The Supreme Court has set aside orders of the High Court and the Revenue Board that had reopened a decades-old dispute, holding that a 31-year delay in challenging a decree cannot be condoned in the absence of cogent justification.
The bench of Justice Sanjay Kumar and Justice K. Vinod Chandran has observed that the plaintiff had consistently alleged the document to be fabricated. The sale deed was never produced in court. A voidable transaction can be repudiated through conduct without necessarily seeking formal cancellation.
The case arose from a civil appeal filed by Hari Ram, who sought declaration of his khatedari (tenant-occupant) rights over agricultural land measuring 158.3 bighas in Rajasthan. The claim was based on succession from his deceased father, whose name had been recorded in revenue records in 1961.
The appellant alleged that the defendants had encroached upon part of the land on the basis of a fabricated sale deed. A suit filed under the Rajasthan Tenancy Act, 1955 was decreed in his favour in 1975 after trial.
However, decades later, the defendants challenged the decree, leading to a remand by the Revenue Board, which was upheld by the High Court.
At the heart of the dispute was whether such an extraordinary delay—31 years in filing an appeal—could be condoned and whether the matter could be reopened on allegations of fraud.
The Supreme Court firmly rejected the remand, observing that the delay was “gross” and unsupported by sufficient cause. It emphasized that delay condonation cannot become an “act of generosity” that undermines finality in litigation.
The Court closely examined trial court records and found that the defendant had actively participated in the proceedings; she appeared through counsel and in person on multiple occasions. Evidence was led on her behalf through witnesses. An application was filed seeking production of documents, including the alleged sale deed.
Despite this, the defendant failed to produce the sale deed, which formed the basis of her defence. The Court held that withholding such crucial evidence justified drawing an adverse inference.
The respondents had alleged that the original decree was obtained through fraud. However, the Court noted that the plea of fraud was vague and unsupported by specific facts. The grounds evolved over time, indicating inconsistency. Initial pleadings did not even raise key allegations later relied upon.
The Court concluded that the allegations of fraud were “deliberate falsehoods” contradicted by the record.
This position was supported by reliance on precedent, reinforcing that substantive rights cannot be defeated by technical omissions.
The Court also flagged serious legal infirmities in the alleged sale transaction; the purported sale involved a minor without court permission. Such a transaction would be hit by Section 8(2) of the Hindu Minority and Guardianship Act, 1956.
Further, subsequent purchasers failed to establish valid title or due diligence, weakening their claim of bona fide purchase.
Allowing the appeal, the Supreme Court set aside the High Court and Revenue Board orders, restored the original 1975 decree in favour of the appellant and held that reopening concluded litigation after decades without justification is impermissible
Case Details
Case Title: Hari Ram Versus State of Rajasthan & Ors.
Citation: JURISHOUR-718-SC-2026
Case No.: Special Leave Petition (Civil) No.4664 of 2025
Date: 10/04/2026
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