Calcutta High Court (Appellete Side)
Arun Kumar Mondal vs Hagru Gorain & Ors on 5 May, 2026
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IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
APPELLATE SIDE
Present:
The Hon'ble Justice Ananya Bandyopadhyay
SA 193 of 2016
Arun Kumar Mondal
-Vs-
Hagru Gorain & Ors.
For the Petitioner : Mr. Bhaskar Ghosh
Ms. Priyanka Jana
Mr. Bikramjit Mandal
Mr. Parimal Sardar
For the Respondents : Mr. Animesh Mukherjee
Judgment on : 05.05.2026
Ananya Bandyopadhyay, J.:-
1. The plaintiff/appellant seeks a declaration of title and confirmation of
possession over a specific parcel of land, relating to an original joint
ownership held by Durgacharan and Rashbihari. These original co-owners
permanently severed their joint status by executing a registered deed of
partition on October 13, 1931, after which they occupied and enjoyed
their respective shares in complete independence from one another. The
lineage of the property shifted when Rashbihari, by way of a registered
deed of sale bearing No.271 dated January 27, 1959, conveyed the
property described in Schedule-1, along with other adjacent lands, to
Tinkari Chakraborty and his five brothers. While these six brothers were
in active and peaceful possession of the land, the settlement authorities
committed several clerical errors during the Estates Acquisition operation.
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Aggrieved by such erroneous entries in the revenue records, Tinkari
Chakraborty and his brothers instituted a civil suit, registered as Title
Suit No.32 of 1980, against the heirs of Durgacharan Banerjee and other
associated parties. This litigation ultimately concluded in favor of the
brothers, with the court decreeing the title and possession of the
purchased land in their favor.
2. Following this successful legal vindication, Tinkari Chakraborty and other
co-sharers entered into an amicable partition to divide their landed
properties, through which Tinkari was exclusively allotted the specific
land identified as the Schedule-1 property. Holding absolute and
unencumbered title, Tinkari subsequently transferred a portion of this
land, designated as the Schedule-2 property, to the present plaintiff by
executing a registered deed of sale bearing No.2159 on February 23,
1983. Notably, this transaction was executed in the direct presence of
defendant no.1, who acted as a witness to the deed. From the exact date
of this purchase, the plaintiff has maintained exclusive, continuous, and
independent physical possession of the property, entirely unconcerned
with and uninterrupted by any third-party claims.
3. The case further delves into intricate discrepancies within the official land
records to substantiate the identity of the land. The property is
fundamentally identified as C.S. Plot No.2816, a parcel measuring 8.42
acres that is naturally classified as danga land. However, during the
Revisional Settlement operation, this tract was erroneously recorded
under R.S. Plot No.3047 instead of the correct identifier, R.S. Plot
No.3057. The plaintiff points out that while R.S. Plot No.3047 is materially
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a very small area, the larger R.S. Plot No.3057 mistakenly included the
smaller plot number within the Revisional Record of Rights due to a
typographical oversight by the settlement staff. Despite this technical
defect in the R.S. plot numbering, the actual area and physical
boundaries of the land purchased by Tinkari Chakraborty and his
brothers remained accurately defined. Later, during the Land Reforms
operation, the revenue records were partially corrected to seamlessly
reflect the plaintiff's name as the lawful owner, although an error
regarding the natural classification of the land persisted.
4. The peaceable enjoyment of this property was abruptly disrupted on April
14, 2012, when the principal defendants began executing overt acts of
disturbance against the plaintiff's possession. These defendants asserted
a competing right to the land, claiming they had purchased the suit
property from defendant no.6, who is alleged to be the daughter of Tinkari
Chakraborty under the authority of a sale deed dated January 13, 2012.
The plaintiff fiercely rejects this competing claim, branding the 2012 deed
as a fraudulent, collusive and mere paper transaction that carries no legal
validity. The plaintiff argues since Tinkari Chakraborty had already
divested himself of all rights, title, and interest by selling the property to
the plaintiff back in 1983, no subsequent heir, including the alleged
daughter, could possess any residual legal authority to alienate or
transfer the property a second time. The deceptive and invalid 2012
transaction has cast a serious cloud over the plaintiff's legitimate, long-
standing title, the plaintiff has been forced to approach the court for
comprehensive legal redress.
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5. The principal defendants had emphatically challenged the maintainability
of the proceedings contending the action was irretrievably vitiated on
foundational grounds of non-compliance with the mandatory statutory
scheme. It was vehemently urged that the suit suffered from a fatal
infraction of procedural safeguards, specifically the absence of a
mandatory pre-suit notice under Section 80(1) of the Code of Civil
Procedure, thereby rendering the plaint liable to be rejected under the
provisions of Order 7 Rule 11. Furthermore, a substantial defect of parties
had been articulated, highlighting that the plaintiff failed to implead
necessary recorded tenants holding distinct interests in respect of R.S.
Plot No.3057 under the relevant Land Reforms Act, an omission that goes
to the root of the matter.
6. A critical dimension of the dispute pertained to the description of the suit
property, which the defendants assert was fundamentally vague,
unspecific, and legally non est. It had been their specific contention that
the plaintiff allegedly purchased an undemarcated portion of land without
possessing actual knowledge, authority, or physical identity over R.S. Plot
No.3057. In sharp contrast, the defendants trace a legitimate and
unblemished trajectory of title originating from Tinkari Chakraborty, who
held lawful possession over a comprehensive 1.40 acre block spanning
R.S. plot nos.332, 350, and 3057. Upon his demise, the property devolved
upon his daughter, Parul Chakraborty, who by dint of a registered sale
deed with strictly defined boundaries, validly transferred the same to the
answering defendants. Under such circumstances, the plaintiff could not
have acquired any title or right of possession over the land. The
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defendants explicitly impute a motive of willful manipulation, alleging that
the plaintiff, by executing a deed devoid of genuine reference to R.S. Plot
No.3057, engaged in a design to influence settlement employees and
improperly insert his name into the Record of Rights during its
preparation under the West Bengal Land Reforms Act, an action which
cannot be sustained under close judicial scrutiny.
7. Based on the pleadings, the following issues were framed by the Trial
Court:-
i. Is the instant suit maintainable either in its form or with prayers?
ii. Is the instant suit hit by the provisions of the law of limitation or
principles of estoppel, waiver or acquiescence or section 34 of the
Specific Relief Act or mis-joinder or non-joinder of parties?
iii. Has the plaintiff succeeded in bringing in record the cogent
evidence in record to substantiate his claim as regards the
entitlement to the sum described in the schedule or any sum? If
so, to what extent?
iv. Has the C.S plot no.2816 configured during preparation of record
of rights under WBEA Act as plot no. 3047? Or that C.S. Plot No.
3047 has been erroneously recorded instead of 3057?
v. Had Tinkawri Chakraborty any title over R.S. Plot no.3047 or he
had title over the property under R.S. Plot No. 3057?
vi. What property did Tinkari intend to transfer in favour of the
plaintiff?
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vii. After transfer of the property described in the schedule of the deed
no. 2159 dated 23.2.1983, had Tinkari Chakraborty any
subsisting right over the suit plot no. 3047 and 3057?
viii. Had Parul, daughter of Tinkari inherited any interest in either of
the plot?
ix. Has the property described in schedule-2 same identical with the
property described in the schedule of the deed executed by Tinkari
being no. 2159 dated 23.2.1983?
x. Is/are the plaintiff/parties entitled to the reliefs prayed embodied
in the prayer clause?
xi. To what other relief/reliefs, either in law or in equity if any, are
they entitled?
8. In order to prove the case, the plaintiff produced and examined a solitary
witness, namely Arun Kumar Mandal, who deposed before the Court as
PW-1. Conversely, in order to disprove the case and substantiate their
defence, the defendants produced and examined two witnesses on their
behalf, namely Gopal Prasad Kuiry and Md. Kuddus Khan, who were cited
and examined as DW-1 and DW-2 respectively.
9. Having disposed of the issues, the learned trial judge decreed Title Suit
No.76 of 2013 in part on contest with a cost of Rs.2000/- against the
defendants, declaring the plaintiff's right, title, and interest over the suit
properties detailed in Schedule-2, confirming the plaintiff's possession
over the said properties, and permanently restraining the defendants from
disturbing the plaintiff's peaceful possession thereof.
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10. Being aggrieved by and dissatisfied with the judgment dated 26.09.2013
and decree signed on 03.10.2013 passed by the Learned Civil Judge
(Senior Division), Purulia in Title Suit No.76 of 2012, the defendants
preferred the an appeal being Title Appeal No.58 of 2014 (147 of 14)
before the Learned Additional District Judge, 1st Court, Purulia.
11. By a judgment and order dated 26.02.2015 the Learned First Appellate
Court allowed the aforesaid Title Appeal on contest against respondent
no.1 and proforma respondent Nos.3 to 7, and ex parte against
respondent no. 2, thereby setting aside the judgment and decree dated
26.09.2013 passed by the Learned Civil Judge (Senior Division), Purulia
in Title Suit No.76 of 2012.
12. Being aggrieved by and dissatisfied with the judgment and decree dated
26th February, 2015 passed by the Learned Additional District Judge, 1st
Court, Purulia in Title Appeal No.58 of 2014, reversing the judgment and
decree dated 26th September, 2013 passed by the Learned Civil Judge
(Senior Division), Purulia in Title Suit No.76 of 2012, the appellant
preferred the instant second appeal before this Court on the grounds
stated in the memorandum of appeal.
13. Vide an order dated 02.05.2016, a Division Bench of this Court was
pleased to admit the instant second appeal, being S.A.T. 172 of 2015 with
CAN 606 of 2016, on the following substantial questions of law:-
i. Whether the findings of the learned First Appellate Court that the
description of the suit property is vague and decree for declaration
of title in respect of the suit property cannot be passed due to
vagueness in its description, are perverse?
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ii. Whether the learned First Appellate Court was justified in refusing
to grant decree for recovery of possession in a case where the title
of the plaintiff is proved but his possession could not be proved in
a suit where relief by way of confirmation of possession was sought
for by the plaintiff?
14. The Learned Advocate representing the appellant submitted as follows:-
i."Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below committed
substantial error of law in not holding that record of rights, Exbt. B
produced and relied upon by defendants are fabricated document
on the face of it particularly in view of the fact that some portion of
the said Exbt. B is handwritten thereby showing the same to be
manufactured for the evil purpose of the defendants/respondents.
ii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding the document Exbt.
B produced by the defendants is a fabricated document on the face
of it and as such no reliance can be placed on the same by the Court
of appeal below in the absence of any specific explanation as to the
portion of the said Khatian Exbt. B is hand written.
iii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding that Exbt. 1
establishes purchase of CS Plot No. 2816 which corresponds to RS
Plot No. 3057 particularly in view of the fact that C.S. Plot No. 2816
is identical in area with RS Plot No. 3057 and the reference of RS
plot 3047 is nothing but a mistake appearing on the face of the
record of rights.
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iv. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not taking into consideration
the fact that no challenge has been thrown by and on behalf of the
defendants regarding purchase of the CS Plot No. 2816 by the
plaintiff from Tinkari and the area of land purchased by the plaintiff
remain unchallenged by the defendants/respondents.
v. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in holding that plaintiff
purchased the land comprised in Plot No. 3047 measuring only 9
decimal keeping the remaining area over and above 9 decimal
owned by daughter of Tinkari, defendant/respondent no.6 which
was sold by her in favour of defendants/respondents no. 1-5.
vi. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below erred in
not holding that defendant/respondent no.6 daughter of Tinkari, did
not possess saleable interest in respect of land over and above the 9
decimals particularly when Tinkari in effect sold total 1.40 acres out
of 9.20 acre comprised in CS Dag No. 2816.
vii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding that plaintiff in
effect purchased the area mentioned in Exbt. I comprised in CS Plot
2816 when it could not be established that the area of CS Plot No.
2816 was never measuring area as mentioned in the said document
Exbt.I.
viii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding that plaintiff could
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establish his possession of 1.40 acre land comprised in CS Plot No.
2816 by overwhelming evidence on record when on the other hand
defendants miserably failed to establish their possession on the
land sold by Tinkari in favour of the plaintiff by Exbt.1.
ix. Whether the Learned Judge of Court of appeal below committed
substantial error of law in not holding that mere error appearing in
the ROR, Exbt.-B cannot affect the title of the plaintiff conveyed in
his favour by Exbt.I.
x. Whether the Learned Judge of Court of appeal below committed
substantial error of law in not holding that mere error appearing in
the ROR Exbt.-B cannot affect the title of the plaintiff conveyed in his
favour by Exbt.I.
xi. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in holding that suit is not
maintainable in view of Section 34 of Specific Relief Act
notwithstanding the fact that plaintiff/appellant is in possession of
the property which is wrongly held otherwise.
xii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding that retaining
name of Tinkari after the sale made by him in favour of plaintiff
cannot confer any right upon the heirs of Tinkari as to possession of
saleable interest by them.
xiii. Whether the Learned Judge of the Court of appeal below
committed substantial error of law in not holding that RS Plot No.
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804 3057 and Cs Plot No. 2816 are same and identical in area but,
was otherwise shown in RS ROR and CS ROR respectively."
15. The Learned Advocate representing the appellant further submitted as
follows:-
i. "CS Plot No. 2816 measuring about 9 acres 20 decimal in Mouza-
Pithati, P.S.- Arsha, District- Purulia, originally belonged to
Rashbehari and Durgacharan Banerjee. On 12.10.1931 a partition
deed was executed between Rashbehari and Durgacharan
Banerjee; Rashbehari got 8 acres 42 decimal and Durgacharan
Banerjee got 78 decimal of land (Exhibit 1/B). On 27.01.1959
Rashbehari sold out 8 acres 42 decimal to Tinkari Chakraborty and
his four brothers and one sister (Exhibit 1/A); all of them having
equal share in the share property i.e. 1/6th share. Thus the share of
Tinkari in the said C.S. plot no. 2816 was 1.40 acres only (8 acre 42
decimal / 6 = 1 acre 40 decimal approx.). In 1966 Tinkari got his
name mutated in the RSROR prepared under the West Bengal
Estate Acquisition Act, 1953. However, there remained an error in
the RROR i.e. CS Dag No. 2816 was wrongly recorded as RS Plot
No. 3047, instead of 3057. Due to such erroneous RROR a dispute
cropped up between Tinkari Chakraborty and the heirs of
Durgacharan Banerjee for which Tinkari along with his brothers/
co-sharers instituted a title suit being Title Suit No. 32 of 1980 inter-
alia praying for (a) decree of declaration of right title interest, (b)
declaration that the RS record of rights is 10.03.2022 interim order
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of status-quo dated May 2, 2016, was made absolute by this
Hon'ble Court.
ii. While admitting the instant appeal the Hon'ble Court formed two
substantial question of law. In reply to the first substantial question
of law the plaintiff/ appellant submits that it is settled principle of
law that the record of rights is not a title document. So the wrong
entry in record of rights does not confer any title neither to the
contesting defendants no. 1-5 nor their predecessor -in -interest.
