Lingaraja Rath, J.@mdashThese appeals arise out of a reversing judgment of a learned single Judge of this court dismissing the suit brought by the
two appellants for recovery of possession and eviction of respondents from the suit land and for mesne profits.
2. The Original Suit, O.S. No. 1569 of 1981 had been brought by Mohammed Ishaque as the plaintiff but he having died during the pendency of
the suit his son plaintiff No. 2 and nephew P.W. 3 respectively appellants in LPA Nos. 205 and 211 of 1991 were substituted.
3. The case of the plaintiffs was that plaintiff No. 1 had purchased the disputed land, Act. 3-677 sq.yards, now it is in the AOC Centre,
Secunderabad, by registered sale deed dated 23-1-1946 and was possessing and cultivating the land but that the land was encircled by the AOC
Centre for which a notice was issued to the Comandant, AOC Centre on 2-11-1953 seeking eviction of the land. A reply was sent by the
Commander, Ex.A-16 on 1-12-1953 stating that Ac. 4-00 of land which was within the AOC Centre perimeter around which a fencing was
erected more erroneously than intentionally, was ploughed and crops were grown by the Unit and that on the complainant representing the matter,
he had been requested that if he had no objection, the fencing would be removed after the crop was ready for cutting and that the complaint had
agreed to this request. Even so the plaintiff No. 1 was not put in possession of the property and at the instance of the parties a joint survey was
conducted on 6-4-1978 and a panchanama was prepared showing the plaintiffs'' land to have been encircled by the AOC Centre but that the
panchanama was not signed by the Commander. A notice was issued by the AOC on 20-8-1981 asking the 1st plaintiff to remove the mulgies
erected by him upon the land on which a notice was given u/s 80 CPC by the 1st plaintiff on 11-10-1981 claiming the reliefs in the suit. The suit
registered as O.S. No. 1569 of 1981 was thereafter instituted for the reliefs claimed. Contesting the suit the only defence taken was that the land
was shown as being within Ac.118-15 cents in the General Land Register, a statutory register, as belonging to AOC. The trial Court found the
plaintiffs to have title to the land and decreed the suit. But on appeal the learned single Judge held the suit to be barred by limitation holding the
respondents to have perfected title against the appellants by adverse possession and that the suit for the purpose was barred by limitation as the
respondents were possessing the land adversely to the appellants for more than twelve years from the date of the institution of the suit.
4. Urging the appeal Mr. Subrahmanya Reddy, learned counsel for the appellants urges the single question of the judgment of the learned single
Judge being vulnerable in law as the respondents never raised the question of adverse possession in the defence, no issue was struck on the
question, no evidence was led in the matter and hence it being not case of the parties, it is not open to the Court to have made out a third case. It is
his submission that the specific case of the respondents was not perfection of title by adverse possession but on the contrary asserting a title in
themselves, on the basis of the inclusion of the land in the General Land Register and denying the title of the plaintiffs to the land.
5. The suit was clearly one brought by the plaintiff on the basis of their title. The suit is clearly under Article 65 of the Limitation Act. In such a suit,
it is the well settled position of law, that the plaintiff has only to establish his title in respect of the land and if the title is established he is entitled to
the decree unless the defendant sets up a plea of adverse possession and establishes to have perfected an adverse title, thereby destroying the title
of the plaintiff in the land.
6. Once the initial title of the plaintiff is established the onus is upon the defendant to establish the plea of adverse possession. It is equally well
settled that when the suit is based upon title and the title is denied on the basis of adverse possession, such plea has to be specifically raised and
established through evidence. Unless the plea is raised, even leading of evidence on such issue is barred as no evidence can be adduced which is
not in consonance with the pleadings. It is conceded that the respondents did not raise the plea of adverse possession. As has been rightly
submitted, the very case of the respondents was asserting title in themselves and the appellants as not having title to the land. On the contrary,
when a plea of adverse possession is raised it is basically first of all admission of the antecedent title of the plaintiff and then thereafter destruction
of the same through adverse possession. But this is a case where the respondents did not admit the prior title of the appellants.
7. The requirement that specific plea regarding adverse possession is to be raised and evidence to be led is a requirement in law since all
possessions are not adverse possessions. ""Adverse possession"", to satisfy the tests, must be with hostile animus against the real owner. The three
ingredients to be satisfied are, as is commonly known on the nec vi, nec clam and nec precario. A mere permissive possession is not adverse. All
the ingredients and particularly possession with hostile animus are questions of fact for which evidence has to be led with opportunity to the parties
to cross-examine the witnesses. We are fortified with this view by the decision in Vidya Devi alias Vidya Vati (Dead by L.R''s) Vs. Prem Prakash
and others, wherein the apex Court observed in paragraph 34 as under :
What, however, emerges from a perusal of the pleadings contained in the written statement filed on behalf of the respondent is that the plea of
adverse possession had not been specifically raised by setting out all the requisite ingredients which had necessarily to be pleaded in order to
constitute the case of acquisition of title by adverse possession. Unless, the pleadings are complete and all the necessary ingredients to constitute
ouster by adverse possession are set out in the written statement, the plea relating to the title of the property in question cannot be said to have
been raised and, therefore, there was no occasion to frame any issue on the question of the or to refer it to the civil court. The judgment passed by
the Delhi High Court cannot be sustained and must, as proposed by esteemed brother Venkatachala, J. be set aside, though for different reasons,
set out above.
