Can registering authorities refuse to register property transfer deeds without proof of mutation under the Bihar Registration Rules?

 

Summary

Category Data
Court Supreme Court of India
Case Number C.A. No.-013429-013429 – 2025
Diary Number 12674/2024
Judge Name HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA
Bench HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE PAMIDIGHANTAM SRI NARASIMHA; HON’BLE MR. JUSTICE VIPUL M. PANCHOLI
Precedent Value Binding on all subordinate courts
Overrules / Affirms Overrules sub-rules (xvii) and (xviii) of Rule 19 of the Bihar Registration Rules, 2008
Type of Law Statutory interpretation; property law; administrative law
Questions of Law
  • Whether sub-rules 19(xvii) & (xviii) requiring mutation proof for registration are ultra vires Section 69?
  • Whether registering authorities may insist on collateral title evidence?
Ratio Decidendi The Supreme Court interpreted Section 69 of the Registration Act as conferring only procedural rule-making power—safe custody of records, office language, holidays, indexes and general regulation of proceedings. Sections 21, 22 and 55 require sufficient property description to identify the land but do not empower the framing authority to mandate mutation records as a condition precedent for registration. By imposing arbitrary pre-conditions unrelated to procedural checks, the impugned sub-rules exceeded the scope of Section 69 and undermined the constitutional freedom to alienate property. Consequently, the amendments were struck down as ultra vires and arbitrary.
Judgments Relied Upon K. Gopi v. Sub-Registrar and Others, 2025 INSC 462
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court
  • Textual analysis of Section 69 rule-making power
  • Sections 21, 22, 52 and 55 on description and admission requirements
  • Principles limiting subordinate legislation to its enabling statute
  • Constitutional right to freely dispose of property
Facts as Summarised by the Court In 2019 Bihar amended Rule 19 of its Registration Rules to add sub-rules (xvii) & (xviii), empowering registrars to refuse registration of sale/gift deeds unless jamabandi or holding allotment proof was produced. The Patna High Court upheld the amendments. On appeal, the Supreme Court allowed the challenge, holding the amendments ultra vires Section 69 and arbitrary given incomplete mutation processes.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On All subordinate courts
Persuasive For High Courts and State legislatures when framing registration rules
Overrules Sub-rules 19(xvii) & (xviii) of Rule 19, Bihar Registration Rules, 2008

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Subordinate rule-making under Section 69 of the Registration Act is confined to procedural matters—custody of records, indexes, fees, forms, language, holidays and general office proceedings.
  • Mandatory mutation proof (jamabandi/holding allotment) as a condition precedent for registration falls outside the scope of Section 69 and is ultra vires.
  • Registration officers cannot refuse validly presented sale/gift deeds on collateral title grounds; title disputes lie with civil courts.
  • Rules imposing arbitrary pre-conditions that delay or impede free alienation of property infringe the constitutional freedom to dispose of property.
  • This decision serves as binding authority to challenge any subordinate legislation extending registrar powers beyond procedural checks.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  1. Scope of Section 69

    • Section 69 empowers the Inspector-General to make rules for safe custody of books (Clause a), electronic records (aa), language (b), territorial divisions (c), fines (d), registrar discretion (e), forms (f), authentication (g), presentation procedures (gg), index particulars (h), holidays (i) and general proceedings (j).
    • No clause authorizes mandating mutation evidence as a pre-condition for registration.
  2. Analysis of Description Provisions

    • Sections 21–22 require a description “sufficient to identify” immovable property, permitting reference to surveys or maps but not mutation records.
    • Section 55 mandates post-registration index particulars; it does not convert into a pre-registration requirement.
  3. High Court’s Error

    • The Patna High Court misread Section 69(1)(h) (index particulars) and general power under 69(1)(j) to uphold impugned sub-rules.
    • It failed to recognize that index particulars apply after registration, not before.
  4. Ultra Vires and Arbitrary Nature

    • The impugned sub-rules introduced collateral title inquiries at the registration stage, exceeding procedural checks.
    • Given incomplete land mutation and survey processes in Bihar, the requirement is unworkable and arbitrary, impeding the right to freely transfer property.
  5. Conclusion

    • Sub-rules 19(xvii) & (xviii) are ultra vires Section 69 and contrary to the Act’s object. They are struck down with parties bearing their own costs.
    • Direction to Law Commission to explore integration of conclusive titling with registration, including technological solutions like blockchain.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner (Samiullah):

  • Sub-rules (xvii) & (xviii) ultra vires Section 69(1); no power to mandate mutation proof.
  • Mutation process incomplete; most jamabandi entries are outdated, making compliance impossible.
  • Mutation entries do not confer title; title adjudication belongs exclusively to civil courts.

Respondent (State of Bihar):

  • Amendments aim to ensure integrity in property transactions by synchronizing registry with revenue records under the Bihar Land Mutation Act, 2011.
  • Mutation process digitized; online applications have fixed timelines (21 days).
  • Public policy supports curbing fraudulent multiple registrations; sub-rules consistent with Section 69.

Factual Background

In October 2019, Bihar amended Rule 19 of its Registration Rules to insert sub-rules (xvii) and (xviii), requiring sale or gift deeds to bear jamabandi or urban holding allotment proof before registration. Multiple writ petitions in Patna High Court challenged these amendments as beyond the Inspector-General’s rule-making power and arbitrary amid incomplete mutation processes. The High Court dismissed the challenges, and the appellants appealed to the Supreme Court.

Statutory Analysis

  • Section 69: Confines rule-making to procedural matters; no authority for title-related conditions.
  • Sections 21 & 22: Require property descriptions for identification and permit reference to surveys/maps.
  • Section 52: Registrar’s duty to enquire into execution; admission procedures under Sections 34–35.
  • Section 55(3): Post-registration index particulars; not a pre-registration requirement.

Impugned sub-rules transcended these procedural mandates, imposing collateral title requirements without statutory basis.

Procedural Innovations

  • Direction to the Law Commission to examine integration of conclusive titling with registration, leveraging modern technologies (e.g., blockchain) and possible legislative reform.

Alert Indicators

  • 🚨 Breaking Precedent – Sub-rules expanding registrar’s power into title inquiries struck down as ultra vires.
  • ✔ Precedent Followed – Reaffirmed limits on subordinate legislation under enabling statutes.

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