Moreover, the father of the vendor of the defendants no. 1-5 namely
Tinkari Chakraborty himself filed title suit inter alia praying for
declaration that the RS record of rights was incorrect and not
binding upon the plaintiffs and permanent injunction being T.S. No.
32 of 1980. The suit decreed in 1982. The decree of the T.S.No. 32
of 1980 is an exhibited document being Exhibit No. 2 which clearly
stated that "It is further declared that entries in R.S. Record of
Rights in connection with suit schedule no. 3 properties are
erroneous and not binding on the plaintiffs". The C.S. Plot No. 2816
comes under the schedule no. 3 property in T.S. No. 32 of 1980.
After getting the decree the father of defendant no. 6 Tinkari sold his
entire 1/6th share in the property i.e. 1 acre 40 decimal to the
plaintiff/ appellant in 1983 who duly got his name recorded in the
LRROR and this time the correction was made by the state authority
and correct L.R Plot No. i.e. 3057 was recorded in favour of the
plaintiff (Exhibit-4A). Therefore there is no vagueness in the
description of the suit property, C.S plot no. 2816 wrongly recorded
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in the RROR as plot no. 3047 instead of 3057. Such wrong entries in
the RSROR was declared by the competent civil court as incorrect
and not binding on the parties. Thereafter correction made in the
ROR and ultimately CS Plot No. 2816 reconfigured as LR Plot No.
3057 and correct LRROR was finally published having the name of
the plaintiff/ appellant in LR Plot No. 3057 to the extent of 0.1667
share with area in possession 1 acre 40 decimal (Exhibit 4A). It is
also be noted that LR record of rights having had finally published
the court should not have entered into the dispute in view of clear
bar under Section 51C of the WBLR Act as amended. Be it also
mentioned that LR plot no 3047 (Exhibit 4) is a very small plot
having only 9 decimal area and such small land neither curved out
from CS plot no. 2816 nor plaintiff has any claim over that said plot.
iii. In this context one case reference being AIR 1967 Cal 10 is being
referred here where the Hon'ble High Court at Calcutta held that
presumption of accuracy of the record or rights under Section 103b
of the Bengal Tenancy Act and Section 44(4) of the West Bengal
Estate Acquisition Act does not apply after a civil court decision is
res judicata and binding on the parties. In this case also after
declaring that RROR prepared under the WBEA Act was erroneous
and not binding upon the parties by the competent Civil Court, the
wrong entry in the RROR is not binding upon the plaintiff/ appellant
herein.
iv. Moreover, Exhibit - 1 i.e. the purchase deed of the plaintiff executed
in 1983 clearly mentioned CS Plot No. 2816 which means that
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Tinkari had an intention and sold out 1 acre 40 decimal land in CS
plot no. 2816 to the plaintiff. Defendant no, 1 was a witness to this
deed. Therefore the factum of sale was not unknown to the
defendants. But only taking aid of wrong RSROR DW-1 in cross
examination dated 24.06.2013 stated that plaintiff purchased land
from Tinkari. DW-1 also stated that corresponding CS plot was
2816. After such admission in evidence there barely leaves any
doubt regarding the ownership of the plaintiff in the suit plot. DW2
also confirmed the possession of the plaintiff over the suit property.
v. In this context one case is being referred reported in 2021 Supreme
(SC) 975 Akkamma and Ors. Vs. Vemavathi and Ors. Where the
Hon'ble Apex Court held that when the trial court found that plaintiff
is the owner of the suit property the court should have decreed the
title of the plaintiff because there is no bar in granting standalone
declaratory decree.
vi. On the contrary, the defendants no. 1-5/ respondents made
contradictory statements in their written statement. In paragraph
no. 12 of the written statement the defendants claimed that Tinkari
was the owner of 1.40 acres of land but in paragraphs no. 23 and
29 claimed that Tinkari was the owner of 2.80 acres of land. Such
contrary statement was made only to establish that even after
selling of 1.40 acre to the plaintiff in 1983, Tinkari had saleable
interest over 1.40 acre of land in RS plot no. 3047. But Exhibit-1A
i.e. the title deed of Tinkari and others and Exhibit 3 i.e. RSROR of
Tinkari clearly showed that Tinkari had only undividable interest to
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the extent of 1/6th share in the suit property which was 1.40 acre
of land only and not more than that. In this context it is reiterated by
the plaintiff/ appellant that RSROR since been declared erroneous
and not binding upon the parties at the instance of Tinkari's civil
suit, the defendants should not get any advantage by mentioning
erroneous RSROR.
vii. It is also to be noted that Exhibit B filed by the contesting
defendants is a forged document on the face of it. Thus Exhibit B
should not have been taken into consideration. Exhibit-B is the plot
information belonged to Gopal Prasad Kuiri, defendant/ respondent
no. 5 herein. The original printed plot information contained only 3
plots. But defendants wrote LR Dag No. 3057 in hand with red ink
along with two other plots but this attempt is a great failure because
other information relating to the defendant no.5's lands were also
mis-matching. Such type of forged document ought not to have been
admitted in evidence specially in absence of proper attestation of the
issuing authority or deposition of the issuing authority as an
witness to that effect. Exhibit-A i.e. the title deed of the defendants,
did not contain any detail of how Parul Chakraborty, defendant no.
6 herein, got the suit property. Recital was totally silent on that
point. The contents of the defendants' deed and the contents of
written statement are contrary to each other. In the deed no where it
is stated that Tinkari had title and possession over 2.40 acres of
land in the suit plot. Therefore defendants' exhibited documents do
not going to help the defendants' / respondents' case."
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16. The Learned Advocate representing the respondents submitted as
follows:-
i. "Maintainability of Suit:-
The plaintiff's suit is fundamentally defective and liable to be
dismissed for want of definite property description. The suit
property, as described in Schedule 2 of the plaint, lacks
identification by boundaries, which is essential in a declaratory and
injunctive relief suit involving immovable property. As held in
Sheodhyan Singh v.Sanichara Kuer (AIR 1963 SC 1879), identity of
property is crucial, and omission of boundaries renders the decree
unenforceable.
ii. Incorrect Plot Number in Deed:-
The plaintiff's title deed (Exbt. 1) cites R.S. Plot No. 3047 as the
subject of sale. However, the reliefs claimed relate entirely to R.S.
Plot No. 3057. There is no correction deed, amendment, rectification,
or competent authority's clarification to support the plaintiff's
assertion that this was a clerical error.
iii. No Evidence of Plot Conversion:-
The plaintiff failed to produce any certified conversion map, revenue
records, or official documents demonstrating that C.S. Plot No. 2816
was ever converted to R.S. Plot No. 3057. The Revenue Records
(Exbt.3 and Exbt. 4A) consistently show R.S. Plot No. 3047 as
corresponding to C.S. Plot No. 2816.
iv. Presumption in Favour of Official Records:-
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Under the West Bengal Land Reforms Act, certified Record of Rights
entries carry a presumption of correctness. Ext. B (ROR) produced
by the respondents shows their lawful ownership and possession.
The plaintiff has neither challenged nor rebutted this by summoning
any settlement official or adducing conclusive evidence of error.
v. Failure to Establish Title:-
It is trite that in a suit for declaration of title, the plaintiff must
succeed on the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of
the defendant's case M/S Roy and Company and Another us. Smt.
Nanibala Dey and Others (AIR 1979 Cal. 50). The plaintiff's sale
deed is self-defeating as it refers to a plot different from the one in
dispute.
vi. Lack of Proof of Possession:-
The plaintiff has not examined any independent witness to support
his claim of long-standing possession. His own testimony remains
uncorroborated, vague, and lacking in specifics such as actual
possession date, land use, or delivery of possession post-sale.
vii. Credible Evidence of Respondents' Possession:-
On the other hand, D.W.2, a cultivator of the land, categorically
deposed that the respondents have been in possession of R.S. Plot
No.3057. He denied any possession by the plaintiff and explained
that the land is used by multiple parties including the respondents.
viii. Legality of Respondents' Purchase:-
The respondents purchased the suit land by Regd. Deed No. 90/2012
from Smt. Parul Chakraborty, the only daughter and legal heir of
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Late Tinkari Chakraborty. There is no material to show that Parul
was divested of title or that Tinkari had exhausted his rights over
R.S. Plot No. 3057.
ix. No Proof of Partition:-The plaintiff claims that Tinkari became sole
owner of the disputed property after a family partition. However, no
partition deed, memorandum, or decree has been exhibited. Mere
oral assertion of partition is insufficient, particularly post-enactment
of the West Bengal Land Reforms Act.
x. Ambiguity in Land Area and Boundaries:-
The plaintiff inconsistently refers to the land area as 8.42 acres, 9.20
acres, and 1.40 acres in different parts of the plaint and evidence.
The absence of specific boundaries and the shifting area figures
cast serious doubt on the identity of the suit land.
xi. Suit Barred by Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963:-
The plaintiff has prayed only for declaration of title and confirmation
of possession but has failed to pray for permanent injunction. The
proviso to Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963 mandates that
no declaration shall be made if consequential relief is omitted.
Hence, the suit is legally barred and that has to be considered.
Injunction constitutes a further or consequential relief within the
meaning of this provision (C_Mohammed Yunus v.
Syed_Unissa_and_Ors., AIR 1961 SC 808). Consequently, the suit is
barred under Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act.
xii. No Prayer Against Proforma Defendants:-
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Although several government officials have been impleaded as
proforma defendants, no relief has been claimed against them.
Further, no statutory notice under Section 80 CPC was served upon
them. The suit is procedurally defective as against such parties. No
leave was obtained under Section 80(2) CPC prior to filing suit
against them.
xiii. Failure to Corroborate Exhibits:-
Exbt. 1 does not contain clear boundaries, mutation details, or
confirmation of delivery of possession. Furthermore, the land area
allegedly transferred is inconsistent with the plot area shown in the
ROR. The deed cannot establish valid title under such
circumstances.
xiv. Effect of Subsequent Settlement Records:-
Later records (Exbt. 4A and B) reflect respondents' names in the
khatian with respect to R.S. Plot No. 3057. These are final and
conclusive unless challenged through revenue or judicial
proceedings, which the plaintiff has not done.
xv. Admissions by Plaintiff:-
In cross-examination, P.W.1 admitted that he could not state the
exact area purchased or the date of possession. He also admitted
that other persons were in possession of parts of R.S. Plot No. 3057.
These admissions undermine his case.
xvi. Trial Court's Presumption Unfounded:-
The Learned Trial Court erroneously relied on a so-called "information
slip" to infer that R.S. Plot No. 3057 was intended instead of 3047.
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This is a speculative and impermissible inference not grounded in
law or evidence.
xvii. No Expert or Official Witness Examined:-
The plaintiff did not summon any official from the Settlement or Land
Records department to prove the alleged clerical error or
misrecording in plot numbers. In a title suit involving land records,
such omission is fatal.
xviii. Respondents' Title Independent and Lawful:-
Even assuming, without admitting, that the plaintiff had purchased a
portion of the suit land, the respondents' title stems from a separate
and lawful source - being inheritance through Parul Chakraborty,
followed by registered conveyance. There is no contradiction or
overlap proved.
xix. No Estoppel Against Respondents:-
The plaintiff has attempted to rely on alleged admissions by
defendants to establish title. However, under Section 115 of the
Indian Evidence Act, estoppel cannot override statutory title or
ownership unless reliance and prejudice are proved - which is
absent in this case.
xx. No Substantial Question of Law:-
The grounds urged in the Second Appeal pertain purely to factual
appreciation of evidence, not to interpretation of any substantial
question of law. As per settled law under Section 100 CPC (Kondiba
Dagadu Kadam v. Savitribai Sopan Gujar, AIR 1999 SC 2213),
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interference by the Hon'ble High Court is not warranted in pure
findings of fact.
xxi. Failure to Challenge ROR Entries Judicially:-
The plaintiff never initiated any proceeding under the West Bengal
Land Reforms Act or any other statute in force at the relevant point
of time to rectify the alleged error in the Record of Rights. A person
alleging clerical error has a legal remedy but must follow due
process. The plaintiff's omission to do so casts serious doubt on his
claims.
xxii. Absence of Boundary Map or Survey Plan:-
The plaintiff has not annexed any certified survey plan or sketch map
identifying the precise location of the 1.40 acres he claims. This
omission is critical in a title suit, particularly when plot identity is
contested.
xxiii. Deed Without Delivery of Possession Is Incomplete Transfer:-
Even assuming the 1983 deed refers to some land, there is no proof
that possession was ever delivered. Under Section 54 of the
Transfer of Property Act, delivery of possession is an essential
element unless possession is already with the transferee.
xxiv. Silence from Co-Sharers of Tinkari:-
The plaintiff relies on an oral partition among Tinkari and his co-
sharers. Yet none of those other co-sharers have come forward to
support his version. This absence undermines the alleged exclusive
ownership of Tinkari over the suit land.
xxv. Contradictory Area in Schedule and Evidence:-
22
The plaint refers to 1.40 acres out of 8.42 acres in Schedule 2,
whereas ROR shows Plot No. 3047 contains only 9 decimals. The
remaining area must belong to someone else. The plaintiff's silence
on the rest of the plot and its owners exposes the vagueness of his
claim.
xxvi. Estoppel from Denying Parul's Title:-
The plaintiff failed to challenge the registered deed executed by Parul
Chakraborty in 2012 before any court of competent jurisdiction. He
cannot now collaterally impeach a registered deed in a suit filed
years later.
xxvii. No Injunction or Possession Complaint Filed Earlier:-
Despite allegedly being dispossessed in April 2012, the plaintiff did
not file any complaint under Sections 144 or 145 CrPC, or any
application for temporary injunction until much later. This delay
raises doubt about his actual possession.
xxviii. Doctrine of Laches and Acquiescence:-
The plaintiff sat idle for nearly three decades after the execution of
the 1983 sale deed, during which he did not assert his rights
actively. His inaction attracts the doctrine of laches and
acquiescence, particularly when others have taken possession in the
meantime.
xxix. Conduct of the Plaintiff Suggests Afterthought:-
The plea that the wrong plot number was recorded is raised only
after the 2012 sale by Parul to the respondents. This appears to be
23
a retaliatory or afterthought strategy, rather than a bona fide title
claim.
xxx. The Plaintiff's Evidence is Self-Serving:-
Apart from P.W.1 (the plaintiff himself, no neutral or independent
witness has been produced to corroborate title or possession. Courts
routinely disbelieve self-serving and uncorroborated oral
statements.
xxxi. Principle of Finality of First Appellate Findings:-
The First Appellate Court, being the final court on facts, has reversed
the decree of the trial court after evaluating all evidence. Its findings
are reasoned and supported by the record. There is no perversity or
illegality to warrant High Court interference under Section 100 CPC.
xxxii. Equity Not in Plaintiff's Favour:-
The respondents have been in settled possession, having purchased
the land with defined boundaries and consideration from the legal
heir of the previous owner. Equitable relief like declaration or
injunction cannot be granted to the detriment of bona fide
purchasers in possession."
