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Ankita Biswas   17 May 2024

Common plot dispute

I had sold 3 plots of land from my own plot after creating a common passage with user and easement rights for the 3 plot owners to use as their access passage to their respective plots. So together with them I have been using this common passage for 41 yrs now. But now suddenly the question has araised that since they have the user and easement rights to this common passage plot we the initial owners cannot use it even though our registered deed mentions that we also have ownership, users and easement right to the same common passage. Now my question is does the initial owner of the plot lose his or her easement rights after making a private plot that he/she owned initially into a common passage? Can the other owners stop him/her from using it after 41 yrs of usage?  What are the legal proceedings to prevent this Harassrment as the neighbors have blocked an entrance gate for our use with brick barricades. 



Learning

 5 Replies

Aadil (Student)     18 May 2024

Dear Ankita,

Thank you for your query! I am Aadil and I will try to answer your question.

 

The short answer to your question would be NO, you still have the ownership right over the said common passage.

Before going into the explanation on why you may still have ownership right over the common way, let us briefly understand what easement means in the Indian legal system.

 

An easement is defined as a right possessed by the owner or occupier of a property to do or continue to do something in connection with another person’s land according to the Indian Easements Act, 1882. This right is most commonly used for granting the owners of certain properties access to a common pathway, but it could also be used to discharge rainwater on another person’s property or for the right to have uninterrupted access to sunlight on a property.

 

There are certain essentials that must be met to grant easement rights:

  • There must be two separate properties: A dominant property and servient property, wherein the servient property is land upon which the easement right is imposed upon.

  • There must be two separate owners: The owner of the dominant property and the owner of the servient property must be different. A single owner cannot hold both the properties and grant themselves the easement rights over the said property.

  • The right should be granted for the purpose of beneficial enjoyment to the owner of the dominant property.

  • Easements can only exist between adjacent properties.

 

Coming to our current situation, the three properties which were sold by you are now the dominant properties while the common property is the servient property. Here it must be noted that the dominant owner has no right over the servient owner and thus cannot bind them to perform any action. Since you own the servient property, the dominant owners cannot remove your ownership rights over the said property and thus cannot prevent you from using it.

 

It must be noted that even though you were using the said property for 41 years, in a situation where you were not the owner of the property, you would not be able to claim ownership of the same through the law of adverse possession, as the law of adverse possession necessitates that the individual claiming the adverse possession must also be the only one using it.

 

Therefore, as long as you are the owner of the servient property, .i.e. the common passage, the other three owners cannot prevent you from using it.

I hope this helps. Thank you for your time and patience!

 

Regards,

Aadil

1 Like

T. Kalaiselvan, Advocate (Advocate)     19 May 2024

You are having rights in the property which you had been enjoying it for over four decades.

This is easement by necessity. 

If your rights have been obstcuted by putting up obstacles in the form of wall or anything then you can file a suit for mandatory injunction to remove them and also for easement rights 

You can consult a local lawyer and proceed as suggested 

1 Like

Ankita Biswas   12 June 2024

Thank you so much

 

T. Kalaiselvan, Advocate (Advocate)     13 June 2024

You are welcome for your appreciations.

Dr. J C Vashista (Advocate )     14 June 2024

Very well analysed, explained and advised by experts, I agree and appreciate.


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