The judgment concerns an appeal by V. S. R. Mohan Rao, who was aggrieved at being labelled a ‘land grabber’ and directed to be evicted from a property he claimed to have duly acquired under a sale deed and resided in since 27.03.19971. The land in dispute was square yards, which the appellant asserted was part of a larger square yards in Survey No. 9, Saroornagar Village, Ranga Reddy District, where a double-storied building stood23. The respondents, legal heirs of the original applicant, argued that the appellant had encroached into Survey No. 10, not Survey No. 9, based on a Commissioner’s report. The appellant had previously filed, and failed in, two suits against the Municipality seeking injunctions related to the property.
Law Involved The primary legislation in question was the Andhra Pradesh Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Act, 19822. Key legal concepts and precedents applied included:
- The definition of ‘land grabber’ and ‘land grabbing’ under Sections 2(c), 2(d), 2(e), and 2(cc) of the Act, which require “obvious criminality and clear mens rea (guilty intention)”.
- The principle established in Konda Lakshmana Bapuji v. Govt. of A.P., which provided the constricted scope of the Land Grabbing Act, emphasizing the necessity of mens rea.
- Section 10 of the Act, which outlines the initial burden of proof (prima facie) to allege land grabbing.
Reasoning The Supreme Court’s reasoning centred on the strict interpretation of ‘land grabbing’ under the Act. The Court, citing Konda Lakshmana Bapuji, clarified that being a “simple trespasser” or merely having a prima facie finding against one’s title does not automatically constitute land grabbing. The Act’s definition of ‘land grabbing’ requires taking possession “forcibly, violently, unscrupulously, unfairly, greedily or unlawfully” with an intention to illegally possess.
The Court noted that the Special Court’s proceedings were a “summary trial” and its finding on title was only “prima facie“. While the burden of proof shifts to the alleged land grabber once a prima facie case is made, this prima facie case itself must demonstrate the criminal intent (mens rea) to illegally grab land. The Supreme Court found that despite ambiguities in survey numbers and previous litigation, the essential elements of criminality and mens rea for land grabbing were not sufficiently established against the appellant. The appellant had acquired the property through a registered sale deed and had been residing there for a significant duration. The Court reiterated that the Act’s purpose is for “speedy enquiry and trial” of genuine land grabbing instances, not to substitute civil courts for general property disputes.
Holding The Supreme Court allowed the appeal, thereby setting aside the impugned order that had accused the appellant of being a ‘land grabber’ and directed his eviction1. The Court effectively held that without sufficient proof of “obvious criminality and clear mens rea“, a person cannot be classified as a ‘land grabber’ under the Andhra Pradesh Land Grabbing (Prohibition) Act, 1982, even if there are disputes regarding property boundaries or title.
V.S.R. Mohan Rao V. K.S.R. Murthy And Others
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 708: (DoJ 15-05-2025)