In Jagjit Singh vs. State of H.P. &Ors., the High Court of Himachal Pradesh upheld the validity of a land mutation based on a private partition (Khangi Takseem), ruling that a joint application signed by all co-sharers satisfies the statutory requirements of Section 135(3) of the H.P. Land Revenue Act, 1954, even if not accompanied by a separate memorandum of partition,. The Court established that a litigant cannot approbate and reprobate by challenging a partition after having already exploited its benefits by selling the allotted land to third parties,. Furthermore, the Court reaffirmed that official revenue records carry a presumption of correctness, and a delayed allegation of forgery—raised 13 years after the event—cannot summarily override contemporaneous administrative actions without a prior legal declaration from a competent court,.
- The Dispute and Statutory Requirements
The petitioner challenged Mutation No. 855 (attested in 2002), which recorded a private partition of jointly held land,. He argued that because the initial joint application was not accompanied by a formal independent memorandum of partition, it could not be processed under Section 135 of the H.P. Land Revenue Act,.
- Ruling on Section 135(3): The Court clarified that Section 135(3) merely requires a signed report in writing by all co-sharers to the Patwari affirming that a private partition has taken place,.
- The Joint Application: Since all co-sharers (including the petitioner) signed the application affirming they had mutually separated their possession and desired a mutation, the application itself effectively served as the statutory written report,.
- Presumption of Correctness and Allegations of Forgery
Thirteen years after the mutation was sanctioned, the petitioner filed a criminal complaint alleging that his signatures on the mutation register were forged,.
- Administrative Record: The state’s revenue records showed the petitioner was personally present, signed the register, and was identified by the local Nambardar,.
- Judicial View on Delay: The Court held that while fraud vitiates any order, a “bare allegation” raised after an unexplained delay of 13 years cannot unseat a official record. Due credence must be given to official records unless the petitioner proves forgery through appropriate civil or criminal proceedings,.
- Principles of Equity and Estoppel
The most critical factor cited by the Court was the petitioner’s own conduct following the partition.
- Acting on the Partition: Between the attestation of the mutation (June 2002) and the filing of his appeal (February 2003), the petitioner had already sold parts of the specific land parcels allotted to him to third-party buyers,.
- Equitable Bar: By selling the land, the petitioner accepted and acted upon the partition,. The Court ruled that he could not later challenge the same transaction that gave him the title to sell that land, as doing so would infringe upon the rights of other co-sharers and third-party purchasers,.
- Final Outcome
The High Court concluded that the petitioner’s challenge lacked both legal and equitable merit. It dismissed the writ petition, affirming the previous orders of the Divisional Commissioner and the Financial Commissioner that upheld the validity of Mutation No. 855,
STPL (Web) 2026 HP 295
JagjitSingh V. State of H.P. &Ors. (D.O.J. 22.05.2026)
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