Nathu Ram Vs Shri Uttam Chandd High Court
Nathu Ram Vs Shri Uttam Chandd High Court
Nathu Ram Vs Shri Uttam Chandd High Court
Versus
CORAM:
HON'BLE MS. JUSTICE INDERMEET KAUR
INDERMEET KAUR, J.
1. This appeal has impugned the judgment and decree dated 05.07.2003
which had reversed the findings of the trial Judge. The trial Judge vide the
judgment and decree dated 14.07.1998 had dismissed the suit of the plaintiff
Uttam Chand. The impugned judgment had reversed this finding. The suit
stood decreed.
2. The plaintiff had filed a suit against the four defendants alleging that
he is the owner of the suit property by virtue of a Certificate of Sale dated
04.01.1965 (Ex.PW-4/1). Contention was that Tara Chand deceased father of
the defendants was in unauthorized occupation of the suit property since
1975 when he had taken forcible possession of the suit land. Since they had
failed to vacate the property, the present suit was filed.
3. A preliminary objection about the maintainability of the suit, being
barred by limitation was raised. The defence of the defendants was that their
grandfather was living in this suit property since the last more than two
decades as an owner and thereafter their father; the defendants were in
possession as owners; house tax was being assessed in the name of their
father; they had become owners by adverse possession; suit was liable to be
dismissed.
4. On the pleadings of the parties six issues were framed. Oral and
documentary evidence had been led which included the testimony of five
witnesses on behalf of the plaintiff and two witnesses on behalf of the
defendants. The plaintiff had proved his ownership by way of a Certificate
of Sale dated 21.03.1964 (Ex. PW-4/1). Per contra, the defendants had
produced the electricity and house tax bills showing their possession in the
suit property from November, 1963. These documents had been proved
collectively as Ex. DW-2/1 to Ex. DW-2/8. On scrutiny of this oral and
documentary evidence, suit of the plaintiff stood dismissed. The Court had
recorded a finding that the defendants have become owners by adverse
possession.
9. Record has been perused. The findings on issues No. 4 & 5 have been
questioned. The ownership of the suit property in terms of the Certificate of
Sale issued in favour of the plaintiff Ex. PW-1/4 dated 21.03.1964 is not in
dispute. Admittedly vide the aforenoted document, the petitioner had
become the owner of the suit property. However the defence of the
defendant all along has been that he had become owner by adverse
possession; this adverse possession which was hostile, uninterrupted and
peaceful qua not only the plaintiff but the entire world and it having matured
over a period of 12 years since 1958-59, the suit filed by the petitioner on
17.02.1979 was time barred.
10. A second appeal Court is not a fact finding Court. However, where a
party is able to pinpoint perversity in the impugned judgment, interference is
called for and to arrive at a conclusion as to whether the finding in the
impugned judgment amounts to a perversity qua a finding on adverse
possession or not, it would be necessary to examine the evidence which has
been led in the court below.
12. The crux of the issue before this Court is as to if and when the
possession of the appellant/defendant had become adverse to the plaintiff.
13. PW-1 had as per his version purchased this property in 1964. His
contention was that Tara Chand, the predecessor of the defendant had taken
illegal possession of this property in 1975. In his cross-examination, he had
admitted that this property is assessed to house tax but no one had paid
house tax of this property; he did not know if there was any water
connection in the property. As per his deposition at the time of his purchase,
there was only one kachha room of mud at the site. In his cross-examination,
he stated that he did not know when the unauthorized construction was made
in this property; whether it was made by Tara Chand prior to 1958 or later;
no police complaint was lodged. The witness could not remember as to when
he has last visited Village Masjid Moth (where the suit property is located);
on specific repeated questions put to him about the location of the property
and how it is to be accessed, whether from South Extension or from Niti
Bagh or from Gautam Cinema, he had no answer. He could not say whether
he visited this Village 10-12 years back or thereafter; he did not know the
municipal number of the adjacent houses. He denied the suggestion that Tara
Chand was in possession of the suit property since last 60-70 years. PW-2
had also deposed that at the time of its purchase, there was a small kachhi
jhuggi made at the site. In his cross-examination, he has stated that he had
gone to the site about five years back; at that time also one mud hut was
there; an old man was living there since 8-9 years when he visited this
village; the same old man was living in the mud hut when the auction of the
property took place. He further stated that he cannot say if this old man was
Tara Chand (deceased father of the defendants).