17. The foundational matrix of the plaintiff/appellant's claim traces its legal
genesis back to a large parent estate designated as Cadastral Survey
(C.S.) Plot No.2816, encompassing an area of 8.42 acres out of a total
9.20 acres, classified as danga (arid upland) land, situated within Mouza-
Pithati, under Arsha Police Station in the District of Purulia. This
extensive property originally reposed in the joint ownership of two co-
sharers, Rashbihari Banerjee and Durgacharan Banerjee.
24
18. The unity of possession between these co-owners was permanently and
fundamentally severed on October 13, 1931, through the execution and
registration of a formal deed of partition (Exhibit 1/B). By virtue of this
partition, the specific 8.42-acre parcel was exclusively allotted to
Rashbihari Banerjee, who entered into independent possession,
completely unconcerned with the residual shares of Durgacharan.
19. Decades later, on January 27, 1959, Rashbihari Banerjee alienated his
entire partitioned interest of 8.42 acres via a registered deed of sale
bearing No.271 (Exhibit 1/A) in favor of Tinkari Chakraborty and his four
brothers. By operation of the law governing joint family acquisitions
without defined individual fractions, this purchase translated into an
undivided one-sixth (1/6th) fractional interest for each of the brothers.
This mathematically isolated Tinkari Chakraborty's lawful, individual
entitlement to an area computing to exactly 1.40 acres.
20. While these brothers were in active, peaceable, and visible physical
possession of their purchased land, the state's settlement apparatus
committed a clerical error during the Estates Acquisition operation in
1966. The settlement clerks incorrectly recorded the ancestral C.S. Plot
No.2816 under the nomenclature of Revisional Settlement (R.S.) Plot
No.3047 instead of its geographically and mathematically accurate
counterpart, R.S. Plot No.3057. Aggrieved by this erroneous revenue
entry, which cast an administrative cloud over their title, Tinkari
Chakraborty and his brothers instituted a civil suit, registered as Title
Suit No.32 of 1980, against the heirs of Durgacharan Banerjee and the
State. This prior litigation concluded in favor of the Chakraborty brothers,
25
with the competent civil court explicitly decreeing in 1982 (Exhibit 2) that
the entries in the R.S. Record of Rights swapping the plot identifiers were
entirely incorrect, void, and fundamentally non-binding.
21. Following this judicial vindication, Tinkari Chakraborty and his co-
sharers entered into an amicable partition to divide their landed
properties, through which Tinkari was exclusively allotted the specific
land identified as the Schedule-1 property. Holding absolute title, Tinkari
subsequently transferred a portion of this land, designated as the
Schedule-2 property (measuring 1.40 acres), to the present plaintiff by
executing a registered deed of sale bearing No.2159 on February 23, 1983
(Exhibit 1). Notably, this transaction was executed in the direct presence
of Defendant No. 1, who acted as an attesting witness to the deed.
22. From the exact date of purchase, the plaintiff asserts he maintained
exclusive, continuous, and independent physical possession. Later,
during the Land Reforms operation, the revenue records were partially
corrected to seamlessly reflect the plaintiff's name as the lawful owner
under Land Reforms (L.R.) Plot No.3057 to the extent of a 0.1667 share,
reflecting an area of 1 acre and 40 decimals (Exhibit 4A).
23. The peaceable enjoyment of this property was abruptly disrupted on April
14, 2012, when the principal defendants began executing overt acts of
disturbance against the plaintiff's possession. These defendants asserted
a competing right to the land, claiming they had purchased the suit
property from Defendant No. 6, Parul Chakraborty - alleged to be the
daughter of Tinkari Chakraborty - under a sale deed dated January 13,
2012 (Exhibit A).
26
24. The plaintiff fiercely rejects this competing claim, branding the 2012 deed
as a fraudulent, collusive paper transaction carrying no legal weight. The
plaintiff argues that since Tinkari Chakraborty had already divested
himself of all rights, title, and interest by selling the property to the
plaintiff back in 1983, no subsequent heir could possess any residual
legal authority to alienate or transfer the property a second time. Because
this deceptive 2012 transaction cast a serious cloud over the plaintiff's
title, the plaintiff was forced to approach the court for comprehensive
legal redress.
25. The principal defendants emphatically challenged the maintainability of
the proceedings. They contended that the suit suffered from a fatal
infraction of procedural safeguards, specifically the absence of a
mandatory pre-suit notice under Section 80(1) of the Code of Civil
Procedure upon the State of West Bengal, which was impleaded as a
proforma defendant. They argued this omission rendered the plaint liable
to be rejected under Order VII Rule 11. Furthermore, a substantial defect
of parties was articulated, highlighting that the plaintiff failed to implead
other recorded tenants holding distinct interests in respect of R.S. Plot
No.3057.
26. The crux of the defence pertained to the description of the suit property,
which the defendants asserted was fundamentally vague, unspecific, and
legally non-est. It was their specific contention that the plaintiff allegedly
purchased an undemarcated portion of land without possessing actual
knowledge, authority, or physical identity over R.S. Plot No. 3057, as
27
Schedule II of the plaint was completely devoid of any specific four-corner
boundary specifications.
27. In contrast, the defendants traced what they claimed to be a legitimate
trajectory of title originating from Tinkari Chakraborty, who they alleged
held lawful possession over a comprehensive 1.40-acre block spanning
R.S. Plot Nos.332, 350, and 3057. Upon his demise, they asserted the
property devolved upon his daughter, Parul Chakraborty, who by dint of a
registered sale deed with strictly defined boundaries, validly transferred
the same to the answering defendants in 2012. The defendants explicitly
imputed a motive of willful manipulation, alleging that the plaintiff, by
executing a deed in 1983 that referred to R.S. Plot No.3047, engaged in a
design to improperly insert his name into the Record of Rights during its
preparation under the West Bengal Land Reforms Act.
28. The arguments articulated by the learned Advocate for the appellant
unfold a compelling and richly detailed narrative of title, meticulously
structured to dismantle the findings of the courts below by demonstrating
a seamless convergence of registered conveyances, prior judicial
declarations, and rectified revenue records.
29. The crux of the present litigation, as the learned Counsel elucidated did
not emerge from any intrinsic defect in the root of title, but rather from a
clerical aberration committed by the State's revenue department. In the
year 1966, when Tinkari Chakraborty sought to mutate his name in the
Revised Survey Record of Rights (RSROR) prepared under the statutory
framework of the West Bengal Estate Acquisition Act, 1953, a structural
error corrupted the State repository; the revenue authorities wrongly
28
recorded the ancestral CS Plot No.2816 as RS Plot No.3047, instead of its
mathematically and geographically correct counterpart, RS Plot No.3057.
Taking opportunistic advantage of this bureaucratic oversight, the heirs of
Durgacharan Banerjee sparked a bitter property dispute. To clear the
cloud cast upon his legitimate ownership, Tinkari Chakraborty, alongside
his sibling co-sharers, instituted Title Suit No.32 of 1980 before a
competent Civil Court, praying inter alia for a decree of declaration of
right, title, and interest, and a specific declaration that the RS entries
were erroneous. This litigation culminated in a landmark civil court
decree in the year 1982 (Exhibit 2), which explicitly adjudicated that the
entries in the R.S. Record of Rights concerning the suit schedule
properties were entirely incorrect, void and fundamentally non-binding
upon the plaintiffs.
30. Armed with this clear, judicially vindicated title, Tinkari Chakraborty
subsequently alienated his entire undivided (1/6th) share - the pristine 1
acre and 40 decimals - to the present plaintiff/appellant by executing a
registered deed of purchase in the year 1983 (Exhibit 1). Following this
conveyance, the appellant successfully set the machinery of the West
Bengal Land Reforms (WBLR) Act in motion to permanently rectify the
historical mapping error. The State Revenue Authorities, acting in
consonance with the prior Civil Court decree, reconfigured the parent CS
Plot No.2816 into the newly designated LR Plot No.3057. The final Land
Reforms Record of Rights (LRROR) was subsequently published, officially
registering the plaintiff/appellant's name under LR Plot No.3057 to the
exact extent of a 0.1667 share, reflecting an area in physical possession of
29
1 acre and 40 decimals (Exhibit 4A). The learned Advocate for the
appellant emphasizes this finalized LR record of rights attracts the
absolute statutory bar under Section 51C of the WBLR Act, which
expressly deprives civil courts of jurisdiction to entertain disputes that
alter finalized revenue maps and records. To further eliminate any
lingering ambiguity, Counsel clarifies that RS Plot No.3047 (Exhibit 4) is
an isolated, minuscule parcel of land measuring a mere 9 decimals; it was
never carved out of CS Plot No.2816, and the plaintiff sets up no claim
over it whatsoever, rendering the respondents' reliance on it entirely
irrelevant.
31. The legal jurisprudence underpinning the appellant's submissions rests
upon the unassailable principle that a record of rights is a mere tool for
revenue collection and possesses no inherent character of a title
document. Consequently, an erroneous entry within such records can
neither confer a valid title upon the contesting defendants (No. 1 to 5) nor
strip the rightful purchaser of his lawful estate. Invoking the classic
authority of AIR 1967 Cal 10, the learned Counsel underscores the rule
that any statutory presumption of correctness attached to revenue
records under Section 103b of the Bengal Tenancy Act or Section 44(4) of
the WBEA Act instantly evaporates the moment a competent Civil Court
delivers a definitive declaration on title, establishing the civil decree as res
judicata and binding upon the parties. Furthermore, drawing structural
strength from the Apex Court's dictum in Akkamma and Ors. Vs.
Vemavathi and Ors. (2021) Supreme (SC) 975, it is urged that when a trial
court finds a plaintiff to be the true owner of the suit property, it is under
30
a judicial obligation to decree the suit, as there is no legal impediment to
granting a standalone declaratory decree.
32. In stark contrast, the defence erected by the contesting respondents is
exposed as a fragile edifice compromised by profound internal
contradictions and procedural manipulation. The learned Advocate
reveals a fatal dichotomy within the defendants' pleadings, demonstrating
that while paragraph 12 of their written statement concedes that Tinkari
Chakraborty was the owner of only 1.40 acres of land, paragraphs 23 and
29 abruptly shift positions to claim that Tinkari owned 2.80 acres. This
clumsy, mathematically impossible inflation was clearly manufactured to
invent a fictitious residual "saleable interest" over RS Plot No.3047, in a
desperate bid to argue that Tinkari still had land left to pass on to them
after his 1983 transaction with the plaintiff. This defensive posture
completely disintegrated during oral evidence; in a cross-examination
dated June 24, 2013, Defendant Witness 1 (DW-1) explicitly admitted that
the plaintiff had indeed purchased the land from Tinkari and that the
corresponding cadastral plot was 2816, while defendant witness-2 (DW-2)
unequivocally corroborated the plaintiff's uninterrupted physical
possession over the suit property.
33. To conclusively seal the fate of the defence, the Learned Advocate for the
appellant directs this Court's attention to Exhibit B, a plot information
sheet filed by respondent no.5, Gopal Prasad Kuiri, branding it a manifest
forgery on its face. The original printed document generated by the state
authorities contained only three plots, but the defendants fraudulently
inserted "LR Dag No. 3057" by hand using red ink. Devoid of any official
31
attestation by an issuing authority, and utterly contradicted by the
mismatching land descriptions of respondent no. 5's actual holdings, this
tainted document ought to have been rejected out of hand. When
juxtaposed against the defendants' own title deed (Exhibit A), which
remains completely silent as to how defendant no. 6, Parul Chakraborty,
ever legally acquired the suit property from Tinkari, the respondents'
claims are revealed to be legally impotent. In light of this exhaustive array
of registered title deeds, an unassailable 1982 civil decree, and the explicit
admissions elicited from the defendants' own witnesses, the Learned
Counsel implores this Court to sweep aside the erroneous findings of the
Courts below and decree the suit in favor of the appellant.
34. The submissions advanced by the Learned Counsel appearing on behalf of
the contesting respondents present an exhaustive and meticulously
woven tapestry of law and fact, seeking to fortify the reversing judgment of
the First Appellate Court by demonstrating an absolute failure on the part
of the plaintiff to satisfy the fundamental legal and evidentiary criteria
governing actions for the declaration of title and recovery of possession.
The respondents strenuously contend that the plaintiff's suit is fatally hit
by an irremediable vagueness in the description of the subject matter,
rendering the action entirely unmaintainable. It is pointed out that the
property set forth in Schedule II of the plaint is conspicuously devoid of
any boundary specifications or dimensional delineations, a structural
omission that directly contravenes the mandate of Order VII Rule 3 of the
Code of Civil Procedure, 1908. Relying upon the authoritative dictum of
the Supreme Court in Sheodhyan Singh v. Sanichara Kuer (AIR 1963 SC
32
1879), the respondents urge that where a claim for immovable property is
contested, the boundaries must be established with definitive certainty,
as an omission of boundaries inevitably renders any subsequent decree a
brutum fulmen, entirely incapable of execution on the ground.
35. The Learned Counsel further exposes a fundamental, self-defeating
contradiction between the plaintiff's foundational title document and the
reliefs sought in the plaint. The plaintiff's registered purchase deed of
1983, marked as Exhibit 1, explicitly and unambiguously names RS Plot
No.3047 as the demised property, yet the plaintiff has sought a
declaration of right, title, and interest over an entirely different parcel,
namely RS Plot No.3057, without the support of any registered deed of
rectification. The respondents argue that it is an axiomatic principle of the
law of conveyancing that a party cannot claim title to a plot that is
completely alien to the four corners of his title deed.
36. The evidentiary structure of the plaintiff's case is further assailed for its
total reliance on unauthenticated, secondary documentation to establish
the alleged transformation of plots. The respondents highlight the plaintiff
has failed to produce any certified conversion map, revenue records or
official layout plan prepared by the settlement authorities to show that
Cadastral Survey (CS) Plot No.2816 was ever structurally reconfigured
into RS Plot No. 3057. On the contrary, the revenue records exhibited by
the parties consistently negative this theory. Under the provisions of the
West Bengal Land Reforms Act, 1955, the entries in a finally published
Record of Rights enjoy a statutory presumption of correctness. The plot
information sheets, including Exhibit B, stand as an un-rebutted
33
reflection of the respondents' proprietary interest. Invoking the settled
principle enunciated by the Calcutta High Court in M/S Roy and
Company and Another v. Smt. Nanibala Dey and Others (AIR 1979 Cal. 50),
it is urged that in a suit for declaration of title, the plaintiff must succeed
on the strength of his own title rather than the weakness of the defence,
rendering the plaintiff's reliance on a sale deed that refers to an entirely
different plot inherently self-defeating.
