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Writ of Mandamus for Possession

Court Rejects Indefinite Deferment of Property Possession Based on Old Litigation: Punjab & Haryana High Court - 2026-03-18

Subject : Civil Law - Property Disputes

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Court Rejects Indefinite Deferment of Property Possession Based on Old Litigation: Punjab & Haryana High Court

Supreme Today News Desk

Deadlines Over Decades: High Court Demands Action on Delayed Plot Possession

In a significant move addressing administrative backlog, the Punjab & Haryana High Court has issued a firm mandate to the Haryana Shehri Vikas Pradhikaran (HSVP), ordering the agency to hand over vacant possession of allotted plots to petitioners within four months. The ruling, delivered by a bench comprising Justice Suvir Sehgal and Justice Deepak Manchanda, effectively concludes a cluster of 21 writ petitions that had stalled while awaiting governmental action.

The Conflict of Stagnation

The dispute centered on the failure of the HSVP to hand over possession of residential plots—specifically looking at the case of Plot No. 85, Sector 80, in the Urban Estate of Faridabad. While the petitioners had been allotted the land, the authority repeatedly failed to deliver possession, citing a "status quo" order in a separate, 16-year-old case (CWP-8525-2009).

For the petitioners, the irony was stark: while the land acquisition itself had long been upheld by the High Court in 2019 and confirmed by the Supreme Court shortly thereafter, the physical handover remained hostage to an unrelated, stagnant litigation.

The Arguments: Efficiency vs. Procedural Caution

During the proceedings, counsel for the respondents argued for the maintenance of the status quo , insisting that the existing court order from 2009 prevented them from acting. They requested a deferment of the current petitions until the resolution of the older, pending matter.

However, the Bench was unimpressed by the argument for continued delay. Recognizing the injustice of keeping citizens in limbo, the Court rejected the request for adjournment, noting that the HSVP’s own internal administration had already issued directives to hand over the sites.

Key Observations from the Bench

The Court’s frustration with the perennial postponement was evident in its oral observations:

  • "No useful purpose would be served in keeping these petitions pending, merely because there is a status quo order in a connected petition, which is pending for the last more than 16 years."
  • "Be that as it may, since clear cut instructions have been issued by the Chief Administrator, writ petitions are disposed of with a direction to the respondents to handover the vacant possession of the plot to petitioner(s) within a period of four months from today, unless there is any legal impediment in doing so." Suvir Sehgal, J.

A Clear Path Forward

By ordering the possession to be handed over within a four-month window, the High Court has prioritized administrative accountability over bureaucratic inertia. The judgment serves as a stern reminder to state authorities that internal departmental instructions—such as those delivered by the Chief Administrator of HSVP—should not be rendered void by the dragging of feet in unrelated legal proceedings.

For the beneficiaries of this order, the decision provides long-sought closure and the right to finally utilize their property. For the HSVP, the directive mandates a swift resolution unless a concrete legal obstacle can be identified, significantly narrowing the scope for further administrative delays.

Land Acquisition - Property Possession - Writ Mandamus - Administrative Delay - Urban Estate - Litigation

#PropertyLaw #PunjabHaryanaHighCourt

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