Page No.# 1/14 vs The General Manager on 9 March, 2026

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    Gauhati High Court

    Page No.# 1/14 vs The General Manager on 9 March, 2026

                                                                         Page No.# 1/14
    
    GAHC010035712026
    
    
    
    
                                                                    2026:GAU-AS:3424
    
                                  THE GAUHATI HIGH COURT
       (HIGH COURT OF ASSAM, NAGALAND, MIZORAM AND ARUNACHAL PRADESH)
    
                                      Case No. : CRP/21/2026
    
                ASWINI BEZBARUAH
                SON OF RAMAKANTA BEZBARUAH, PERMANENT RESIDENT OF NEAR
                K.K. HANDIQUE GOVERNMENT SANSKRIT COLLEGE, P.O. AND P.S.-
                JALUKBARI, DISTRICT - KAMRUP (METRO), ASSAM.
    
    
    
                VERSUS
    
                THE GENERAL MANAGER, N.F. (NORTHEAST FRONTIER) RAILWAY AND 3
                ORS.
                MALIGAON, GUWAHATI -781011
    
                2:THE GENERAL MANAGER (CONSTRUCTION)
                 N.F. (NORTHEAST FRONTIER) RAILWAY
                 MALIGAON
                 GUWAHATI -781011.
    
                3:THE SENIOR DIVISIONAL ENGINEER (CONSTRUCTION)
                 N.F. (NORTHEAST FRONTIER) RAILWAY
                 MALIGAON
                 GUWAHATI -781011.
    
                4:THE ESTATE OFFICER
                 N.F. RAILWAY (NORTHEAST FRONTIER) RAILWAY
                 MALIGAON
                 GUWAHATI -781011
    
    Advocate for the Petitioner   : SADHAN KALITA, MRITYUNJOY KALITA,GUNJAN DAS,MR P
    DAS
    
    Advocate for the Respondent : DY.S.G.I., MR. K GOGOI(C.G.C.)
                                                                             Page No.# 2/14
    
    
                                     BEFORE
                        HONOURABLE MR. JUSTICE ROBIN PHUKAN
    
                                          ORDER
    

    09.03.2026
    Heard Mr. P. Das, learned counsel for the petitioner and Mr. K. Gogoi,
    learned Central Government Counsel (herein after CGC), for all the respondents.

    2. In this petition, under Article 227 of the Constitution of India, the petitioner
    has challenged the Judgment and Order, dated 12.02.2026, passed by the
    learned Additional District Judge No. 2, Kamrup (Metro), Guwahati, in Misc.
    Appeal (Civil) No. 25/2022.

    SPONSORED

    3. It is to be noted here that vide impugned judgment and order, dated
    12.02.2026, the learned Additional District Judge No. 2, Kamrup (Metro),
    Guwahati (hereinafter, learned Appellate Court), has affirmed the Eviction Order,
    dated 17.02.2021, passed by the Estate Officer, NF Railway, Guwahati; in
    Eviction Case No. EO/MLG/139/2020.

    4. The background facts, leading to filing of the present petition, are briefly
    stated as under-

    “The petitioner herein is a bonafide purchaser of a plot of land by virtue of

    a registered sale deed, dated 09.05.2016, with specific boundaries under
    the Dag No. 147 (Old) 353 (New), K.P. Patta No. 30 (Old) 183 (New), and
    he got his name mutated over the said plot of land, and since the date of
    purchase, he is in continuous possession of the same. But, the Estate
    Officer, NF Railway, had issued a notice to him, alleging encroachment,
    without conclusive demarcation of the boundary through boundary to
    boundary verification and thereafter, instituted a proceeding under the
    Page No.# 3/14

    Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorized Occupants) Act, 1971.

    Thereafter, the Estate Officer had passed the impugned order of
    eviction, dated 17.02.2021, without proper verification of the boundaries of
    the land of alleged encroachment and it was passed only on the internal
    map and presumption, and not on technical and legally admissible proof.
    Then being aggrieved, the petitioner had challenged the same, by filing
    Misc Appeal (Civil) No. 25/2022, before the court of learned Addl. District
    Judge, No. 2, Kamrup(M), Guwahati. But, the learned Appellate Court, vide
    impugned order, dated 12.02.2026, had dismissed the said appeal,
    allegedly by mis-reading and selective reading of the pleadings and
    erroneously construed the geographical location/proximity to the railway
    alignment, as admission of boundaries of the sale deed as overlap and
    without reading the pleading as a whole, along with registered sale deed
    and other cogent material records.”