37. The respondents further contend the plaintiff's case founders upon the
rock of actual physical possession. A critical examination of the record
reveals that the plaintiff did not examine a single independent witness
from the locality, such as contiguous owners or village elders, to
corroborate his claim of continuous physical enjoyment or to fix the date
of his alleged dispossession in April 2012. Conversely, the defence has
brought forward the compelling, consistent testimony of DW-2, an actual
cultivator of the soil, who categorically deposed that it is the respondents
who are in settled, open, and uninterrupted physical possession of RS
Plot No.3057, utilizing the land to the absolute exclusion of the plaintiff.
The respondents' possessory and proprietary rights are rooted in a valid,
independent legal source, specifically a registered deed of conveyance
bearing No.90 of 2012, executed in their favor by Smt. Parul Chakraborty,
who is admittedly the only daughter and sole legal heir of the late Tinkari
Chakraborty. The plaintiff has placed no material on record to
demonstrate that Smt. Parul Chakraborty was ever legally divested of her
right of inheritance, or that Tinkari Chakraborty had exhausted his entire
interest in the suit plot during his lifetime. While the plaintiff has argued
34
that Tinkari Chakraborty became the exclusive owner of the land by
virtue of an internal family arrangement, such a claim remains a mere
statement of convenience, completely unsupported by any registered
partition deed or memorandum of settlement, which is an imperative
requirement under the law to extinguish jointness of property, disproving
the eventuality of a partition.
38. The Learned Counsel for the respondents also invites this Court's
attention to the fluid, fluctuating, and wholly inconsistent figures
introduced by the plaintiff regarding the total land area in question.
Throughout the pleadings and the evidence, the plaintiff oscillates
between descriptions of 8 acres 42 decimals, 9 acres 20 decimals, and 1
acre 40 decimals, without producing a certified sketch map or survey
report to isolate and locate the exact geographical coordinates of the 1
acre 40 decimals he claims. This ambiguity becomes fatal when the
identity of the land is actively disputed. Furthermore, the suit is hit by an
absolute statutory bar under the proviso to Section 34 of the Specific
Relief Act, 1963. The plaintiff has merely sought a standalone declaration
of title and a confirmation of possession, but has consciously omitted to
pray for the consequential relief of a permanent injunction against the
respondents. Relying on the celebrated decision of the Supreme Court in
C. Mohammed Yunus v. Syed Unissa and Ors. (AIR 1961 SC 808), it is
urged that no declaration can be made where a mandatory consequential
relief is omitted, making the suit legally barred since a suit for mere
declaration without seeking further mandatory relief cannot be
entertained by a court of law.
35
39. The respondents further argue that the suit suffers from a fatal
procedural defect owing to the non-service of the mandatory statutory
notice under Section 80 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, upon the
State of West Bengal and its revenue officials, who were impleaded as
proforma defendants. No leave of the Court was obtained under Section
80(2) to institute the suit without such notice, thereby vitiating the entire
proceedings ab initio. The respondents emphasize that during cross-
examination, the plaintiff, deposing as PW-1, made catastrophic
admissions that completely dismantled his own case. He explicitly
admitted his inability to state the precise boundaries of the land he
allegedly purchased, confessed that he could not remember the exact date
on which he entered into possession, and candidly conceded that other
third parties were cultivating and occupying distinct portions of RS Plot
No.3057. The Trial Court's reliance upon a mere unauthenticated, loose
information slip to draw a sweeping inference that RS Plot No.3047 was a
clerical error for RS Plot No.3057 was an exercise in pure conjecture and
an impermissible leap of logic. The plaintiff's total failure to initiate any
lawful proceedings for the correction of the Record of Rights before the
appropriate revenue forums over a span of nearly thirty years
demonstrates a deep-seated inertia and an implicit acquiescence to the
correctness of the records. It is further pointed out that while the plaintiff
sets up an expansive claim over 1 acre 40 decimals, the Record of Rights
shows that RS Plot No.3047 consists of a minuscule area of merely 9
decimals; yet the plaintiff has maintained a stony silence regarding the
36
remaining vast portion of the land or the identity of its co-owners, further
underscoring the speculative nature of his action.
40. The plaintiff is further precluded from collaterally impeaching the
registered deed executed in favor of the respondents in the year 2012.
Having failed to challenge that instrument before a court of competent
jurisdiction within the statutory period of limitation, the plaintiff is now
legally estopped from questioning the validity of the respondents' title or
the capacity of Parul Chakraborty to execute the same. The plaintiff has
attempted to build his case upon certain isolated statements made by the
defendants in other proceedings, asserting them to be admissions of his
title. However, under Section 115 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, the
doctrine of estoppel cannot override an absolute statutory title, and an
admission on a question of law or a mistaken statement of fact cannot
create a title where none exists. The subsequent settlement records,
including Exhibit 4A and Exhibit B, which record the respondents' names
in the khatian with respect to RS Plot No.3057, must be treated as final
and conclusive unless set aside through due process of law. The conduct
of the plaintiff speaks volumes of his lack of bona fides, having remained
entirely passive for nearly three decades after his purported purchase in
1983 without setting up any visible markers of ownership. Despite his
claim of a sudden, forcible dispossession in April 2012, the plaintiff did
not lodge any immediate possessory complaints under Section 145 of the
Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898, nor did he move the Court for an ad
interim temporary injunction at the earliest opportunity, which strongly
indicates the theory of an erroneous plot entry is a manufactured,
37
retaliatory afterthought designed to disrupt the respondents' peaceful
enjoyment.
41. In conclusion, the respondents urge that the grounds raised in this
Second Appeal do not touch upon any substantial question of law, but
relate purely to the appreciation of facts and evidence. Under Section 100
of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, and in line with the landmark
dictum in Kondiba Dagadu Kadam v. Savitribai Sopan Gujar (AIR 1999 SC
2213), it is settled position that the High Court cannot sit as a third court
of facts to reverse the findings of the First Appellate Court unless those
findings are demonstrated to be perverse, irrational or shocking to the
judicial conscience. The First Appellate Court, as the final arbiter of facts,
thoroughly analyzed the entire documentary and oral evidence, detected
the foundational vulnerabilities in the plaintiff's chain of title, and rightly
dismissed the suit. Equity, law, and possessory rights reside firmly with
the respondents, who are bona fide purchasers for valuable consideration,
and their settled possession over a clearly identifiable piece of land cannot
be disturbed at the instance of a negligent and unproved claimant.
42. The First Appellate Court reversed the Trial Court's decree primarily on
the ground that the description of the suit property in Schedule II of the
plaint was vague, unspecific, and non-compliant with Order VII Rule 3 of
the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), 1908.
43. The Principle of Identity Over Nomenclature is a well-settled canon of
property law that where there is a conflict between the plot number, the
area, and the boundaries, or where a clerical error creep into the plot
38
number, the identity of the property must be gathered from the totality of
the transaction and the parent title.
44. The parent estate, Cadastral Survey (CS) Plot No. 2816 (measuring 8.42
acres out of 9.20 acres after a registered partition in 1931), was sold to
Tinkari Chakraborty and his brothers in 1959 via Deed No.271. When the
settlement authorities committed a clerical error during the Estates
Acquisition (EA) operation by recording CS Plot No.2816 as Revisional
Settlement (RS) Plot No. 3047 instead of RS Plot No.3057, Tinkari and his
brothers successfully filed Title Suit No.32 of 1980.The civil court in 1982
(Exhibit 2) explicitly declared that the RS entry was erroneous and void.
45. When Tinkari sold his undivided 1/6th share (1.40 acres) to the plaintiff in
1983 via Deed No. 2159 (Exhibit 1), the deed referenced the plot number
currently active in the revenue records due to the state's failure to update
its maps immediately. However, the physical identity, the area (1.40
acres), and the root of the title (derived from CS Plot No.2816) remained
perfectly constant. Under cross-examination, defendant witness-1 (DW-1)
explicitly admitted that the plaintiff had purchased the land from Tinkari
Chakraborty and that the corresponding cadastral plot was 2816. Once
the identity of the land is admitted by the defence, the argument of
"vagueness" evaporates. The First Appellate Court completely ignored this
vital admission, rendering its finding perverse.
46. The First Appellate Court erred in holding that because the plaintiff
sought a "confirmation of possession" but the defendants alleged they
were in physical possession, the suit must fail completely in the absence
of a specific alternative prayer for "recovery of possession."
39
47. As ruled by the Supreme Court in Akkamma v. Vemavathi (2021),once a
plaintiff successfully proves absolute underlying title to a property, the
court is under a judicial obligation to protect that title. If the Court finds
the plaintiff has title but has been subtly or forcefully dispossessed during
the pendency or immediately prior to the suit, the Court can grant a
decree for recovery of possession under the umbrella of a declaration of
title.
48. In view of the proviso to Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, the
respondents argued the suit is barred because the plaintiff did not seek
consequential relief. However, the plaintiff explicitly prayed for a
permanent injunction to restrain the defendants from disturbing his
peaceable possession. A permanent injunction satisfied the requirement
of "further relief" under Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act.
49. Following the 1983 purchase, the plaintiff successfully moved the revenue
authorities under the West Bengal Land Reforms (WBLR) Act. The visible
error was permanently rectified: CS Plot No.2816 was mapped to Land
Reforms (LR) Plot No.3057, and the plaintiff's name was officially
published in the Record of Rights (LRROR) for a 0.1667 share (1.40 acres)
under Exhibit 4A. Under Section 51C of the WBLR Act, there is an
absolute bar on civil courts altering these finalized revenue maps, and the
First Appellate Court had no authority to ignore this finalized statutory
presumption of ownership and possessory right.
50. The role of the High Court in deciding a Second Appeal under civil law,
specifically under Section 100 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908, is
structurally unique and limited. It does not act as a regular court of facts,
40
but rather as a constitutional guardian of legal purity.
While a First Appeal is a matter of right where the court re-evaluates both
facts and law, a Second Appeal is strictly confined to the adjudication of a
substantial question of law.
51. The High Court is bound by the findings of fact recorded by the Trial
Court and the First Appellate Court, even if those findings are arguably
incorrect or poorly reasoned. The High Court cannot substitute its own
opinion on facts or re-examine oral and documentary evidence to see if it
can reach a different conclusion.
52. The High Court can breach the wall of "finality of facts" only if the lower
court's findings suffer from perversity. Perversity occurs when
a Trial Court or the First Appellate Court takes into consideration
completely irrelevant evidence while ignoring material evidence and
reaches a conclusion that is so completely irrational that no reasonable
person could ever arrive at it. A finding is based on absolutely zero
evidence on the record.
53. Therefore, the High Court is bound by the following depositions of the
plaintiff/appellant being uncontroverted in cross-examination and the
deposition of the defendants.
54. PW-1 being the plaintiff in his examination-in-chief inter alia stated as
follows:-
"... 8. That in the aforesaid manner I, the sole plaintiff came into title
and possession on the suit land which is described in schedule 2 of the
plaint and which is the part of schedule 1 land and the transferor
41
Tinkari Chakraborty divested all of his right, title, interest and
possession on the suit land.
...
11. That in my title purchased Deed bearing No.2159 of 1983 the R.S.
Plot has been mentioned as R.S. Plot No.3047 but its area and C.S. Plot
No. has been rightly mentioned and I am in title and possession on the
schedule 2 land as per my title deed.
12. That it is submitted that the defendant No.1 Hagru Gorai is an
attesting witness of my aforesaid title Deed and he has clear idea that I
am in title and possession on the suit land described in schedule 2 of
the plaint by demarcating the same by fencing.
13. That it is submitted that at the time of L.R. Operation the suit land
has been recorded in my name but the class of land wrongly mentioned
as “Bahal” instead of “Danga”.
14. That the principal defendants Nos.1 to 5 in collusion with the
principal defendant No.6, the alleged daughter of Tinkari Chakraborty
creating a Sale deed bearing No.90 dated 13.01.2012 in respect of my
suit land and they were trying to disturb my peaceful possession on the
suit land and hence this suit.
15. That it is submitted that since purchase I am in title and possession
on the suit land and the vendor Tinkari Chakraborty and or his heirs or
heiress have no subsisting interest on the suit land or any portion of the
schedule 2 land and the principal defendant No.6, the alleged daughter
of Tinkari Chakraborty has no saleable interest or any kind of interest
on the suit land.
42
16. That by the aforesaid manufactured Sale Deed No.90 of 2012 the
principal defendant Nos.1 to 5 have not acquired any right, title, interest
or possession on the schedule 2 land or any portion of the same.
17. That only to disturb my peaceful possession on the suit land, in
collusion with each other the principal defendant Nos.1 to 6 created and
manufactured the aforesaid sale deed which has no force in the eye of
law and nothing but a mere paper transaction.
…
27. That the defendant Nos. 1 to 5 did not and could not acquired any
right, title, interest or possession on the suit land by the any document
executed by the alleged daughter of Tinkari Chakraborty who had no
subsisting interest on the suit land.”
55. During cross-examination of PW-1 inter alia stated as follows:-
“1. The remaining land in plot no.3057 remains with the Babus at
Kolkata; my deed contents both the plots nos.3057 and 3047; I cannot
recollect the specific area of each of the plot I have purchased; my deed
does contents boundary; I have claimed the plot no.3057; I have not
gone through the deed; this plot should have a reference in my deed;
the recorded tenants do possess it; I have not stated that plot no.3057
was originally 3047;
…
3. I have purchased with boundaries; I am not in position to state the
possession of the owners of this plot direction wise nor the details the
brothers of Tinkari Chakraborty; transfers have been made by co-share
of Tinkari but not by his brothers, descendants; 1.40 acre has been
43recorded in my name, it is in respect of Tinkari’s share; both the share
will be obtained by me; I have purchased 1.40 acre;
4. The metal road is in the middle of plot no.3057; the road was
prepared not before a long time, not a fact it was made with permission
from Chakrabortys; the said road runs southwards thereafter
eastwards;
…
6. The possession is according to entries in the ROR;”
56. DW-1 in his cross-examination inter alia stated as follows:-
“… 2. I know Tinkari Chakraborty; they were five brothers; I also know
the CS plot no.2816 measuring 9.20 acre; I do not know to whom it
belonged nor hal plot 3047 corresponding to its CS plot numbers nor
that of 3057; it was purchased by Tinkari Chakraborty and his other
brothers but to whom is not known to me; no such CS plot does exist at
all.
