LAWS(PVC)-1937-7-45

BEROJULLAH SARKAR Vs. AYATULLAH AKAND

Decided On July 27, 1937
BEROJULLAH SARKAR Appellant
V/S
AYATULLAH AKAND Respondents

JUDGEMENT

(1.) This Is an appeal from a decree of the Court of the Subordinate Judge at Patina modifying a decree of the Court of the Munsif at Serajgunj who decreed the suit. The appellant brought the suit, out of which this appeal arises, for khas possession after declaration of title to the lands identified by Dags Nos. 387, 393 and 394 of Khatian No. 226. The parties are members of a Mahomedan family; and it is admitted that the dags in suit were purchased in the plaintiff's name in 1914. The defendants however pleaded that the lands wore purchased out of joint family funds, and that they got the lands by partition. Defendant 4 is a purchaser from defendant 1 and the defence case in appeal has been largely based on adverse possession. The trial Court decreed the suit. The lower Appellate Court confirmed that decree as to Dag No. 387 but held that the defendants had proved their title by adverse possession to Dags Nos. 393 and 394, and it allowed the appeal to that extent.

(2.) The judgment of the lower Appellate Court is challenged on the ground that adverse possession for the requisite period is not established, and that the findings of the trial Court have been reversed without adequate consideration of the materials on which those findings are based. Both Courts have found that the plaintiff was the only earning member of the family, and that he purchased the lands in suit from one Imam Ali in 1914, and had his name registered in the landlord's sherista. The members of the family were then living together but later they separated, first, defendant 1 and afterwards, defendants 2 and 3. Defendant 1 is said to have had his name entered in regard to another property in Khatian No. 165 after the separation, but he never applied for mutation of his name in regard to the property in suit. Defendant 1 sold Dag No. 393 to defendant 4 in April 1931. The final publication of the Record of Rights took place in February 1933 and the plaintiff's case is that he was dispossessed in March 1933. In the meantime defendant 4 had applied for mutation on the strength of his purchase from defendant 1 but his application was rejected on 6 July 1932. The main evidence of possession, which has been relied upon by the parties, is the Record of Rights and the mutation proceedings. The learned Munsif rejected the evidence of the Record of Rights on the ground that the area for which defendant 4 was recorded in the Khatian conflicts with the area of the land as shown in the kobala when he purchased from defendant 1, and he relies on the record in the malik's sherista, and the refusal to alter that entry on defendant 4's application for mutation as conclusive of the plaintiff's title. The issues as framed did not specifically raise a question of title by adverse possession though issue 2 is as follows : "Is the suit barred by limitation?" The learned Munsif held that no question of limitation arises in this ease. The learned Subordinate Judge however says "point for decision in this appeal is whether the defendants had interest in the suit land acquired by adverse possession and he finds that there was adverse possession. Such a finding must, to some extent, be a finding of fact, but more particularly in a case where the judgment of the lower Appellate Court is a judgment of reversal, this Court may enquire into the method adopted by the lower Appellate Court in coming to its conclusion, and enquire whether the adverse possession as found is supported by evidence, and whether the finding, which is said to be based on the proper legal conclusion to be drawn from the settlement and mutation records is justified.

(3.) The plaintiff in proof of his title showed that the property had been bought with his own money; that the lands had been entered in the plaintiff's name in the land-lord's sherista, and that they were so entered at the time when defendant 4 purchased from defendant 1. Prima facie that is proof of the plaintiff's title. The defendants in their written statement appear to have asserted title as though they were a Hindu family. They alleged purchase out of joint family funds and allotments to defendant 1 of the suit lands on a family partition when each member of the family was granted his share. That case has been negatived, and in the lower Appellate Court the defendants alleged adverse possession. On that allegation, the onus must be on the defendants to prove that they had been in possession for 12 years and that the possession was adverse to the plaintiff. The dates throw an interesting sidelight on the defendants claim. Defendant 1 sells Dag No. 393, which is entered in his brother's name, to defendant 4 in 1931. Defendant 4 tries to get his name entered in the mutation proceedings but his application is rejected in 1932. He then succeeds in getting his name entered in the settlement records in 1933 and according to the plaintiff's story, he immediately ousts the plaintiff from possession. Obviously the sheet anchor on which the defendants rely is the Record of Eights. The Record of Rights raises a strong presumption in favour of the recorded holder, but as this Court has pointed out in Manmatha Nath Haldar V/s. Girish Chandra , the Record of Rights is presumptive evidence of the state of things at the date the Record of Rights was prepared, and cannot ordinarily raise a presumption in favour of the defendant of possession at some earlier date.