    5. Being aggrieved, the petitioner has approached this Court, on the grounds
    that –

    (i) There was no conclusive finding of encroachment by the Estate
    Officer.

    (ii) The learned Appellate Court has failed to consider the same and
    also misread the pleadings and travelled beyond the record.

    (iii) The respondents herein have failed to discharge the burden of
    proof, even though the same lies upon them; by showing boundary to boundary
    verification that there is well defined boundary in the sale deed and the
    petitioner herein has been possessing the said plot of land, as described in the
    sale deed; but the learned Appellate Court has overlooked the same.

    Page No.# 4/14

    (iv) No documentation, whatsoever, is produced and proved by the
    respondents, so as to support their contention that the petitioner has been
    occupying land beyond the boundaries described in his sale deed.

    (v) The respondents have failed to proof that the petitioner is
    residing outside the boundary described in the sale deed.

    5. Mr. Das, learned counsel for the petitioner, submits that the Estate Officer
    had passed the order of eviction, dated 17.02.2021, only on the basis of
    assumption and without conclusive demarcation and also boundary to boundary
    verification; and that the said finding of the Estate Officer was based on internal
    maps and presumption and not on any technical or legally admissible proof; and
    that the learned Appellate Court also, by affirming the impugned order, dated
    17.02.2021, has compounded the error that was committed by the Estate
    Officer of N.F. Railway. According to him the respondent herein had failed to
    discharge its burden to establish that the land under the occupation of the
    petitioner belongs to it. It is the further submission of Mr. Das that as observed
    by the learned appellate court in the impugned judgment, the petitioner had
    never admitted the discrepancy in respect of the boundary described in the Sale
    Deed and in the Memo of Appeal specially in para No.3, rather it was a
    description of the boundary only and it never amounted to admission under the
    Evidence Act. Further submission of Mr. Das is that the learned Appellate Court
    has also misread and selectively read the pleadings, especially the pleadings
    made by the petitioner in paragraph No. 3 of the Memo of Appeal, regarding
    geographical location; and that the learned Appellate Court has also construed
    the same as admission of boundaries not consistent with the sale deed.

    5.1. Mr. Das, learned counsel for the petitioner further submits that the learned
    Page No.# 5/14

    Appellate Court has failed to read the pleading as a whole and also failed to
    read the same in connection with the registered sale deed; and that the learned
    Appellate Court has re-appreciated the facts, beyond the permissible scope
    under the law.

    5.2 It is the further submission of Mr. Das that the findings, so recorded by the
    learned Appellate Court and also by the Estate Officer; are not based on any
    legally admissible foundation and as such, the findings of the learned Appellate
    Court and the Estate Officer, NF Railways, are perverse and are liable to be
    interfered with; and that the petitioner has never encroached upon any land
    belonging to the Railway department; and that since the date of his purchase,
    the petitioner has been residing within the boundaries described in the sale
    deed; and it is well settled that when there is a dispute regarding the boundary,
    the boundary described in the Sale Deed will prevail and the petitioner has been
    occupying the land described in the Sale Deed. And as such, the impugned
    judgment and order passed by the learned Appellate Court and the Eviction
    Order, passed by the Estate Officer, NF Railways, are liable to be set aside and
    quashed and under such circumstances, Mr. Das has contended to allow this
    petition.