3. It is fact that I have not seen the deed standing in the name of
Tinkari Chakraborty but I have seen the ROR in their name; 1.40 acre
stands in his name in that ROR.
4. I do not know the area of plot no.3047″.
57. DW-2, in his cross-examination inter alia stated as follows:-
“… 2. I know Arun Kr Mandal has two other brothers; it is fact that his
brothers also purchased land along with him.
3. I do not know the kht. no. but plot no.3057; total area is 9.15 acre;
we are in possession a portion of property under license of owners; the
record has been prepared in our name to that eflect.
44
4. The property originally belong Rashbihari Bannerjee and thereafter it
was purchased to Tinkari Chakraborty; Rashbihari had no other
brothers; I am a licensee under Durgacharan Chakraborty; Tinkari
purchased all the properties of Rashbihari; I do not know the area nor
the number of brothers of Tinkari; Parul Chakraborty possess the
property which Rashibari possessing.
…
7. I have not found the deed standing in favour of Arun by Tinkari
Chakraborty nor I have found Parul Chakraborty.
8. I do not know the date on which the defendant purchased from Parul
Chakraborty : I found Tinkari when he was in police service before his
purchase”.
58. Under the provisions of Order VII Rule 7 while deciding a second appeal,
the High Court is not tethered to the rigid, imperfect remedies passed
down by the First Appellant Court. If the High Court answers the
formulated substantial question of law in favour of the appellant, it holds
the power to completely discard the First Appellante Court’s decree and
restore the Trial Court’s findings. Furthermore, under Order VII Rule 7 of
the CPC, the High Court can mould the final relief to match the
substantive law proved, ensuring that form does not defeat absolute
justice (e.g., ordering a transformation from a prayer of “confirmation of
possession” to a decree for “recovery of possession” from a trespasser.
59. The Learned Advocate for the appellant submitted a compelling narrative
of title, meticulously structured to demonstrate a seamless convergence of
registered conveyances, prior judicial declarations, and rectified revenue
45
records. He argued that the parent estate, C.S. Plot No.2816, was
definitively split by the 1931 partition deed, and Tinkari Chakraborty’s
1.40-acre share was an absolute, identifiable interest.
60. Counsel heavily relied upon the 1982 civil court decree (Exhibit 2) in Title
Suit No.32 of 1980, which had already adjudicated that the R.S. entries
swapping Plot Nos. 3047 and 3057 were entirely incorrect and void. He
urged that when Tinkari executed the 1983 sale deed (Exhibit 1)
referencing the active R.S. number, the underlying identity of the land
remained perfectly secure and judicially cleared.
61. The appellant further emphasized that the state revenue authorities
eventually corrected this historical mapping error during the Land
Reforms operation, officially publishing the L.R. Record of Rights (Exhibit
4A) in the plaintiff’s name under L.R. Plot No.3057. Counsel
invoked Section 51C of the West Bengal Land Reforms Act, 1955, to
argue that this finalized statutory entry creates an absolute bar on civil
courts altering finalized revenue maps.
62. To expose the fragility of the defense, the appellant directed this Court’s
attention to the cross-examination of the defence’s own witness, DW-1,
who explicitly admitted that the plaintiff had purchased the land from
Tinkari and that the corresponding cadastral plot was 2816. He branded
the defendants’ Exhibit B as a manifest forgery, pointing out that “LR Dag
No.3057” was crudely hand-written in red ink without any official
attestation. He concluded that since Tinkari had divested himself of all
rights in 1983, his daughter inherited nothing, rendering the 2012 deed a
legal nullity.
46
63. In opposition, the Learned Counsel for the contesting respondents
presented an exhaustive argument seeking to fortify the reversing
judgment of the First Appellate Court. He strenuously contended the
property set forth in Schedule-II of the plaint was conspicuously devoid of
any boundary specifications or dimensional delineations, a structural
omission that directly contravened the mandate of Order VII Rule 3 of
the CPC. Relying upon Sheodhyan Singh v. Sanichara Kuer (AIR 1963 SC
1879), he urged an omission of boundaries inevitably renders any
subsequent decree a brutum fulmen, entirely incapable of execution on the
ground.
64. The respondents further argued that the plaintiff’s 1983 deed explicitly
named R.S. Plot No.3047 as the demised property. In the absence of a
registered deed of rectification or a civil decree modifying the contract
under Section 26 of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, the plaintiff cannot use
oral evidence to substitute one plot number for another. He
invoked Sections 91 and 92 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, to argue
that oral narratives cannot be admitted to contradict or vary the written
terms of a registered document.
65. Counsel also asserted that the plaintiff failed to examine any independent
local witnesses to corroborate continuous physical enjoyment or his
alleged dispossession in April 2012. Conversely, the defense brought
forward the consistent testimony of DW-2, an actual cultivator, who
deposed that the respondents are in settled, open possession. He
maintained that the respondents’ rights are rooted in a valid, independent
47
legal source – the 2012 deed executed by Parul Chakraborty, the sole legal
heir of Tinkari.
66. Finally, he argued the suit was hit by the absolute statutory bar under
the proviso to Section 34 of the Specific Relief Act, as the plaintiff merely
sought a standalone declaration and confirmation of possession,
consciously omitting a proper prayer for recovery of possession. He also
highlighted the non-service of notice under Section 80 of the Civil
Procedure Code upon the State, contending it vitiated the entire
proceedings ab initio.
67. The first substantial question of law requires this Court to evaluate
whether the First Appellate Court’s branding of the suit property
description as “vague” constitutes judicial perversity.
68. The First Appellate Court concluded that the absolute absence of specific
four-corner boundaries in Schedule II of the plaint, which mirrored the
schedule of the 1983 title deed, was fatal to the suit under Order VII Rule
3 of the Civil Procedure Code. This finding represents a severe
misconstruction of property law and conveyancing jurisprudence.
69. The statutory mandate of Order VII Rule 3 is not that a
plaint must contain boundary descriptions under all circumstances. The
clear text of the rule dictates that the plaint must contain a
description sufficient to identify the property. The law provides
alternative, equally reliable methods of identification.
70. It is a well-settled canon of property law that where an administrative,
clerical, or typographical error creeps into a plot number during rapid
settlement survey operations, the true identity of the land must be
48
gathered from the totality of its parent title and its historical lineage,
rather than relying blindly on an isolated, incorrect survey identifier.
71. The legal maxim certum est quod certum reddi potest – that is certain
which can be made certain–directly applies to the facts of this case.
While Schedule II lacked boundary lines, it explicitly identified the exact
area of 1.40 acres tied directly to the parent tract of C.S. Plot No.2816. A
government survey plot number is considered the most precise marker in
land administration because it refers to a fixed, officially mapped
coordinate within the state’s land registry. By referencing the parent plot
number and the precise acreage derived from the registered 1931
partition deed, the property description was legally complete. The plot
number implicitly references fixed coordinates within the state’s mapping
infrastructure, meaning the boundaries are legally present by proxy.
72. Furthermore, the historical plot identifier mismatch between R.S. Plot
No.3047 and R.S. Plot No.3057 had already been fully litigated and
judicially settled by a competent civil court in Title Suit No. 32 of 1980.
The 1982 Civil Court decree (Exhibit 2) explicitly ruled that the Revisional
Settlement entries swapping these plot identities were incorrect, void, and
non-binding.
73. When Tinkari Chakraborty sold the 1.40 acres to the plaintiff in 1983, his
title had already been judicially cleared of this mapping defect. The
plaintiff was not required to secure a formal deed of rectification; the 1982
civil court decree had already judicially cured the identity of the property.
The First Appellate Court sat as a lower court of facts and had absolutely
49
zero legal authority to overturn or ignore the binding finality of that 1982
decree.
74. The defence’s argument of vagueness completely collapses when
juxtaposed against the explicit oral admissions elicited during the trial.
Under cross-examination, Defendant Witness 1 (DW-1), Gopal Prasad
Kuiry, explicitly admitted that the plaintiff had indeed purchased the land
from Tinkari Chakraborty and explicitly confirmed that the underlying
parcel was parent Cadastral Plot No.2816.
75. Under Section 58 of the Indian Evidence Act, 1872, facts admitted need
not be proved. It is a severe legal contradiction for the defendants to argue
that a property is completely unidentifiable while their own primary
witness explicitly identifies its historical origin and boundaries during
testimony.
76. The Hon’ble High Court of Bombay, in the case of GODAWARIBAI
PURUSHOTTAM BAWASKAR vs. SITARAM BHAGWAN PAITHANE AND
OTHERS1, has made the following observations: –
“10. In this regard the provision of Order 7, Rule 3 of Civil Procedure
Code being material is quoted as under : Order 7, Rule 3:
“3. Where the subject-matter of the suit is immovable property –
Where the subject-matter of the suit is immovable property, the
plaint shall contain a description of the property sufficient to
identify it, and, in case such property can be identified by
boundaries or numbers in a record of settlement or survey, the
plaint shall specify such boundaries or numbers.”
12. The very purpose of Order 7, Rule 3 of the Civil Procedure Code
is to ensure that there is description of the suit property sufficient to
identify the same, which is with the intent and purpose that in case
a decree is passed, it ought to be an executable decree and does not
remain a mere paper decree.
1
2020 SCC OnLine Bom 2043
50
13. In Laxman Singh v. Jagannath, (2000) 1 MP LJ 79 : 1999 SCC
OnLine MP 271 it has been held as under:
“10. The purpose of Order 7, Rule 3 of the Code is that unless
the plaintiff indicates the identity of the property claimed by him
either by means of boundaries or by means of map as required
by Order 7, Rule 3 of the Code, it would be difficult for the Court
to find whether the plaintiff has title to the property claimed and
whether any encroachment or dispossession has been made by
the defendant. Thus the duty of the party is to give description
sufficient to identify the property in dispute. If such decree is
passed, it shall be unworkable. The Court can only pass a decree
which can be executed under Order 21 of the Code”
15. Similar position is reiterated in Zarif Ahmad (Dead) Through
Legal Rep. v. Mohd. Farooq, 2015 Mah LJ OnLine (SC) 126 : (2015)
13 SCC 673, in the following words:
“11. The object of the above provision is that the description of
the property must be sufficient to identify it. The property can
be identifiable by boundaries, or by number in a public record
of settlement or survey. Even by plaint map showing the
location of the disputed immovable property, it can be
described.”
17. It is trite to say that for the purpose of obtaining an effective
decree which can be executable in law, the correct identifiable
description of the suit property is a must, otherwise the decree
remains a paper decree, unexecutable due to non-identification of
the property to which it relates. ”
78. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of ZARIF AHMAD AND
ANOTHER vs. MOHD. FAROOQ2, has made the following observation: –
“11. Order 7 Rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (for short
“CPC“), which pertains to the requirement of description of
immovable property, reads as under:
“3.Where the subject-matter of the suit is immovable
property.–Where the subject-matter of the suit is immovable
property, the plaint shall contain a description of the property
sufficient to identify it, and, in case such property can be2
(2015) 13 SCC 673
51identified by boundaries or numbers in a record of settlement or
survey, the plaint shall specify such boundaries or numbers.”
The object of the above provision is that the description of the
property must be sufficient to identify it. The property can be
identifiable by boundaries, or by number in a public record of
settlement or survey. Even by plaint map showing the location of the
disputed immovable property, it can be described.”
79. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of P. CHANDRASEKHARAN AND
OTHERS vs. S. KANAKARAJAN AND OTHERS3, has made the following
observation: –
“10. The plaintiff, before his suit is decreed, must establish the
cause of action in respect of the property in question wherefor the
relief for recovery of possession has been claimed. In case the suit is
decreed, the executing court must be able to deliver possession
thereof and thus there cannot be any doubt whatsoever that the
property in suit must be adequately identifiable. When such a relief
is claimed the plaintiff must show what he had purchased and how
the court, in the event a dispute arises, would determine the identity
of the property.”
80. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of PRATIBHA SINGH AND
ANOTHER vs. SHANTI DEVI PRASAD AND ANOTHER4, has made the
following observations: –
“15. Order 7 Rule 3 CPC requires where the subject-matter of the
suit is immovable property, the plaint shall contain a description of
the property sufficient to identify it. Such description enables the
court to draw a proper decree as required by Order 20 Rule 3 CPC.
In case such property can be identified by boundaries or numbers in
a record for settlement of survey, the plaint shall specify such
boundaries or numbers.”
77. In real estate and civil litigation, a common defense strategy is to
challenge the maintainability of a suit by arguing that the property
description is too vague to be identified. This argument usually relies
3
(2007) 5 SCC 669
4
(2003) 2 SCC 330
52
on Order VII Rule 3 of the Code of Civil Procedure (CPC), 1908, which
dictates that where a suit subject matter is immovable property, the
plaint must contain a description sufficient to identify it, such as
boundaries or numbers in a record of settlement.
78. When a defendant argues that a suit must fail because the schedule of
the property (which mirrors the schedule in the plaintiff’s title deed) lacks
specific four-corner boundaries, the argument sounds strong on the
surface. However, a deeper legal analysis reveals that the absolute
absence of boundaries in a deed or plaint schedule does not
automatically render a property description vague or the suit
unmaintainable.
79. The fundamental flaw in arguing that a lack of boundaries equates to
“vagueness” is the misinterpretation of Order VII Rule 3. The statutory
mandate is not that a plaint must contain boundaries; the mandate is
that the description must be sufficient to identify the property.
80. The law provides alternative, equally valid methods of certain
identification. If a property can be unambiguously identified by other
markers, the absence of boundaries is legally irrelevant.
81. When interpreting a property schedule that lacks boundaries but matches
a valid title deed, courts rely on standard rules of construction under
the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 and the Indian Evidence Act, 1872.
82. In property law, there is a recognized hierarchy of reliability used to
determine the true identity of a parcel of land when description elements
conflict or are omitted:-
53
i. Government Survey/Plot Numbers: These are considered the most
precise markers because they refer to a fixed, officially mapped
coordinate within the state’s land registry.
ii. Boundaries: These are highly persuasive but can shift over time (e.g.,
changing adjacent owners, shifting natural landmarks).
iii. Extent/Area: This is generally considered the least reliable marker
and yields to both plot numbers and boundaries.
If a schedule lacks boundaries but provides a specific, unique Survey
Plot Number (such as Cadastral Survey or Revisional Settlement
numbers) alongside an exact area measurement (e.g., 1.40 acres),
the description is legally complete. The plot number embeds the
property within an official state-engineered map that explicitly
defines its physical boundaries. Therefore, the boundaries are
already legally present by proxy.
