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  4. 2024/
  5. May

Sri Nitai Shil and Anr vs. the State of Tripura and Ors

Decided on 31 May 2024• Citation: RSA/21/2023• High Court of Tripura
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                                          Page 1 of 12                              
                                 HIGH  COURT   OF TRIPURA                           
                                         AGARTALA                                   
                                      RSA. 21  of 2023                              
                  1. Sri Nitai Shil,                                                
                     56 years                                                       
                  2. Sri. Gouranga Shil,                                            
                     54 years                                                       
                     both are sons of Lt. Nibaran Shil,                             
                     resident of Sankar Palli, near MI Office,                      
                     Amarpur Town, P.S. Birganj,                                    
                     District-Gomati.                                               
                                                       Plaintiff appellant(s)       
                                                 ..…….                              
                                             Vs.                                    
                   1.The State of Tripura,                                          
                     represented by the DM & Collector,                             
                     Gomati District, Udaipur.                                      
                   2.The Sub-Divisional Magistrate,                                 
                     Amarpur, Gomati District.                                      
                   3.The Tehsilder,                                                 
                     Birganj, Tehsil-Kachari,                                       
                     Amarpur, P.O & P.S. Birganj,                                   
                     Gomati District.                                               
                                                   Defendant  Respondent(s)         
                                               ….                                   
                For Appellant(s)             :    Mr. DR Choudhury, Sr. Adv.        
                                                  Mr. S Sarkar, Adv.                
                For Respondent(s)            :    Mr. K De, Addl. GA.               
                Date of hearing              :    12.03.2024                        
                Date of delivery of judgment :    31.05.2024                        
                Fit for reporting            :    NO                                
                                MR. JUSTICE  S. DATTA  PURKAYASTHA                  
                      HON’BLE                                                       
                                    JUDGMENT   & ORDER                              
                          This appeal arises out of a judgment dated 26.04.2023     
                passed by learned Additional District Judge, Gomati, Udaipur in     

                                          Page 2 of 12                              
                Title Appeal No.04/2019  whereby   the appeal  was  dismissed       
                affirming the judgment and decree passed by learned Civil Judge,    
                Senior Division in Title Suit No.02/2016 by which learned Trial     
                court dismissed the suit of the plaintiff appellants for declaring  
                their right, title and interest over the suit land by way of adverse
                possession.                                                         
                [2]       The suit land comprises 0.507 acre of CS Plot No.1151,    
                corresponding to RS Plot No.2332 of class Tilla as reflected in RS  
                                                       ‘   ’                        
                Khatian of Mouja Amarpur. During first settlement operation, the    
                classification of land was shown as Bastu .                         
                                                ‘    ’                              
                [3]       The claim of the appellants was that their father Lt.     
                Nibaran Shil came in the locality of that area in the year 1950 from
                East Pakistan and started residing in contiguous CS Plot Nos.       
                1151/1180  and 1401/1881  by  constructing homestead dwelling       
                and subsequently, got allotment of said land in the year 1964.      
                [4]       While residing in those plots said Nibaran Shil also      
                started possessing the suit land by constructing huts therein and   
                by planting vegetables and other seasonal crops. However, from      
                01.01.1965 said Nibaran Shil, started forcefully possessing the suit
                land openly in public and adversely claiming his right, title and   
                interest therein. The suit land as was during the first survey and  
                settlement operation was recorded in the name of the government     
                in the Khas Khatian, showing him as an illegal possessor in the     
                relevant column of the related Khatian.                             

                                          Page 3 of 12                              
                [5]       Accor ding to the appellants, said adverse possession     
                became  perfected after a lapse of 30 years i.e. on 31.12.1994,     
                since when their predecessor became the owner thereof. The said     
                Nibaran Shil died in 2004 and his wife also expired in 2011 and     
                thereafter, the appellants became absolute owners in possession     
                of the suit land. But during Revisional survey and in settlement    
                operation, the name of predecessor of the appellants was deleted    
                from the relevant column of the Khatian. It was also stated by      
                appellants that in the year 2015 the defendants  sanctioned a       
                minimum  of Rs.25,000/- in the name  of the appellant No.1 for      
                construction of his house in the suit land.                         
                [6]       It was also additionally stated that in the year 2012,    
                the appellants filed Title Suit No.23/2012 for declaration of their 
                right, title and interest with further prayer for an injunction against
                some  of the present respondents in the court of learned Civil      
                Judge, Senior  Division, Gomati, of  the then  South  Tripura       
                District, in respect of their allotted land which was also decreed on
                22.05.2013. But suddenly, on 23.12.2015, the respondent No.3        
                with his staff came to the suit land and cautioned the appellants to
                vacate the suit land within seven days followed by serving a notice 
                dated 26.12.2015, asking the appellants to appear before him with   
                relevant papers in support of his occupation of the suit land. Again,
                a similar second  notice was  served on  02.01.2016  and  the       
                appellants submitted all necessary documents to respondent No.2     
                but despite the same, on 14.01.2016, the respondent No.3 with       

