March, 1958 and August, 1958.
Pointing out that the suit was filed on November 25, 1985, so
the period of 30 years was not completed from 1958, it rejected
the plea of adverse possession.
In regard to the animus of the appellant to possess the
land in dispute adverse to the interest of the first respondent, the
Special Court pointed out that the appellant applied for
occupancy certificate to the concerned authority under the
Inams Abolition Act which nullified the animus of adverse
possession. The Special Court also relied on Ex.A-42 (Ex.B-
43) issued by the State demanding siwai jamabandi on May 14,
1960 and payment of the same under Exs.A-44 and A-45 dated
June 30, 1960 to show that the requisite animus was lacking.
These documents were put to the appellant when he was in the
witness box and he admitted the same. On the basis of the
above evidence the Special Court came to the conclusion that
the appellant failed to prove adverse possession. In the said
writ petition the High Court did not find any illegality in the
approach or decision of the Special Court and declined to
interfere with the said finding.
We have already noted above the requirements of
adverse possession.
In Balkrishan Vs. Satyaprakash & Ors. (J.T. 2001 (2)
SC 357), this Court held :
"The law with regard to perfecting title by
adverse possession is well settled. A person
claiming title by adverse possession has to prove
three "nec" - nec vi, nec clam and nec precario.
In other words, he must show that his possession is
adequate in continuity in publicity and in extent.
In S.M. Karim v. Mst. Bibi Sakina (AIR 1964 SC
1254) speaking for this Court, Hidayatullah, J. (as
he then was) observed thus :
"Adverse possession must be adequate
in continuity, in publicity and extent and a plea
is required at the least to show when
possession becomes adverse so that the starting
point of limitation against the party affected
can be found."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 25 of 30
In that case the requirement of animus possidendi was not
adverted to as on facts it was shown to be present; the
controversy, however, was about the other ingredient of adverse
possession. It is clear that it must be shown by the person
claiming title by prescription that he has been in possession of
the land for the statutory period which is adequate in continuity
in publicity and in extent with the animus of holding the land
adverse to the true owner.
Mr.Parasaran, however, contended and reiterated in his
written submissions that possession in assertion of one’s own
title was animus of adverse possession and that passing an
adverse order against the appellant or the appellant himself
filing an application to any statutory authorities for occupancy
certificate would not interrupt his adverse possession of the
land in dispute. It was also contended that as a derivative title
holder he was entitled to tack his possession to that of his
predecessor-in-interest and that in any event the presumption of
the continuity of state of things backwards could also be drawn
as the appellant’s possession from 1958 was accepted and the
possession earlier to 1958 should also be presumed.
Regarding the animus of the appellant, admittedly he
claimed as a lessee under the Inamdar. Indeed in his written
statement filed in Rasheed Shahpurji Chenoy’suit (O.S.No.13
of 1958 on the file of Additional Chief Judge, City Civil Court,
Hyderabad) he claimed to be a lessee under the Inamdar. He,
however, did not assert title to the land in dispute in himself nor
did he lay any claim on the ground of adverse possession. Even
otherwise there is no material to show that between November
28, 1954 (unregistered perpetual lease agreement, assuming it
to be free from interpolation and admissible as agreement for
lease and (Ex.B-40) registered lease deed dated December 11,
1957 (assuming that the secondary evidence is admissible) and
the date of filing of the written statement on January 28, 1987
the appellant claimed title to the land in dispute otherwise than
under Ex.B-40 much less by way of asserting adverse title. It is
only in the written statement filed in the present suit that he
pleaded adverse possession for the first time. The possession of
the said land from the date of Ex.B-39, 1954, till the date of the
filing of the written statement in 1987 cannot, therefore, be
treated as adverse because there was no animus possidendi
during the said period. Before the date of filing the written
statement he never claimed title to the land in dispute adverse to
the State. On the other hand, he paid siwai jamabandi and
applied for occupation of rights. Indeed in his deposition as
R.W.1 in chief examination before the Special Court he stated,
"on being satisfied about the nature of the Inam, I
entered into an agreement of perpetual lease on
28.11.1954 with Inamdar as per Ex.B-39...............I
have taken possession from the Maqtedar under
Ex.B-39 on 28-11-1954. Since then I am in
occupation uninterruptedly and enjoying the
same."
