Sukumar Pathak vs The State Of West Bengal And Ors on 25 August, 2025

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Calcutta High Court (Appellete Side)

Sukumar Pathak vs The State Of West Bengal And Ors on 25 August, 2025

Author: Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya

Bench: Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya

                                                                  2025:CHC-AS:1628-DB




Form No.J(2)


                  IN THE HIGH COURT AT CALCUTTA
                       Civil Appellate Jurisdiction
                              Appellate Side

Present : The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya
                           &
          The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Uday Kumar


                            WPLRT 108 of 2025

                               Sukumar Pathak
                                     Vs.
                      The State of West Bengal and Ors.



For the petitioner              :    Mr. Prosenjit Mukherjee,
                                     Ms. Sima Ghosh,
                                     Mr. Jahangir Hossain,
                                     Ms. Ankhi Koyal, Advs.

For the respondent no. 5        :    Mr. Amit Kr. Ghosh, Adv.

Heard on                        :    August 25, 2025.
Judgment on                     :    August 25, 2025.


Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya , J.:

1. Despite service, none appears for the State, although both the

petitioner and the private respondent are represented through

counsel.

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2025:CHC-AS:1628-DB

2. Learned counsel for the petitioner submits that by the

impugned order, the learned Tribunal proceeded on a palpably

erroneous premise that an appeal against an order of

termination of the bargadarship of the private respondent

under Section 18 of the West Bengal Land Reforms Act, 1955

is pending and on such premise, refused to pass a direction on

the B.L.& L.R.O. to correct the Records of Rights pursuant to

such termination.

3. Learned counsel for the petitioner submits, by way of a brief

history of the matter, that initially a proceeding was filed by the

present writ petitioner/owner for a direction on the private

respondent/bargadar to pay his share of the produce in

respect of the disputed land. An order was passed to that

effect, which was challenged by way of an appeal bearing no.

366 of 2019 as well as an original application before the West

Bengal Land Reforms and Tenancy Tribunal.

4. During pendency of the appeal and the parallel challenge

against the self-same order before the Land Reforms and

Tenancy Tribunal, an order of termination of the bargadarship

of the private respondent was passed under Section 18 of the
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said Act for non-payment by the private respondent of such

share of the produce as per the earlier direction.

5. In view of the termination order having been passed, the

appellant authority, by way of an order bearing order no. 3

dated December 6, 2022, dismissed the appeal, bearing no.

366 of 2019, thereby recording that the final order of

termination had been passed and that a parallel challenge

against the self-same order was pending before the Tribunal.

On the other hand, the Tribunal, vide order dated February 18,

2025, dismissed the challenge preferred before the Tribunal,

on the recording that the challenge had become infructuous

because the D.L.& L.R.O., Birbhum had already disposed of

the appeal and appropriate steps would be taken against the

order passed by the D.L.& L.R.O., Birbhum.

6. Learned counsel for the petitioner also places reliance on the

order bearing Order no. 4 dated February 26, 2020 passed in

the proceeding under Section 18(1)(b) of the West Bengal

Land Reforms Act, 1955, whereby the barga right of the then

recorded bargadar, i.e. the private respondent, was

terminated.

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2025:CHC-AS:1628-DB

7. Learned counsel for the private respondent submits that an

appeal is pending against the order of termination. However,

no number thereof is disclosed to us. Rather, from the

impugned order of the Tribunal, it is clearly reflected that an

impression was given by the private respondent to the Tribunal

that appeal no. 366 of 2019 was pending against the order of

termination under Section 18.

8. However, from the records annexed to the writ petition, which

are certified copies of the orders passed in the said appeal

itself, it is clearly evident that the appeal had been filed not

against the termination order but against the initial order

directing the private respondent/bargadar to furnish his share

of the produce in favour of the owner. Thus, there is nothing on

record to show that any appeal was preferred against the order

terminating the private respondent’s bargadarship at all.

9. Hence, the termination order has attained finality and there is

no option before the respondent authorities but to reflect such

termination and correct the records-of-rights accordingly by

recording the name of the current bargadar, if any, in respect

of the land-in-question.

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2025:CHC-AS:1628-DB

10. The appeal against the initial order directing the private

respondent to pay his share of the produce having already

been dismissed as infructuous, the order of the learned

Tribunal was perverse, inasmuch as the said order was based

on no material at all.

11. In view of the above, we do not find any scope of the Tribunal

dismissing the application of the petitioner for correcting the

Records of Rights by incorporating the name of the current

bargadar, in view of the same being merely a corollary of the

order of termination of the bargadarship of the private

respondent, if taken to its logical conclusion.

12. Accordingly, WPLRT 108 of 2025 is allowed on contest against

the private respondent, thereby setting aside the judgment

dated March 21, 2025 passed by the Third Bench, West

Bengal Land Reforms and Tenancy Tribunal in OA 736 of

2022 (LRTT) and directing the concerned B.L.& L.R.O.,

Dubrajpur, being the respondent no. 3 herein, to immediately

correct the Records of Right in respect of the disputed land by

reflecting the name of the current bargadar and cancelling the

name of the private respondent as a bargadar from the

concerned Records of Rights. Such correction shall be carried
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out at the earliest, preferably within one month from the date of

communication of this order to the respondent no. 3.

13. There will be no order as to costs.

14. Urgent photostat certified copy of the order, if applied for, be

supplied to the parties at an early date.

  I agree.                           (Sabyasachi Bhattacharyya, J.)



(Uday Kumar, J.)
 



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