84. Resolving Latent Ambiguities under the Indian Evidence Act can be
inferred to the following provisions:-
i. Section 93 (Patent Ambiguity): If a deed is so inherently unspecific
that it cannot mean anything (e.g., selling “my land in Purulia”
when the seller owns five different plots there), it is a patent
ambiguity, and oral evidence cannot cure it.
ii. Section 96 (Latent Ambiguity / Misdescription): If the deed
describes a property clearly by plot number and area, but the
boundaries are omitted or a typo exists in the survey number, this
is a latent ambiguity or a mere misdescription.
54
85. Under the provisos of Section 92 and Section 96, a party is fully entitled
to introduce surrounding evidence–such as parent deeds, village map
layouts, tax receipts, and oral testimony from local witnesses–to show
exactly which physical patch of earth matches that plot number and area.
86. If the identity of the plot–including its historical mapping discrepancies–
has already been litigated and decided by a competent civil court in a
prior suit involving the same predecessors-in-title, that prior decree acts
as an absolute clarification of the property’s identity. The property can no
longer be called “vague” because a court has already legally defined its
parameters.
87. When a defendant claims they purchased the exact same plot via a later
deed that does feature beautifully detailed boundaries, they argue their
deed is superior due to its specificity. This argument fails under the
doctrine of Nemo dat quod non habet (no one can give what they do not
have), governed by Section 48 of the Transfer of Property Act (Priority
of Rights):
i. The First in Time Rule: Once a vendor executes a registered sale
deed transferring a specific plot number and area to a plaintiff, the
vendor is completely divested of ownership over that land.
ii. The Empty Inheritance: If that vendor dies, their heirs inherit
absolutely zero residual interest in that specific plot.
iii. The Void Subsequent Deed: If an heir later purports to sell that same
plot to a defendant, drawing a map with clear boundaries on the
paper, that deed is a brutum fulmen (a harmless
55thunderbolt/empty threat). It transfers nothing because the heir
had nothing to transfer.
88. An articulated boundary on a fraudulent, void deed cannot defeat a valid,
earlier registered title deed that relies cleanly on an official government
plot number.
89. A lack of boundaries in a property schedule is fatal only if the remaining
description elements are also deficient. For example, if a deed conveys “an
undemarcated 1 acre out of a massive 50-acre communal plot” without
specifying a subdivision layout, a plot number, or a mutation block, the
description is genuinely vague and unexecutable.
90. However, if the schedule reflects a distinct, individual fractional share
or an entire standalone plot identifier (e.g., 1.40 acres out of an
officially recognized historical plot), the lack of boundaries is a superficial
omission. The property remains perfectly identifiable through state
revenue maps and local physical survey teams. For a court to dismiss
such a suit on the ground of vagueness is an exercise in hyper-technical
perversity that sacrifices substantive justice for administrative form.
83. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of HEMLATHA(D) BY LRS vs.
TUKARAM(D) BY LRS AND OTHERS5, has made the following
observations: –
“31. It is a settled position of law that a registered Sale Deed carries
with it a formidable presumption of validity and genuineness.
Registration is not a mere procedural formality but a solemn act that
imparts high degree of sanctity to the document. Consequently, a Court5
2026 SCC OnLIne SC 106
56must not lightly or casually declare a registered instrument as a
“sham”. Adopting the principles enunciated in Prem
Singh v. Birbal, (2006) 5 SCC 3531, Jamila Begum (Dead) Through
Lrs. v. Shami Mohd. (Dead) Through Lrs., (2019) 2 SCC 727 2,
and Rattan Singh v. Nirmal Gill, (2021) 15 SCC 3003, this Court
reiterates that the burden of proof to displace this presumption rests
heavily upon the challenger. Such a challenge can only be sustained if
the party provides material particulars and cogent evidence to
demonstrate that the Deed was never intended to operate as a bona
fide transfer of title.”
84. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of P. KISHORE KUMAR vs.
VITTAL K. PATKAR6, has made the following observations: –
“22. It is trite law that revenue records are not documents of title.
23. This Court in Sawarni v. Inder Kaur [Sawarni v. Inder Kaur, (1996)
6 SCC 223] held that mutation in revenue records neither creates nor
extinguishes title, nor does it have any presumptive value on title. All it
does is entitle the person in whose favour mutation is done to pay the
land revenue in question.
24. This was further affirmed in Balwant Singh v. Daulat
Singh [Balwant Singh v. Daulat Singh, (1997) 7 SCC 137] wherein this
Court held that mere mutation of records would not divest the owners
of a land of their right, title and interest in the land.
25. In Jitendra Singh v. State of M.P. [Jitendra Singh v. State of M.P.,
2021 SCC OnLine SC 802] , this Court after considering a catena of
judgments, reiterated the principle of law as follows: (SCC OnLine SC
para 6)“6. … mutation entry does not confer any right, title or interest in
favour of the person and the mutation entry in the revenue record
is only for the fiscal purpose.”
6
(2024) 13 SCC 553
57
26. We may also profitably refer to the decision of this Court in Sita
Ram Bhau Patil v. Ramchandra Nago Patil [Sita Ram Bhau
Patil v. Ramchandra Nago Patil, (1977) 2 SCC 49] wherein it was held
that there exists no universal principle that whatever will appear in the
record of rights will be presumed to be correct, when there exists
evidence to the contrary.”
85. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of JITENDRA SINGH vs. STATE
OF MADHYA PRADESH AND OTHERS7, has made the following
observations: –
“7. Right from 1997, the law is very clear. In the case of Balwant
Singh v. Daulat Singh (D) By Lrs., reported in (1997) 7 SCC 137, this
Court had an occasion to consider the effect of mutation and it is
observed and held that mutation of property in revenue records neither
creates nor extinguishes title to the property nor has it any
presumptive value on title. Such entries are relevant only for the
purpose of collecting land revenue. Similar view has been expressed in
the series of decisions thereafter.
8. In the case of Suraj Bhan v. Financial Commissioner, (2007) 6 SCC
186, it is observed and held by this Court that an entry in revenue
records does not confer title on a person whose name appears in
record-of-rights. Entries in the revenue records or jamabandi have only
“fiscal purpose”, i.e., payment of land revenue, and no ownership is
conferred on the basis of such entries. It is further observed that so far
as the title of the property is concerned, it can only be decided by a
competent civil court. Similar view has been expressed in the cases
of Suman Verma v. Union of India, (2004) 12 SCC
58; Faqruddin v. Tajuddin, (2008) 8 SCC 12; Rajinder Singh v. State of
J&K, (2008) 9 SCC 368; Municipal Corporation, Aurangabad v. State of
Maharashtra, (2015) 16 SCC 689; T. Ravi v. B. Chinna
Narasimha, (2017) 7 SCC 342; Bhimabai Mahadeo7
2021 SCC OnLine SC 802
58Kambekar v. Arthur Import & Export Co., (2019) 3 SCC 191; Prahlad
Pradhan v. Sonu Kumhar, (2019) 10 SCC 259; and Ajit
Kaur v. Darshan Singh, (2019) 13 SCC 70.”
86. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of NARASAMMA AND OTHERS
vs. STATE OF KARNATAKA AND OTHERS8, has made the following
observations: –
“……
27. It is true that the entries in the revenue record cannot create any
title in respect of the land in dispute, but it certainly reflects as to who
was in possession of the land in dispute on the date the name of that
person had been entered in the revenue record.”
87. The Hon’ble High Court at Bombay, in the case of RITA PREMCHAND
AND ANOTHER vs. STATE OF MAHARASHTRA AND OTHERS 9, has
made the following observations: –
“…..
7. The principle of law is well settled, that entries in the revenue
records are not dispositive or conclusive on questions of title. The
revenue records create no title and are relevant only for fiscal
purposes.”
88. The Hon’ble High Court at Bombay, in the case of NIVRUTTI S/O
KUSHABA BINNARvs. SAKHUBAI W/O KERU JORVAR (SINCE
DECEASED) BY HER L.RS. PANDU KERU JORVAR AND OTHERS 10, has
made the following observations: –
“29….The Apex Court in Balwant Singh v. Daulat Singh (dead) by
L.Rs., (1997) 7 SCC 137 : AIR 1997 SC 2719, held that mere8
(2009) 5 SCC 591
9
(2001 SCC OnLine Bom 477
10
2009 SCC OnLine Bom 19
59mutation entries could not be construed as conveying title in favour
of the person claiming to be the owner. It is observed:
“….Be that as it may, we have already noticed that mutation
entries do not convey or extinguish any title and those entries are
relevant only for the purpose of collection of land revenue. …….”
There is a catena of case-law in this behalf. In State of Himachal
Pradesh v. Keshav Ram, (1996) 11 SCC 257 : AIR 1997 SC 2181,
the Apex Court held that entries in the revenue record cannot
form basis for declaration of title.”
89. The Hon’ble High Court at Calcutta, in the case of LAKSHMI JAISWAL
vs. SANJAY JAISWAL & ORS11., has made the following observation: –
“……
26. It may be true as has been held by a Division Bench of this court
in Indira Devi (supra) that a record of right is not a document of title.
But it is also well settled that entries in a record of right carry with it a
presumption. Such entries having been made in the record of rights as
far back as in the year 1930, the presumption becomes stronger.”
90. The Hon’ble High Court at Calcutta, in the case of KASHINATH MONDAL
& ORS. vs. STATE OF WEST BENGAL & ORS12., has made the following
observations: –
“15. It is settled position of law that record-of-rights does not create
nor extinguish title. It really reflects the title and this has got a
presumptive value. The decision relating to status and/or right of a
particular person is something else from the record-of-rights. After the
decision of right or status is rendered, the same is reflected in the
record-of-rights…”
11
2000 SCC OnLine Cal 312
12
2007 SCC OnLine Cal 739
60
91. The Hon’ble High Court at Calcutta, in the case of SEIKH SAHIDUL vs.
SAJAHAN SHEIKH & ORS13., has made the following observations: –
“27. …..It is needless to say that the R.O.Rs indicates possession and
not that of title. It is true that continuous possession of a person in
respect of a particular property may lead to acquisition of title and such a
person may claim adverse possession against the whole of the world
including the real owner.
28. …… It is true on principles that finally published record of
rights should be presumed to be correct but simply relying on that the
appellants or the proforma respondents cannot acquire any title over the
suit property.”
92. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of STATE OF H.P. vs. KESHAV
RAM AND OTHERS14, has made the following observations: –
“5. In view of the rival contentions, the question that arises for
consideration is whether the plaintiffs have been able to establish their
title and the courts below were justified in declaring plaintiffs’ title. As
has been stated earlier the only piece of evidence on which the courts
below relied upon to decree the plaintiffs’ suit is the alleged order
made by the Assistant Settlement Officer directing correction of the
record of right. The order in question is not there on record but the
plaintiffs relied upon the register where the correction appears to have
been given effect to. The question, therefore, arises as to whether the
entry in the settlement papers recording somebody’s name could
create or extinguish title in favour of the person concerned? It is to be
seen that the disputed land originally stood recorded in the name of
Raja Sahib of Keonthal and thereafter the State was recorded to be the
owner of the land in the record of right prepared in the year 1949-50.
In the absence of the very order of the Assistant Settlement Officer
directing necessary correction to be made in favour of the plaintiffs, it
13
2016 SCC OnLine Cal 4441
14
(1996) 11 SCC 257
61is not possible to visualize on what basis the aforesaid direction had
been made. But at any rate such an entry in the Revenue papers by no
stretch of imagination can form the basis for declaration of title in
favour of the plaintiffs. To our query as to whether there is any other
document on the basis of which the plaintiffs can claim title over the
disputed land, the learned counsel for the plaintiffs-respondents could
not point out any other document apart from the alleged correction
made in the register pursuant to the order of the Assistant Settlement
Officer. In our considered opinion, the courts below committed serious
error of law in declaring plaintiffs’ title on the basis of the aforesaid
order of correction and the consequential entry in the Revenue papers.
In the circumstances, the appeal is allowed and the judgment and
decree passed in all the three forums are set aside. The plaintiffs’ suit
stands dismissed. There will be no order as to costs.”
94. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of SAWARNI(SMT) vs. INDER
KAUR (SMT) AND OTHERS15, has made the following observations: –
“7. ….. At the outset, it may be noticed that the plaintiff had filed the
suit claiming half interest for herself and claiming half interest in
favour of the husband and sons of Roori and, therefore, the learned
Additional District Judge was wholly in error to hold that the plaintiff
could not have filed the suit in question. In view of the rival stand of
the parties the main question that arose for consideration was whether
Roori was the daughter of Gurbax Singh or Inder Kaur, Defendant 5
was the daughter of the same Gurbax Singh? The learned trial Judge
after elaborate discussion of the evidence on record both oral and
documentary came to the positive conclusion that it was Roori who
was the daughter of Gurbax Singh as alleged by the plaintiff and not
Inder Kaur. The lower appellate court without focusing its attention on
the weighty reasons advanced by the trial court and without
examining the materials on record in that respect even did not set
aside the said finding of the trial Judge and yet reversed the decree of15
(1996) 6 SCC 223
62the trial Judge. We have no hesitation to come to the conclusion that
the said judgment of the Additional District Judge is wholly
unsustainable in law. The crucial point being as to who was the
second daughter of Gurbax Singh, namely Roori or Inder Kaur, and the
trial Judge having come to the positive conclusion that it was Roori
who was the second daughter of Gurbax Singh, the lower appellate
court was not justified in not considering the material evidence as well
as the reasons advanced by the trial Judge and merely coming to the
conclusion that the evidence on the file does not prove Roori to be the
daughter of Gurbax Singh. Further, the lower appellate court has not
come to any positive finding that Inder Kaur was the daughter of
Gurbax Singh. He has been swayed away by the so-called mutation in
the revenue record in favour of Inder Kaur. Mutation of a property in
the revenue record does not create or extinguish title nor has it any
presumptive value on title. It only enables the person in whose favour
mutation is ordered to pay the land revenue in question. The learned
Additional District Judge was wholly in error in coming to a conclusion
that mutation in favour of Inder Kaur conveys title in her favour. This
erroneous conclusion has vitiated the entire judgment. That apart, as it
would be seen, the learned trial Judge had considered the oral
evidence adduced on behalf of the parties to establish the respective
stand as to who was the second daughter of Gurbax Singh and on
perusal of the same came to the conclusion that it was Roori who was
the second daughter of Gurbax Singh. The Additional District Judge
has not even discussed anything about the said oral evidence and the
reasonings advanced by the learned trial Judge in coming to the
conclusion that it was Roori who was the second daughter of Gurbax
Singh. Non-consideration of the oral evidence adduced by the parties,
by the lower appellate court vitiates the ultimate conclusion on the
question whether Roori was the daughter of Gurbax Singh or not. It is
further seen that Gurdip Kaur, widow of Gurbax Singh had executed a
Will in respect of the entire estate in favour of the plaintiff and Roori
and after the death of Gurdip Kaur a succession certificate had been
issued by the civil court under the Indian Succession Act, 1925 in
63favour of the plaintiff and the said Roori. The said succession
certificate and rights flowing therefrom cannot be ignored. Admittedly
no attempt has been made by Defendants 1 to 4 to annul the
succession certificate on the grounds available under the Succession
Act. The Additional District Judge committed serious error of law in not
considering the said Will and the succession certificate in question
which unequivocally clinches the matter and thereby the ultimate
judgment of the Additional District Judge is vitiated. The High Court
also was in error in not examining these questions and dismissing the
second appeal in limine.”