14. Admittedly in March, 1964, this old man was found at the site. A
specific suggestion had been given to PW-2 that this old man was Tara
Chand to which he had replied that he was not sure. Presence of Tara Chand
in the suit premises since March, 1964 thus stands admitted. Testimony of
PW-1 on this score is relevant. On a specific query put to him as to whether
Tara Chand had made the admitted illegal construction in the suit premises
prior to 1958, PW-1 was only evasive; there was no denial. PW-1 had
further admitted that his property was assessed to house tax but who was
paying this house tax was not known to him. Per contra, the evidence
adduced by the defendant which included payment of house tax and water
charges from November, 1963 (Ex. DW-2/8) right up to 1976 evidenced his
possession and occupation in the suit property. DW-2/7 is a notice dated
27.12.1962 issued to Tara Chand seeking payment of property tax. This
document is prior to purchase of the property by the plaintiff. Ex. DW-2/1
dated 23.10.1974 was the payment of electricity charges in favour of Tara
Chand. It has also come on record that the electricity communication was in
the name of deceased Tara Chand; water connection had also been installed
in his name in 1976. This documentary evidence coupled with the oral
version of DW-1 & DW-2 all speak volumes of the fact that it was Tara
Chand, the deceased father of the defendant, who was in occupation of the
suit property even prior to the purchase of this property by the plaintiff in
1964. In (2006) 7 SCC 570 T. Anjanappa and others VS. Somalingappa &
another, the Supreme Court on the concept of adverse possession had noted
as under:-
“The concept of adverse possession contemplates a hostile possession i.e. a
possession which is expressly or impliedly in denial of the title of the true
owner. Possession to be adverse must be possession by a person who does
not acknowledge the other’s rights but denies them. The principle of law is
firmly established that a person who bases his title on adverse possession
must show by clear and unequivocal evidence that his possession was
hostile to the real owner and amounted to denial of his title to the property
claimed. For deciding whether the alleged acts of a person constituted
adverse possession, the animus of the person doing those acts is the most
crucial factor. Adverse possession is commenced in wrong and is caimed
against right. A person is said to hold the property adversely to the real
owner when that person in denial of the owner’s right excluded him from the
enjoyment of his property”
16. In 2007 (97) DRJ 83 Mohan Singh Kohli & Anr Vs. Brij Bhushan
Anand & ors relying upon the proposition in T. Anjanappa (Supra), the
following broad principals of adverse possession were culled out:-
“(1) Onus to prove the question of title by adverse possession is on the party
who make such a claim.
(2) Mere long possession of the land is not enough. What is important is
whether the possessor had the animus possidendi to hold the land adverse to
the title of the true owner.
(3 The period of limitation starts running from the date both actual
possession and assertion of title are shown to exist.
(4) The assertion of title adverse to the true owner must be clear and
unequivocal, though not necessarily addressed to the real owner.
(5) The party claiming adverse possession must prove that his possession is
“nec vi, nec clamnec precario.”
(6) The party claiming title by adverse possession must make clear
averments to that effect and explain as to when he entered into the
possession of the property and when the possession became adverse.”
It is clear from the above that the assertion of title adverse to the true
owner must be clear and unequivocal although it must not be necessarily
addressed to the real owner”
17. Applying the ratio of the aforenoted cases, it is clear that in this case
the possession of the defendant stood established and proved even as per
version of PW-1 as way back as 1958. Defendant no. 1 had purchased this
land in March 1964. The documentary evidence adduced by the defendants
i.e. payment of house tax, electricity and water charges continuously from
November 1963 up to 1976 qua this property show that the defendants had,
in fact, perfected their title by adverse possession qua this suit land in 1975.
This possession was open, hostile, uninterrupted and peaceful. These are by
and large admissions made by PW-1 himself and facts elicited in the cross-
examination of PW-2. Suit filed on 17.02.1979 was thus time barred.
18. Learned counsel for the respondent has relied upon AIR 2002 VII AD
(Delhi) 333 Rakesh Sharma Vs. Lakshmi Sharma which recites the principal
that the period of limitation has to be computed from the date when the
defendant is claiming his ownership of adverse possession. This proposition
is not in dispute. The second judgment relied upon by the learned counsel
for the respondent AIR 2007 SC 1753 P.T. Munichikkanna Reddy & Ors
Vs. Revamma & Ors. also lays down a legal proposition ( as emphasized by
learned counsel for the respondent) that the intention to possess cannot be
substituted from the intention of dispossess. Again there is no dispute to this
proposition. The defendant has been able to establish his positive intent to
dispossess which had culminated into his title by way of adverse possession.
19. Under Article 65 of the Schedule of the Limitation Act as aforenoted,
the limitation commences from the date when the defendant’s possession
had become adverse. Physical fact of exclusive possession and the animus
possidendi to hold as owner in exclusion to the actual owner are the most
important factors that are to be accounted in cases of this nature. Plea of
adverse possession is not a question of law but it is a blend of fact and law.
Such a defence has no equity in his favour; by claiming adverse possession
the defendant is trying to defeat the rights of true owner; he must clearly
plead and establish all such facts to establish his adverse possession. The
question of intention to be known becomes important. The possession of
adverse possessor must be hostile enough to given rise to a reasonable notice
and opportunity to the paper owner.
20. Applying these tests, it is clear that even prior to the purchase of this
property by the plaintiff (which was in March, 1964) the defendant was
openly, uninterruptedly, peacefully and in open hostility enjoying the suit
property. It was in his possession and occupation. This fact was known to
the plaintiff. The plaintiff had knowledge that this land was in possession
and occupation of the defendant and presuming, even at best that this
knowledge came to him only at the time of the purchase of the property in
1964, yet even if the period of 12 years is counted from March, 1964, 12
years stood complete in March, 1976. The plaintiff did not take any steps to
dispossess the defendant right up to the February, 1979 when he chose to file
the present suit. Suit was time barred.
Appeal is allowed. Suit is dismissed.
Sd/-
INDERMEET KAUR, J.