    5.3. Mr. Das, in support of his submission, has referred to the following
    decisions:-

    (i) Birendra Sankar Sanyal and Ors. Vs. Dinesh Chandra
    Sarma
    , reported in (2015) 5 GLR 731;

    (ii) Anil Rishi Vs. Gurbaksh Singh, reported in (2006) 5 SCC
    558;

    Page No.# 6/14

    (iii) Sita Ram Bhau Patil Vs. Ramchandra Nago Patil, reported
    in (1977) 2 SCC 49;

    (iv) Narayan Govind Gavate Vs. State of Maharashtra,
    reported in (1977) 1 SCC 133;

    (v) Sheodhyan Singh and Others Vs. Musammat Sanichara
    Kuer & Others
    , reported in 1961 SCC OnLine SC 164;

    (vi) Ayyavu Vs. Prabha and Others, reported in 2025 SCC
    OnLine SC 522;

    (vii) Tejlal & Another Vs. Pragyanand & Another, I.L.R. 2023
    M.P. 1190;

    6. Per contra, Mr. Gogoi, learned CGC, appearing for the respondents, has
    supported the impugned judgment and order, so passed by the learned
    Additional District Judge, Kamrup (M) Guwahati. He submits that the petitioner
    is not residing in the plot of land described in the sale deed; rather, she has
    been residing in a different plot of land which falls within 39 meters from the
    middle of the existing railway track. Taking this court through the pleading of
    the petitioner, Mr. Gogoi submits that the petitioner has never described the
    boundary of the land in his pleading; and that the learned Appellate Court has
    observed in respect of the same, in paragraph No. 34 of the impugned
    judgment, dated 12.02.2026.

    6.1 It is the further submission of Mr. Gogoi, that the land being occupied by
    the petitioner is a public premise and the Estate Officer has rightly passed the
    Eviction Order, dated 17.02.2021; and the learned Appellate Court has also
    rightly affirmed the same vide impugned judgment and order, dated 12.02.2026.

    Page No.# 7/14

    6.2 Mr. Gogoi, referring to the sale deed, which is annexed to the petition as
    ‘Annexure-3’ and also in the Memo of Appeal, filed under Section 9 of the Public
    Premises (Eviction of Unauthorized Occupants) Act, 1971, especially to
    paragraph No. 3; wherein, the boundary of the land, which the petitioner has
    presently been occupying, has been given, pointed out that the description of
    the land in the sale deed and description of the land in paragraph No. 3 of the
    Appeal Memo are different. And as such, it can be held that the petitioner has
    been occupying a different plot of land from that of the land described in the
    sale deed and under such circumstances, Mr. Gogoi submits that the impugned
    Judgment and Order, passed by the learned Appellate Court and also, the
    impugned Eviction Order, passed by the Estate Officer; suffers from no infirmity
    or illegality, requiring any interference of this Court. He also submits that no
    relief what so ever, which is not founded in the pleading can be granted.

    6.3 Mr. Gogoi, also submits that the Railway department has been laying a
    double line and it is a public project and it could not be completed within time
    only due to its land being occupied by the petitioner herein and under Section
    41 (ha)
    of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, which provides that an injunction cannot
    be granted if it would impede or delay the progress or completion of any
    infrastructure project or interfere with the continued provision of relevant facility
    related thereto or services being the subject matter of such project. He also
    submits that laying of double track is a time bound infrastructure project of
    immense public importance and under such circumstances also, Mr. Gogoi has
    contended to dismiss the petition.

    6.4. Lastly, Mr. Gogoi submits that the jurisdiction of this court under Article
    227
    of the constitution of India is supervisory only and it cannot re-appreciate
    evidence like an appellate court and that the learned appellate court herein has
    Page No.# 8/14

    not committed any perversity requiring any interference of this court.

    6.5. In support of his submission Mr. Gogoi, learned CGC, following decisions:-

    (i) Divyagnakumari Harisinh Parmar and Others Vs. Union
    of India and Others
    , reported in 2025 SCC OnLine SC 2064;

    (ii) Jai Singh and Others Vs. Municipal Corporation of
    Delhi and Another
    , reported in (2010) 9 SCC 385.

    7. Having heard the submissions of the learned counsel for both the parties,
    this Court has carefully gone through the memo of appeal and the documents
    placed on record and also perused the impugned eviction order, dated
    17.02.2021, passed by the Estate Officer, NF Railway, Guwahati; in Eviction Case
    No. EO/MLG/139/2020 and also perused the impugned judgment and order,
    dated 12.02.2026, passed by the learned Appellate Court.

