Judgment An interesting question of law has been argued in this case before me by the learned counsel for the appellants. The suit out of which the second appeal arises was instituted by the appellants for recovery of possession of the suit house and site and for recovery of rent. The plaintiffs alleged that the property in question having been originally purchased by their father was allotted to them at a partition between themselves and their brothers. They also alleged that the first defendant was in possession as a lessee under Ex. P-1. The title of the plaintiffs was found by both the Courts below; but on the question of the genuineness of Ex. P-1 they have differed, the trial Court holding that it is genuine, but the appellate Court holding contra. The Courts below have also differed on the question whether the plaintiffs have, proved possession within 12 years prior to suit the trial Court holding that they have, but the appellate Court holding that they have not. The suit was decreed by the trial Court, but has been dismissed on appeal. It is common ground that when the plaintiffs’ mother died in 1940 in another house the plaintiffs lived for some time in the suit house. That was of course with the permission of the first defendant in whose favour at that time according to the plaintiffs’ case Ex. P-1 was in force. The learned District Munsiff and the learned Subordinate Judge on appeal have both held that the possession which the plaintiffs had at the time was with the permission of the first defendant, although the learned District Munsiff has said what the appellate Judge has not accepted that it was as a matter of friendly or neighbourly obligation that they did so. On the basis of such possession, Mr. Suryanarayana for the appellants contends that the plaintiffs have proved possession within 12 years prior to suit as required by Article 142 of the Indian Limitation Act. “Possession”, according to learned counsel, must be taken at its ex facie meaning and ought not to be needlessly limited or qualified. He says that possession howsoever obtained within the statutory period is sufficient compliance with the requirement of Article 142, no matter whether the obtaining was by force or otherwise.
“Possession”, according to learned counsel, must be taken at its ex facie meaning and ought not to be needlessly limited or qualified. He says that possession howsoever obtained within the statutory period is sufficient compliance with the requirement of Article 142, no matter whether the obtaining was by force or otherwise. That is true, and there is ample authority to that effect, of which it is sufficient to mention Narasayya v. Subbayya1. That was a case in which the true owner obtained forcible possession of the property from a trespasser, and the Court held that that possession was quite sufficient to fulfil the requirement of Article 142. No question however arose in that case whether where the possession was obtained with the permission of the trespasser it could be regarded as sufficient compliance with the statute. The passage from Lord Selborne’s judgment in Lows v. Telford2, which is quoted at page 126, of Narasayya v. Subbayya1, is as follows: “In the case also cited at the Bar of Janes v. Chapman3, it is accurately stated by Mr. Justice Maule that ‘as soon as a person is entitled to possession and enters in the assertion of that possession, or, which is exactly the same thing any other person enters by command of that lawful owner so entitled to possession, the law immediately vests the actual possession in the person who has so entered.......And in Harvey v. Brydges4, it is pointed out that so far as relates to the fact of possession and its legal consequences it makes no difference whether it has been taken by the legal owner forcibly or not.” The words italicised to be found at the end of the passage are emphasised by Mr. Suryanarayana before me in support of his argument; but this argument unfortunately ignores the words italicised at the beginning of the passage which, in my opinion, indicate that possession howsoever obtained in order to save the bar of the statute must be possession obtained in the assertion of a right to possession, not as learned counsel would have it with the permission of the wrongful possessor. Mr. Surynanarayana contends that the case of possession obtained with the permission of the trespasser is, for the purpose of the application of the rule relied upon by him, if anything a fortiori to the case of possession obtained forcibly.
Mr. Surynanarayana contends that the case of possession obtained with the permission of the trespasser is, for the purpose of the application of the rule relied upon by him, if anything a fortiori to the case of possession obtained forcibly. It seems to me that on principle this contention is unsound. It is true that in U.N. Mitra’s Limitation and Prescription, Vol. 2, 6th Edn., at page 1686, there is a passage relied upon by learned counsel to the effect that “the true owner’s possession however obtained would be possession within she meaning of Article 142. that the law in mechinery vests actual possession in that person, and that it makes no difference whether it has been taken by the legal owners forcibly or not.” But then as pointed out at pages 1683, 1684 and 1687 of the same work: “There is perhaps no legal conception more open to a variety of meanings than possession-Possession is a flexible term not necessarily meaning occupation.... Possession must be accompanied by an intention to possess, since possession involves an animus possidendi, i.e., occupation with the intention of excluding the owner as well as other people. Possession is the occupation of anything with the intention of exercising the right of ownership in respect of it. If this legal signification of the word”possession“is borne in mini, it, in my opinion, follows that the mere fact of physical possession held by the true owner within the statutory period is not sufficient if it is traceable not to an animus on his part to exercise it in assertion of his own right but to the sufferance of the person in wrongful posession. In U.N. Mitra’s Limitation and Prescription, 6th Edn., Vol. I, Tagore Law Lectures, the same point of view is brought out at page 140 in footnote 4. It is there stated- ”Possession by the plaintiffs“(who set up a title by adverse possession to a strip of land belonging to the defendants)”involves an animus possidendi, i.e., occupation with the intention of excluding the owner as well as other people. Per Lindley, M.R., in Littledale v. Liverpool College5”.
It is there stated- ”Possession by the plaintiffs“(who set up a title by adverse possession to a strip of land belonging to the defendants)”involves an animus possidendi, i.e., occupation with the intention of excluding the owner as well as other people. Per Lindley, M.R., in Littledale v. Liverpool College5”. Then, citing Hunter’s Roman Law, pag1e 209, it is further stated that possesion is the occupation of anything which he intention of exercising the right of ownership in respect of it.” Then again at page 151 in enunciating the proposition that dispossession within the statute ought to be by means of unequivocal acts the author points out: “It was held in the Privy Council in Van Duemen’s Land Co. v. Table Cabe Marine Board1, that the construction of a jetty over a part of the disputed land and giving a lease of the jetty to a third person was, in the absence of any evidence of such severance of interest as might in law lead to such acts being regarded as evidence only of an easement, clearly evidence of seisin in the locus quo. Erecting gates and locking them, or doing other equivocal acts on a strip of land over which one has a right of way, with the intention of protecting such right from invasion by the public, does not amount to a dispossession of the servient owner. To dispossess such owner the land must be occupied with the intention of excluding him as well as other people.” Reference is then made to Littledale v. Licerpool2, and it is further observed, noting Muniappan v. Muppil3, that “possession will not generate a prescriptive right to property unless it is a possession to hold exclusively and as owner.” In the light of the foregoing-a part of which, it may be, has reference to adverse possession which is not strictly material to the case on hand but only affords assistance by way of analogy, I have arrived at the unhesitating conclusion that the learned Subordintate Judge on appeal was right in holding that the kind of possession had by the plaintiffs in the present case within 12 years before suit is not such as satisfies the statute. The second appeal is accordingly dismissed with costs. No leave. K.C. ------ Appeal dismissed.