GOAN MUTATIONS: WHAT GOVERNMENT MUST DO
By Valmiki Faleiro

The mess of mutations is rampant. This I gauged from reader response to this 
column
on the five preceding Sundays. Most told the same story: of how people are 
harassed at
Mamlatdar offices across Goa when they seek a change in the Index of Lands – a
simple process in law, but far from it in practice. A gentleman who heads a 
trade body
feels listing the steps will help government mitigate the troubles of the ‘Aam 
Aadmi’.
Fingers crossed, here is my list:

1. Enforce Sections 96 (proviso 2) and 102 of the Land Revenue Code, and Rule 
15 of
Record of Rights & Register of Cultivators Rules. The onus of initiating and 
carrying out
mutations lies squarely with the Taluka Sub-Registrar and Mamlatdar when land
ownership changes occur by documents under the Transfer of Property Act (that 
are
registered under the Indian Registration Act.)

Just enforce the existing law! Ninety percent of the scourge Goans now face 
will vanish.
When people acquire rights by way of a registered deed, the process of mutation 
must
follow automatically – no question of them even applying for mutation, much less
repeatedly visiting, begging and bribing all and sundry at Mamlatdar offices. 
That is what
the law stipulates. No government has enforced the law, resulting in the 
mutation mess
across Goa.

What the law provides is simple. When a Sub-Registrar registers a deed – sale, 
gift,
partition, relinquishment, etc. – he must, during the first week of the 
following month,
intimate the Talathi/Mamlatdar in Form XIII. Upon receipt of such intimation, 
the latter
must carry out the mutation, ‘mutatis mutandis’, as per procedure laid down in 
detail.
Where, then, would be the scope for harassment and extortion? Of people having 
to
apply, meet, beg and bribe revenue officials?

2. As regards the balance ten percent cases, where land ownership changes occur 
by
other means, viz.- a Court decree, judicial partition, ‘Inventario,’ 
Will/bequest, etc., once
again, follow the law and established conventions. These are listed, briefly, 
below.
The mutation applicant’s duty must end, as envisaged under the law, with 
reporting of
the acquisition of rights (with evidence) to the Mamlatdar. Thereafter, as per 
present law,
the onus of completing the mutation, must lie squarely with the Mamlatdar and 
his staff.
A private citizen must not be turned into a public clerk and peon, as now 
happens.

3. When a person applies to add his name to a survey number where mutations have
previously been carried out, s/he must not be asked to furnish addresses of 
persons so
added. Because these addresses are already with the concerned Talathi/Mamlatdar 
who
themselves carried out the previous mutations.

4. The stupid idea of asking the applicant to furnish the latest Form I & XIV 
must stop.
The concerned Talathi/Mamlatdar are themselves the custodians of this document!

5. The law provides for oral mutation applications. It would be injudicious to 
retain this
provision. But, for heaven’s sake, when someone applies in writing, don’t ask 
him/her to
provide a file. The government has crores to splurge on needless bridges and 
dubious
garbage handling purchases – but not a few lakhs for essential stationery?

6. Across the board, every entry clerk in every government office must 
acknowledge an
inward letter with the office rubber stamp.

7. Upon receipt of intimation from the Sub-Registrar (in case of registered 
documents)
and report from acquirer of rights (in case of other documents), fix a time 
limit for issue
of Notice/s in Form X. Notice/s should be sent only to people whose names 
appear in
Form I & XIV, not to consenting parties, etc. whose names appear in the Sale 
Deed.

8. No applicant must be asked to make copies of Form X on behalf of the state.

9. Form X, as done before, should be served by hand through the office bailiff 
or the
concerned village Talathi. If logistics do not permit hand delivery, service 
may be done
by Registered AD Post. But not by the applicants who are currently told to do 
the mailing!
This will also eliminate the ‘vanishing trick’ of AD cards and the ensuing 
rigmarole.

10. In exceptional cases where service by hand or by Registered AD Post is 
impossible,
substituted service should be effected by the Government – at its own cost. It 
is a
government notice and the government must serve it. The applicant should NOT be
made to pay for a duty of the government.

11. Substituted service by way of Public Notice should be released to one 
English and
one vernacular daily for better reach and avoidance of mischief.

12. Let the dead lie in peace. Stop this nonsense of ‘serving’ notices upon the 
departed.
If a respondent is deceased, notify the heirs by substituted service. Officials 
who fight
shy to carry out mutation involving a dead person – even when a Court 
‘Inventario’ order
is furnished, need to be disciplined. As do Talathis, Circle Inspectors and 
Mamlatdars
who, despite being unqualified, raise specious “objections” on legalities of 
Sale Deeds.

13. Village Panchayats, Municipalities – and even Mamlatdars! – need to be 
educated
on the legal value of Form I & XIV. That it is not a proof of title and that 
its entire value is
merely presumptive. When an applicant files a Sale/Gift (or such title) deed, 
local bodies
must not insist on Form I & XIV featuring the applicant’s name. In a different 
context, but
relevant to the issue, was a recent statement by the Salcete Mamlatdar, as 
reported in
‘Herald’ (Pg.3 anchor, Nov 22, 2008.)

The Mamlatdar is quoted having said, “These [old Matriz records] are not much 
in use,
since the present survey and revenue plan also constitute revenue documents.”
Revenue records alright, but of what legal value? A quasi-judicial order of a 
District
Collector spelt out the almost NIL legal value of Form I & XIV.

People like the Salcete Mamlatdar also need to know that a Sub-Registrar cannot
register a deed unless the mention of ‘Matriz’ is made in the description of 
the property.
The Salcete Mamlatdar alone cannot be blamed. All Mamlatdars without law studies
must be put through a crash-course on Goa’s basic laws.

14. Modify the software used for maintaining revenue records, to rid it of 
shortcomings.
For instance, the software must be changed to accept a common Mutation Case No. 
in a
joint application involving a common survey number. This will avoid 
multiplicity of cases
and save immense amounts of time, paper and money.

15. In cases involving sub-division of land, the Director of Settlement & Land 
Records
and his Taluka-level Inspectors must be directed to exercise their powers under 
Section
59(c) of the LRC. When a survey number is sub-divided with final approvals 
under the
Town & Country Planning Act, it must be partitioned as per the approved 
sub-division.
This will save a multiplicity of future individual partitions, its attendant 
ills, and human
errors while transcribing plots at different points of time on the survey 
sheets. Such
partitions must be carried out not only on the PT sheets at the taluka level 
but also on
the originals at Panjim headquarters.

16. And finally, appoint an Ombudsman/disciplinary authority specifically for 
complaints
under the Land Revenue Code, with jurisdiction over the Director of Settlement 
& Land
Records and Deputy Collector downwards.

Such measures will provide the beleaguered Goan some relief. (ENDS.)

The Valmiki Faleiro weekly column at:

http://www.goanet.org/index.php?name=News&file=article&sid=330

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The above article appeared in the November 30, 2008 edition of the Herald, Goa

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