95. By ignoring this vital admission and the finalized L.R. Record of Rights
(Exhibit 4A), which officially registered the plaintiff’s name under L.R. Plot
No.3057 to the exact extent of his 1.40 acres, the First Appellate Court
delivered a finding that is visibly perverse, irrational, and unsustainable.
Question No. 1 is, therefore, answered in the affirmative.
93. The second substantial question of law examines whether the First
Appellate Court was justified in refusing to grant a decree for protection
or recovery of possession simply because the plaintiff sought
“confirmation of possession” but was found to be physically out of actual
control on the ground on the date of the suit.
94. In dismissing the suit, the First Appellate Court chose to re-characterize
the plaintiff’s substantive prayer for a permanent injunction as a mere
“interim temporary prayer till disposal of the suit.” It used this misreading
to invoke the statutory bar under the proviso to Section 34 of the
Specific Relief Act, 1963, citing C. Mohammed Yunus v. Syed Unissa
(AIR 1961 SC 808), and concluded that the plaintiff had failed to seek
mandatory consequential relief.
64
95. This reasoning represents a severe distortion of the pleadings and a
misapplication of substantive law. The plaintiff did not file a bare,
standalone suit for a declaration. The plaint explicitly included a
substantive prayer for a permanent injunction to restrain the principal
defendants from entering upon or interfering with his peaceable
enjoyment. A prayer for a permanent injunction is an explicitly recognized
form of consequential “further relief” under Section 34. By seeking this
injunction, the plaintiff completely satisfied the statutory safeguard of
Section 34, ensuring that the litigation was not split into multiple,
vexatious proceedings.
96. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of ANNAMALAI vs. VASANTHI
AND OTHERS16, has made the following observations: –
“35. A declaratory relief seeks to clear what is doubtful, and which
is necessary to make it clear. If there is a doubt on the right of a
plaintiff, and without the doubt being cleared no further relief can be
granted, a declaratory relief becomes essential because without
such a declaration the consequential relief may not be available to
the plaintiff [ See : Anathula Sudhakar v. P. Buchi Reddy, (2008) 4
SCC 594] .
37. Rationale of the aforesaid principle is that a void
instrument/transaction can be ignored by a court while granting the
main relief based on a subsisting right. But, where the plaintiff’s
right falls under a cloud, then a declaration affirming the right of the
plaintiff may be necessary for grant of a consequential relief.
However, whether such a declaration is required for the
consequential relief sought is to be assessed on a case-to-case
basis, dependent on its facts.
44. In our view, a declaratory relief would be required where a
doubt or a cloud is there on the right of the plaintiff and grant of
relief to the plaintiff is dependent on removal of that doubt or cloud.
However, whether there is a doubt or cloud on the right of the16
(2026) 3 SCC 769
65plaintiff to seek consequential relief, the same is to be determined on
the facts of each case.”
97. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of AKKAMMA AND OTHERS vs.
VEMAVATHI AND OTHERS17, has made the following observations: –
“18. Our attention has also been drawn to certain portions of M.
Krishnaswamy’s Law of Adverse Possession (12th Edn.). In this
commentary, the author has summarised the legal position in
relation to presumption of law in relation to vacant lands in the
following manner:
“Possession is not necessarily the same as actual user. To prove
possession, it is not necessary, generally, to prove user of land. If
the land is of such a nature as to render it unfit for actual enjoyment
in the usual modes, it may be presumed that the possession of the
owner continues until the contrary is proved.
The jurisprudential concept of possession is made up of two
ingredients : (i) the corpus; and (ii) the animus. Corpus means actual
exclusive physical control over the property denoting physical
possession. The animus denotes the intention and exercise of right
to possess the property as owner to the exclusion of others. These
two ingredients put together go to constitute legal possession.”
20. …. The plaintiffs sought to introduce prayer for recovery of
possession to cure the defect of not having made out a case on that
count by way of amendment of plaint at the appellate stage. The
High Court rejected this prayer. We have quoted earlier in this
judgment the reason for such rejection. We are in agreement with
the High Court on this point. While in a situation of this nature,
amendment of plaint could be asked for (Vinay Krishna v. Keshav
Chandra [Vinay Krishna v. Keshav Chandra, 1993 Supp (3) SCC
129] ), such a plea ought to have been made within the prescribed
limitation period. This position of law has been clarified
in Venkataraja v. VidyaneDoureradjaperumal [Venkataraja v. Vidya
neDoureradjaperumal, (2014) 14 SCC 502 : (2015) 1 SCC (Civ) 360] .
In this case, it has been held : (Venkataraja
case [Venkataraja v. VidyaneDoureradjaperumal, (2014) 14 SCC
502 : (2015) 1 SCC (Civ) 360] , SCC p. 510, para 24)
“24. A mere declaratory decree remains non-executable in most
cases generally. However, there is no prohibition upon a party
17
(2021) 18 SCC 371
66
from seeking an amendment in the plaint to include the unsought
relief, provided that it is saved by limitation. However, it is
obligatory on the part of the defendants to raise the issue at the
earliest. (Vide Prakash Chand Khurana v. Harnam
Singh [Prakash Chand Khurana v. Harnam Singh, (1973) 2 SCC
484] and State of M.P. v. Mangilal Sharma [State of
M.P. v. Mangilal Sharma, (1998) 2 SCC 510 : 1998 SCC (L&S)
599] .)”
21. We agree with that part of the decision of the High Court in
which it has been held that possession of the suit property was not
established by the plaintiffs and hence injunctive relief could not be
granted. As we have already recorded, we are also in agreement
with the High Court’s reasoning for rejecting the plea for
amendment. But we do not agree fully with the entire reasoning of
the High Court for dismissal of the appeal as spelt out in the said
judgment. The bar contained in the proviso to Section 34 of the 1963
Act, in our opinion, could not be applied in the case of the plaintiffs
as consequential relief for injunction from interference with the suit
land was claimed. The prohibition contained in the proviso to
Section 34 would operate only if the sole relief is for declaration
without any consequential relief. In the plaint of the 1987 suit, relief
for injunction was asked for. Such dual relief would protect the suit
from being dismissed on maintainability ground. It is a fact that the
plaintiff ought to have had asked for recovery of possession, given
the factual background of this case, but the plaint as it was
originally framed reflected that the original plaintiff was in
possession of the suit land. Such plea rightly failed before the trial
court and the first appellate court.
22. The prohibition or bar contained in the proviso to Section 34 of
the 1963 Act determines the maintainability of a suit and that issue
has to be tested on the basis the plaint is framed. If the plaint
contains claims for declaratory relief as also consequential relief in
the form of injunction that would insulate a suit from an attack on
maintainability on the sole ground of bar mandated in the proviso to
the aforesaid section. If on evidence the plaintiff fails on
consequential relief, the suit may be dismissed on merit so far as
plea for consequential relief is concerned but not on maintainability
question invoking the proviso to Section 34 of the 1963 Act. If the
plaintiff otherwise succeeds in getting the declaratory relief, such
relief could be granted. On this count, we do not accept the ratio of
the Karnataka High Court judgment
in Aralappa [Aralappa v. Jagannath, 2006 SCC OnLine Kar 501 :
67
ILR 2007 Kar 339] to be good law. In that decision, it has been held
: (SCC OnLine Kar para 31)
“31. Even if the plaintiff comes to Court asserting that he is in
possession and that if it is found after trial that he was not in
possession on the date of the suit, even then, the suit for
declaration and permanent injunction is liable to be dismissed as
not maintainable, as no decree for permanent injunction can be
granted if the plaintiff is not in possession on the date of the suit.
In such circumstances, it is necessary for the plaintiff to amend
the plaint before the judgment and seek relief of possession.
Therefore, a suit for declaration of title and permanent injunction,
by the plaintiff who is not in possession on the date of the suit,
when he is able to seek further relief of recovery of possession
also, omits to do so, the Court shall not make any such
declaration and the suit is liable to be dismissed as not
maintainable.”
98. The Hon’ble High Court at Karnataka, in the case of SRI ARALAPPA vs.
SRI JAGANNATH AND OTHERS18, has made the following observations: –
“28. Section 34 of the Act reads as under:
“34. Discretion of Court as to declaration of status or
right.– Any person entitled to any legal character, or to any
right as to any property, may institute a suit against any person
denying or interested to deny, his title to such character or right,
and the Court may in its discretion make therein a declaration
that he is so entitled, as the plaintiff need not in such suit ask for
any further relief:
Provided that no Court shall make any such declaration where
the plaintiff, being able to seek further relief than a mere
declaration of title, omits to do so.”
29. In the light of the aforesaid judgment and the statutory
provisions referred supra, it is clear that, the object of the section is
to perpetuate and strengthen testimony regarding title and protect it
from adverse attacks and to prevent future litigation by removing
existing cause of controversy. The policy of the legislature is not only
to secure to a wronged party possession of the property taken away
from him but also to see that he is allowed to enjoy that property
peacefully. The proviso to the said Section shows the care that has
been taken by the legislature to avoid multiplicity of suits and to
18
2006 SCC OnLine Kar 501
68
prevent a person getting the declaration of right in one suit and
immediately after the remedy already available in the other. This is
clear from the proviso of the Section. The proviso lays down that no
Court shall make such declaration where the plaintiff being able to
seek further relief than mere declaration of title omits to do so. The
object of this proviso is to avoid multiplicity of the suits. Where the
plaintiff is entitled to some consequential relief, directly flowing from
the right or title of which he seeks declaration in the suit, he must
seek declaration in the first instance and a consequential relief in
the same suit and not by two separate suits. This provision is
mandatory and enjoins the Court not to pass a declaratory decree
where the plaintiff omits to seek further relief to which he is entitled
to, as a natural consequence of the declaration. That is where the
judicial discretion counts. It would be a case of proper exercise of
judicial discretion, to refuse to grant a declaration sought for, even if
the plaintiff establishes his title but he is not in possession, on the
date of the suit and do not seek the relief of possession.
30. In a suit for declaration of ownership and permanent injunction,
not only the plaintiff has to prove his title to the property, but also
his possession over the property on the date of the suit. When the
plaintiff is not in possession of the property on the date of the suit,
relief of permanent injunction is not an appropriate consequential
relief. The appropriate relief consequential to declaration of
ownership would be recovery of possession of the property. When
the plaintiff is out of possession of the property and does not seek
relief for possession, a mere suit for declaration is not maintainable.
The reason is not far to seek. It is well settled that no Court would
grant any relief which is not useful, or futile and not effective. If title
of the plaintiff is to be declared and he is not in possession and
possession is with the defendant or some other person, the plaintiff
would be having title of the property and the person in possession
would be having possessory title tothe property. It would lead to
anomalous situation and create confusion in the public, which is to
be avoided.
31. Even if the plaintiff comes to Court asserting that he is in
possession and that if it is found after trial that he was not in
possession on the date of the suit, even then, the suit for declaration
and permanent injunction is liable to be dismissed as not
maintainable, as no decree for permanent injunction can be granted
if the plaintiff is not in possession on the date of the suit. In such
circumstances, it is necessary for the plaintiff to amend the plaint
before the judgment and seek relief of possession. Therefore, a suit
69
for declaration of title and permanent injunction, by the plaintiff who
is not in possession on the date of the suit, when he is able to seek
further relief of recovery of possession also, omits to do so, the Court
shall not make any such declaration and the suit is liable to be
dismissed as not maintainable.”
99. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of VASANTHA(DEAD) THROUGH LR
VS. RAJALAKSHMI @ RAJAM (DEAD) THROUGH LRS19, has made the
following observations: –
49. We now proceed to examine the law on this issue. As submitted
by the learned Senior Counsel for the appellant, in Vinay
Krishna v. Keshav Chandra [Vinay Krishna v. Keshav Chandra,
1993 Supp (3) SCC 129] (two-Judge Bench), this Court while
considering Section 42 of the erstwhile Specific Relief Act, 1877 to
be pari materia with Section 34 of SRA, 1963 observed that the
plaintiff’s not being in possession of the property in that case ought
to have amended the plaint for the relief of recovery of possession in
view of the bar included by the proviso.
50. This position has been followed by this Court in Union of
India v. Ibrahim Uddin (two-Judge Bench), elaborated the position of
a suit filed without the consequential relief. It was observed : (SCC
p. 173, paras 55-58)“55. The section provides that courts have discretion as to
declaration of status or right, however, it carves out an exception
that a court shall not make any such declaration of status or right
where the complainant, being able to seek further relief than a
mere declaration of title, omits to do so.
56. In Ram Saran v. Ganga Devi [Ram Saran v. Ganga Devi,
(1973) 2 SCC 60] this Court had categorically held that the suit
seeking for declaration of title of ownership but where possession
is not sought, is hit by the proviso to Section 34 of the Specific
Relief Act, 1963 and, thus, not maintainable. In Vinay
Krishna v. Keshav Chandra [Vinay Krishna v. Keshav Chandra,
1993 Supp (3) SCC 129] this Court dealt with a similar issue
where the plaintiff was not in exclusive possession of property
and had filed a suit seeking declaration of title of ownership.
Similar view has been reiterated observing that the suit was not
maintainable, if barred by the proviso to Section 34 of the Specific
Relief Act. (See also Gian Kaur v. Raghubir Singh [Gian
19
(2024) 5 SCC 282
70
Kaur v. Raghubir Singh, (2011) 4 SCC 567 : (2011) 2 SCC (Civ)
366] .)
57. In view of the above, the law becomes crystal clear that it is
not permissible to claim the relief of declaration without seeking
consequential relief.
58. In the instant case, the suit for declaration of title of
ownership had been filed, though Respondent 1-plaintiff was
admittedly not in possession of the suit property. Thus, the suit
was barred by the provisions of Section 34 of the Specific Relief
Act and, therefore, ought to have been dismissed solely on this
ground. The High Court though framed a substantial question on
this point but for unknown reasons did not consider it proper to
decide the same.”
