Mangilal vs Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat Dhoru … on 12 August, 2025

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Rajasthan High Court – Jodhpur

Mangilal vs Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat Dhoru … on 12 August, 2025

Author: Nupur Bhati

Bench: Nupur Bhati

      [2025:RJ-JD:35927]

              HIGH COURT OF JUDICATURE FOR RAJASTHAN
                                        AT JODHPUR
                    S.B. Civil Writ Petition No. 14897/2025
1.      Mangilal S/o Shri Jalaram, aged about 61 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

2.      Shrawanram S/o Shri Mangilal, aged about 43 years, Resident
        of    Village      Dhoru,     Tehsil       Bhopalgarh,            District   Jodhpur
        (Rajasthan)

3.      Bhakar Ram S/o Shri Mangilal, aged about 37 years, Resident
        of    Village      Dhoru,     Tehsil       Bhopalgarh,            District   Jodhpur
        (Rajasthan)

4.      Poonaram S/o Shri Hariram, aged about 64 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

5.      Sahiram S/o Shri Poonaram, aged about 29 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

6.      Rampal S/o Shri Poonaram, aged about 31 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

7.      Tejaram S/o Shri Sujaram, aged about 60 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

8.      Prakash S/o Shri Tejaram, aged about 29 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

9.      Dinesh S/o Shri Tejaram, aged about 32 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

10.     Shyamlal S/o Shri Babulal, aged about 31 years, Resident of
        Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur (Rajasthan)

11.     Chutararam S/o Shri Dhannaram, aged about 41 years,
        Resident of Village Dhoru, Tehsil Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur
        (Rajasthan)

                                                                              ----Petitioners
                         Versus
Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat Dhoru,                         Tehsil      Bhopalgarh,      District
Jodhpur (Rajasthan)
                                                                            ----Respondent


For Petitioner(s)              :     Mr. Sharad Vyas.



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               HON'BLE DR. JUSTICE NUPUR BHATI

Order

12/08/2025

1. By way of instant writ petition, the petitioners have invoked

writ jurisdiction of this Court under Article 227 of the Constitution

of India seeking following relief(s):

“a) by an appropriate writ, order or direction the writ
petition filed by the petitioners/applicants may kindly be
allowed.

b) by an appropriate writ, order or direction,
impugned Orders dated 02.07.2025 (Annx.4) passed by
the learned Civil Judge, Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur in
Civil Misc. Case No. 05/2025 titled as “Mangilal & ors.

VS. Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat Dhoru” as well as dated
21.07.2025 passed by the learned District Judge,
Jodhpur District in Civil Appeal Order No. 10/2025 titled
as “Mangilal & ors. vs. Sarpanch, Gram Panchayat
Dhoru” may kindly be declared illegal and accordingly,
be quashed and set aside.

c) by an appropriate writ, order or direction, the
application under Order XXXIX Rule 1 and 2 of C.P.C.
(Annx.2) filed by the petitioners/applicants may kindly
be ordered to be allowed as prayed for throughout with
costs.

d) Any other appropriate order, which this Hon’ble
Court deems just and proper in the facts and
circumstances of the case may kindly be passed in
favour of the petitioners.

e) Cost of the writ petition may please be awarded in
favour of the petitioners.”

2. The petitioners are challenging the validity of orders dated

21.07.2025 (Annex.5) and 02.07.2025 (Annex.4) passed by the

learned District Judge, Jodhpur, and the Civil Judge, Bhopalgarh,

respectively, vide which, their appeal and application for a

temporary injunction under Order XXXIX, Rule 1 & 2 read with

Section 151 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1908 (for brevity,

hereinafter referred to as ÇPC’), in a civil suit for permanent

injunction filed against the respondent, the Sarpanch of Gram

Panchayat Dhoru (Annex.1), were rejected.

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2.1. Briefly stated, the facts of the case are that the petitioners

filed a suit for permanent injunction against the

respondent/defendant with respect to residential houses and a

Bada on the land comprising Khasra No.497/9, measuring 1.6187

hectares in Village Dhoru, which was in their possession since

ancestral times, where they have built certain kuchcha/pucca

houses, a Bada for cattle, and secured electricity connections.

Approximately 10 Bighas of this land was converted to residential

use 20 years ago, now designated as Khasra No. 497/9. The

petitioners claimed adverse possession over the property/land in

question, which they have continuously used and occupied.

However, due to village politics and animosity, the respondent

issued notices on 06.12.2023 and 28.01.2025, attempting to

dispossess them.

2.2. It was further pleaded that the petitioners applied for

issuance of Patta before the Gram Panchayat Dhoru, which was

not issued due to political motives, despite their willingness to pay

the requisite fees. They also served a legal notice on 05.12.2024

under Section 109 of the Rajasthan Panchayat Raj Act, asserting

their rights. The petitioners pleaded that a prima facie case,

balance of convenience, and irreparable loss favor them, as

dispossession would violate their legitimate rights.

3. The respondent/defendant, in reply to the injunction

application (Annex.3), denied these claims, alleging the

application was fraudulent and aimed at usurping government

property.

4. The learned Civil Judge, Bhopalgarh, District Jodhpur vide

order dated 02.07.2025 (Annex.4) rejected the injunction, and the

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learned District Judge in an appeal preferred by the petitioners

herein, vide its order dated 21.07.2025 (Annex.5) upheld the

order dated 02.07.2025 (Annex.4), against which the petitioners

have filed the instant writ petition under Article 227 of the

Constitution, asserting that the orders are illegal and unjust and

thus deserves to be quashed.