                                          Page 4 of 12                              
                his men  tried to dispossess the appellants from the suit land      
                illegally and, therefore, the present suit was filed.               
                [7]       According  to  the   respondents,  considering  the       
                possession of the father of the appellants, 0.451 acre of land was  
                allotted to them from CS Plot No.1151  but his name  was  not       
                deleted from the Khatian. However, the same was later on deleted    
                during Revisional survey and settlement operation.                  
                [8]       According to them, the father of the appellants never     
                possessed the present suit land. They further stated that from the  
                said allotted 0.451 acre of land the allottees sold out 0.30 acre of
                land to some other persons and now started claiming the suit land   
                as of their own.                                                    
                [9]       During trial from the  side of the  appellants, four      
                witnesses were examined and some  documents  were also proved       
                into record. Out of said four witnesses, PW-4, Narayan Chandra      
                Tripura was the Assistant Survey Officer of the office of Director of
                Land Records  & Settlement, Govt. of Tripura. Affidavit of one      
                witness from  the  side of  respondents  was  submitted,  but       
                ultimately, the said witness did  not appear  to  face cross-       
                examination and evidence of respondent side was closed.             
                [10]      The appeal was admitted  on the following substantial     
                questions of law:-                                                  
                         i.   Whether  the plaintiff-appellants have been able to   
                              prove their adverse possession to the state?          

                                          Page 5 of 12                              
                         ii.  Whether  the findings of both the courts below are    
                              perverse in respect of possession of the suit land    
                              by the plaintiff-appellants?                          
                [11]           Learned Sr. counsel, Mr. DR Choudhury  for the       
                appellants, argued that from 01.01.1965 the appellants or their     
                predecessors have been possessing the suit land adversely and       
                despite notices issued by the respondents, the appellants could not 
                be evicted from the suit land and they have their uninterrupted     
                hostile possession over the suit land with the  knowledge  of       
                everyone.                                                           
                [12]      Learned Sr. counsel gave emphasis to the fact that the    
                government  itself, through the publication of Khatian of first     
                survey and settlement operation, admitted that the predecessor of   
                the appellants was in forceful possession of the suit land but      
                learned trial court as well as learned first appellate court missed to
                consider that aspect.                                               
                [13]      According to  learned  Sr. counsel,  the appellants       
                successfully proved their adverse possession in the  suit but       
                learned trial court as well as learned first appellate court mis-   
                appreciated the evidences  led by  the plaintiffs leading to a      
                perverse decision.                                                  
                [14]      Learned Sr. counsel also relied on a decision of the      
                                         in  Eureka   Builders  &   Ors.  vs.       
                Hon‟ble Supreme   Court                                             
                Gulabchand  reported in (2018)  8 SCC  67. In that case, while      
                considering the materials available in the rec                      
                                                         ord, Hon‟ble Supreme       
                Court held that the plaintiff was in lawful possession of the suit  