51. In Venkataraja v. VidyaneDoureradjaperumal [Venkataraja v. Vi
dyaneDoureradjaperumal, (2014) 14 SCC 502 : (2015) 1 SCC (Civ)
360] (two-Judge Bench), the purpose behind Section 34 was
elucidated by this Court. It was observed that the purpose behind
the inclusion of the proviso is to prevent multiplicity of proceedings.
It was further expounded that a mere declaratory decree remains
non-executable in most cases. This Court noted that the suit was
never amended, even at a later stage to seek the consequential relief
and therefore, it was held to be not maintainable. This position of
law has been reiterated recently
in Akkamma v. Vemavathi [Akkamma v. Vemavathi, (2021) 18 SCC
371] (two-Judge Bench).
52. This Court in ArulmiguChokkanatha Swamy Koil
Trust v. Chandran [ArulmiguChokkanatha Swamy Koil
Trust v. Chandran, (2017) 3 SCC 702 : (2017) 2 SCC (Civ) 334] (two-
Judge Bench), while reversing the High Court decree, observed that
because of Section 34 of the SRA, 1963, the plaintiff not being in
possession and claiming only declaratory relief, ought to have
claimed the relief of recovery of possession. It was held that the trial
court rightly dismissed the suit on the basis that the plaintiff has
filed a suit for a mere declaration without relief for recovery, which
is clearly not maintainable.
53. That apart, it is now well settled that the lapse of limitation bars
only the remedy but does not extinguish the title. Reference may be
made to Section 27 of the Limitation Act. This aspect was overlooked
entirely by the High Court in reversing the findings of the courts
below. It was not justified for it to have overlooked the aspect of
71
limitation, particularly when deciding a dispute purely civil in
nature.
100. The Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the case of ANATHULA SUDHAKAR vs. P
BUCHI REDDY20, has made the following observations: –
“13. The general principles as to when a mere suit for permanent
injunction will lie, and when it is necessary to file a suit for
declaration and/or possession with injunction as a consequential
relief, are well settled. We may refer to them briefly.
13.1. Where a plaintiff is in lawful or peaceful possession of a
property and such possession is interfered or threatened by the
defendant, a suit for an injunction simpliciter will lie. A person has a
right to protect his possession against any person who does not
prove a better title by seeking a prohibitory injunction. But a person
in wrongful possession is not entitled to an injunction against the
rightful owner.
13.2. Where the title of the plaintiff is not disputed, but he is not in
possession, his remedy is to file a suit for possession and seek in
addition, if necessary, an injunction. A person out of possession,
cannot seek the relief of injunction simpliciter, without claiming the
relief of possession.
13.3. Where the plaintiff is in possession, but his title to the
property is in dispute, or under a cloud, or where the defendant
asserts title thereto and there is also a threat of dispossession from
the defendant, the plaintiff will have to sue for declaration of title
and the consequential relief of injunction. Where the title of the
plaintiff is under a cloud or in dispute and he is not in possession or
not able to establish possession, necessarily the plaintiff will have
to file a suit for declaration, possession and injunction.
19. This Court in Sajjadanashin Sayed Md. B.E. Edr. v. Musa
Dadabhai Ummer [(2000) 3 SCC 350] (at SCC pp. 362-63, para 24)
noticed the apparent conflict in the views expressed
in Vanagiri [Vanagiri Sri
SelliammanAyyanarUthirasomasundareswarar Temple v. Rajanga
Asari, AIR 1965 Mad 355] and Sulochana Amma [AIR 1965 Mad
355] and clarified that the two decisions did not express different
views, but dealt with two different situations, as explained
in Corpus Juris Secundum (Vol. 50, para 735, p. 229):
20
(2008) 4 SCC 594
72“Where title to property is the basis of the right of possession, a
decision on the question of possession is res judicata on the
question of title to the extent that adjudication of title was
essential to the judgment; but where the question of the right to
possession was the only issue actually or necessarily involved,
the judgment is not conclusive on the question of ownership or
title.”
20. In Vanagiri [ From the Final Judgment and Order dated 18-1-
1999 of the High Court of Judicature of Andhra Pradesh at
Hyderabad in SA No. 29 of 1992] the finding on possession did not
rest on a finding on title and there was no issue regarding title. The
case related to an agricultural land and raising of crops and it was
obviously possible to establish by evidence who was actually using
and cultivating the land and it was not necessary to examine the
title to find out who had deemed possession. If a finding on title was
not necessary for deciding the question of possession and grant of
injunction, or where there was no issue regarding title, any decision
on title given incidentally and collaterally will not, operate as res
judicata. On the other hand, the observation in Sulochana
Amma [AIR 1965 Mad 355] that the finding on an issue relating to
title in an earlier suit for injunction may operate as res judicata, was
with reference to a situation where the question of title was directly
and substantially in issue in a suit for injunction, that is, where a
finding as to title was necessary for grant of an injunction and a
specific issue in regard to title had been raised. It is needless to
point out that a second suit would be barred, only when the facts
relating to title are pleaded, when an issue is raised in regard to
title, and parties lead evidence on the issue of title and the court,
instead of relegating the parties to an action for declaration of title,
decides upon the issue of title and that decision attains finality. This
happens only in rare cases. Be that as it may. We are concerned in
this case, not with a question relating to res judicata, but a question
whether a finding regarding title could be recorded in a suit for
injunction simpliciter, in the absence of pleadings and issue relating
to title.
21. To summarise, the position in regard to suits for prohibitory
injunction relating to immovable property, is as under:
(a) Where a cloud is raised over the plaintiff’s title and he does not
have possession, a suit for declaration and possession, with or
without a consequential injunction, is the remedy. Where the
plaintiff’s title is not in dispute or under a cloud, but he is out of
possession, he has to sue for possession with a consequential
73injunction. Where there is merely an interference with the plaintiff’s
lawful possession or threat of dispossession, it is sufficient to sue
for an injunction simpliciter.
(b) As a suit for injunction simpliciter is concerned only with
possession, normally the issue of title will not be directly and
substantially in issue. The prayer for injunction will be decided with
reference to the finding on possession. But in cases where de jure
possession has to be established on the basis of title to the property,
as in the case of vacant sites, the issue of title may directly and
substantially arise for consideration, as without a finding thereon, it
will not be possible to decide the issue of possession.
(c) But a finding on title cannot be recorded in a suit for injunction,
unless there are necessary pleadings and appropriate issue
regarding title (either specific, or implied as noticed in Annaimuthu
Thevar [Annaimuthu Thevar v. Alagammal, (2005) 6 SCC 202] ).
Where the averments regarding title are absent in a plaint and
where there is no issue relating to title, the court will not investigate
or examine or render a finding on a question of title, in a suit for
injunction. Even where there are necessary pleadings and issue, if
the matter involves complicated questions of fact and law relating to
title, the court will relegate the parties to the remedy by way of
comprehensive suit for declaration of title, instead of deciding the
issue in a suit for mere injunction.
(d) Where there are necessary pleadings regarding title, and
appropriate issue relating to title on which parties lead evidence, if
the matter involved is simple and straightforward, the court may
decide upon the issue regarding title, even in a suit for injunction.
But such cases, are the exception to the normal rule that question of
title will not be decided in suits for injunction. But persons having
clear title and possession suing for injunction, should not be driven
to the costlier and more cumbersome remedy of a suit for
declaration, merely because some meddler vexatiously or wrongfully
makes a claim or tries to encroach upon his property. The court
should use its discretion carefully to identify cases where it will
enquire into title and cases where it will refer to the plaintiff to a
more comprehensive declaratory suit, depending upon the facts of
the case.”
101. The property in question is naturally classified as danga (arid upland)
land. It is a long-standing rule of Indian property jurisprudence that for
74
vacant, uncultivated, or danga land, continuous, minute-by-minute
physical occupation is an impossibility. Therefore, possession follows title.
102. Once the plaintiff established an unassailable root of title through his
1983 registered sale deed, backed by the 1982 civil decree, the legal
presumption immediately arose that the plaintiff was in continuous
constructive possession. A prayer for “confirmation of possession” is not a
bare statement of fact; it is a request for the court to judicially recognize
and protect this existing legal right to possess against threatened or
recent disturbances.
103. Even if the First Appellate Court genuinely believed that the principal
defendants had managed to establish actual physical presence on the soil
prior to or during the pendency of the litigation, its legal course of action
was governed by the principles of equity and Order VII Rule 7 of the CPC.
104. A Civil Court’s primary duty is to ensure that substantive rights defeat
pleading technicalities. If a title is proved but the court finds that an
injunction alone cannot restore the plaintiff’s peaceful enjoyment due to
an active trespass, the court has a judicial duty to mould the relief and
grant a decree for the recovery of possession.
105. The lower appellate court used its own misconstruction of the injunction
prayer as a dead-end to frustrate the suit. In doing so, it failed to realize
that a prayer for “confirmation of possession and permanent injunction”
acts as an open gate for the court to grant recovery of possession if the
underlying title is established. Forcing a lawful purchaser to file a brand-
new suit for recovery against a clear trespasser violates the core judicial
policy against multiplying lawsuits.
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106. The principal defendants’ possessory claims are completely empty under
the foundational doctrine of nemo dat quod non habet–no one can
transfer a better title than they themselves possess–governed by Section
48 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882 (Priority of Rights): When Tinkari
Chakraborty executed the registered sale deed in 1983 (Exhibit 1) and
transferred his entire 1.40-acre individual entitlement to the plaintiff, his
right, title, and interest in that property were permanently and completely
extinguished. Crucially, Defendant No. 1 signed as an active attesting
witness to this 1983 deed. By acting as an attesting witness to the
wholesale transfer of the land to the plaintiff, Defendant No. 1 is
completely barred by the doctrine of equitable estoppel and acquiescence
(Section 115 of the Indian Evidence Act) from later claiming ignorance
or asserting a competing title. Because Tinkari Chakraborty held
absolutely zero residual interest in the suit property at the time of his
death, his daughter, Parul Chakraborty (Defendant No. 6), inherited
absolutely nothing in respect of this land. Consequently, her subsequent
2012 sale deed (Exhibit A) executed in favor of the principal defendants is
a legal nullity–a mere paper transaction completely incapable of
conveying a valid root of title.
107. The principal defendants are not bona fide purchasers for value; they are
speculative disputants relying on a void instrument, and their physical
presence on the land is that of mere trespassers. To deny a valid title-
holder a decree for recovery of possession against a blatant trespasser
running on a void deed, simply because the plaintiff used the word
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“confirmation” instead of “recovery” in his prayer, is a severe miscarriage
of justice. Question No. 2 is answered in the negative.
108. The specific observation of the First Appellate Court–that because the
plaintiff supposedly claimed a “temporary injunction” and not a
permanent one, a permanent injunction cannot be granted and Section
34 of the Specific Relief Act applies–is a classic example of an error of law
on the face of the record. This Court cannot let such an impermissible
interpretation stand uncorrected.
109. A meticulous reading of the prayer clause in the plaint reveals that the
plaintiff explicitly prayed for a decree of permanent injunction to protect
his ownership block under L.R. Plot No. 3057. The lower appellate court,
however, performed semantic surgery on the text, concluding that
because the phrasing mentioned restraining the defendants from acts of
disturbance, it must be downplayed as a mere interim temporary prayer
“till the disposal of the suit.”
110. This interpretation demonstrates an absolute failure to distinguish
between a temporary injunction under Order XXXIX of the Civil Procedure
Code and a permanent, perpetual injunction under Section 38 of the
Specific Relief Act, 1963. A temporary injunction is an interlocutory
mechanism designed to preserve the status quo pendente lite. A
permanent injunction is a final decree, an absolute shield forged after
complete adjudication on the merits, which restrains a party from
invading a right for eternity.
111. By actively praying for a perpetual restraint against the trespassers, the
plaintiff fully claimed the necessary consequential “further relief.” The
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statutory bar under Section 34 is completely bypassed the moment a
substantive, perpetual remedy is appended to a declaration of title. The
lower appellate court’s deliberate manipulation of the nature of the prayer
to force a statutory non-suit is an exercise in judicial overreach that
cannot be sustained under close scrutiny.
112. Regarding the respondents’ secondary technical defenses, this Court finds
them entirely devoid of merit. The State of West Bengal was impleaded
merely as a proforma defendant, and no substantial relief or decree was
claimed against the state sovereign. It is a settled rule that the absence of
a notice under Section 80(1) of the CPC does not vitiate a suit against
private individuals where the state is merely a formal party to the record
and no relief is sought against it.
113. Furthermore, the non-impleadment of other recorded tenants under the
Land Reforms Act does not constitute a fatal defect of parties, as the
plaintiff’s claim was restricted exclusively to the independent 1.40-acre
share transferred by Tinkari Chakraborty, which had already been
judicially and amicably severed from the parent holding.
114. The First Appellate Court committed a profound error in law by preferring
an unauthenticated, crudely hand-altered plot information sheet (Exhibit
B, where “LR Dag No. 3057” was written in red ink without any official
attestation) over registered conveyances, a binding 1982 civil decree, and
finalized Land Reforms records. Mere administrative errors or
typographical survey issues within revenue records cannot be elevated to
a legal precinct to defeat a pristine, registered title deed.
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115. Consequent upon the elaborate analysis and legal reasoning articulated
above, the findings of the First Appellate Court are held to be
unsustainable in the eyes of the law. The judgment of the Trial Court was
solid, well-grounded in evidence, and required no interference.
116. In view of the above discussions, the Second Appeal being SA 193 of 2016
is allowed on contest against respondent no.1 and proforma respondent
nos.3 to 7 and ex parte against respondent no.2.
117. The reversing judgment and order dated February 26, 2015 passed by the
Learned Additional District Judge, 1st Court Purulia in Title Appeal No.58
of 2014 is set aside.
118. The judgment and decree dated September 26, 2013 passed by the
Learned Civil Judge (Senior Division), Purulia in Title Suit No.76 of 2012
is restored in its entirety.
119. The plaintiff/appellant is declared as the absolute, lawful owner of the
suit property delineated in Schedule-II of the plaint encompassing 1.40
acres of land derived from parent C.S. Plot No.2816 and finalized under
L.R. Plot No.3057.
120. A decree for confirmation and recovery of vacant, peaceful physical
possession of the suit property is granted in favour of the
plaintiff/appellant under the mandate of Order VII Rule 7 of the Civil
Procedure Code. The principal defendants are directed to vacate the land
immediately if they have been in unlawful possession.
121. The registered deed of sale bearing no.90 of 2012 executed by defendant
no.6 in favour of the principal defendants is declared fraudent, void ab
initio and entirely not binding upon the plaintiff’s title.
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122. The respondents shall bear the cost of Rs.2,000/- as decreed by the Trial
Court. Let the decree be drawn up accordingly.
123. Photostat certified copy of this order, if applied for, be given to the parties
on priority basis on compliance of all formalities.
(Ananya Bandyopadhyay, J.)