8. Dealing with the question, a Full Bench of the Punjab High Court in Ganda Singh and Others Vs. Ram Narain Singh, observed:
The plea of adverse possession is not always a legal plea. Indeed, it is always based on facts which must be asserted and proved. A person who
claims adverse possession must show on what date he came into possession, what was the nature of his possession, whether the factum of his
possession, was known to the legal claimants and how long his possession continued. He must also show whether his possession was open and
undisturbed. These are all questions of fact and unless they are asserted and proved, a lea of adverse possession cannot be inferred from them.
Therefore, in normal cases an appellate Court will not allow the plea of adverse possession to be raised before it. There are no doubt some cases
in which the plea will be allowed because in some form the allegation upon which it can be raised was made at the time and the facts necessary to
prove the plea were brought before the Court and proved.
9. As regards the ingredients to be proved to establish adverse possession it was stated in Makina Atchayya Patrudu Vs. Jalaluddin Sahib and
Others, as under:
The possession of the wrong doer to avail him must be adverse in its character, importing a denial of the owner''s title in the properly claimed. It is
settled law, that possession cannot be adverse unless it is held in such circumstances as are capable in their nature of notifying mankind that the
party is on the land claiming it as his own, openly and exclusively. There ought to be nothing equivocal in a possession which is relied upon as a
bar. Possession cannot be adverse unless the owner is in denial of his title excluded from enjoyment. The test is, are the acts of the person in
possession such as to be irreconcilable with the rights of the true owner? Possession to be adverse must be notorious exclusive and hostile.
10. In the decision in The State Bank of Travancore Vs. Aravindan Kunju Panicker and Others, it was held that in the absence of evidence to
show that the person or his successor in interest asserted any hostile title to the suit property to the knowledge of the true owners at any time
before the suit, their possession cannot be said to be adverse possession.
11. Discussing the question ""Whether the suit is in time, it was observed in the judgment under appeal as follows:
The plaint allegations do not reveal that the suit is based on previous possession and not on title on the allegation that the original plaintiff while in
possession of the property has been dispossessed. So, Article 64 of the Limitation Act (hereinafter referred to as ""the Act"") has no application. On
the other hand, the original plaintiff sought the relief of possession of the suit property based on title. Hence Article 65 of the Act applies and the
starting point of limitation is when the possession of the defendants became adverse to that of the original plaintiff.
With respect we are to observe the approach being not legally sound as the enquiry was not to be, when a suit is under Article 65 of the Limitation
Act to infer that the starting point of Limitation is when the possession of the defendant becomes adverse unless such a plea has been raised at all.
On the contrary if a suit is brought on title, the suit has to be ipso facto decreed for possession if the title is established and the question of limitation
for the suit would arise only when a plea of adverse possession is set up and it is then for the defendant to establish that the plaintiff has not been in
possession of the suit land within twelve years of the suit. The judgment proceeds on the footing as if the respondents were possessing the land by
way of adverse possession and went on to decide as to whether the possession was not adverse but was permissible at the instance of the
appellants. Such question does not arise for consideration.
12. Mr. P. Innayya Reddy, learned standing counsel for the Central Government while fairly conceding this position of law yet raises the question
15 that the appellants cannot succeed without first of all establishing the title to the land and it is his submission, that there is no proof of title of the
appellants to the land. It is argued that the entire title to the land is deduced from Ex. A-16, the communication from the Commandant,
Headquarters AOC Centre on 1-12-1953 saying that the land of the appellants had been fenced more erroneously than intentionally but that by
itself would not amount to establishment of title by the appellants and hence the suit cannot be one for possession based on title. The issue of title of
the appellants was specifically framed as issue No. 1 by the trail Court. Issue Nos. 1 and 2 are as follows:
(1) Whether the plaintiff is the owner and pattedar of the suit schedule land?
(2) Whether the possession of the defendants on the suit schedule land is illegal and unauthorised?
Both the issues are taken up together and on an analysis of the evidence on 30 record including the deed of purchase the appellants were found to
have title to the land. Ex. A-16 is not the only document for the purpose. Of course, the appellants in their pleadings did not refer to the date of
purchase of the land in 1946 and it was only mentioned that the land has been purchased through registered sale deed in 1946. An application has
been made under Order 41 Rule 27 CPC to accept the sale deed as additional evidence. The application has been registered as CMP No. 15551
of 1995 in LPA No. 205 of 1991. It is submitted that the sale deed could not be traced earlier. We are not prepared to introduce additional
evidence at this stage and we accordingly reject the application. However we do not think that on that count there is any difference so far as
appreciation of the question is concerned. The respondent never denied the purchase in 1948. Ex. A-14 is the pahani relating to the land in the
year 1977-78. Ex. B-8 is the pahani relating to the land in the year 1980-81. Both the pahards show the plaintiff No. 1 as pattedar of the land. Ex.
B-8 is the document filed by the respondents and hence they would be bound by the entry therein. That apart, the pahanis are prepared in the
usual course of official business of preparation of Records of Rights and hence there is a due presumption that the entries made therein have been
made in due performance of official duties. They are hence to receive weightage in evidence particularly when there is no other rebutting evidence
to the contrary. The learned single Judge also proceeded on the same footing of the appellants having title and that is why the question of perfection
of title by the respondents by adverse possession arose. There being thus consistent findings on such a question of fact there is nothing to disturb
that finding now particularly when we are not convinced on merits of the findings to have been reached without evidentiary support.
13. In that view of the matter we do not find the judgment under appeal to be sustainable under la w which is set aside and that of the trial Court is
restored. The appeals are allowed with costs.