                                          Page 6 of 12                              
                land since 1942/1943 and the original holders of the land were      
                aware of such ownership rights of the predecessors of the plaintiffs
                and such  aforesaid undisputed facts confirmed the possessory       
                right, title and interest of the plaintiff on the suit land against 
                everyone, including the original holders, by operation of law.      
                [15]      Learned Sr. counsel also made reference to a decision     
                of this court in case of Ratna Chakraborty & Ors. Vs Pranab         
                Kanti Basu & Ors. reported in (2015) 1 TLR 96 wherein at para       
                23, this court observed that Section 27 of the Limitation Act       
                provides that if within a period prescribed by the law of limitation
                any person fails to institute suit for recovery of possession of any
                property, his right to such property shall be extinguished and such 
                possession, known as adverse possession, is not a mere fact, it     
                creates a definite right in favour of the squatter on extinguishment
                of right of true owner.                                             
                [16]      Learned Sr. counsel, Mr. Choudhury, further relied on     
                another decision of this court rendered in Hiranbala Deb & Ors.     
                vs. The State  of Tripura & Ors.  (2015)  1 TLR  104 wherein        
                basing on the factual narrations of the parties the court observed  
                that as the plaintiff had proved that since 15.05.1963 they had     
                animus possidendi, open and uninterrupted, and as on the day of     
                possession by respondent No.2 of that case in exercise of powers    
                under Section 16 of Land Acquisition Act, the title by prescription 
                in favour of the plaintiffs had existed. It was also observed that  
                there is  a  distinction between       forcible occup               
                                                 „the                ier‟ and       
                                      and  the nature of possession had to be       
                „unauthorized occupier‟                                             

                                          Page 7 of 12                              
                gathered and  identified from the evidence led by the  person       
                claiming such title on the basis of animus possidendi.              
                [17]      Another reference, as made by the learned Sr. counsel     
                Mr. Choudhury, is one decision of this court in case of Chinu Das   
                & Ors. vs. Nimai Debdas    (2020)  1 TLR 534.  In that case, it     
                was held at  para 17 that a  plaintiff can well maintain a suit     
                claiming title by virtue of adverse possession under Article 65 of  
                the Limitation Act and that apart, the plaintiff can also further seek
                relief of permanent injunction.                                     
                [18]      Learned Addl. GA, Mr. K De referred to para 7 of the      
                judgment  of  learned trial court and   submitted that  mere        
                possession over a property for a long period of time does not grant 
                the right of adverse possession on its own in absence of animus     
                possidendi. According to learned Addl. GA, the court is required to 
                act with more cautiousness when  plea of adverse possession is      
                raised in respect of a government land.                             
                [19]      According to Mr. De, learned Addl. GA in the instant      
                case, the appellants relied on a comment made in the Khatian of     
                first survey and settlement operation reflecting the name of their  
                predecessor as an illegal occupier, which was omitted during the    
                revisional survey and settlement operation and against the said     
                order of settlement authority, the appellants did not make any      
                challenge in the  appropriate forum  and therefore, they  are       
                estopped from raising any challenge regarding entries of Khatian    

                                          Page 8 of 12                              
                prepared during revisional survey and settlement operation in       
                respect of the suit land.                                           
                [20]      Finally,                                                  
                                 learned counsel relied on a decision of Hon‟ble    
                Supreme  Court in Government  of Kerala and  Anr. vs. Joseph        
                and  Ors.  (Civil Appeal  No.   3142  of  2010)   decided on        
                09.08.2023 wherein it was observed that when a claim is raised by   
                any private party of adverse possession in relation to a land       
                belonging to the government, the court is required to consider this 
                question more seriously. Reference of anoth                         
                                                         er decision of Hon‟ble     
                Supreme  Court  in State of  Rajasthan  Vs.  Harphool   Sing,       
                (2000)  5 SCC  652 was  also made in said decision. In the said     
                case of Harphool  Singh  (supra) it was observed by the Apex        
                Court that so far the question of perfection of title by adverse    
                possession and that too in respect of public property is concerned, 
                the question  requires to be  considered more   seriously and       
                effectively for the reason that it ultimately involves destruction of
                right/title of the state to immovable property and confirming upon  
                a third party encroacher where he had none.                         
                [21]      On considering the rival contentions of the parties and   
                on perusing the materials available on record, it is found that     
                during the first survey and settlement operation, Khatian No.1 was  
                opened in respect of disputed CS Plot No.1151 comprising an area    
                of 0.507 acre standing in the name of government of Tripura and     
                in said Khatian, the name of predecessor of the appellants was      
                mentioned in column No.23  as an illegal possessor in respect of    
                said plot.                                                          