We found no assertion of title by adverse possession in his
deposition. Further there is nothing on record to show that his
lessor, Mohd. Nooruddin Asrari, ever claimed the land in
dispute adverse to the State. On these facts there is no scope to
invoke the principle of tacking the possession of the Inamdar or
presumption of continuity of possession backward.
There can be no doubt that passing of adverse order
against the appellant would not cause any interruption in his
possession [See : Balkrishan vs. Satyaprakash (supra)]. So also
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 26 of 30
filing of application before statutory authority under Inams
Abolition Act for occupancy rights, in our view, causes no
interruption in the continuity of possession of the appellant but
it does abrogate his animus to hold the land in derogation of the
title of the state and breaks the chain of continuity of the
animus.
In the light of the above discussion we hold that the
appellant neither proved factum of possession of the land in
dispute for period of 30 years nor succeeded in showing that he
had animus possidendi for the whole statutory period.
Therefore, we cannot but maintain the confirming view of the
High Court that the appellant failed to acquire title to the land
in dispute by adverse possession. We may also add that the
lessee of a Maqtedar (the Inamdar) cannot acquire title to the
demised land by adverse possession either as against the State
or the Maqtedar (Inamdar) so long as his possession under the
lease continues.
Mr.Parasaran has contended that should the point of
adverse possession be found against the appellant, the principle
of lost grant would apply as the appellant has been in
possession of the land in dispute for a considerable length of
time under an assertion of title. In support of his contention he
placed reliance on Monohar Das Mohanta Vs. Charu Chandra
Pal and Ors. (A.I.R. 1955 S.C. 228).
The principle of lost grant is a presumption which arises
in cases of immemorial user. It has its origin from the long
possession and exercise of right by user of an easement with the
acquiescence of the owner that there must have been originally
a grant to the claimant which had been lost. The presumption
of lost grant was extended in favour of possessor of land for a
considerably long period when such user is found to be in open
assertion of title, exclusive and uninterrupted. However, when
the use is explainable, the presumption cannot be called in aid.
A constitution Bench of this Court explained the principle in
Monohar Das Mohanta (supra) thus,
"The circumstances and conditions under which a
presumption of lost grant could be made are well
settled. When a person was found in possession
and enjoyment of land for a considerable period of
time under an assertion of title without challenge,
Courts in England were inclined to ascribe a legal
origin to such possession, and when on the facts a
title by prescription could not be sustained, it was
held that a presumption could be made that the
possession was referable to a grant by the owner
entitled to the land, but that such grant had been
lost. It was a presumption made for securing
ancient and continued possession, which could not
otherwise be reasonably accounted for. But it was
not a ’presumptio juris et de jure’. A presumptio
juris et de jure, means an irrebuttable presumption,
is one which the law will not suffer to be rebutted
by any counter-evidence, but establishes as
conclusive; whereas a presumption juris tantum is
one which holds good in the absence of evidence
to the contrary, but may be rebutted. [Juris et de
jure - Of law and of right] and the Courts were
not found to raise it, if the facts in evidence went
against it.
"It cannot be the duty of a judge to presume
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 27 of 30
a grant of the non-existence of which he is
convinced" observed Farwell, J. in - ’Attorney-
General Vs. Simpson’, 1901-2 Ch.671 at p.698
(A)."
[para 7 page 230]
In that case the possession of the defendant was claimed to be
for over 200 years but there was no finding on the length of
possession. On the ground, inter alia, that the land was part of
Mal lands (assessed land) within the zamindari, it was held that
there was no scope for applying presumption of lost grant. In
the case on hand the appellant traces his possession from 1954
under an unregistered perpetual lease from the erstwhile
Inamdar (Maqtedar). Therefore, the presumption of lost grant
will not be available to the appellant.
