In the case of Sib Nath Chatterjee v. Tulsidas Chatterjee & Ors. (2026), the Supreme Court of India dismissed an appeal regarding the right of pre-emption, ruling that the statutory limitation period for adjoining landowners must be strictly followed regardless of when they gained knowledge of the land transfer.
Case Background
The appellant sought to exercise a right of pre-emption under Section 8(1) of the West Bengal Land Reforms Act, 1955, claiming he was a raiyat (landholder) possessing land contiguous to a plot that had been transferred to private buyers. However, the appellant filed his application 17 months after the date of the transfer. Under the Act, the prescribed limitation for a person possessing contiguous land to exercise this right is four months from the date of transfer.
Procedural History
- Trial Court: Rejected the application, holding it was ex facie barred by the limitation prescribed in the 1955 Act.
- Appellate Court: Reversed the rejection, reasoning that because the appellant claimed he was never served notice of the transfer, the application should not be dismissed at the threshold.
- High Court (Calcutta): Restored the Trial Court’s order, confirming that the right must be exercised within the four-month window.
Key Legal Issues and Findings
The Supreme Court addressed whether the requirement of “notice” or “date of knowledge” could be “read into” the statute to extend the limitation period for adjoining landowners.
- Nature of Pre-emption Rights: The Court reaffirmed that the right of pre-emption is a “weak right” and a “clog on the right of the owner to alienate his property”. Because it interferes with valid transactions, the statute conferring this right must be construed strictly, not liberally.
- Distinct Categories of Pre-emptors: The Court noted that Section 8(1) of the Act identifies three distinct categories with different limitation triggers:
- Bargadars (Sharecroppers): Three months from the date of transfer.
- Co-sharers: Three months from the service of notice.
- Adjoining Landowners: Four months from the date of transfer.
- Intentional Legislative Distinction: The Court held that the legislature specifically chose to provide a notice-based trigger only for co-sharers, who have a direct interest in the subject matter. Adjoining landowners cannot equate themselves with co-sharers to demand the same notice requirements.
- Limits of Judicial Interpretation: The Court ruled that when a statutory provision is clear and unambiguous, judges cannot “remake the statute” or “read down” provisions simply because they seem harsh.
Conclusion
The Supreme Court concluded that the High Court was correct in its determination that the application was barred by limitation . Since the appellant fell into the third category (contiguous landowner), his right to file expired four months after the transfer took place, and knowledge of the transfer was irrelevant to the commencement of that period .
The appeal was dismissed with no merit found in the appellant’s arguments.
2026 INSC 409
Sib Nath Chatterjee V. Tulsidas Chatterjee & Ors. (D.O.J. 09.04.2026)