    8. It appears that in paragraph No. 26, the learned Appellate Court has made
    a categorical observation to the effect that the pleaded case of the petitioner is
    that the boundary of the land occupied by him is as follows-

          On Eastern side          : a broad gauge railway line;
    On Southern side          : the campus of K.K. Handique              Government
                                 College;
         On the Northern side : Public road;
    
    
    

    8.1. Thereafter, in paragraph No. 27, the learned Appellate Court has held that
    the boundary, as described in the sale deed, dated 09.05.2016; is as follows-

    “North : 28 ft. wide College road;

    South : Land of Akhtar Hussain;

         East   : Land of K.K.H. Sanskrit College; and
                                                                           Page No.# 9/14
    
       West     : Land of Hemanta Das."
    
    

    8.2. Thereafter, in paragraph No. 28, the learned Appellate Court has observed
    as under-

    “The discrepancy in the boundaries is glaring and
    significant, and the appellant has not been able to
    satisfactorily explain this discrepancy. The eastern
    boundary, as per the Appellant’s own admission in the
    appeal, is a broad gauge railway line, whereas, as per the
    sale deed, the eastern boundary is the land of K.K.H.
    Sanskrit College. This clearly indicates that the land
    presently in occupation of the Appellant is not the same
    land as described in the sale deed dated 09.05.2016.”

    9. The aforementioned finding, so recorded by the learned Appellate Court,
    while examined in the light of the sale deed and also, in light of the statement
    and averment made in the memorandum of appeal filed by the petitioner
    herein, under Section 9 of the Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorized
    Occupants) Act, 1971, this Court fails to find any infirmity or misreading of the
    pleading by the learned Appellate Court. Mr. Gogoi, learned CGC, has rightly
    pointed this out during hearing and this Court finds sufficient force in the same
    and is in complete agreement with his submission.

    10. It also appears that from the contention being made by the respondent
    herein that the petitioner is occupying a distinct and different plot of land which
    he alleged to purchase vide alleged Sale Deed dated 09.05.16 and therefore, he
    had not submitted the complete copy of the Deed of Sale dated 09.05.16
    (Annexure- 3) wherein the page containing the Schedule of Property has been
    suppressed. It is also appears that in the guise of alleged Myadi Patta land the
    Page No.# 10/14

    petitioner has been occupying 160 Sqm of Railway land comprising of the
    following boundaries:-

    North : Railway land,
    South : Railway land,
    East : Railway land, and
    West : Private land.

    11. It also appears that the Estate Officer has relied upon the Certified Land
    Plan Sheet No. 82, which was jointly signed and sealed by the Deputy
    Commissioner and Collector, Kamrup, Guwahati; the then Circle Officer,
    Guwahati Revenue Circle; Mandal and another, on 28.06.2002, and the said
    Certified Land Plan Sheet No. 82, clearly reveals that the railway lane existed in
    the area and that the railway boundary is marked at 39 meters from the middle
    of the track for both sides (eastern and western).

    12. And it appears from the said Certified Land Plan Sheet No. 82 that the land
    being occupied by the petitioner falls with the 30 meters from the middle of the
    tract. The learned appellate court had also taken note of the same in the
    impugned judgment and order and record a categorical finding to that effect
    and it cannot be said that the respondents have failed to discharge the burden
    of proof which lies upon it.

    12.1. Though referring to a decision of Hon’ble Supreme Court (i) Anil Rishi
    (supra) (ii) Narayan Govind Gavate(supra) and another decision of this
    court in (iii) Birendra Sankar Sanyal (supra) Mr. Das learned counsel
    for the petitioner submits that the burden of proof lies upon the respondent
    herein that the land being occupied by the petitioner belongs to it and that the
    Page No.# 11/14

    respondent had failed to discharge the same, yet in view of the discussion and
    finding in the foregoing paragraph, the submission of Mr. Das left this court
    unimpressed. That being so, the decisions relied upon him would not come into
    his assistance.