Thus, it follows that the appellant has unauthorisedly
come into possession of the land in dispute of the first
respondent without lawful entitlement.
Now reverting to the other ingredient of the definition of
the expression ’land grabbing’ -- intention of the appellant -
embodied in the phrase "with a view to" illegally taking
possession of the land in dispute or entering into the land for
any of the purposes mentioned in clause (e) of Section 2, the
Special Court discussed exhaustively both the documentary
evidence on record and the oral evidence of the appellant under
the caption - design of the first appellant in obtaining the
documents of title and resisting possession -- and concluded
that he was fully aware of the infirmity of the title of his
vendor for want of confirmation of the grant by the civil
administrator and subsequent mutation proceedings, willingly
suffered siwai jama assessment, paid the same and raised
structures when a suit was pending and therefore he was a land
grabber. The High Court having noted the discussion of the
Special Court on the said issue and having adverted to the
evidence, declined to interfere with that finding in the writ
petition.
The requisite intention which is an important ingredient
of the land grabber, though not stated specifically, can be
inferred by necessary implication from the averments in the
petition and the plaint and the deposition of witness like any
other fact. If a person comes into occupation of any
Government land under the guise of a perpetual lease executed
by an unauthorised person having no title to or interest in the
land it cannot but be with a view to illegally taking possession
of such land. We make it clear that we are expressing no
opinion on the point whether those averments would constitute
’mensrea’ for purposes of offence under the Act.
We have carefully gone through the concise statement
accompanying the application filed by the first respondent
before the Special Court on March 20, 1992 and the plaint in
O.S.No.1497 of 1985 filed by the first respondent in the Court
of the IV Additional Judge, City Civil Court, Hyderabad. It is
also averred that the appellant occupied the land in dispute in
the year 1958 and raised building "Jala Drushyam" and on
coming to know of it the first respondent took action for his
eviction under Section 6 of the Land Encroachment Act. It is
also stated that the claim of the appellant to the land in dispute
is not proper, valid or legal as it never belonged to Naimatullah
Shah Maqta and even otherwise the land ceased to be Inam land
from July 20, 1955 and had vested in the first respondent and
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 28 of 30
none of the heirs of Naimatullah Shah had come forward to be
declared as occupant under the Inam Abolition Act. The land in
dispute is described by the first respondent as land grabbed and
a declaration is sought from the Special Court that the appellant
is a land grabber.
It may be observed here that though it may be apt yet it is
not necessary for any petitioner who invokes the jurisdiction of
the Special Court/Special Tribunal to use in his petition under
Sections 7(1) and 8(1) of the Act, the actual words employed in
the relevant provisions of the Act, namely, grabbing of the land
without any lawful entitlement and with a view to or with the
intention of (a) illegally taking possession of such lands or (b)
enter into or create illegal tenancies, leases or licences
agreements or any other illegal agreements in respect of such
lands; or (c) to construct unauthorised structures thereon for
sale or hire; or (d) to give such lands to any person on (i) rental
or (ii) lease and licence basis for construction, or (iii) use and
occupation of unauthorised structures, as the case may be.
Prima facie it will satisfy the requirements of the Act if the
petitioner alleges that the respondent is a land grabber or that he
has grabbed the land. What is pertinent is that the allegations in
the petition/plaint, in whatever language made, should make out
the ingredients of land grabbing against such a person or his
being a land grabber within the meaning of those expressions
under the Act, as explained above. It is only when the
allegations made in the petition/plaint are proved the activity of
taking possession of the land will fall within the meaning of
land grabbing that such a possessor can be termed as a "land
grabber" within the meaning of that expression under the Act.
It is generally true that in the absence of necessary
pleadings in regard to the ingredients of the definition of "land
grabbing" no finding can validly be recorded on the basis of the
evidence even if such evidence is brought on record. Mr.
