Does Mere Mention of a Pathway as a Boundary in a Sale Deed Confer Easementary Right by Grant? — Madras High Court Affirms Existing Precedent

The Madras High Court clarifies that the mere reference to a pathway (battai) as a boundary in a sale deed does not itself confer an easementary right of way by express or implied grant, especially where the property in question is not a public road or shown to be set apart as a common way. This judgment upholds established law and distinguishes earlier precedent; it serves as binding authority for subordinate courts in similar disputes involving alleged implied grants of easement.

 

Summary

Category Data
Case Name SA/224/2009 of JAMUNARANI Vs MANGAYAR THILAGAM
CNR HCMA010105352009
Date of Registration 14-03-2009
Decision Date 27-10-2025
Disposal Nature DISMISSED
Judgment Author HONOURABLE DR.JUSTICE R.N.MANJULA
Court Madras High Court
Bench Single Judge
Precedent Value Binding on subordinate courts within the Madras High Court’s territorial jurisdiction
Overrules / Affirms Affirms trial court and first appellate court decisions; distinguishes AIR 1924 MAD 834 (Kuppakkal v. Mathan Chettiar)
Type of Law Civil/Easement/Property
Questions of Law
  • Whether the grantor could deny the grantee the benefit of grant?
  • When the pathway is shown as a boundary in the sale deed, would it not partake the character of a grant?
  • Whether findings are against AIR 1924 MAD 834?
Ratio Decidendi
  • The Court held that simply describing a pathway as a boundary in a sale deed does not constitute a grant of easement unless expressly stated, or where the facts support an easement of necessity.
  • ‘B’ schedule property was not proved to be public or a common pathway, nor was there proof the appellant had no other means of access.
  • The burden lay on the plaintiff to show ‘B’ schedule property was set apart as a common way, which was not discharged.
  • The Court distinguished the facts and principles from AIR 1924 MAD 834, finding no comparable circumstances of implied right.
  • No express, implied or prescriptive easement was established by the appellant.
  • The judgments of the lower courts were correct.
Judgments Relied Upon
  • AIR 1924 MAD 834 (Kuppakkal v. Mathan Chettiar)
  • AIR 1972 MAD 307
  • 1997 III CTCT 461
Logic / Jurisprudence / Authorities Relied Upon by the Court
  • Section 28 of The Easements Act (necessity as determinant of easement’s scope).
  • Commissioner’s and surveyor’s reports regarding site features and elevation.
  • The principle that mere mention of a boundary does not itself create an easement of right of way.
Facts as Summarised by the Court Plaintiff bought ‘A’ schedule property under sale deed, with ‘B’ schedule (alleged common battai) mentioned as an eastern boundary. Plaintiff sought declaration and injunction relating to right of way over ‘B’. Defendants disputed existence of common battai and claimed exclusive use. Lower courts dismissed claim re: ‘B’ schedule. Plaintiff appealed.

Practical Impact

Category Impact
Binding On All subordinate courts within the jurisdiction of the Madras High Court
Persuasive For Other High Courts
Distinguishes AIR 1924 MAD 834 (Kuppakkal v. Mathan Chettiar) — distinguished on facts and principle
Follows Section 28, Easements Act; prior trial and appellate court reasoning

What’s New / What Lawyers Should Note

  • Clarifies that mentioning a pathway as a boundary in a sale deed does not by itself confer an easementary right of way, especially where the alleged pathway is not public or set apart as a common way.
  • The burden is on the plaintiff to prove that the pathway was the only available means of access (“easement of necessity”) or that it was expressly or impliedly granted.
  • Elevation or physical disconnection between the plaintiff’s land and the asserted pathway can be relevant in denying the claim for right of way.
  • Previous precedents (like AIR 1924 MAD 834) do not automatically apply unless the factual context is identical.
  • Lawyers should take care to establish clear evidence of usage, necessity, or express grant when pleading implied easements.

Summary of Legal Reasoning

  • The Court considered whether the mention of a “common battai” (pathway) as a boundary in the sale deed created any grant of easementary right in favour of the grantee.
  • Relying on and closely examining AIR 1924 MAD 834, the Court noted that precedent applies only when the property in question is specifically set apart or recognized as a street or public way.
  • The judgment emphasized that, absent express words of grant or evidence of necessity, no implied right arises merely due to boundary description.
  • The Court relied on Section 28 of the Easements Act, noting that any easement of necessity must be co-extensive with the actual necessity at the time of severance.
  • On facts, it was found that the plaintiff did not prove exclusive necessity (others reached their lands by ridges), nor that the pathway in dispute was dedicated for public or third party use.
  • The Court considered physical characteristics (including a 4-foot elevation difference) as making the pathway unsuitable as a matter of necessity or implied right.
  • The claim for prescriptive or implied easement therefore failed, the lower courts’ findings were upheld, and the appeal was dismissed.

Arguments by the Parties

Petitioner (Appellant/Second Plaintiff):

  • Asserted that describing the boundary as a pathway in the sale deed sufficed to confer a right of way.
  • Claimed common battai was the only means of access due to necessity.
  • Contended lower courts’ findings contradict precedent, specifically AIR 1924 MAD 834, AIR 1972 MAD 307, and 1997 III CTCT 461.

Respondent (Defendant/First Respondent):

  • Asserted ‘B’ schedule property is private, not common or public.
  • Emphasized plaintiff never granted right of way; family alone used the battai.
  • Pointed to revenue records and physical site evidence (including elevation and prior sales of battai portions) showing no exclusive or necessary right for plaintiff.
  • Asserted the appellant used her own ridges for access, negating necessity.

Factual Background

The first plaintiff purchased ‘A’ schedule property by registered sale deed dated 09.06.1964, with ‘B’ schedule property (alleged common battai) mentioned as a boundary. The suit was filed seeking declaration and injunction over right of way across ‘B’. Defendants claimed exclusive ownership of ‘B’, denied it was a common way, and contended the plaintiff had alternative access. The trial court and first appellate court rejected the plaintiff’s claim over ‘B’, finding no right of way established; this judgment was challenged by the second plaintiff (appellant) in Second Appeal.

Statutory Analysis

  • Section 28, Easements Act: The court reiterated that an easement of necessity is determined by the necessity existing at the time the easement is claimed; the mere mention of a pathway as a boundary, without more, is insufficient to create an easement.
  • The sale deed did not contain express terms granting a right of way; nor was the property public or a common way within the meaning of the law.

Dissenting / Concurring Opinion Summary

No dissenting or concurring opinions are recorded in this single-judge decision.

Procedural Innovations

No procedural innovations or new procedural precedents are set by this judgment.

Alert Indicators

  • ✔ Precedent Followed – Judgment affirms existing legal principles and distinguishes, rather than overrules, relevant precedent.

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