5. Learned counsel for the petitioners submits that the trial

court committed a grave error of law and fact in its order dated

02.07.2025 (Annex.4), rejecting the petitioners’ application for

temporary injunction under Order XXXIX, Rule 1 & 2 of the C.P.C.

(Annex.2), and the appellate court has also erred in dismissing the

appeal vide its order dated 21.07.2025 (Annex.5) without properly

analyzing the facts, evidence, and legal position, rendering both

orders illegal, unjust, and perverse. He submits that the

petitioners are in possession of the residential property and Bada

on Khasra No. 497/9 in Village Dhoru since ancestral times, and

they have established ownership through adverse possession,

supported by electricity connections and use of the Bada for cattle

and fodder storage. The counsel emphasizes that the essential

ingredients for granting temporary injunction viz. prima facie case,

balance of convenience, and irreparable loss–are fulfilled, as

dispossession would cause irreparable harm, yet both courts

overlooked this, making their orders unsustainable.

5.1. Further, the counsel contends that the petitioners provided

cogent evidence of long-standing possession and applied for

pattas from the Gram Panchayat Dhoru, which were not issued

due to political animosity, despite the petitioners’ readiness to pay

requisite fees. The respondent’s notices dated 06.12.2023 and

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28.01.2025 to dispossess the petitioners, without deciding their

patta applications, indicate an intent to illegally evict them, which

would prejudice their case and frustrate the suit’s purpose if the

injunction is not granted.

5.2. Learned counsel for the petitioners further submits that the

courts below failed to evaluate the evidence establishing the

petitioners’ possession and did not determine the prima facie case,

balance of convenience, and irreparable loss in their favor,

rendering the orders legally unsustainable.

5.3. Finally, it is submitted that allowing the impugned orders to

stand would lead to the petitioners’ eviction, frustrating the suit’s

purpose and causing a miscarriage of justice, necessitating their

quashing and an order for the respondent to maintain the status

quo until the suit’s disposal.

6. Heard learned counsel for the petitioners and perused the

material on record.

7. Upon hearing the learned counsel for the petitioners and

perusing the case file, this Court finds that the writ petition under

Article 227 of the Constitution of India lacks merit and does not

warrant interference with the impugned orders dated 02.07.2025

(Annex.4) and 21.07.2025 (Annex.5) for the reason that

petitioners’ claim of adverse possession over the residential

property and Bada on Khasra No. 497/9 in Village Dhoru,

supported by their long-standing possession, electricity

connections, and use of the land, does not sufficiently establish a

prima facie case for granting a temporary injunction.

8. The trial court, in its order dated 02.07.2025 (Annex.4), and

the appellate court, in its order dated 21.07.2025 (Annex.5), have

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adequately considered the material and evidence on record,

including the respondent’s reply (Annex.3) alleging that the

petitioners’ application was fraudulent and aimed at usurping

government property. Both the courts found no compelling

evidence to substantiate the petitioners’ claim of adverse

possession and also no reason to allow the application only

because the petitioners applied for Patta, particularly in light of

the respondent’s notices dated 06.12.2023 and 28.01.2025 for

eviction of petitioner from the land in question, which indicate the

disputed land’s governmental ownership.

9. The petitioners’ assertion that the Gram Panchayat’s refusal

to issue pattas was driven by political animosity is not supported

by conclusive evidence, and their application for pattas does not

automatically confer a legal right to the property. Furthermore,

the essential ingredients for a temporary injunction–prima facie

case, balance of convenience, and irreparable loss–have not been

convincingly demonstrated.

10. The petitioners have failed to show that dispossession would

cause irreparable harm incapable of being remedied through the

final adjudication of the suit. Their findings are based on a

reasonable assessment of the evidence, and the dismissal of the

temporary injunction application and the subsequent appeal does

not reflect perversity or illegality warranting interference under

the supervisory jurisdiction of this Court.

11. It is observed that the denial of a temporary injunction does

not preclude the petitioners of their right to pursue the main suit

for permanent injunction, where their claims of adverse

possession can be fully adjudicated. The issuance of notices by the

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respondent/defendant and the ongoing proceedings before the

Gram Panchayat further suggest that the matter is under due

process, and no case is made out for maintaining the status quo

pending the suit’s disposal. Further, both the learned courts, after

perusal of the record, have concurrently held that in the revenue

record, the land was mutated in the name of defendant and the

petitioners were notified by issuing notice to vacate the land in

question as they were in occupation of the land in question

illegally and no documents with respect to ownership of the

petitioners/plaintiff were even placed on record. Both the courts

have rightly observed that the petitioners/plaintiffs, in their plaint,

nowhere pleaded that they are sought to be ousted from the land

in question without following the due process of law.

Consequently, the impugned orders are neither illegal nor unjust,

and the petitioners’ prayer for quashing them and allowing the

temporary injunction application cannot be granted.

12. In view of above discussion, this Court finds no force in this

petition and, therefore, the writ petition as also stay petition are

dismissed. Pending application(s), if any, also stand dismissed.

(DR. NUPUR BHATI),J
50-DJ/-

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