    13. Further this court finds that in the para No. 19 of the memorandum of
    appeal the petitioner herein had stated that “The Appellant fairly admits
    that on the eastern side of his land existing broad-gauge line
    belonging to the Railway is there but there is clear boundary
    mark for identification of his land and the railway line.” Based
    upon this statement Mr. Gogoi, learned CGC has pointed out that the petitioner
    has admitted that there is discrepancy in respect of the land being occupied by
    him and on such count the submission of Mr. Das, learned counsel for the
    petitioner that the petitioner had never admitted the discrepancy in respect of
    the boundary described in the Sale Deed and in the Memo of Appeal specially is
    not factually correct.

    13.1. There appears to be force in the submission of Mr. Gogoi, the learned
    CGC. And in that view of the matter, the decision referred by Mr. Das in respect
    of admission, the case of (i) Sita Ram Bhau Patil (supra) would not
    advance the argument of Mr. Das. There is discrepancy in respect of the
    boundary of the land being occupied by the petitioner and as described in his
    memorandum of appeal from that of the Sale Deed.
    And as such no relief can
    be granted him in view of the decision referred by Mr. Gogoi in the case of
    Divyagnakumari Harisinh Parmar (supra).

    14. There is no quarrel at the bar about the proposition of law that when there
    Page No.# 12/14

    is dispute regarding the boundary then the boundary described in the Sale Deed
    will always prevail. But, in the instant case it has been established that the
    petitioner has been occupying a plot of land which different from Sale Deed. In
    that view of the matter the decision referred by Mr. Das in (i) Sheodhyan Singh
    (supra) (ii) Ayyavu (supra) (iii) Tejlal (supra), would not
    advance the case of the petitioner. Therefore, this court is unable to record
    concurrence with the submission of Mr. Das in this regard.

    15. It is to be noted here that the statement of objects and reasons of
    enacting the Public Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1958
    was enacted to provide for a speedy machinery for the eviction of unauthorised
    occupants of public premises. Section 5 of the Act provides for taking
    possession of the public premises which are in unauthorised occupation of
    persons.

    16. It is also to be noted here that proceedings under Rule 5 of the Public
    Premises (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Rules are treated as summery in
    nature, intended to provide a special, speedy procedure distinct from an
    ordinary civil suit under the Code of Civil Procedure. Under the Public Premises
    (Eviction of Unauthorised Occupants) Act, 1971
    , the entire scheme of Sections 4
    and 5 (read with the Rules) is designed as a special mechanism for quick
    eviction of unauthorised occupants of public premises, avoiding elaborate
    trial-type procedures.

    17. This court has carefully considered the submissions advanced by the
    learned counsel for the petitioner and gone through the decisions referred by
    the learned counsel for the petitioner. And in view of the aforesaid discussion
    Page No.# 13/14

    and finding this court is unable to record with his submission. And the decision
    referred by him also would not advance his argument.

    18. Even though, a contention is being made by the petitioner that the land
    being occupied by him was mutated in the name of the petitioner, yet, it is well
    settled that mutation of land in the revenue record neither creates nor
    extinguishes title to the property and it also has no presumptive value on title.
    The only purpose of the same is to pay the land revenue in question. Reference
    in this context can be made to a decision of the Hon’ble Supreme Court, in the
    case of Balwant Singh Vs. Daulat Singh, reported in (1997) 7SCC 137;
    which has also been relied upon by the learned Appellate Court.

    19. It is not in dispute that the land in question is required for laying another
    railway track and Mr. Gogoi, learned CGC, has categorically submitted that the
    said project is a time bound project with great public importance and it could
    not be completed because of its land being occupied by the petitioner herein.
    And under Section 41(ha) of the Specific Relief Act, 1963, no injunction can be
    granted, in respect of any infrastructure project. This Court finds force in his
    submission.

    20. Even though, several other grounds are also being taken by Mr. Das, the
    learned counsel for the petitioner, during his submission and also in this
    petition; yet, this Court finds the said grounds bereft of merit and the learned
    counsel for the petitioner has failed to demonstrate before this Court about the
    arbitrariness or any illegality being committed by the Estate Officer and also by
    the learned Appellate Court.

    Page No.# 14/14

    21. On such ground, this Court finds this Civil Revision Petition devoid of any
    merit and accordingly, the same stands dismissed.

    JUDGE

    Comparing Assistant



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