                                          Page 9 of 12                              
                [22]      During revisional survey and settlement operation, said   
                comment  was deleted from the Khatian but the area of said plot     
                was maintained to be 0.507 acre and one RS plot corresponding to    
                said CS plot was  created in respect of said area viz. RS plot      
                No.2332.  Simultaneously, during first survey and  settlement       
                operation, an area of total 0.451 acre of land was allotted in the  
                name of predecessor of the appellants wherein one CS plot bearing   
                No. 1151/1880 of area 0.170 acre was endorsed  in the name of       
                predecessor of appellant.                                           
                [23]      The  contention of  the appellants that since their       
                predecessor they were possessing the suit land adversely and as     
                such, said comment was  inserted in the said Khatian No.1, does     
                not find much support from the said old Khatian inasmuch as mere    
                insertion of                           in the comment column        
                           a comment  “illegal possessor”                           
                itself does not constitute adverse possession, unless all the       
                ingredients of adverse possession are distinctly proved by the      
                persons seeking such relief based on adverse possession.            
                [24]           It is also  a  fact that when   the  name   of       
                predecessor of the appellants was not maintained in the Khatian     
                prepared during revisional survey and settlement operation, they    
                or their predecessor did not challenge the same before any higher   
                revenue authority.                                                  
                [25]      At the instance of the appellants themselves, one officer 
                from settlement department namely, Sri Narayan Chandra Tripura,     
                was summoned   to appear as witness on behalf of the appellants     

                                         Page 10 of 12                              
                and in his evidence, he stated that generally a person who is found 
                in possession of the property during field inquiry, Khatian is      
                created in his name until and unless any objection is received and  
                found proper in this respect.                                       
                [26]      He also stated that as per their revenue records there    
                was nothing that any person had raised any objection when the       
                name  of predecessor of the  appellant was not  reflected with      
                reference to RS Plot No.2332  and generally, Khatian is finally     
                published after the completion of all the stages of preparation of  
                such ROR.                                                           
                [27]      He also stated that in their relevant register there was  
                no mention  on  which date  said predecessor of the appellant       
                occupied CS Plot No.1151. Finally, one suggestion was given from    
                the side of the appellants to him that intentionally, the name of   
                their predecessor was deleted  from the  Khatian of revisional      
                survey and settlement operation to provide the land to the PWD.     
                The said witness did not support the case of the appellants but the 
                appellants did not declare the said witness hostile.                
                [28]      As per the claim of the appellants, their father, after   
                coming from East Pakistan, started occupying the suit land and its  
                contiguous plots and those contiguous plots were allotted to him.   
                But the suit land was not allotted to him by the government and in  
                spite of repeated inquiries to the appropriate authorities, their   
                father could not know the reasons for not allowing the suit land to 
                him, in his name. The appellant No.2 stated the aforesaid facts in  

                                         Page 11 of 12                              
                his evidence and stated further that thereafter, getting the reason 
                for not allotting said suit land to him, his father, from 01.01.1965
                started possessing the suit land forcibly and illegally, to the     
                knowledge of everyone  in the locality. From such evidence, it      
                appears that since his migration to India from the then  East       
                Pakistan, the father of the appellants started occupying the suit   
                land and  at that time,  as per  the claim  of the appellants       
                themselves, he did not start possessing the suit land adversely and 
                there is also no explanation from the side the appellants as to how 
                suddenly his possession became adverse from 01.01.1965.             
                [29]      Mere possession, whether lawful or illegal, how so long   
                ever be, does not automatically constitute adverse possession,      
                unless it is proved satisfactorily that from a certain period it    
                became  hostile to the real owner  and  such  possession was        
                continuous and open.                                                
                [30]      In the case in hand for the reasons discussed above, it   
                appears that learned trial court as well as learned first appellate 
                court committed  no  error in negating the  claim of  adverse       
                possession of the appellants. The substantial questions of law      
                formulated in the appeal are answered accordingly.                  
                [31]      As a result, it is held that the appeal is devoid of merit
                and accordingly, the same is dismissed with costs in favour of the  
                respondents.                                                        

                                         Page 12 of 12                              
                          The  registry is directed  to  prepare  the  decree       
                accordingly and to send  down  the LCRs  with a  copy  of the       
                judgment and decree.                                                
                          Interim application, if any, also stands dismissed of.    
                                                                 JUDGE              
                SATABDI     Digitally signed by                                     
                            SATABDI DUTTA                                           
                DUTTA       Date: 2024.06.04 13:13:02                               
                            +05'30'                                                 
                Satabdi