Parasaran cited the judgment of this Court in Sri
Venkataramana Devaru & Ors. vs. The State of Mysore &
Ors. (1958 SCR 895 at 906) to support his submission that
without necessary pleading, the evidence on record cannot be
looked into. However, it is a settled position that if the parties
have understood the pleadings of each other correctly, an issue
was also framed by the Court, the parties led evidence in
support of their respective cases, then the absence of a specific
plea would make no difference. In Nedunuri Kameswaramma
vs. Sampati Subba Rao [1963 (2) SCR 208], Hidayatullah,J. (as
he then was) speaking for a three-Judge Bench of this Court
observed at page No.214 thus :
"Though the appellant had not mentioned a
Karnikam service inam, parties well understood
that the two cases opposed to each other were of
Dharmila Sarvadumbala inam as against a
Karnikam service inam. The evidence which has
been led in the case clearly showed that the
respondent attempted to prove that this was a
Dharmila inam and to refute that this was a
Karnikam service inam. No doubt, no issue was
framed, and the one, which was framed, could
have been more elaborate; but since the parties
went to trial fully knowing the rival case and led
all the evidence not only in support of their
contentions but in refutation of those of the other
side, it cannot be said that the absence of an issue
was fatal to the case, or that there was that mis-
trial which vitiates proceedings."
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 29 of 30
The same view is expressed by this Court in the following two
cases : Kali Prasad (Dead) by Lrs. & Ors. vs. M/s.Bharat
Coking Coal Ltd. & Ors. [1989 Supl. (1) SCC 628] and Sardul
Singh vs. Pritam Singh & Ors. [1999 (3) SCC 522].
Now, in the instant case the appellant has never pleaded
before the Special Court that necessary pleading in regard to the
requirements of land grabbing is lacking in the case. On the
other hand, he understood the averments in the petition read
with the plaint correctly as allegations of land grabbing as can
be seen from the affidavit containing objections to the Gazette
Notification dated April 1, 1992, referred to above, filed on
April 16, 1992 (affidavit was attested on April 10, 1992). He
stated "I deny the petitioner’s allegation of land grabbing
whatsoever, made in its petition dated 20.3.1992". He further
stated that the documents filed by him and the first respondent
"nullify the petitioners allegation of land grabbing, claim of
title over the land and claim of right to get the possession of the
land and the building.....". On this pleading the Special Court
framed issue No.6 aforementioned. The parties adduced
evidence, oral and documentary, on that issue. We have
already discussed documentary evidence above. PW 1 in his
statement categorically stated that the appellant was a land
grabber. What is surprising to note is that there was no cross-
examination on that aspect. What is more surprising is that in
his deposition he did not even state that he was not a land
grabber and the land in dispute was not a grabbed land. We
have not taken this as his admission but only an aspect in
appreciation of oral evidence.
The Special Court is, therefore, correct in discussing the
evidence on record under the caption ’design’ in view of the
pleading on that aspect, adverted to above and the High Court
rightly upheld the same. We have already pointed out that the
activity of grabbing of any land should not only be without any
lawful entitlement but should also be, inter alia, with a view to
illegally taking possession of such lands. These two ingredients
are found against the appellant.
It is nonetheless submitted by Mr.Parasaran that the
plaint mentions that the possession of the appellant partakes the
character of permissive possession and this averment negates
the very concept of land grabbing. It is no doubt true that if the
possession is permissive then it cannot be treated as illegal for
purposes of clauses (d) and (e) of sub-section (2) of the Act.
We have already discussed above with regard to the alleged
plea of permissive possession and held that those averments in
the plaint would not constitute plea of ’permissive possession’.
In the light of the above discussion, we have no option
but to sustain the view of the High Court in approving the
finding of the Special Court on Issue No.6, that the appellant
falls within the mischief of the definition of the expression
"land grabber" under the Act.
In the result, we uphold the judgment and order of the
High Court under challenge declining to interfere with the
judgment and decree of the Special Court. The appeal is
dismissed; the parties shall bear their own costs.
.................................................J.
[Syed Shah Mohammed Quadri]
.................................................J.
[S.N.Phukan]
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 30 of 30
January 29, 2002.