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Illegality of Land Allotment Due to Ineligibility and Fraud Overrides Technical Defenses Like Limitation and Res Judicata: Allahabad High Court - 2025-09-16

Subject : High Court Judgments - Land and Property Law

Illegality of Land Allotment Due to Ineligibility and Fraud Overrides Technical Defenses Like Limitation and Res Judicata: Allahabad High Court

Supreme Today News Desk

Allahabad High Court: Substantial Justice Prevails Over Technicalities, Upholds Cancellation of Fraudulent 1993 Land Allotment

LUCKNOW: The Allahabad High Court, in a significant ruling, has held that an illegal land allotment ('Patta') obtained by a person who was fundamentally ineligible at the time of the grant cannot be protected by technical legal arguments such as limitation or res judicata. The single-judge bench of Hon'ble Justice Saurabh Lavania dismissed a writ petition filed by Ramesh Kumar Singh, affirming the cancellation of a Patta granted to him in 1993. The Court emphasized that it would not exercise its extraordinary writ jurisdiction to revive an illegality rooted in fraud.

Background of the Case

The dispute centers on a two-bigha plot of land in Village Methi Tikur, Unnao, allotted to the petitioner, Ramesh Kumar Singh, via a Patta approved on November 26, 1993. The petitioner's claim to this land has been contested twice over three decades.

Initial cancellation proceedings under the erstwhile U.P.Z.A. & L.R. Act, 1950, were dropped in 1998, with the authorities upholding the allotment. However, in 2023, private respondents initiated fresh proceedings under Section 128 of the U.P. Revenue Code, 2006. On December 30, 2024, the Collector/District Magistrate of Unnao cancelled the Patta, a decision that was subsequently upheld by the Commissioner of Lucknow Division on March 11, 2025. The petitioner challenged these concurrent orders before the High Court.

Petitioner's Arguments: A Plea for Technical Dismissal

The petitioner's counsel, Sri M.E. Khan, mounted a challenge based on several procedural and legal grounds:

- Limitation: The cancellation proceedings were initiated in 2023, nearly 30 years after the 1993 allotment, making them highly time-barred under the U.P. Revenue Code, 2006.

- Res Judicata: The matter had already been decided in the petitioner's favor in 1998, and since that order was never challenged, the current proceedings on the same issue were barred by the principle of res judicata.

- Procedural Lapses: The petitioner alleged that the Revisional Authority entertained applications behind his back and decided the case on merits without summoning the lower court's records.

Respondents' Counter: Illegality and Fraud Trump Delay

Counsel for the respondents argued that the High Court should not interfere as substantial justice had been done. Their core contentions were:

- Fundamental Ineligibility: The Patta was granted to a person who was ineligible under the statutory scheme of the 1950 Act. The petitioner was neither a resident of the concerned village nor a 'landless agricultural labourer' at the time of allotment.

- Illegality vs. Irregularity: This was not a case of mere procedural 'irregularity' but one of fundamental 'illegality', as the petitioner did not meet the basic criteria for allotment. Therefore, limitation would not apply.

- Evidence of Fraud: The respondents presented documentary evidence, including revenue records (Khatauni) and family registers, showing that the petitioner was a resident of another village and owned other agricultural lands purchased just before the Patta was granted.

High Court's Rationale: Fraud Vitiates All

Justice Saurabh Lavania, after a thorough review of the record, concluded that the petitioner had illegally obtained the Patta through fraudulent means. The Court made several key observations in its judgment:

"Upon due consideration of following facts of the case, which born out from the record, this Court is of firm view that the 'Patta' to the petitioner was illegally provided as he was not eligible person in terms of Section 198 of the Act of 1950."

The Court noted three crucial facts that the petitioner failed to refute: 1. He was not a resident of Village Methi Tikur, where the allotted land is situated. 2. His actual residence was in Village Korari Khalan, Tehsil Hasanganj. 3. He was not a 'landless agricultural labourer' on the date of allotment, having purchased three other properties in 1992 and 1993.

Based on this, the Court invoked the legal maxim that "fraud vitiates every solemn act." It held that interfering with the cancellation orders on technical grounds like limitation or res judicata would amount to reviving an illegality.

"Thus, in view of the aforesaid, this Court finds that if interference is caused in the impugned order(s) on the grounds indicated above including the ground of limitation as also the ground based on principle of Res-judicata, the illegality in providing the 'Patta' to the petitioner would be revived, which was on account of fraud played by the present petitioner and principle in this regard is that fraud vitiates every solemn act."

Final Decision and Implications

The High Court dismissed the writ petition, thereby cementing the cancellation of the 30-year-old land allotment. This judgment reinforces the principle that courts, particularly in their writ jurisdiction, are guardians of substantial justice and will not allow legal technicalities to be used as a shield to protect benefits derived from fraud or fundamental illegalities, especially concerning the distribution of public or state-owned land.

#AllahabadHighCourt #LandAllotment #RevenueLaw

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